1988
DOI: 10.1080/00036848800000113
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A test of futures market disequilibrium using twelve different technical trading systems

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Cited by 117 publications
(137 citation statements)
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“…Even after taking into consideration the transaction costs, the returns for all the NNclose and NNeMA for FCLO, FCO and FCPO are much larger than the passive buy-and-hold control strategy as shown in Table 5. Similar findings by Lukac et al (1988), Brock et al (1992 and Park and Irwin (2009) support the results. To compare the five models, the base prices of $33.00 for FCLO, $27.76 for FSO and RM1766 for FCPO as of at 2/1/2004 are used.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…Even after taking into consideration the transaction costs, the returns for all the NNclose and NNeMA for FCLO, FCO and FCPO are much larger than the passive buy-and-hold control strategy as shown in Table 5. Similar findings by Lukac et al (1988), Brock et al (1992 and Park and Irwin (2009) support the results. To compare the five models, the base prices of $33.00 for FCLO, $27.76 for FSO and RM1766 for FCPO as of at 2/1/2004 are used.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 81%
“…The estimation techniques employed are as those used in Brock et al (1992), Lukac et al (1988), Gencay and Stengos (1998) and Yao et al (1999). The study tests if one or more of the technical trading rules could possibly be superior in producing greater returns than that of the passive buy-and-hold strategy.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, since the mid 1980s, there have been numerous empirical studies supporting the predictability and profitability of technical trading rules in stock markets. The origin of this new found interest was from a few influential academic articles by Sweeney (1986), Lukac, Brorsen & Irwin (1988), and Brock, Lakonishok & Lebaron (1992). After these three studies, many academicians have pursued their works and published a myriad of papers in opposition to the efficient market hypothesis by constructing technical trading rules to beat the market rather than using the random walk testing.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%