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For those mechanical boys and girls, how accurate is mechanical trading?
Analysing the market is not an exact science, so I contend that discretionary entries make trading work well, providing all elements of a trade are managed without bias over the other elements, particularly exits.
tech/a said:Snake.
For me its purely numbers.
I know that when I have the funds I can take ANY entry signalled by the method and I will have on average a 35% win rate.
My return is 8 times risk on average.
My average Hold will be a year
I could have up to 9 straight losses (4 is the most in 4 yrs)
I have 2 eyeball filters (Montecarlo analysis tells me that the Deviation from best to worst portfolio result is quite a bit.(Over 50000 portfolio tests there was not 1 losing portfolio over the 8 yr test period.))
(1) The trade must be in an obvious up trend
OR obviously breaking a longterm dowmtrend.
(2) The trade must be in a stock which isnt longterm ranging unless the trigger is a breakout from that resistance.
Accuracy I cannot judge at the time of entry so it would only become an issue if I had 9 straight losses.
If your talking accuracy of each component---this is the wrong way to veiw mechanical trading.
If you veiw it from the Blueprint Of trading numbers about the methodology which we can tabulate then for the 3 mechanical methods I use in the last 4 yrs its proven to be 100% accurate.
All are designed to trade long and all do very well in bull markets.
There is good arguement and initial testing seems to cionfirm that a switch to turn the method off during less bullish times could be benificial to the methods. That switch could be an index or an equity curve or advancers/decliners--- Testing is still being carried out and when I get back I'm employing Kaveman to help using Amibroker. Testing thoroughly takes a great deal of time and I just dont have it.
The problem is that all discretionary trades are a singular entity.
You simply dont know the numbers.You dont know winners v losers,nor maximum run of losers,nor average win to average loss. With discretionary trading there is no blueprint.
Ypou could trade it for x trades or X months or years and record these results but the disadvantage is that it will take x time to get the numbers and if the discretionary element is mostly different each trade will mean nothing.
Snake I'm off for 5 weeks as of Midday so sorry I cant discuss further.
See you then.
Snake Pliskin said:Analysing the market is not an exact science, so I contend that discretionary entries make trading work well, providing all elements of a trade are managed without bias over the other elements, particularly exits.
I`m interested in your thoughts.Also the discretionary gang as well.
By Bobby
Hullo Snake,
As every trade has a trilateral possibility of direction, the discretionary entry may well do better then the spoon fed rabbits approach:
I'm working on the evaluation of a discretionary entry based on ebbs & flows of just pure sentiment.
I've found it possible to draw a primitive formula to measure this.
In doing so by specifying values, a hypotheses of repeatable serendipity of feel is identifiable.
The expectation of such could be tainted by ones own hyperbole?
mit said:Snake,
I trade mechanically mostly. My system gives me a buy signal but I don't take it as buying tomorrow but just here is a list of buys.
So for the actual entry I like to finese the entry as every penny counts. I did a short study at intraday buying/selling and found that it is usually best to buy just before 4 so I tend to hold of to buy until then. If it is a market big up day I'll tend not to buy. If it is a market down day. I might buy if one of my signals is actually up or flat. I trade around 100 stocks a year so having a good entry can make an excellent contribution to the bottom line.
I'll also try not to buy more than one stock in a day.
MIT
Snake Pliskin said:Interesting stuff. Care to elaborate Bob? Pretty please with sugar on top
My current answer to this is as follows;Snake Pliskin said:For those mechanical boys and girls, how accurate is mechanical trading? Are your buys forcing you to sell? Can it match discretionary entries? What filters help at the entry stage?
The exit is simply a 6.5 ATR trailing stop. It is a long term system (as you'd expect from the wide exit). Average winning trade hold time is about 300 days.mit said:Interesting, what are your exits? Is it a long or short term system?
mit said:Yes there is a lag although I trade pretty quickly if I have cash and a signal. Again I trade over 100 times a year. I hold for a maximum of 49 days (dividend system). I use volatility based position sizing and if I could in theory get an extra 1/2 ATR on every entry it would make a huge difference to the bottom line. Over time I think you get a feeling for the ebb and flow of the day to know when or whether to buy (I'm actually a frustrated day-trader)
I think Linda Raschke had a similar comment that she puts her outperformance on managing the entry day and exit day.
MIT
mit said:I use volatility based position sizing
MIT
Bobby said:Ok Snake you got me with the sugar
Its early days but what I'm trying to do is segment sentiment from feelings to generate a distribtion of design functions so as to form a theorem that can be tested.
This being only useful in short time intervals.
Bob.
Snake Pliskin said:Bobby,
...sentiment from feelings? :guitar:
BSD said:MIT, a couple of questions.
Where possible (ie an ETO market exists), do you use implied volatility or simply stick to historic? Have you tested this?
Do you adjust annualised vol numbers to reflect your shorter average hold?
Has the recent large uptick in vol seen your positions reduced somewhat? To what extent (rough guess) would you say you lines have been reduced?
How prescriptive are you in this? Do you have a 'wiggle factor' ?
Currently I believe that almost all discretionary entry techniques harm system performance and that near random entry generally does better. It is my contention that inherent in discretionary entry is the fallacy that you are able to predict future price outperformance based on past price outperformance.
Is your entry technique consistent with your strategy’s market concept? When I speak of your system’s “market concept,” I’m talking about the beliefs upon which your strategy is built.
Do you have to get in now? This is a great question for folks who follow long-term newsletter recommendations and those who take trades based on fundamental data. For those trading on a shorter time frame or following a technical system, in most cases, you should take entries as they occur.
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