Forum Archive Index - August 2002
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[sharechat] Expected Return w/ Tech Analysis?
Bertie,
You ask "What sort of win/loss ratio is possible with good TA?". Don't
focus too much on the win/loss ratio - it is not as important as you think.
What affects your return is the combination of (1) Hit Rate (Ratio of Winning
Trades:Losing Trades) (2) Ratio of Size of Average Win:Size of Average Loss
(3) Number of trades.
Many very profitable systems have surprisingly poor hit rates, with perhaps
only 40% of trades being profitable. You may be wrong 60% of the time, but if
your average win is twice the size of your average loss, you have a profitable
system. My hit-rate is about 60% (40% of my trades are losses). This is not to
say that someone with a better hit rate would make more money, or that someone
with a lower hit-rate would make less. Far from it.
"What sort of average return can I expect on my investments with a sensible
trading system etc?" An achievable aim would be to beat the Index. If you think
this is too easy, expecting too little, or aiming too low, consider the
following :- (1) Most new investors lose money, whatever system they use. (2)
Most managed funds fail to even equal the Index, let alone beat it.
"How closely are predicted returns in Metastock backtesting matched by actual
returns?" Correlations range from close, right through to no correlation at
all. While good backtest results do not guarantee future success, poor backtest
results virtually guarantee failure. One way to manage this problem is to split
your data into two sets. Setup, backtest, and optimise your system using the
first set. Then apply the optimised parameters to the second set. Judge your
system by the second set of results. This approach avoids the potential hazard
of curve-fitting.
"How rigid should one's system of selecting stocks to trade be, i.e. should
you reject a possible trade because one indicator gives a less-than-positive
signal?" There is no simple answer to this question, because it is a matter of
risk versus reward. The fewer signals you act on, the earlier you will buy, the
more risk you will run, the more you will make if you are right, and the more
often you will be wrong. At the other end of the continuum, if you waited until
absolutely everything was perfect (assuming that were possible) you would miss
many profitable trades, and be entering late into any that did qualify. You
would not only be slow getting in, but also slow getting out. I have a friend
who does not make much money on the sharemarket. He looks for trades with an
absolutely perfect setup. (He has also never married, and at 49 is still
looking for the perfect woman)
Regards,
Phaedrus.
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