yahoo finance -> historical data -> download csv. Below is SamsungYes, I have done that part for Portfolio A. But how do I get the data for foreign stocks?
That's not the only issue. For Portfolio A, all instruments are expressed in a common unite of account (USD) and have the same risk-free rate, and probably also have synchronous closing prices and holiday schedules. For Portfolios B and C, even if foreign market closing prices were available, without contemporaneous closing FX and 1-day forward rates, and adjustment for non-synchronous closes and holiday schedules, your historical Sharpe Ratio will be both inflated and inconsistent (spurious).portfoliovisualizer was able to do everything that I was looking for in Portfolio A. Only issue with that site is that it does not have access to non-US stocks,
Hi,Hi there
I have developed 4 equally weighted portfolios, say, Portfolio A, B, C and D
Portfolio A has mostly US stocks (33 in number)
Portfolio B has mostly US stocks and few European and Asian stocks (25 stocks)
Portfolio C has mostly US Stocks and few European and 1 Asian stock (27 stocks)
Portfolio D has a combination of all stocks (34 stocks)
I want to backtest these portfolios since 12/30/2005 onwards. I want to compute Sharpe and Sortino ratios, along with Drawdown % for that time period.
Can you please recommend a free backtesting resource that will accomplish my goal?
Thanks so much.