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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
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Edge Perf.E | LSE:EDGE | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B00DDX23 | E SHS 10P |
Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | |
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Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
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Last Trade Time | Trade Type | Trade Size | Trade Price | Currency |
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- | O | 0 | 24.00 | GBX |
Edge Perf.E (EDGE) Share Charts1 Year Edge Perf.E Chart |
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1 Month Edge Perf.E Chart |
Intraday Edge Perf.E Chart |
Date | Time | Title | Posts |
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31/3/2014 | 17:31 | EDGE's Fantasy Trade Ledger | 14 |
Trade Time | Trade Price | Trade Size | Trade Value | Trade Type |
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Top Posts |
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Posted at 15/9/2012 09:45 by tpaulbeaumont edge 6 Sep'12 - 10:07 - 2 of 6thanks long dollar (after the squeeze) , short dax to 95 should i place this later around 3 ? tpaulbeaumont 7 Sep'12 - 09:23 - 5 of 6 edit oh dear edge |
Posted at 07/9/2012 09:23 by tpaulbeaumont oh dear edge |
Posted at 12/10/1999 06:43 by clem I'm going to risk charges of hype here but the following images blew me
away.
To cut a long story short I though I'd put up some more images up on
ADVFN in line with my aberation thread.
I decided on prompting to use some more 'technical' data to show a
little more of what the Edge can do.
I started off by using the basic planet model to look at fallers,
that had negative relative strenghts over 1 month, 3 months
and 12 months. I did this by using the Edge to filter out all shares
with even one positive relative strenght period across these ranges.
ie. Only 'unremitting losers' were to be shown.
This is the resultant image!
Words like Fibanacci, logarithmic spirals, power scaling and fractals
jumped immediately to mind.
Or too you superbrains s= exp(2*pi*m*k) where k is a constant and
m is an interger... etc
Another way of putting this for you Nautilus fans is this is
the 'Golden mean' spiral.
Putting it yet another way, this diagram suggest that shares, when
they are for the dustbin, fall in a predictable mathematical way.
Adhering pretty much to a Fibonacci sequence.
So that a horribly jagged chart like Cortecs (CCS) can be displayed in
3 dimensions as a graceful logarithmic spiral plunge. Or perhaps a
plunge bounded by such a spiral.
So tantalised by this half understood insight I thought I'd model risers.
All those shares which have positive relative strenghts over 12 month,
3 months and 12 months.
This is what we find.
Without reaching for the higher maths, we can see that shares rising over
the year upto 80% or so follow a relatively stable pattern. Again this
seems to be following that log spiral shape. Then suddenly shares with
a 12 months performance of around 100% become unpredictable
over 3 and 1 month, in the main going generally haywire on the upside.
For those wondering what they are really looking for here is the key:
Each planet is a share. Size of planet is 1 month relative strenght,
distance from the yellow sun is 3 months relative strenght, and
anticlockwise rotation is 12 month relative strenghts.
Image 1 is negative relative strenghts. Image 2 is positive relative
strenghts.
Please dont for one minute think I profoundly understand what I'm
looking at. The implications of these image may go a lot further than
that or my ideas might be ill founded. However it neatly shows the power
of being able to poke data around with a powerful and flexible tool.
Opinions welcome.
BTW The data for these images is about 2 months old. |
Posted at 11/10/1999 17:16 by clem I hate making promises but we should have destroyed the Klingons by Xmas and have Edge into hands of closed beta before then.
Learjet >> as far as SUN goes when I model it, all the 0's get in the way. It lives under the grey planet at 3 O'clock to the Yellow sun. ie 0 p/e, 0 div |
Posted at 11/10/1999 11:08 by clem Aquilla > The yellow thing is the origin. ie The middle point to give you a fix on the middle from which everything is projected from.
Docproc >> Basically Edge enable you to look at all the stocks under the parameters you select, so you can see them all relative to each other.
On a primary level this enables the following:
A view of relative values, each to all, rather than one to one. (eg Everything in terms of everything at once)
Fast Quantitive evaluation in seconds rather than hours or days.
(eg try comparing all the shares on the back page of the FT one against the other.)
Use your own investment idea to evaluate shares, rather than see 'signals' selected by the software that everyone will see.
(eg for the above model use Gross margin and revenue per employee rather than Div and P/E. Or even relative strenght over 1 month and 1 year instead of P/E and dividends. etc.)
Edge has multiple ways of doing this.
This is just a brief very partial overview. I'll put some more models up and hopefully drive some discussion about the stocks it throws up. |
Posted at 11/10/1999 10:22 by docproc Apart from detecting possibly undervalued or oversold stocks, what else can The Edge do?
When will WE be able to play about with it? Are we talking again in "solar system" terms? :>) |
Posted at 11/10/1999 02:42 by clem I thought I would use the forthcoming EDGE tool for a
little bit of prototypical visualisation.
Edge is a real-time interactive tool but I thought I take some screenshots
and annotate them.
A lot of shares that get talked about are ones that are 'value stocks'.
This can mean they are lame and dying or cheap and neglected and ready
to recover.
I've used Edge's Planet model to show all the UK market in terms of
Capitalisation, Dividend Yield and P/E. Some of you maybe familiar with
how I use this model. Distance from the sun (yellow sphere) is P/E,
planets are sorted anticlockwise the higher their dividend, ie the more
anticlockwise you go the higher the dividend. Bigger the planet the bigger the cap. Every thing is to scale.
My assumptions run in line with the classic Grahame model, which says high
dividend, low P/Es are PROBABLY cheap. In many cases there are good reasons why
these kinds of companies are 'cheap' and unlikely to recover. But sentiment
is often overzealous and over-corrects valuation and therefore dramatic recoveriescantake place, a la,Universal Salvage, Allied Carpets and Vickers.
This model highlights
some interesting annomolies which I have annotated.
I hope you find these images intriguing. Questions are welcomed.
This is the shape of the whole market expressed under the above dimensions.
The image below is a zoom in on the high dividend sector with certain
shares highlighted. I am particularly piqued by the mix of dividend/p/e
abberance, coupled with a market cap larger than average in this sector.
This is best typified by Rank.
1 Rank,
2 Charter,
3 Hyder,
4 Somerfield,
5 Storehouse,
6 Baird,
7 RJB,
8 Alldays,
9 Couraulds,
10 Cape,
11 Arcadia,
(The images in copyright On-line PLC 1999 and confidential to ADFN'ers.) |
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