Quote from Trader13:
There are really two time factors for a cointegration test. The first time frame is simply the length of historical data used for the test. For example, last n days or years. The second time factor is the lag value used to conduct the test. In theory, this lag value (aka, half-life) should represent the half-life of the mean reversion cycle. The lag is either user-defined as a single value, or more advanced software may iterate and report results across a range of lag values. <i>Interpreting the lag value along with the significance statistic is very important. </i>There are resources on the web to learn more about this.
Now, if I were to abruptly wake you up in the middle of the night and ask you to explain the lag variable, you should be able to provide a complete answer without hesitation. Until you can do that, don't trade mean-reversion strategies. [/QUOTE
Emperically, would this be the same as average time to revert to mean in the past ( for example 10 yrs)...
