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Historical Testing
Thu, Jun 15 2006, 14:12 GMT
by Scott Owens
FX Engines
Risk assessment is a critical element of
money management. To gauge risk in advance of live trading,
sophisticated investors employ a historical testing system. However,
not all historical systems are capable of delivering complete risk
assessments, and choosing the wrong tool could lead to poor live
trading results.
Content
ANALYSIS
- Use historical testing as a risk assessment tool.
- Learn how historical testing works and can be optimized.
- Understand the potential pitfalls of historical testing.
ACTION
- Test your systems to get baseline metrics for risk performance.
- Optimize your systems to minimize drawdowns and consecutive losses.
- Trade your systems live with a few caveats about historical testing.
RELATED MATERIAL
- Test-drive FX Engines for free online at www.fxengines.com to see
the power of system building, system testing, and system automation.
About this Report
The Forex Report is a periodic publication that
investigates advanced strategies for superior trading performance in
the foreign exchange markets. These reports utilize advanced
statistical and econometric modeling techniques to create new insight
into the trading strategy of the average trader. This Core Concept
Brief, Historical Testing, is intended for traders with all levels of
forex trading experience and technical analysis understanding.
To learn more about The Forex Report or to register for delivery of
all future reports by email, including Case Studies & Data Briefs,
please visit
www.fxengines.com
Analysis
Historical testing is one of the most
powerful tools in the trader’s arsenal. Using a large amount of
historical data allows the trader to build systems that are
fundamentally sound and expand upon them. Along with the benefits of
historical tests come a few warnings about the dangers of using
historical results irresponsibly.ASSESSING RISKEach time a trader places an order, a number of factors combine to
form a risk profile for that particular trade. Chief among these
factors are position size, volatility, drawdown potential, and recent
events. For a trader with a long history of live trading experience
with a particular system, these dynamics are well known. But the trader
who deploys a new system usually does so without the advantage of this
live trading perspective. For these traders, historical and live tests
are the best substitutes for actual trades.
HISTORICAL TESTSHistorical tests, in particular, provide a rich analytic framework
for ascertaining a system’s ability to cope with the factors that
influence risk. A historical test is a tic-by-tic re-enactment of a
trading system’s performance over time. The best systems, like the one
offered by FX Engines, use multiple years of tic data, employ that data
in a real re-enactment with real trading constraints, and work in a way
that the trader can replicate in a real-time, real-money account.
A good historical test provides a wealth of data which must be
scrutinized by the trader to identify patterns that can be used
advantageously in further optimized tests. The most telling metrics are
net pips, maximum drawdown, consecutive losses, and success rate. These
metrics give the trader enough information to make a rapid
determination of the system’s worth. If the system is obviously bad,
another direction can be chosen. If the system is good or looks to have
potential, further scrutiny is needed.
The statistics of a back test are convenient, quick ways to gauge a
system’s value, but there is no richer data to mine than the trades
themselves. By looking at each trade the trader can get an idea of what
happened, even with only a handful of data points. Using this data and
the metrics from the test, a course for system optimization can be
devised.
In some cases the methods for optimizing a system are obvious –
adjust a stop, change an exit signal, change the entry schedule, etc.
In other cases the methods are not so clear, and that’s when an
automated optimizing system is of tremendous value. FX Engines, in
particular, has such a tool, the Back Test Multiplier. This tool takes
a number of different engines, breaks them down into their component
parts, then recombines them into many more engines. This method creates
systems that the trader might not have had the time or creativity to
discover otherwise.
Once a system has been created and optimized through historical
tests, a period of live testing is required. Only after verifying the
conditions predicted by the historical test should a system be traded
in a real account. Even then, real trades can deviate from the
historical trades in many ways...
Published on
Thu, Jun 15 2006, 14:28 GMT
FX Engines
http://www.fxengines.com | fxengines@fxengines.com
Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure
The information contained in this report is represented without warranty or any statement of its veracity. The contents of this report are intended to stimulate thinking on issues related to trading forex. This report does not suggest any particular action that could be utilized in live trading for profit or loss.
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