You don't know how good (or bad!) a system (or edge) before trying it (for real!), in different market conditions.Let's say I have an edge and it is as simple as applying a very clever algorithm to linear combinations of futures and stock index data feeds.
Let's say it's 60 lines of code. A script then generates a "signal" that gives you early warnings of reversals, tops, bottoms, trends and immediate volatility.
Using this and then comparing it to price action easily enables one to profit almost continuously during RTH.
Assume probability of profit > 85% and 10% on account equity daily is relatively easy to do with standard exchange margin.
What would you do with this thing?
1) Keep it a secret, trade the edge and run up your account XXX%, then repeat.
2) Approach a prop firm?
3) Trade it, make a track record and then approach a prop firm?
4) Sell it to people?
5) Something else?
What I have learned is that people won't believe this. Also, fake educators and snake oil salesmen peddling pitchforks, crossovers, and the rest have poisoned the well. It's almost like this sort of thing would have to be marketed with a website, videos, whatever. And even if I did all that, most people wouldn't even understand the concept, let alone the actual code and script, even though it would be obvious it worked.
I'm leaning toward doing (1) a lot and then maybe (3) later on.
I'm interested in your opinions. Maybe one of you even has a story about what you did with something similar.
Thanks.
Not really.
If it is an intraday strategy it doesn't need one year to verify.
Because there can be many trades in one day and different day the intraday chart pattern just repeat in same way. Also different market conditions produce the same intraday chart pattern. If you put up an intraday chart and roll back to like one month, it will include almost all condition that an intraday strategy could experience.So I would say one month intraday trading record is enough to verify.
]No way, Ray.
There are single, whole months that have high flops and flips, whole months where volatility approaches single digits, whole months where the air leaks slowly out of the market balloon. Their intraday behavior reflects that variety very much, and whether your (or the OP's) intraday trading strategy could operate well in those different environments is an open question.
[FWIW, an ATR with a MA set up to mimic market implied vol makes a great temperature gauge. That's another 2 lines of code for the OP -- as a Go/NoGo starting point.]
So did you find a strategy that can make daily 10%? No, so your strategy is not good enough, right? That's why you see market varies big day to day. Because your strategy is not robust enough to deal with market situation change.
A strategy that can make 10% daily is a strategy that is robust enough to deal with (in your eyes) different situation. In another word,his strategy view those situations as no different day to day.
For example , a strategy based on shorter time SMA cross longer time SMA will not be affected by volatility change.