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The universe was BT Margin allowed margin traded stocks.
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Hi InvestoBoy,
I think it would be fair to say that the results of most system tests posted on a forum are on the premise that surplus profits are reinvested in the system. Having said that, I believe I have seen a couple of instances where a set amount has been taken out annually from profits.
Cheers,
Rob
Re margin yes you could but that’s not how it was used
Thanks @tech/a
Also can you help us understand how tax worked on your trading system? As you traded it for 7 consecutive years you were generating net capital gains and must have been required to pay CGT if trading in your own account or corporate profits if you had setup a corporation to trade through. But the equity curve doesn't seem to show any impact of annual or quarterly tax payouts on capital gains and compounds regardless.
How could you achieve this, unless you were paying tax from another source of funds?
Please tell us for the posterity of this thread, and so we can make a useful comparison versus a benchmark, how it was used.
From my point of view... all funds available to the public, indexes etc show returns before tax, so from a comparison point of view I think it is better to show returns like this.
Initially I funded enough to trade 10 positions risking 10% on any one trade.
This was around $34000 my own capital and the rest Margin.
As equity grew and I closed winning and losing positions the account eventually became self funding.
Each new position was the same $10000 with $1000 risked.
Still using the BT margin list.
It was my opinion that BT had done their research and wouldn't allow a dud in that list!
Don't think they are over stated.
If your wage before Tax is $100K your not overstating your wage
by having to pay tax from it.
You earned it just as a portfolio earned it.
@tech/a I am specifically referring to the compounding portion of the curve.
If you start trading an account with $100,000 and assume you can generate 10% per annum returns, in year 1 you will have $110,000.
If you pay no tax out of that and compound from there you'd have $121,000 by year 2.
Instead if you have to pay 30% CGT on that $10,000 then you'd only have $107,000 to compound from.
Generating 10% on $107,000 would net you $10,700 and after paying 30% CGT on that amount you'd have $114,490... 5.6% less money to compound with in year 3.
Those differences would add up to quite a lot over 10 years of trading versus the backtested equity curve.
If you're paying corporate profits tax quarterly the compounding equation would be quite different again.
Surely this is obvious and I'm not missing something...
The compounding in the equity curves and reported Sharpe ratios etc is only valid if you can pay that tax from another source. If you have to pay CGT or corp profits tax out of your trading profits then they are obviously overstated.
Don't think they are over stated.
Yes again unless you pay tax from some other source.
The curve and compounding component is dependent on not eating into profits.
That's what I said heh!
All the equity curves in Unholy Grails and the one you posted for TechTrader should really come with a big disclaimer:
Only valid if you are rich enough to pay taxes from other funds!
Not sure how that would be a valid comparison? If you invest in AFI, or VAS, sure they show the returns before tax, because you can hold them indefinitely without selling and causing a CGT event to occur. The systems described in Unholy Grails are constantly generating net capital gains and causing CGT events. The compounding in the equity curves and reported Sharpe ratios etc is only valid if you can pay that tax from another source. If you have to pay CGT or corp profits tax out of your trading profits then they are obviously overstated.
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