Filters & KISS methods

Quote from prophet:

Quote from peterfigliozzi:

I agree with T-REX. Fact is, there is not one documented case of secret system that worked great, then stopped working once it was revealed (if you don't count illegal insider trading :D ).

So then every profitable system (mechanical or discretionary) should be revealed to the public since it won’t have any effect anyway? So all this secrecy is a waste of time?


In fact you can find just the opposite. LBR group posts their good trades and methods on their website. The same good trades appear over and over again.


The more who take the trades, the more they push price, the more it becomes a race of speed to get in first.

And don’t tell me “you can’t push price with less than a billion $”. One only has to push price locally, over a few minute period to worsen the entries and exits of others taking the execution. So you just attribute the bad entry to market volatility, when in fact it’s others trading your system.

It seems there are (at least) three schools of thought that a profitable system should be:

1. Kept secret;

2. Promoted to all traders to use it; and

3. Known to a number of traders, but not all traders.

Perhaps it depends on individual systems. :confused:
 
Quote from OddTrader:

It seems there are (at least) three schools of thought that a profitable system should be:

1. Kept secret;

2. Promoted to all traders to use it; and

3. Known to a number of traders, but not all traders.

Perhaps it depends on individual systems. :confused:

I agree completely. I believe it's possible to develop a system, then distribute it either to improve one's winnings or to fade the effect of others trading it.

I know two traders who license signals to institutions, and have had the problem of a few of their clients trading too much size and spoiling the system for other clients. This makes an excellent case for keeping systems private or restricting usage.
 
I would just like to hear one story, just one example, of a secret mechanical system that was pulling in cash, was revealed (or better yet, discovered by a "keen market participant"), and then had its entries erode to the point where it was no longer useful.
 
Quote from T-REX:


"The more a strategy becomes profitable and well known, the more it is traded, the more it’s execution prices worsen. Alternatively, more sophisticated participants may catch on to a popular system and recognize that the ones trading it are risk adverse, then step into the markets to fade it, purposely causing others to hit their stops or get squeezed, causing predictable breakouts or mean reversions. Again, a popular strategy becomes less profitable."

Hi T-Rex,

I'd like to add my two cents worth of knowledge about common known systems - In the Journal of Finance in 1992, Brock, Laknishok and LeBaron published simple trading rules for the stock market which had been working from 1897 til 1986. Simply put, they had discovered the 200day-moving-average, buy when above, short when below.
In the Journal of Finance 1997 Sullivan, Timmermann and Whie re-tested those rules for the period 1987 til 1996 - the results had been turned around. Out-of-sample the rules didn't hold up, the edge in predicting direction was gone only the second momentum (volatility) was kept intact. The distortions and the stress put to the rules in 1987 til 1996 was bigger than any-time in the previous 100 years. Data-Snooping, Luck or knowledge of the rules?

Regards, Oliver
 
Quote from peterfigliozzi:

I would just like to hear one story, just one example, of a secret mechanical system that was pulling in cash, was revealed (or better yet, discovered by a "keen market participant"), and then had its entries erode to the point where it was no longer useful.

Do you think Turtles would be one? http://www.originalturtles.org/
:confused:
 
Quote from peterfigliozzi:

I would just like to hear one story, just one example, of a secret mechanical system that was pulling in cash, was revealed (or better yet, discovered by a "keen market participant"), and then had its entries erode to the point where it was no longer useful.

Good question.

I know a trader who did very well in the late 90’s through ‘01 trading extreme daily deviations of pairs like QQQ and INTC. Doesn’t work so well now.

You might say the market has changed since then. The participants are more sophisticated. Systems are proliferating. Arbs are using more automation to find opportunities. Mutual funds and large players are more careful now with their entries and exits to avoid getting chewed up by traders. The public is more risk adverse, and more and more are dabbling into short positions... and getting squeezed.

I have some of my own “secret mechanical systems” that stopped working. How does one tell if the “market changed” or others discovered my system? Probably a combination of both. Maybe it’s the same phenomenon. How can you tell? Lets go ask every trader what system they are trading. :D
 
Quote from prophet:



I have some of my own “secret mechanical systems?that stopped working. How does one tell if the “market changed?or others discovered my system

First I see what you are saying now about purely mechanical systems-- if everyone tries to do exactly the same thing, on the same instrument, the entries erode. Big discretionary funds face the same problem, that's why they set up fake order desks to blow smoke. A big poker game.

Now to your experience with your systems. It should be easy to tell what happened by looking at the entries over time. Did they deteriorate?
 
Quote from prophet:

I have some of my own “secret mechanical systems” that stopped working. How does one tell if the “market changed” or others discovered my system? Probably a combination of both. Maybe it’s the same phenomenon. How can you tell? Lets go ask every trader what system they are trading. :D

Hi Prophet,

when I do a system, I do a 10-year-Monte-Carlo-Simulation of expected MaxDrawDowns. I draw and put back into the sample daily-returns of my single market / portfolio equity-curve. By drawing 260 returns for a year and standardizing the length of the MC to 10 years, I get comparable numbers for what to expect and how much draw down to sustain. As we all know, MDD increases over time and this fact is reflected in the MC.

If a market takes out my 95% confidence interval of MDDs, I start paying attention and when the 97% interval is hit, I stop the system. Neither the 95% nor 97% case has happened since 1998 but you never know :-)
 
Quote from peterfigliozzi:

Now to your experience with your systems. It should be easy to tell what happened by looking at the entries over time. Did they deteriorate?
Yes. The purity of the equity charts deteriorated over time, not uniformly, but in an unpredictable way. Risk increased. Perhaps this is because the market "discovered" related patterns/systems, or because my systems simply weren't robust enough, or had overfit the past character of market. It's hard to tell.

It's not like other participants suddenly discover a new system and start trading it with large size exactly as it was traded in private. It's very hard to pin the blame, except that the system is not good anymore in general.
 
Quote from olintner:



Hi Prophet,

when I do a system, I do a 10-year-Monte-Carlo-Simulation of expected MaxDrawDowns. I draw and put back into the sample daily-returns of my single market / portfolio equity-curve. By drawing 260 returns for a year and standardizing the length of the MC to 10 years, I get comparable numbers for what to expect and how much draw down to sustain. As we all know, MDD increases over time and this fact is reflected in the MC.

If a market takes out my 95% confidence interval of MDDs, I start paying attention and when the 97% interval is hit, I stop the system. Neither the 95% nor 97% case has happened since 1998 but you never know :-)

Very interesting Olintner,

May I ask you what kind of systems you test; I mean daytrading ES or so; how many trades average a day?

Thank you for commenting,

nononsense
 
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