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Please see my post in the ASF feedback thread.
I wanted to know if traders who are very familiar with one or more techniques would be interested/willing to take part in a "trade off", one method against others.
Joe is ok with it. If there are people who want to take part, please indicate here to get an idea of numbers. We might need an excel person to keep track of trades and tabulate data. Gains and losses would be compared with 'method' chosen. The best method would be one where most % gains have been made across all traders and all trades. It's not a competition where a person wins, but a method.
Hopefully this is of interest to everyone. It's the best way I could think to compare TA methods against each other.
How it would work:
from the list of 10 stocks, analyze each, find one you like using a method you like. If nothing appeals, make no trades. Submit your trade to the ASF thread. Buy and sell as you wish within the set time frame.
Obviously there are times when a certain stock may appeal on a number of different criteria. eg. a 'breakout' stock may also be a 'momentum' stock may also be a 'candle pattern' set up. In this case you can nominate more than one method for each entry and exit you make.
Anyone?
I got a better idea. Why don't we pick 10 different athletic events and do the same.I really need to know:
1. Can any of these non-systematizable methods stand on its own?
2. What can be thrown out all together?
3. What methods involve a high degree of subjectivity/user experience?
Don't you think that's useful info?
See what I'm saying? I'm wanting to isolate the method on its own.
This is not about comparing systems. Systems are easily compared. What's not easy to compare is TA methods that can't be sytematized, eg. trendline breaks, pattern set ups, elliot wave analysis, vsa etc etc.
I really need to know:
1. Can any of these non-systematizable methods stand on its own?
2. What can be thrown out all together?
3. What methods involve a high degree of subjectivity/user experience?
Don't you think that's useful info?
The 'how' is a different ball game, and I agree that's where the money is made.
That's probably not possible.
But if we had 100 participants, the skill factor across various methods would even out to some degree and become less influential in the measurements.
That's probably not possible.
But if we had 100 participants, the skill factor across various methods would even out to some degree and become less influential in the measurements.
I had an idea for a one-off competition.
Let's choose say 10 speccy stocks (chosen randomly - so that no one is advantaged).
Then a group of practitioners of each of the following methods* can analyze and submit trades (long only) on these ten stocks.... and see which comes out ahead over a set period of time.
*some common methods
-depth reading
-(horizontal) support/resistance
-trendline support/resistance
-swing trading
-breakout trading
-pattern trading (other than breakout)
-wkykoff/vsa
-momentum
-indicator trading (hey, why not?!)
-candle/candle patterns
-gap trading
-your own method/other
You nominate your method, stock, entry time and price, sell time and price.
If "the skill of the practitioner" is your objection and reason for not participating, then how useful is the method? See? Can the method stand alone - that's what I want to know, and so do you! My bet is no method can stand alone. And if I'm right about that, why use a system at all? Why not go the dartboard method?
Position sizing must be a fixed amount and the same for everyone and every trade, for obvious reasons.
Stops and targets can be made with different methods if desired. eg. you can enter on a 'breakout' method and sell on massive momentum spike.
Joe?
You better off having a simple survey of practitioners and ask them what is the average return of their method from their experience and average that over all the respondents for that method. You'd probably get an answer no worse than this competition while saving yourself a fair bit of time.
Here's a better idea:
1. Work for the ATO.
2. Find the most successful/profitable traders
3. Audit them and claim they're doing inside trading.
4. Learn their methodology as they attempt to explain their legitimate strategy
5. ???
6. Profit!
BONUS:
3b. Turns out they were doing inside trading! Cut a deal. $$$
Thanks for the link, but I'm more wanting to know about hard-to-test or impossible-to-test TA methods. Anyone with a profitable and purely mechanical system won't share it (nor should they).Why don't you do this yourself?
State of Trend Following report does something similar.
You would need to replicate their model IMHO across
* Trend following strategies
* MR or S/R strategies
* Volatility breakout strategies
http://www.automated-trading-system.com/state-of-trend-following-in-february/ for an idea of what I mean.
Needs to be diversified across a large basket of futures. SOTF uses 50 instruments from many exchanges.
My guess is the results would not be very useful, and only confirm what most already know (those who have done the research already) about market regimes and discretionary trading.
Thanks for the link, but I'm more wanting to know about hard-to-test or impossible-to-test TA methods. Anyone with a profitable and purely mechanical system won't share it (nor should they).
My initial hypothesis on the other thread was that method would not matter... then maybe try to disprove that. I tend to agree with you peter, but not totally convinced without numbers.
NowThe "how" you mention is the simple process of skewing the numbers (trade stats) to ensure a profitable outcome over time. Every profitable trader does the same things even though they may use completely different methods.
The methods don't matter.
I repeat. The methods don't matter and again, the methods don't matter.
The methods aren't responsible for their profitable edge. Their methods provide them with trading opportunities. Proper trade management skews their results so that they are profitable over time
Have done --- its now in a book.(Techtrader)
As for the impossible to test discretionary methods---how on earth are you going to follow something that cant be tested---worse how on earth am I or anyone going to put it down on paper and answer the myriad of questions generated by those who dont see what I see?
RE READ
Now
RE READ.
Now thats ALL you need know its in a nut shell.
Everything else is UP TO YOU!
A head-and-shoulders pattern can easily be identified and traded. Backtesting is near impossible. That's the sort of thing I'm talking about.
So why do you spend so much time and effort on VSA as opposed to just using a simple MA to find opportunities?
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