Can a retail trader succeed in algorithmic trading? (Kevin Davey vs Ernest Chan)

They can, but to reach the highest level in this game, you absolutely must have a gambler mindset, who is willing to lose his shirt, pants and possibly wife and kids. If you don't like that idea, don't even initiate the learning process. Just invest long-term and enjoy a normal life.

Stupidest advice I have ever heard. To succeed consistently in trading, not investing, you need to have mind set of people like RenTech crew.

Gamblers eventually blow up.
 
Kevin Davey, an (apparantly) successful algorithmic trader/author claims simple strategy works and will always work.

Ernest Chan, another guru in this field, however, says simple quant strategies don't work anymore and machine learning is a must if you want to suceed in trading. He also says (along with Marcos de Prado) that it is impossible to do ML-based system trading on your own; you need a team based approach, since it is so labour intensive work.

One of the main motivating factor to strive to be a trader must be for a lot of people, the freedom and independence it entails, the idea that you can be succesful by working on your own. What the latter two guys seem to suggest is demorilizing to some degree.

What do you guys think? Can a retail trader succeed in algorithmic trading?
Even if I have to use ML, is it really impossible to do ML based trading on my own?

Thanks in advance for your replies.

Suggest trying what Davey advocates... find out for yourself.
 
Wow! So much talking past each other -- all convinced of their correctness, but in various grades ignorant of the rest of the picture. Like the whole Touching The Elephant -- all convinced that they've got the right story.....

FWIW, I like much of what Chan and Davey have put together. But even they speak in absolutes -- and I'm convinced that they're both smart enough to qualify their various statements were you to corner them at a holiday party...:D

• Finding a decision rule with positive expectancy is a nearly trivial operation.
• Finding a decision rule with positive expectancy on daily data that goes back 20+ years is (IMO) foolhardy.
• Finding a decision rule with positive expectancy on daily data that may be tweaked every 6-9-12 months to continue that positive outcome set is an operation that *may* benefit from pattern-recognition routines that inhabit the machine-learning space, but ...
• machine learning depends on data stability that is at odds with the very nature of time-series phenomena, and
• developing a meta-algo to modify a floor-level algo is *also* a nearly-trivial maneuver -- just google "time-series decomposition" for examples that go back half a century.

In my tick-scalping days, I put T/A up that looked good for 20-30 minutes; I relied on it for the next minute or two. For trend-exploitation, I put up daily candles that go back maybe 6-12 months, and rely upon it for the next week or so. HINT.
 
You are new here, so I will give you some benefit of the doubt. Get it in your head, you can not find algo with positive expectancy ANYWHERE. The only way to get it is to create it yourself.
Ok, wait a minute: Everytime traders are talking about big players and market manipulation, everyone seems to agree that algos are running the game.
So, assuming that this is right - someone stating that 85% of market is driven by them - that means, that big banks, players etc. actually have financial algorithms, that work and are profitable.

If this is true, why is there, after decades of banks etc using them, no market for retail traders, for buying them, even if it is not the best/newest version of all?!

Coders working for banks could make a fortune with it/ at least there must have been some leaks...

Furthermore, you say that one can only create a robot on your own. Why? Can't you imagine that developers, that aren't actually into trading, would like to sell their robot for a good price, when if performs well?!
Especially if these developers don't have big money...
 
I think they are both "right" in their own way. If you look at what Kevin Davey does, it's a little different from Chan's strategies. Kevin Davey isn't looking for any one strategy to be hugely profitable on it's own (or even work forever). He builds a portfolio of strategies with very small edges that have a low-ish correlation with each other, and constantly prunes and adds strategies. I may be mistaken, but Chan is looking for a more concentrated portfolio of strategies that will a) be able to stand by themselves and b) work for a long time (assuming tweaking along the way).
 
Stupidest advice I have ever heard. To succeed consistently in trading, not investing, you need to have mind set of people like RenTech crew. Gamblers eventually blow up.
They're not the ones gambling. They have a paycheck/salary coming in, with full benefits package.
 
Ok, wait a minute: Everytime traders are talking about big players and market manipulation, everyone seems to agree that algos are running the game.
So, assuming that this is right - someone stating that 85% of market is driven by them - that means, that big banks, players etc. actually have financial algorithms, that work and are profitable.

If this is true, why is there, after decades of banks etc using them, no market for retail traders, for buying them, even if it is not the best/newest version of all?!

Coders working for banks could make a fortune with it/ at least there must have been some leaks...

Furthermore, you say that one can only create a robot on your own. Why? Can't you imagine that developers, that aren't actually into trading, would like to sell their robot for a good price, when if performs well?!
Especially if these developers don't have big money...

You need to spend a little more time in the trenches. Algorithmic trading edges aren't like used cars that will keep chugging along for 20 years with a little love - they have a lifespan on the order of months. Some edges will vanish on their own as the market evolves, others will persist but require execution advantages/edges not available to retail - such as speed, infrastructure, or customer order flow.

The "trading robots" you see on sites like collective2 aren't serious edges. Only an idiot would sell a serious proven edge to random Internet anons for pennies on the dollar, and idiots don't develop profitable trading algos. If you have a proven edge, you raise capital to trade it yourself or sell it to a quant fund for serious lump-sum cash and a job.
 
I believe Ernie has gone on record saying the strategies in his book are old strategies that don't work for him anymore. I wouldn't be surprise if @kevinkdog did the same in his book. Seems kind of silly to put strategies in your book you are still using. Both of chan's major publications on this, as well as kevin's, are seminal works in retail algo trading. Kevin is one of the few people with a verifiable record in a trading competition (though we sort of take his word he did it algorithmically). I'd listen to what he has to say.
Both of them are nice guys, and I've complimented them for their contributions, but neither one of them is really "killing it" in this game. I tend to learn a lot more from those with serious (1M+) skin in the game, and I don't mean OPM.
 
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