 |  Investments, 4th Canadian Edition, 4/e Zvi Bodie,
Boston University School of Management Alex Kane,
University of California, San Diego Alan Marcus,
Boston College Stylianos Perrakis,
Concordia University Peter Ryan,
University of Ottawa
Technical Analysis
Web LinksPrepared by William Lim, University of New Brunswick.
 |  |  | The Dow Theory: Thedowtheory.com
(http://www.thedowtheory.com/)
This interpretation of the Dow Theory has claimed to have successfully timed and beaten the market. |
 |  |  | Dow Theory: Chart School
(http://www.stockcharts.com/education/What/MarketAnalysis/dowtheory1.html)
The Dow theory has been around for almost 100 years, yet even in today’s volatile and technology-driven markets, the basic components of Dow theory still remain valid. |
 |  |  | Predictability of Stocks (NBER Report): National Bureau of Economic Research
(http://nber.org/programs/ap/ap.html)
Article by: John Y. Campbell, Program Director [The following Program Report appeared in the Spring 1997 issue of the NBER Reporter.] Asset pricing---the study of markets for financial assets including stocks, bonds, foreign currencies, and derivatives---is a field in which there is an intense and fruitful interaction between empirical and theoretical research. The work of economists associated with the NBER asset pricing program illustrates this interaction particularly well. NBER economists have been studying many different phenomena, including the high rewards that investors have received for holding stocks in general and "value stocks" in particular, the apparent predictability of stock and bond returns at long horizons, and unusual patterns in option prices. In each area, empirical puzzles have stimulated new thinking about investor behavior and the functioning of capital markets. |
|