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The past 6 sessions have been a down run for LEN shares.

Chapter XI: The length of "Runs", (the number of consecutive price movements up or down) reveal some new ways to visualize Price Series Data. A discussion of the "Monte Carlo Fallacy" and it's relevance to Stock Price Prediction leads to a revisionist method of Price Projection using the Bernoulli Analysis.

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LEN:  Daily Volatility = Price Range as a percent of the daily average price.
Here we depict the price line along with the plot of the run length characterization:

The run length is the number of consecutive days that the stock price rises or falls. The longest run during the past quarter, a 7 session down term, ended on 6/22/2010.

The green backgound plot shows the actual price. Daily Closing Prices are indicated by the tics on the candlestick figures.



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Relation between Binomial Test and Run Test of Lennar Corporation

This is another projection of the closing price run history. The chart at the top of the page resets the run back to the midline when the trend changes, creating a sawtooth waveform. By contrast, this chart is of the cummulative price change directions. In effect, it is a sort of binary filtering of the price movement. When superimposed on the actual price line, an indicator is generated according to how the price changes lag or lead the run length changes.


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LEN:  Volatility Curve

This histogram shows the frequency of various run lengths of the history of Lennar Corporation.

The length of a run would appear to indicate something about over-bought or oversold conditions, and so it might be of value as a sentiment indicator. The transformation from a price series to a run series eliminates the magnitude of the price change, and simplifies the prediction problem to a simple binary process. That is, the next price in the series either will be up or down, so the problem of predicting the end of the run can be expressed in terms similar to those we might use to describe the probabilities of heads or tails when flipping a coin.

This is a good time to raise the question of the “Monte Carlo Fallacy” or “Gambler’s Ruin” as it might be applied to stock price prediction. A naïve gambler might notice that “heads” had been flipped 5 times in a row on a coin that was known to give a fair toss. He might reason like this: He knows that six heads in a row would be extremely rare, (assuming that no cheating was going on). So, not wishing to bet on an extremely unlikely event, he bets against it by calling “tails”.

He assumes the probability of heads in one toss is 1 out of 2, the probability of all heads in 2 tosses is 1 out of 4, and so on. By this logic, the probability of the sixth toss coming up heads would only be 1 out of 64.

The fallacy assumes that the coin somehow remembers that it has already come up heads 5 times, causing the probability on the next toss to be something different than the normal 1 out of 2. But so long as the toss is fair, the probability of the next will always be the same, regardless of history. Flipping a coin is a Bernoulli Process, because each flip is completely independent of what happened before.

So, if the Monte Carlo Fallacy applies, it would be useless to attempt to predict the length of a price movement run, because the probability of the next day’s price being up or down would always be very close to 1 out of 2, no matter what. However, are stock price runs comparable to Bernoulli processes? Coins don’t have memory, but speculators do, so the price behavior is not completely independent from price history.



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Slope of Run (Based on Daily Closing) of Lennar Corporation

This projection takes into account the slope of the run. This is the total price change during the run-up or run-down.


The next page takes into account the run length, the slope, and the probability characteristics, to generate some hard numbers.


For Subscribers: More Probability Analysis of Lennar Corporation Bernoulli Risk Analysis

Refined Bernoulli Risk Analysis for LEN :


Companies in the News:

Friday, February 18, 2011: We have news on Fiserv, Inc., ticker symbol FISV. Signs of an over-bought condition have become noticable. Also, there are breaking events concerning Zimmer Holdings, Inc. and McCormick & Company, Incorporated.

From the News Archive: (2/18/2011 ) Bad news came from Reynolds American, Inc., Dollar Tree, Inc., Zimmer Holdings, Inc., and NVIDIA Corp.


More LEN Technical Analysis Topics

LEN Price Predictions

Support and Resistance Levels

Volume Stratification Analysis

Politics and Prices of LEN

Japanese Candlestick Analysis

Momentum Investing Indicators

LEN Classical Analysis of Time Series

LEN Historical Volume

LEN Risk-Volatility Analysis

LEN Seasonal Trends

Back to LEN Table of Contents


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