Reading recommendations:
William Eckhardt: A Chapter in "The New Market Wizards"
Howard B Bandy: "Mean Reversion Trading System: Practical Methods for Swing Trading"
Larry Connors: "Short Term Trading Strategies That Work"
Laurens Bensdorp: "Automated Stock Trading Systems"
Cesar Alvarez: https://alvarezquanttrading.com/
William Eckhardt. 1 out 2 guys who created the famous Turtles experiment. No systems there. But he speaks about timeless truths of systematic trading. My personal favorite.
Comp. Sciense prof. Howard Bandy gives examples of systems in AmiBroker's code. Not sure if they still work, but they inspired me to look into MR in the first place and my first strategies were based on his work. I've read all his books but this one is the most practical in my opinion. Looking back - his strategies are a bit naive as they use low trade count and have very high win rate. Easy to overfit. But he has lots of right ideas / examples of research.
Larry Connors - a famous trader. He is not purely mechanical, like Linda Raschke, but uses lots of formal research to power his decisions. Sometimes his findings still work sometimes they don't. But it is a good value. Lots of the stuff he mentions will have value as individual components of a system.
Cesar Alvarez worked for Larry Connors and now on its' own. He is focused on AmiBroker and periodically publishes research on his blog. It is an interesting read. He dissects and measures individual edges fairly often. Great example of how to do it.
Finally, Laurens Bensdorp. Biggest value, in my opinion, is the overall method he describes. That can be summed up - holy grail of trading is trading multiple non correlated strategies. After reading his book there is a decent chance that will be internalized. The way his strategies are described is a high quality. Decent description of how to look at them together.
In general, don't expect that any strategy published in any book will work. Mostly they don't. Sometimes they "somewhat” work. Sometimes they work, but over market types which are not what we're seeing now and you will feel like they don't work, but they actually do. After reading a bunch of a good ones you get a sense of what a system looks like, gain knowledge / skill required to validate, find something that work but maybe not as great as you want, go thru attitude/expectations adjustments, pickup individual ideas and then finally put something together that has a potential.
I've probably went thru couple of hundred of other ones. Mostly garbage.
Val
"holy grail of trading is trading multiple non correlated strategies"
Put this on my gravestone, please.
GAT