Personally I can't find a strategy that isn't massively over fitted that I could rely on to beat trading costs.
Just because you haven't, doesn't mean that someone else, like James Simon, has not.
Personally I can't find a strategy that isn't massively over fitted that I could rely on to beat trading costs.
Just because you haven't, doesn't mean that someone else, like James Simon, has not.
Thanks globalarbtrader,
First paper formulated L/S (0) strategy with the weight rebalanced daily at closing price.
My understanding, I think it is similar to Shannon's Demon. Correct me if I'm wrong.
Appreciate your comments.
What kind of reliability are you talking about? Are you talking about latency?I personally don't day trading because I don't (yet) have a reliable execution. But if I could do the coding stuff and automate trading, I'd set aside some equity for day trading.
Hello globalarbtrader,
If day trading strategies did not exist, then instrument prices would not fluctuate trillions a time per day.
Its about get rich fast, that getting rich slow stuff is over with. Day trading is how you get rich fast.
I technically do day trading as my algos trade several times during the day
I also trade several times a day, but I don't define myself as a 'day trader'
Personally I define day trading as a holding period of less than a day, i.e. you end up flat at the close. I think this is the most common definition.
A large fund can have a holding period of years, and still trade several times a day, and not be a day trader.
GAT
This is the title for the first paper:
"What Happened To The Quants In August 2007?"
I just did a text search for Shannons Demon in the paper and it isn't mention. You have the wrong link.
Of course Shannons demon works in theory, but the question is whether it can overcome realistic transaction costs.
GAT