Quote from DT-waw:
i've tested thousands of different systems. 6,000 trades in 10 years? such systems always, always produce negative equity curves, going straight down. if properly tested.
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Quote from jazzguysoca:
1) What does your expectation/trade look like on ES? (Using your stats, I'm getting about $50/trade or about 4 ticks net).
2) Any execution assumptions that might give you issues in sim vs live environments? Do you enter at market at the open of a 1min bar or do you use limit orders that execute within the range a 1min bar?
I'm curious about your NN topology; I've played with quite a few in my research. Are your 20 NNs essentially 20 different strategies or are they more of a consensus (ie: are they wired in an OR configuration or an AND configuration?). Based on your equity curves, I'm assuming they are wired as multiple strategies.
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Quote from Mike805:
I agree....
I really don't want to be a detractor here, but, those backtests are a huge red flag... intraday systems with proper fill and slippage assumptions AND with a profit factor > 2 are very rare. Anything over 3 is generally subject to very poor fill ratios.
Frosty, I hate to say this, but, your testing process is flawed. You either assumed frictionless entry/exit and/or perfect fill ratios.
How are you testing fills? Are your entries/exits limits? Did you simulate full-tick trade through for every transaction?
Quote from frostengine:
Having traded ES quite a bit in the past, I feel somewhat confident the 1 tick slippage is sufficient. The market is generally tight enough and its not like I am trading huge size. If anything 1 tick more may be required, which still leaves the strategy insanely profitable...
For CL and 6E however I am new to those markets. What are the spreads generally like? How many ticks are needed to realistically represent the likely slippage?