I've read many times that a strategy should work across as many markets as possible. However, I don't know what that means from a pure numerical standpoint. I have an intraday strategy under development that back-tests well for about 15 stocks - most of which belong to the semi-conductor/high-tech sector with a few odd ones in financial and oil services sector. So, here are my concerns:
1. Is 15 stocks too few stocks?
2. Does it matter that most of those stocks are in the same sector and most likely corelated? (The index for the sector backtests with profitable results but nowhere near the profitablity of the individual stocks)
3. Does it matter that the SPY does NOT backtest profitably with the strategy?
4. Is there a rule of thumb that offers guidance about how many rules are too many? (The one under development has one entry rule, one exit/SAR rule and one rule limiting number of trades/day for a total of 3.)
5. I've backtested using 2 cents for slippage on entry and exit. Is this enough for high volume/liquid stocks?
On a go-forward basis - what parameters should one be looking at in order to determine that a strategy is starting to fail (besides the obvious one of profitability starting to decline)? [The answer to this question is probably "it depends on the strategy logic" but I figured I'd ask just in case there are guidelines]
Thanks in advance for any input/advice you can offer.
-eLindy
1. Is 15 stocks too few stocks?
2. Does it matter that most of those stocks are in the same sector and most likely corelated? (The index for the sector backtests with profitable results but nowhere near the profitablity of the individual stocks)
3. Does it matter that the SPY does NOT backtest profitably with the strategy?
4. Is there a rule of thumb that offers guidance about how many rules are too many? (The one under development has one entry rule, one exit/SAR rule and one rule limiting number of trades/day for a total of 3.)
5. I've backtested using 2 cents for slippage on entry and exit. Is this enough for high volume/liquid stocks?
On a go-forward basis - what parameters should one be looking at in order to determine that a strategy is starting to fail (besides the obvious one of profitability starting to decline)? [The answer to this question is probably "it depends on the strategy logic" but I figured I'd ask just in case there are guidelines]
Thanks in advance for any input/advice you can offer.
-eLindy