There was a large thread on this a few years back:
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showt...erpage=6&highlight=cointegration&pagenumber=1
nitro
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showt...erpage=6&highlight=cointegration&pagenumber=1
nitro
Quote from lynx2004:
Yes I agree that the pair sp500 vs R2K seems to work for daytrading (or intraday changes in spread)...would you say that the pair will work for multi-day/multi-week timeframes? I find it that ER2 (the Russell electronic future) doesn't have much depth (size) to trade intraday to scale up in size. I haven't looked into the ETF for R2K...does it have decent volume?
Quote from nitro:
There was a large thread on this a few years back:
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showt...erpage=6&highlight=cointegration&pagenumber=1
nitro
Quote from stephencrowley:
When you get into timeframes of days and weeks you probably only want to use cointegration based pairs as correlation is only useful for short timescales.
Quote from lynx2004:
that's what I thought... i.e., macro moves and sector rotations would come into play (small cap vs large cap) making that spread trade more a macro view than correlation.
Can you give me an example of cointegration based pair?
Quote from BeTheSparrow:
http://www.pairstrader.com/
Mark Whistler is your man. Tell him Indiana Joe sent you.
)Quote from RedManPlus:
You have created an artificial standard for defining a tradeable pair...
That it must satisfy the term "cointegrated"...
Which, frankly, I couldn't care less exactly specifically what it means in statistics...
Because I trade and follow about 400 highly corelated securities...
And have more action and profits than I can possibly trade at this time.
There is a miguided tendency here...
To equate power with complexity.
Complexity rarely results in powerful strategies...
But it sure keeps the "rocket scientists" among us occupied.
rm+
Quote from yobo:
So, let me get this straight please. All you do is open up an excel sheet..
Quote from c0in:
The thing is that cointegration is a way to define a longer term relationship between stocks.
In THEORY selecting a cointegrated pair of stocks is the right way to do it, because as someone posted early on this topic a stock is an integrated time series... therefore non-stationary, and a way to transform 2 integrated time series into a non-integrated one is combining by taking the ratio... hence you've got yourself a mean-reverting pair which is market neutral...
The way i see it cointegration is better for longer term pairs and i prefer to use correlation between stock for day-trading (as even tough in theory it's not the "right" way to do)
I prefer using the johansen method even tough it's a bit more complicated and there is an easy way to code it into excel, i've done it and didn't have to program vba (for those interested try downloading this add-in http://digilander.libero.it/foxes/SoftwareDownload.htm)
What i am trying to say is that cointegration is a much more robust way to trading pairs especially for the long term trader, however depending on your style and time-frame using correlation isn't a bad approach (it's much easier and faster as well)
And please don't buy the mark whistler's book, it's just awful...