TA is also called subjective, as opposed to quantitative parameters, so the results can become discretionary. Although, it gives a chance to look at the movement of price, which helps.
I think, following a pure quantitative approach and not tinkering cannot be compared to quantitative+TA method. The returns can be very different. May be, when the allocation is substantial and one wants to have a concentrated PF, not leaving the outcome, entirely to a set of rules, does sound logical. Risk management too can be based on TA, instead of rules.
Discretion changes things, and results can be compared after exiting the positions, and whatever are our observations and inferences, the same scenarios may not repeat again.
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