theasxgorilla
Problem solved... next bubble.
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Niz,
One of the things I plan to implement into the system I am working on is to tighen my intial stop after a given MFE. This is a mechanisation of the trailing stop idea that tech/a talks about. How many discreationary traders would move their intial stop to breakeven (inc. brokerage) after an MFE of greater than 10%?
If you don't do this and the stock fails the breakout then your trailing ATR or MA or whatever else you are using as your primary exit, may never overtake your initial stop and you effectively give back a 20%+ on that trade (from the peak of the MFE, assuming an initial stop of 10%).
ASX.G
What does MFE mean?
I assume some sort of return?
Niz,
If you don't do this and the stock fails the breakout then your trailing ATR or MA or whatever else you are using as your primary exit, may never overtake your initial stop and you effectively give back a 20%+ on that trade (from the peak of the MFE, assuming an initial stop of 10%).
ASX.G
It is for this reason that your stop line should be the greator of either the initial stop (which may be 10% below your purchase price and is therefore fixed) or the trailing MA or ATR stop. That way, if at the start of the trade, your trailing stop is too far away from the price action, your initial stop will provide you with the protection until such time as the trailing stop will have risen sufficiently to take over (hopefully).
would also take out good trades.
This is not going to help Drawdown.
Is it only exits, the part where the trend bends?? Giving back something at the end of a trend is the inevitable part of a trend following system, but I don't think this is the only factor that contributes to the depth of a peak to valley drawdown.
The next market phase could be non-trending and volatile. False breakout territory. How do you prevent your system from digging itself further into the valley 1R at a time. Moving the stoploss to prevent entire 1R losses every time your system gets suckered by a false breakout might be one way (the beauty is I get to test it). Keeping your system out of an unfavourable market with a filter of some kind, like an index filter or a momentum filter for example, might be another way.
I personally dont believe the answer or more to the point finessing relative to drawdowns--- is at this end (The buy end) of a system.
By adding a filter I managed to reduce the average DD from 23.7% to 21.4% and more importantly significantly bunch up the distribution from stdev of 7.24 down to 6. But my CAGR also fell from 18.35% to 17.3%, stdev was about the same. Hence my rubiks cube analogy....in this case it would seem that one can smooth the ride by tinkering with the entry at the likely compromise of some CAGR.
ASX.G
If a trader wants less drawdown then one approach is to take less risk - as you found above. Less risk can be achieved, whilst not touching the system entry / exit criteria, by altering the position sizing strategy. Try 1% risk position sizing rather than 2% risk or take more smaller positions.
I have personally found 1.5% risk to be a good trade-off.
Just a question for everybody.
When your portfolio is experiencing a period of drawdown, how do you know whether its just another drawdown or whether the system no longer works because market dynamics/conditions have changed?
Howard mentioned on the Robustness thread that he thinks trend following (or at least that of the Donchian channel style) worked well in the 1970s and 1980s but does not work well now. He included John W. Henry as an example of a renowned trend follower who has struggled thus far in 2007.
Couldnt it just be John W. Henry's funds are just going through a period of drawdown? Surely 8 months isnt enough to say a system has failed?
Michael Covel in his book goes through some of Henry's performances. Its happened a few times through the history of his fund that he was in the red until October, then still finished the year nicely as some huge trends took off in the last 2 months of the year.
Trend following, well at least is my understanding, isnt supposed to be a slow and steady method. Of course this doesnt mean that adding extra conditions to your system wont smoothen out the equity curve.
While not disputing this, it seems counterintuitive to me.Longterm equity curves get smoother the longer they run---generally.
Greetings --
Most of the CTA firms that used breakout-style systems have been doing poorly lately, not just Henry's.
Trend-following systems are designed to take every signal, losing on most trades (70% or so), winning on a few (30% or so), with small losers and big winners. The smoothness of the equity curve depends on having enough capital to trade many markets, and to have those trades be relatively uncorrelated.
Thanks,
Howard
www.quantitativetradingsystems.com
Greetings --
Trend-following systems are designed to take every signal, losing on most trades (70% or so), winning on a few (30% or so), with small losers and big winners.
The smoothness of the equity curve depends on having enough capital to trade many markets, and to have those trades be relatively uncorrelated.
While the many commodity markets traded would appear to be uncorrelated, readers of Lowenstein (When Genius Failed) and Taleb (Fooled by Randomness and The Black Swan) will not be surprised to hear that the trades made are often very correlated.
There are statistical tests can that can be performed to determine whether a trade system is in a drawdown or broken. Two examples are a "runs" test that evaluates the number of wins and losses, and a "t" test that compares the mean of one sample (when the system is working) with another (recent performance) and gives a probability estimate of whether those two samples were drawn from the same distribution or not.
Are these tests in your book.
IE how to set them up and how to apply them?
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