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Ok, if so yes so that's very different and just highlight the importance and luck attached to a starting date, even with a good system.QF, I'm guessing if Skate ran a backtest from early Oct 2020 to now, then showed the monthly performance for Oct, Nov, Dec and Jan they would be much closer to the actual performance. The monthly backtest figures shown were from 1st month to end of each month individually, if I'm not mistaken.
Let's visualise weekly volatility
The HappyCat Strategy has had it's fair share of weekly volatility as shown in the Equity Curve below.
View attachment 119299
Skate.
The strategy will probably better reflect your actual results if you instead tested the entire period it was trading instead of monthly tests so the suboptimal monthly sells (which also encourages more buys the next month due to zero positions) aren't skewing the result.Let's visualise actual results versus backtest results
The HappyCat Strategy actual monthly trading results versus the backtest results. The same HappyCat Strategy displaying the monthly volatility.
QF, I'm guessing if Skate ran a backtest from early Oct 2020 to now, then showed the monthly performance for Oct, Nov, Dec and Jan they would be much closer to the actual performance. The monthly backtest figures shown were from 1st month to end of each month individually, if I'm not mistaken.
On a multiyear backtest this week was a 5% blip down
I've been wondering how you exit out from an under-performing strategy?
Do you liquidate everything at the end of a certain week/month/year or do you wait for each Sell signal to come?
It could also be built into the strategy like the GTFO trigger if you didn't plan to take anymore buy signals.
What's trading all about?
As traders, we buy a position in the hope that "sometime in the future" we will be able to offload the position to someone at a "higher price" than when we brought it. That's trading in a nutshell.
Humans are wired wrong to be successful traders
Emotions can sometimes be our worst enemy. Successful traders are methodical in their procedure to analyse, rationally deciding a course of action while understanding the "limitations of their knowledge". Good Traders will continuously challenge their best ideas & will remain completely unemotional in their decision-making process. To remain unemotional in their decision-making is almost impossible. In times of "extreme stress" (such as the past week of trading) adrenalin releases, our heart rate & blood pressure increases, fogging our decision-making process.
Skate.
"Any trade, however, is merely a probabilistic bet. Would I attach myself to a relationship if my wife was faithful 75% of the time? Of course not. I have to stay detached from my trades and their outcomes because I know that there will always be occasions when the odds fail to play out. I own my trades--I take ownership for them--but I cannot allow them to own me.
That is very different from staying emotionally attached to the market itself. That emotional attachment is similar to empathy: you're not just observing market activity, but *feeling* it. As a psychologist, I have to be fully attuned to the person I'm working with. I can't be distracted with thoughts about myself, how much money I'm making from my sessions, etc. In that emotionally attuned state, I can pick up on subtle shifts in tone of voice and shifts of topic that tell me what's going on with the other person.
Similarly, when we are emotionally open to markets and focused on them, we can identify subtle shifts of buying and selling that alert us to opportunities. That attachment to the market is vital to pattern recognition. When we lack that degree of emotional connection, we become tone-deaf to the market's communications. Later, we look back on poor trading decisions and wonder what we were thinking.
Emotionally detached from our trades and emotionally focused on the market--that is not an easy balance. The common element is that we remove our egos from trading. To the degree that you're wedded to an outcome, you can't be fully immersed in the process."
It took me years to become detached to the market, yes pissed off by a 10k loss in a day but so different from 20y ago..with far lower at stake then.This one caught my eye. The reason that it caught my eye is because this is the generally accepted position. From Steenbarger:
jog on
duc
I've just been practising my deep breathing every time I look the portfolio over the last week.It took me years to become detached to the market, yes pissed off by a 10k loss in a day but so different from 20y ago..with far lower at stake then.
I view that trading money very differently from the day to day coin.i will try to save 2$ here at woolies but do not hesitate to put 20k or buy 4 positions this morning as my system told me too.once you trust your system to be statistically right on the long term, it geels ok, could these 20k go in smoke sure
Difference between the coin in the pocket and the trading balance is probably helped by the devaluatio of money worth by qe universal income aka job keeper etc.this also greatly helped in turning to pre retirement..why bother
Learn didgeridoo, double gains?I've just been practising my deep breathing every time I look the portfolio over the last week.
Just part of the drawdown stats we say but teeth are gritty with all this sand?
I usually use Firefox but I have no issue with Chrome either.View attachment 119472
It appears I have issues with my Chrome Browser
Posting & responding to the "Dump it here" thread will be an issue until it's sorted. I have no other issues using the "Google Chrome Browser" other than being restricted from accessing the AussieStockForums website.
Skate.
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