I think its still alive and well but only for a few categories of trades:
- v high freq trading, the type of TA you mention but down to fractions of a second trading.
- growth stocks, growth investing is heavily reliant on volume confirmation so it tends towards trend investing
I'm not sure what IB does for its estimation of bid/offer to calc the liquidation values. For larger trades, I think they widen the bid/offer a heck of a lot.
I don't have specific funds for you to hit up but most funds will at least take a brief meeting with a trader that can submit an auditable trade history, with consistent risk and demonstrate how risk was managed for the period. You would need quite a lot of data to back up your profits.
Depends on the fund strategy, some quant funds like and die by technical analysis.
For the macro long/funds they don't use technical analysis for trade ideas, but use it to time their trade entry and exits.
Some brokers use an SPV to put the stock in a then take a fee+carry instead of upfront fee. 2/20 is v high though. Should be 1/10 for these type of structures...
I'm looking for historical data on US Treasuries and other major issuers in USD (high rated corps and supranationals).
Need intraday bars (ideally down to 1min) plus yield if possible, back at least 5 years...
Seems there are very few vendors for this type of data, or am I missing some? Any...
Similar to the research showing the impact of being underinvested and missing the best n-days in the market. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/03/24/this-chart-shows-why-investors-should-never-try-to-time-the-stock-market.html
I got the Firstratedata intraday stocks bundle. Benchmarked the last 4 years versus my company's reference dataset (which I think is tickdata.com aggregated bars) , matched very well and data back to 2010 looks robust. Haven't tried their futures data although will probably use that next.
Unfortunately SPY returns are increasingly focused on 5-7 stocks so concentration is a lot higher than it looks on paper.
You might try a blend of SPY / IWM (Russell 2000) to get some broader diversification.