For a concise, readable summary of iTulip concepts developed over the past 16 years and a vision of a challenging next decade and how to navigate it, read Eric Janszen's book "Post Catastrophe Economy".
Join the discussion of today's events with a wide range of professionals with an interest in economics and finance.
Register to join our 50,000 plus member registered community from 78 countries today.
Subscribe to iTulip Select for access to the longest running, deep, accurate, and unvarnished macro economic trends analysis and forecasting available, since 1998.
If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
It gives me an interesting idea for a computer science problem (I am a comp sci major, btw) ... basically taking charts and measuring how often it follows patterns and even showing those patterns.
It would be interesting to see if certain charted assets (or whatever) are more 'patternized' (oh there is probably a good math term for that) versus one that is random.
It would be even interesting to wonder if that is a measure of a market that is efficient versus one that is inefficient (I am a big believer in EMT, btw).
I suspect this is a well studied problem, of course. If anyone has any terms I can google on this, I'd appreciate it.
Comment