Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Securities Fundamentalists Vs Chartists

There are two very broad classifications of analysts on Wall Street, fundamentalists and chartists.

Fundamentalists investigate the operations of companies. Their sales, earnings and future potential.

The chartists look at the technical market. The market-pricing highs, lows, trading patterns and the volume that accompanies these patterns. There are many types of chartists, and interpreters of each type.

When you hear someone saying a market for a stock is oversold or undersold or is ready to “break out,” chances are they are charting the market, and not talking about fundamentals.

Fundamentalists are more long term in their outlook than are chartists. And to complicate matters, some analysts use a combination of both approaches. Also, there are quants who look to the math of securities more than they do management evaluation.

I have spent decades studying well over 1,500 individual investment strategies. I find it important that you overlook individual analyst recommendations if you have little understanding of what they are about.

Always remember: The analyst advice you get may vary greatly, depending on the type of analysis they do.

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