No, I don't. Sorry. It would be a great idea though for some sort of intern, I'll look into it. It an also get pretty computationally intense & lengthy (its a genuine distributed processing problem as the number of components starts to increase).
It gets even more intense when we look to solve for criteria other than just being "expected growth-optimal (all else be damned)." For example, most of us want growth withing some sort of constraint. One common measure might be, say, expected growth with respect to amount risked as far better criterion than just what many colloquially refer to as "Kelly," but I refer to (for the sake of accuracy) "Expected growth-optimal."
Such a thing is solvable by the same equation, optimized for a different target, but it gets a little mind-bending for most: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2364092
and the slides to a talk one of my coauthors did on it (perhaps a little simpler):
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2624329
That's all theoretical though, and since I manage two hedge funds, like most traders, I have the day-to-day real world slog of bridging the theoretical with the real world. So much of my time in recent years has been spent on robust approximations which can be implemented i the markets themselves, realizing there is a big difference between the academic world and the trading world (and I come from the latter). So my efforts have been along the lines of:
-How can you define the shape of this "manifold" without going into heavy math, doing it simply, with fair approximations?
-How do you travel through this manifold, i.e. what quantity should i have on at present to satisfy my criteria in the markets with respect to current risks, capital available, etc. and do so in a manner tht doesn't require supercomputers solving very complex equations running parallel! I am i the day-to-day foxhole of the markets and I need robust tools that will work for me there.
It gets even more intense when we look to solve for criteria other than just being "expected growth-optimal (all else be damned)." For example, most of us want growth withing some sort of constraint. One common measure might be, say, expected growth with respect to amount risked as far better criterion than just what many colloquially refer to as "Kelly," but I refer to (for the sake of accuracy) "Expected growth-optimal."
Such a thing is solvable by the same equation, optimized for a different target, but it gets a little mind-bending for most: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2364092
and the slides to a talk one of my coauthors did on it (perhaps a little simpler):
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2624329
That's all theoretical though, and since I manage two hedge funds, like most traders, I have the day-to-day real world slog of bridging the theoretical with the real world. So much of my time in recent years has been spent on robust approximations which can be implemented i the markets themselves, realizing there is a big difference between the academic world and the trading world (and I come from the latter). So my efforts have been along the lines of:
-How can you define the shape of this "manifold" without going into heavy math, doing it simply, with fair approximations?
-How do you travel through this manifold, i.e. what quantity should i have on at present to satisfy my criteria in the markets with respect to current risks, capital available, etc. and do so in a manner tht doesn't require supercomputers solving very complex equations running parallel! I am i the day-to-day foxhole of the markets and I need robust tools that will work for me there.


