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{{helpme}} Please guide me, as I would love to have more reviews and guidance regarding this topic. As this is a valuable topic for the financial world. Sincere thanks once more..
- Frankly, it reads more like an essay than an encyclopedia article.
- In addition, I have some concerns about the content. You say:
- Intermarket analysis can be though of as a form of fundamental analysis
- yet it sounds more like technical analysis than fundamental analysis.
- The following statement:
- Hence, intermarket market analysis can be though of as a type of instantaneous fundamental analysis and is not really meant to work on a tick by tick basis. It gives you a general bias and direction.
- is an assertion, but is not obvious, nor supported.
- Some statements are unintelligible:
- There are many approaches to intermarket analysis like mechanical, rule based (while not mechanical via a different angle).
- Many statements are assertions without a reference:
- The most widely accepted correlation is the inverse correlation between stock prices and interest rates;
- (Not to mention that it isn't true. There is a far more widely accepted correlation, that between bond prices and interest rates.)
- This isn't even a sentence:
- A really simple concept for Intermarket based systems.
- I don't feel it is suitable, nor even easily correctable.--SPhilbrickT 22:42, 7 February 2011 (UTC)
Sincere thanks for your guidance, shall look into the matter. Please give a week or so, please.. Moreover, if it is possible to move it back to my own userspace to make it a better article before going live.. please do so.. Sincere thanks and apologies once more..