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hlwiener@erols.com  
#1 Posted : Thursday, January 4, 2007 10:54:40 AM(UTC)
hlwiener@erols.com

Rank: Newbie

Posts: 3

As a new member of this group, I thought I would try out the analysis
program on a stock of current interest: Stratasys (which was an
Investor Advisory Service recommendation in December 2006).   Strangely, a statement on one of the pages read as follows:  "The minimum sales or earnings growth rate for a company of this size should be about 15.1%;
20.1016767485214% is desirable."  That response makes little or no sense, and at the least cannot be justified mathematically.

I think that you would be well advised to have someone with a quantitative background check over some of your methods.

LARRY WIENER

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sally.an  
#2 Posted : Thursday, January 4, 2007 12:53:01 PM(UTC)
sally.an

Rank: Member

Posts: 23

thank you for report this problem in takestock beta release, we will look into it and fix the bug shortly.
sally.an  
#3 Posted : Thursday, January 4, 2007 1:07:52 PM(UTC)
sally.an

Rank: Member

Posts: 23

Larry,

Here is the explaination for the response you saw in growth page of takestock on ticker SSYS:

This company is a small company (TTM sales
If you need further information please feel free to post more on this thread.

Thank you very much.
jncraig  
#4 Posted : Thursday, January 4, 2007 2:03:06 PM(UTC)
jncraig

Rank: Advanced Member

Posts: 561

Larry,

You said: I think that you would be well advised to have someone with a quantitative background check over some of your methods.

I can't tell if you are referring simply to the number formatting error, or to a more general objection to Take Stock's methods. If it's the latter, could you expand on the comment a little? It is my impresssion that Take Stock is a pretty faithful implementation of the approach that Ellis Traub described in his Take Stock book. If you like, I can ask Ellis to comment on the approach and the judgments made by Take Stock.

Either way, thanks for the comment. It certainly will lead to a better product.
Joe
hlwiener@erols.com  
#5 Posted : Friday, January 5, 2007 10:43:10 AM(UTC)
hlwiener@erols.com

Rank: Newbie

Posts: 3

Sally and Joe:  No, it was my response to the program's presenting
numbers that didn't make any sense.  I presume that the program followed

Ellis's methods, but it was the presentation of the computed data that
I objected to.  Things that catch my attention include the use of
too many significant figures in presenting computed results, erroneous
interpretation of data, and incorrect application of the term "law of large numbers."

Larry Wiener


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