Quote from Rol:
Kohanz, thanks for the interest. It helps keep me thinking about things and not get lazy. I am a Medical Technologist at a major medical center hospital. Working around automated analyzers in the laboratory helps me appreciate the role computers can play in strat automation. The instruments follow programming instructions to perform functions tirelessly. A lot of success in trading I believe is just about being at the right place at the right time, and a human just can't keep up. I mean what person would just sit there for weeks to months at a time with their finger on the buy button, hoping it doesn't turn out to be a "Fat" finger.![]()
Totally agree. Impressive results last week, btw. The equity curve is nearly ideal. You have been running live for just over 4 months now, correct? How closely have you found that your live results are reflecting your backtesting results and how do you perform this comparison (statistically). Do you monitor this relationship (backtesting vs. live) closely and frequently?
Quote from Rol:
I use the TradeStation platform and the limit is 1000 symbols in what is termed their RadarScreen. I don't trade off of charts, otherwise I would need a separate chart for each symbol. The RadarScreen is similar in function, it appears, to what others are doing with Excel.
So you use a market "scanner" to find candidates for your strategy. Do you find that such a scanner (1000 symbols) has bandwidth or CPU issues or is it relatively lightweight?
Quote from Rol:
I have developed into my code the ability to handle disconnects and position mismatches, so that is no longer a big problem for me.
I think I might know what you mean by "position mismatches", but could you please elaborate?
Quote from Rol:
When markets are quiet I am more in cash, but when things start moving, I am slow to enter, but quick to get out.
I think I understand the first part, but the "slow to enter, quick to get out" I'm not sure about. Do you mean that your strat only takes a smaller portion of a larger trend?
Quote from Rol:
My position size is an equal dollar amount per position. This is necessary for me to be able to calculate the maximum number of positions I can take. A lot of what I have been doing recently has to do with determining that sweet spot between position size and maximum number of positions to maximize net profit.
Without going into details if you don't want to - I'm interested in a general idea of what this calculation looks like. Do you take into account commissions, liquidity, etc.?
Quote from Rol:
With regard to entries and exits, I always use limit orders for entry and market orders for exit. I use market orders for exits because when the strat says to go flat, I am willing to give up a few points to do so. There is a bit of slippage in backtesting because it assumes I buy at the bid and sell at the ask, when the opposite is usually true. I am not scalping so it really is not a big issue. If one is developing a daytrading strat with tight margins, I would suggest they assume they have to buy at the ask and sell at the bid to get a realistic perfomance report (unless they are a quant trader working next door to Wall Street).![]()
Sounds like good advice. Thanks!
All the best this coming week.

