Quote from anesthesiaman:
There are a few points that I think are important enough for me to butt in:
1. I was looking for a method to determine if my trading results were due to chance alone and not skill (i.e. Was I just lucky I did 7.5% during 3 difficult summer months?). Therefore any formula that incorporates std deviation I believe is the correct answer. I thank the several gentlemen who have provided what I think are good solutions to this question.
2. Although drawdowns are not included in van tharps formula (or any formula mentioned so far), it is not what I was looking for initially. Drawdowns are very important but with my drawdowns averaging from 0% - 10% (cost basis of trade in denominator not total trading capital), I am not too concerned about this. In fact, from what I've read the hedge fund, CTA, etc. pros have average drawdowns of about 8% with some going as high as 13% (but this was data in 2005). I assume my drawdowns are still not far off from from the pros. In the future and after I have determined the probability of my success as being due to a bunch of lucky guesses (or even dare I say due to skill), then I would like to incorporate drawdowns because that is a measurement of risk which I feel I need to minimize to improve trading...I'm not sure... Is it alpha?
3. Correct me if I'm wrong, but van tharps formula assumes a normal distribution of trading results. I have shown that trading results are in fact normally distributed in a previous post of mine. If the data being analyzed are not normally distributed, then van tharps formula probably would not be accurate. Therefore running a random trading simulation on ES to prove van tharps formula true doesn't seem to make sense to me. But then again I only have a few stats classes under my belt.