Search
× Search
Thursday, January 9, 2025

Archived Discussions

Recent member discussions

The Algorithmic Traders' Association prides itself on providing a forum for the publication and dissemination of its members' white papers, research, reflections, works in progress, and other contributions. Please Note that archive searches and some of our members' publications are reserved for members only, so please log in or sign up to gain the most from our members' contributions.

Trade Detection

photo

 Guy R. Fleury, Independent Computer Software Professional

 Sunday, September 25, 2016

What I see most often are stock trading strategies that operate on the premise of finding some kind of anomaly or pattern that the developer hopes will repeat in the future. He tries to select the best methods he has to do the job. But, it still is limiting in the sense that one is not looking to increase the number of trades but simply to accept the strategy's generated number of trades. As if looking only at one way to increase end results. It's okay, but one should want more, and could do more.


Print

2 comments on article "Trade Detection"

photo

 Vasily Nekrasov, Senior Risk Analyst and Model Developer at Total Energie Gas GmbH

 Sunday, October 2, 2016



>in the sense that one is not looking to increase the number of trades

>but simply to accept the strategy's generated number of trades.

Nice point! If a strategy has an edge, one should try to increase the number of trades to make use of its edge and the central limit theorem.

However, it is often a trade-off between number and quality of trades.

If one is, e.g. a trend follower, one can hardly trade intraday because on the short term trading horizon the volatility (noise) dominates.


photo

 Guy R. Fleury, Independent Computer Software Professional

 Sunday, October 2, 2016



Vasily, agree. At whatever level a trader has designed his edge, he should push for a higher number of such trades. The time spent, on average, to generate the edge can be a different story altogether.

Virtus averages about 1 million trades a day, makes about $1 million per day. Their net edge is about $1.00 per trade, but it is still sufficient to make $1 million per day, on average.

One needs to design their own net “edge”, its origin could be about anything. But without this edge, one is only spinning his wheels, and in reverse.

Please login or register to post comments.

TRADING FUTURES AND OPTIONS INVOLVES SUBSTANTIAL RISK OF LOSS AND IS NOT SUITABLE FOR ALL INVESTORS
Terms Of UsePrivacy StatementCopyright 2018 Algorithmic Traders Association