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The Evolution of Technical Analysis: Financial Prediction from Babylonian Tablets to Bloomberg Terminals

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MP3 CD Format Andrew Lo, Director, MIT Laboratory for Financial Engineering, and his co-author Jasmina Hasanhodzic, present the creation and evolution of technical analysis, spanning several civilizations, from the most ancient onesas far back as the Stone Age, through the rise of Wall Street as the world's financial center.  It is filled with interesting facts, such as that speculative trading came into existence in ancient Babylon, where market values of various commodities were regularly charted with the purposes of forecasting them. They continue their research through the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and the Industrial Revolution. They also explore the Eastern markets of China and Japan, and compare and contrast them to Western practices. Along the way, they examine the work of the people who have played a significant role in the formation and growth of this ancient practice. The work of Charles Dow, the grandfather of modern technical analysis, will be discussed in this volume, as well as the contributions of other pioneers, such as Samuel Armstrong Nelson, William, Peter Hamilton, Robert Rhea, Richard Russell, and C.J. Collins.

1 pages, Audio CD

First published August 26, 2010

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About the author

Andrew W. Lo

50 books92 followers
Andrew Wen-Chuan Lo is the Charles E. and Susan T. Harris Professor of Finance at the MIT Sloan School of Management. Lo is the author of many academic articles in finance and financial economics

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Alexander Ruchti.
75 reviews4 followers
December 19, 2021
It is quite fascinating to see how technical analysis evolved (and stayed the same) over centuries. It seems like there is just something very innate human about trying to find patterns in things and then aiming to exploit that for financial gains. The authors go back to the Babylonians, Greeks, and Romans. However, they also cover more recent things like the invention of the stock ticker, telegraph, computer, and how those things impacted technical analysis. Overall, an interested, but not enlighting read. I liked it, but didn´t love it or would recommend it to anybody who isn´t already looking for something to read on that topic.
Profile Image for Chris Esposo.
680 reviews56 followers
February 9, 2019
A good overview of the history of technical analysis from Babylonia to right before the contemporary machine learning era in finance. The author does a good job of showing how technical analysis arose from a "scientific mindset" albeit one that was unveiled in mysticism and astrology, when ancient traders and money changers augmented observation of harvest, politics, and flows of goods with star-gazing to serve as predictive indicators to phenomena in the forthcoming seasons.

The author shows that these early technicians even attempted to validate their predictions with outcomes they recorded, in a procedure similar to modern statistical learning. Other interesting facts include the practice of traders to increase the frequency of observations by increasing the number of columns for each period, a transposition of what we do by increasing rows, though the same effect, of trying to discern smaller movements in price, essentially decreasing the time delta.

The book moves through medieval Europe and Japan next and goes through some Japanese thinking on commodity trading that anticipate the Dow Theory 100 years prior to that work. This was the only book I've read in mass-market publications that do a good description of Dows theory and helps explain the origins of a lot of terms commonly used by technicians, including contrary movements, head-shoulders patterns, momentum, volume etc.

Overall a great intro, would probably need a more detailed treatment on all topics to be functional, but enough to get one started. Recommend
339 reviews
January 3, 2021
I'm a sucker for these deep-in-the-weeds technical origin stories
Profile Image for Etienne K.
57 reviews2 followers
June 4, 2021
Great overview of technical analysis history, with a bunch of references and tips.
Profile Image for Keith.
960 reviews63 followers
July 24, 2012
The first half of the book says that technical analysis is an ancient, low prestige, profitable occupation. The second half of the book goes into the modern evolution of technical analysis, and that it is hardly more respectable now than it was then than. The authors point out that there are flaws in the dominant theory, which is the Efficient Market Hypothesis, and therefore technical analysis has value.

According to the book, for thousands of years, Technical Analysis has not been respected, and it is still that way.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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