Cheeky! Give up? I have solved it, friend!
Okay, I think I am breaking new ground in computational finance.
Let
CK be the continuous Kelly,
R be the return over a given period,
s be the standard deviation of returns,
r be the average return.
First, I realized that my proposed performance metric:
Performance Metric = CK * R = (R * r) / (s^2)
should actually be this:
Performance Metric = CK * R
CK = R / (s^2)
Performance Metric = CK * R = [R / (s^2)] * R = (R^2) / (s^2)
Notice that (R^2) / (s^2) reduces to Sharpe squared:
(R^2) / (s^2) = (R / s)^2 = Sharpe^2
close, reduces variance by 1 divided by root 2 = 71%![]()
Help kut2k2 and myself to come up with a generalized approach to rank trading strategies (not necessarily the ones with a binary outcome) . This is where I'd like to see the direction of this discussion.
I think I am onto something. I found a confirmation of (r^2) / (s^2) = Sharpe^2 as a "special quantity" in here (see section 7, "Wall Street: the biggest game", equations 7.4):
http://www.bjmath.com/bjmath/thorp/paper.htm
Continuous Kelly says that the leverage should be R/S^2. When you time that by R, you get R^2/S^2, or square of sharp.
(This is assuming that risk free rate is zero).
Right. And furthermore, I propose that (R^2 / S^2) can be used as a universal performance metric for strategy selection, including any trading strategy, and even more generally, including any betting strategy, such as the one stated in the beginning.
You guys keep arguing about candidate performance metrics which are monotone increasing transforms... none of these can be any better of a metric than the base
I propose the System Achievement Score.Help kut2k2 and myself to come up with a generalized approach to rank trading strategies (not necessarily the ones with a binary outcome) . This is where I'd like to see the direction of this discussion.