Quote from Tompson:
Here are 3 distributions for the last 1000 daily bars on SPY for:
close minus open
close minus cubic spline
close minus pivot
The cubic distribution is not normal, I'm not sure why that is. The best curve for a mean reversion trading approach looks to be the close minus pivot.
Maestro, any thoughts on this before I test some trading rules?
Tom
Quote from Tompson:
Here are 3 distributions for the last 1000 daily bars on SPY for:
close minus open
close minus cubic spline
close minus pivot
The cubic distribution is not normal, I'm not sure why that is. The best curve for a mean reversion trading approach looks to be the close minus pivot.
Maestro, any thoughts on this before I test some trading rules?
Tom
Quote from Tompson:
Nice curves - looks like your spline fit is better than mine (MATLAB?).
My test was frictionless but could be reproduced with Direxion funds or similar, given the high number of trades.
However, the equity curve is not great in my view. Something like this could be more promising:
http://cssanalytics.wordpress.com/2...-implied-volatility-vs-historical-volatility/
using IV-HV 75%+
Tom
Quote from MAESTRO:
6. The distribution of the actual price fluctuations around a spline predicted point is always Gaussian with the standard deviation that is typically smaller than a price deviation over one time interval used to calculate the center of gravity itself.
Quote from MAESTRO:
Any STABLE distribution has a logic (set of trading rules) that has positive expectations. For example: if the markets were truly Gaussian then the short option strangle positioned at 2 STD would be 100% guarantee winning strategy providing there is a stop loss at 1 STD. You can verify it for yourself.