I would add a new product 'Rightedge' to the list. I am not affiliated with the company, but have been using the beta and so far looks like it has lots of potential. Like the other platforms listed it supports trading system development and backtesting.
I was a heavy user of Wealth-lab, but found it to be somewhat limiting in certain areas. The pro's of wealth lab are that they have a large user community, with numerous trading strategies already coded in there scripting language. I've taken many of these scripts modified them to my own needs. The big con to Wealth-lab is that if your a US citizen you are required to use Fidelity as your broker to use the software (plus they put trading limits on users to maintain the license, so you must trade 120+ times a year at 8 dolalrs a trade... not so good). I also would add that the wealth-lab script is a bit confusing to me, and doesn't make for the most readable code.
Rightedge apparently integrates well with IB, so I am in the process of converting some scripts to there platform. It doesn't have all the bells and whistles that a more mature product has, but all of the core stuff is there in the beta! The fact that it is a open platform is a big plus. It looks like it could be a trustworthy application for automating some of my trades.
That brings me to OpenQuant. I would love to hear others opinions on this software? At this point I would like to take a look at there platform and see what the pro/cons are but lack the time. Is anyone actually using it to submit orders to there broker (particularly IB)?
I was a heavy user of Wealth-lab, but found it to be somewhat limiting in certain areas. The pro's of wealth lab are that they have a large user community, with numerous trading strategies already coded in there scripting language. I've taken many of these scripts modified them to my own needs. The big con to Wealth-lab is that if your a US citizen you are required to use Fidelity as your broker to use the software (plus they put trading limits on users to maintain the license, so you must trade 120+ times a year at 8 dolalrs a trade... not so good). I also would add that the wealth-lab script is a bit confusing to me, and doesn't make for the most readable code.
Rightedge apparently integrates well with IB, so I am in the process of converting some scripts to there platform. It doesn't have all the bells and whistles that a more mature product has, but all of the core stuff is there in the beta! The fact that it is a open platform is a big plus. It looks like it could be a trustworthy application for automating some of my trades.
That brings me to OpenQuant. I would love to hear others opinions on this software? At this point I would like to take a look at there platform and see what the pro/cons are but lack the time. Is anyone actually using it to submit orders to there broker (particularly IB)?