Quantitative Trading. Ernest P. Chan

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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_c8372fb7-11d7-5797-bd3c-200d64b3604a">Example 7.1), but it is much simpler if we just demand that our model deliver good performance on recent data.

      Does the Strategy Suffer from Data-Snooping Bias?

      If you build a trading strategy that has 100 parameters, it is very likely that you can optimize those parameters in such a way that the historical performance will look fantastic. It is also very likely that the future performance of this strategy will look nothing like its historical performance and will turn out to be very poor. By having so many parameters, you are probably fitting the model to historical accidents in the past that will not repeat themselves in the future. Actually, this so-called data-snooping bias is very hard to avoid even if you have just one or two parameters (such as entry and exit thresholds), and I will leave the discussion on how to minimize its impact to Chapter 3. But, in general, the more rules the strategy has, and the more parameters the model has, the more likely it is going to suffer data-snooping bias. Simple models are often the ones that will stand the test of time. (See the sidebar on my views on artificial intelligence and stock picking.)

      ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND STOCK PICKING1

      There was an article in the New York Times a short while ago about a new hedge fund launched by Mr. Ray Kurzweil, a pioneer in the field of artificial intelligence. (Thanks to my fellow blogger, Yaser Anwar, who pointed it out to me.) According to Kurzweil, the stock-picking decisions in this fund are supposed to be made by machines that “… can observe billions of market transactions to see patterns we could never see” (quoted in Duhigg, 2006).

      While I am certainly a believer in algorithmic trading, it is a lot more difficult to successfully apply artificial intelligence to trading.

      This is not to say that no methods based on AI will work in prediction. The ones that work for me are usually characterized by these properties:

       The targets are nonreflexive—targets that will not change their values in response to too many people successfully predicting them. If returns can be predicted, returns will change in response to the prediction. On the other hand, if weather can be predicted, weather will not change in response. Yet accurate weather prediction can benefit agricultural futures traders. Examples of financial targets that are nonreflexive include earnings surprises and nonfarm payroll surprises, both of which my research team has been successful in predicting (see predictnow.ai/blog/us-nonfarm-employment-prediction-using-riwi-corp-alternative-data/ for the latter).

       The features (predictors) that are used as input for predictions are meaningful, numerous, and carefully scrubbed and engineered. For example many fundamental stock databases have embedded look-ahead bias because they report “restated” financials, not “point-in-time” financials. This look-ahead bias will make the backtest looks great, but will cause live trading performance to be much worse.

       The prediction is applied to private instead of public targets. For example, instead of predicting the returns of SPY, AI should be used to predict whether your proprietary trading signals will be profitable. This way, you can avoid competing with many of the world's best financial machine learners in predicting the exact same target. This application of AI is called metalabeling. See how we applied metalabeling successfully at predictnow.ai/blog/what-is-the-probability-of-profit-of-your-next-trade-introducing-predictnow-ai/.

      Does the Strategy “Fly under the Radar” of Institutional Money Managers?

      Finding prospective quantitative trading strategies is not difficult. There are:

       Business school and other economic research websites.

       Financial websites and blogs focusing on the retail investors.

       Trader forums where you can exchange ideas with fellow traders.

       Twitter!

      After you have done a sufficient amount of Net surfing or scrolling through your Twitter feed, you will find a number of promising trading strategies. Whittle them down to just a handful, based on your personal circumstances and requirements, and by applying the screening criteria (more accurately described as healthy skepticism) that I listed earlier:

       How much time do you have for babysitting your trading programs?

       How good a programmer are you?

       How much capital do you have?

       Is your goal to earn steady monthly income or to strive for a large, long-term capital gain?

      Even before doing an in-depth backtest of the strategy, you can quickly filter out some unsuitable strategies if they fail one or more of these tests:

       Does it outperform a benchmark?

       Does it have a high enough Sharpe ratio?

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