tech/a
No Ordinary Duck
- Joined
- 14 October 2004
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I don't need back test to tell me if I buy close enough to the low of the day, sell at the close on an instrument that has good enough range I'd be doing pretty good.
Problem is you can't actually backtest the performance. As the key performance driver is simply your ability to pick the bottom.
Even with intraday data, the best test you could do is to find out what your performance is if you are 4, 5, 6 etc ticks away from the low. And augment that with say a 1, 2, 3 or 4 tick stop.
You can forward test your skill in picking (or getting close to) the bottom - which is basically what you are doing now. Say with practice you get it right 75% of the time. But surely by that stage you will need to add a stop component to the 25% of time where you got it wrong.
And if you can acquire the skill to find the low so efficiently, I wouldn't use that skill on LYC (which is usbjected to company specific tail-end risks - i.e. trading halt any minute). You should just take it to the various index futures...
Sinner.
He guesses it.
Well he tries to work out from depth and a bit of tape reading
where he believes the low of the day is.
My and your personal view (I maybe wrong) is it has limited upside because we can see the issues--as we see the issues.
skc, it helps greatly to know in advance what sort of returns you can get if you can pick the bottom. It helps to know which stock to trade this way (some it doesn't work on). And it helps to know how close to the Low you have to get to be profitable. All these things are backtestable.
When tested, they tell me:
1. the returns are huge if you can read the depth to within 3 price levels of the low on LYC.
2. the returns are pretty close to zero tending negative if you are 4 or greater levels away - in other words, if a low of 1.16 has been already printed, don't buy at 1.19, put in a buy at 1.175 and hope to get filled. Otherwise leave it for that day.
Futures would be a better instrument, as you say. This thread is about how one might trade a stock intraday.
Can you tell what is the degree of return vs accuracy?
I suppose if you have 250 trades per year and each correct pick gives you 15 ticks on average. While an incorrect pick yields a loss of (say) 4 ticks (assuming a stop), you can quickly work out what is the "breakeven" accuracy required?
Now you're talking. That's the real crux of it, and the reason for me paper trading it. The answer is no, not until I have traded it for some weeks.
I expect that if 300% pa and miniscule drawdowns is the result of getting all trades within .015, and I get 4 out of 5 right in every week, then I should be able to do ok. This will be determined by two things - 1. my ability to pick the bottom consistently (so far so good), and 2. what sort of size losses occur when I don't pick it. I have a feeling the odds would be in my favour.
1. my ability to pick the bottom consistently (so far so good)
Cool GB, wish you all the best with this, as the range over the last eight trading days in LYC has been quite narrow I am interested to see how you go once it expands again.
Since your hypothesis is to pick bottom within 1.5c of LOD, then the most logical action is to have a stop at 2c below entry. If the stop is hit, put that pick in the failed basket.
If you know the average return of a correct pick (which really is just daily close - LOD - 1.5c) and you know the definite loss of an incorrect pick, you can easily plot the curve of pick accuracy vs return.
Paper profit at yesterday's close: $2758
Ah yes, let's subtract $55 per trade. [note that my backtests did include commission]
That comes to $1980. Not quite so glamorous now. Still, 4% in just over a week is good if I can keep it going.
The big IF will be when I start putting my own money down. Psychological factors will come into play.
You need to get a more cost effective broker!
Even if you were with Commsec you would only be paying $19.95 each way. A saving of over $15 per completed trade.
on IB you would save even more
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