- Joined
- 3 June 2013
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- 53
Hi Know
Really in-depth post and long running too.
Well done for your dedication to improvement and also for sharing your experiences and issues.
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However it is enjoyable as a hobby and the loss of a couple of % here or there and time is not a supremely expensive hobby.
Plus you have only a few years of data, in a long term 20-30 year horizon, that is quite small.
I hope I have not asked too much
cheers
Hi Omega and thanks for the feedback.
To properly evaluate my performance, there are two time period, that I think should be judged separately.
1. First 2 years, it was discretionary investing, holding mostly cash for a large period of time.
2. Last 2 years - semi-automated trading.
First 2 years, I have significantly under performed.
For the next 2 years, however, my automated portfolio (now ~80% of my stocks), have returned, as of 2 weeks ago, 49.78% vs XAO -1.5%. In terms of time taken to manage it, that has also drastically decreased in the last 2 years. Once, I do a quick scan with my software to see if anything needs to be sold/bought, usually not. Together with some record keeping, 1 hour/month is about right.
I run a different, but also automated strategy in my super, which has doubled in the last 4 years.
It has taken many, many hours to get to a point where I am comfortable doing this and get good results. The hourly rate, given the size of my portfolio is not good. But, you are quite right that it is an enjoyable hobby. As an aside, it led me to develop a back-testing tool, that I am now commercialising.
Also, 2 years is not much. 50% out-performance may not be sustainable. The goal is to keep learning and if I can keep up my rate of progress in knowledge and performance for another 5-10-20 years, I am sure the profits will more than make up for it.
To answer your specific questions:
Returns include bank interest, dividends and brokerage.
No tax or dividend imputation,
I do not calculate SD or volatility.
Cheers
KTP
great thread KTP. Thanks for documenting your journey. Did you design your own software?
Tax is also really important.
Omega
It is pretty concerning if your analysis and back-testing tool does not include standard risk metrics
STD, Alpha, drawdown etc etc
Maybe you should look at implementing these.
More volatility= greater chance of over betting = greater chance of ruin
Omega
My tool supports all these metrics, I meant I don't use them for this investment strategy.
I think it was Howard Marks, who said that you can't avoid all risk, you have to choose which one you are prepared to take. I invest in small caps, so almost by default, liquidity and volatility are risks I am prepared to take. Calculating volatility of less liquid stocks is not something that I feel benefits this strategy in any way.
Without risk or volatility you are not comparing apples with apples.
Volatility is one of the cornerstones of modern finance.....
Hi Omega,
There's plenty of controversy about using volatility as a proxy for risk.
Consensus amongst most well known fundamental, long term investors is that it is not the right tool for that kind of portfolio.
We'll have to agree to disagree on this one.
The risks I do look at:
Leverage - I do not have any, but may add it in the future.
Industry risk - I override my automated trading to make sure my stocks are concentrated in any one or a number of industries.
Liquidity risk - partially, this is a risk I am willing to take on. My personal circumstances are such that it is unlikely I will need to get cash out from this portfolio in the coming years. Still, I monitor my purchases to make sure that I still have most of my stocks to trade out of relatively quickly. Not too difficult given my portfolio size.
Bankruptcy - diversification. The type of stocks I buy, bankruptcy isn't too common and holding an average of 25 stocks is enough to offset that.
Agree to disagree.
What is your corellation to the market?
hahaI don't use it, so I don't calculate it.
After getting off to a hot start, it has now under performed the index in 4 out of the last 5 months. If the next month is the same, I will look at changing strategy.
For this particular strategy, it has not under-performed more than 3 months in a row for more than 10 years. So, having 5+ of those months is a trigger for me.
I don't expect to find a long term automated strategy that will always work, adapting and changing strategy will be needed.
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