If I was backtesting an es system which used limits, I would never count a trade as filled until the price trades through. Man those lines are getting long.
- is that I think both approaches (follow through/no follow through) are not going to mirror real life, and I'd think that it would be more fair to say, if it did actually hit that price, I will count it. Otherwise, it seems more arbitrary, at least in my way of thinking.You got it JPB, That's exactly right. Hey, you want to sell that scalping system? That's all I do is scalp, and I know darn well there are computers out there doing exactly what I and about a half a million other traders are doing.Originally posted by JPB
When I've been testing, I've used worst case- that is, filled on the stop if it trades there at all (if using hard stops with IB this is the case 99% of the time), and not filled on the limit entry or limit exit unless it trades through. It makes a huge difference in scalping systems. One system I was testing goes from about $2,000/contract in three months to $18,000/contract over the same time period, depending on how you count the fills. I'd rather be pleasantly surprised with real world testing then horribly dissapointed.
-JPB
Originally posted by profitseer
You got it JPB, That's exactly right. Hey, you want to sell that scalping system? That's all I do is scalp, and I know darn well there are computers out there doing exactly what I and about a half a million other traders are doing.
Just curious, what's the max drawdown? You have it broken down into say max profit max drawdown per 100 r/ts?
Oh by the way, just to make matters worse, there's also the chance that if you were in there with any size it wouldn't have traded through!