theasxgorilla
Problem solved... next bubble.
- Joined
- 7 December 2006
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In my opinion, performing Monte Carlo re-ordering of trades in the in-sample period gives No information about the likelihood of the future profitability of a trading system.
However my view is that a system that is able to maintain performance irrespective of whether the trades are executed in Chronological order or not is superior to one that depends on the trades being executed in chronological order.
Agreed. Does anyone know if this is how it is implemented in TradeSim?
In my opinion, it is more important to perform rigorous out-of-sample testing than it is to perform Monte Carlo analysis, although properly done Monte Carlo analysis can improve the confidence that the developer has in his or her system.
Yes. The path must be chronological. Monte carlo analysis simulates different paths of trades.
Another way is to reorder closed trades. This can be done either by using exactly the trades that were produced by the trading system, or by creating trades from a statistical distribution that has characteristics similar to those from the trading system. The reordered trades allow the system developer to see what might have happened if the winning and losing trades happened in a different order. For example, if the losing trades happened early in the run, would the trading account have been drawn down too far to allow continued trading.
What I try to raise awareness of and caution against are those practices that are known to over-estimate (often very significantly)
Okay, cool.
Any idea how Tradesim does this? Does it ignore trades at random, or randomise delaying the start date of the testing period?
ASX.G
Monte Carlo analysis is like giving your system and the same available starting capital to 20,000 people, telling them to come back in 10 years time, and then collating the results. You then have the mean, and also the positive and negative outliers, and the standard deviations for profit, max.DD, number of trades, percent winners, etc.
"Once Ive done an out of sample test it becomes "in sample"
There is no guarentee that future out of sample tests are going to perform the same,good or bad."
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