StockFetcher Forums · General Discussion · How to use ROI . . . | << 1 2 >>Post Follow-up |
costner 31 posts msg #36795 - Ignore costner |
7/8/2005 5:12:39 PM I have heard complaints on this site that the ROI in backtesting is not accurate. Although this is true, I find it to be a very valuable percentage. I believe the roi is calculated as follows .. Take the average of all winning and losing percentages, and multiply them by the # of trading days in the year. Now although this is not an accurate roi, it is very valuable as a number to compare to other formulas you are backtesting. If your formula does not show a good roi % number, then your formula is simply not that good for trading. I would prefer that instead of this roi calculation that we simply got the average percentage gain or loss. But since we do not have that, I recommend using the roi for that purpose, because that is exactly what it is. ROI = (average gain or loss %) x 247 So although it is a bigger number than we need it is still representative of whether our formula is a moneymaker or not. Of course keep in mind when using this number ...the more stocks your filter finds, the more you can trust this "roi" result. Also before you throw out your filter because you get no good returns, first make sure you have done your best to have a good exit strategy built into your filter. Here is a good generic exit filter SHORTING ... close is 3 percent lower than high one day ago LONG ... close is 3 percent higher than low one day ago Well that is my two cents for today. |
costner 31 posts msg #36830 - Ignore costner |
7/10/2005 11:37:26 PM Do you all agree with my statement "then your formula is simply not that good for trading?" interested in other opinions. |
corsino 259 posts msg #36834 - Ignore corsino |
7/11/2005 12:24:14 AM Costner Your question is somewhat interesting and not "all" will agree with anything. One thing I find interesting is that most filters advertised as magical have low ROI's. Some have negative ROI's. Of course, some filters are based on theories which, although popular, may be faulty. Other filters are concocted by day traders which probably don't actually use them in their day trading. Day traders typically are glued to their Level II systems and just watch which heavily-traded stock is volatile enough so that with good timing, they can get in and out that same day with a profit (actually, sometimes within minutes). So a yearly ROI or a W/L ratio is meaningless to them. I'm not a day-trader but am reluctant to use a filter with a very low ROI, but specially with a low W/L ratio, and usually delete them so as not to waste my time. But also, I'm reluctant to use somebody else's filter unless I modify it to my taste. Generally, I prefer a filter with an ROI of several hundred percent AND a W/L ratio between 55 and 60, if it supplies a reasonable number of picks. I then look at their charts and check to see if there's any news, to try to judge what their short-term chances are. |
costner 31 posts msg #36837 - Ignore costner |
7/11/2005 7:13:31 AM You sound like a guy that lives somewhere withing the bollinger bands of reality. I am more of a swing trader than day, so I do not know a lot about what they look for on there level 2's. Anyway, I feel the same as you about the ROI's. Money management, I will agree is extremely important, but I think finding good stocks to trade is equally important. If a filter shows good gains backtested over two seperate time frames, then that is a filter to include. No matter how much you like rsi's or macdaddys or what have you, my view is throw emotion out the window and use what shows good backtesting results. I have found that backtesting the most recent year is best. It seems the market is a growing entity, and it changes it's mood and reactions from year to year. But I still find it valuable to backtest other timeframes to make sure your results are not a complete anomoly. Especially if your backtesting produces a small amount of results. What would be impressive? How about 80 plus stocks with 1000% or more roi and 70% or more winners and good liquidity -- reasonable trading volume so you can get in and out easily. Yeah baby! That would be impressive!! |
corsino 259 posts msg #36839 - Ignore corsino |
7/11/2005 11:01:31 AM costner Well, most of your percentages are a little higher than the filters I use , except for the number of stocks. I like filters that usually have two or three stocks a day. I agree that money management is very important, but it starts with the selection of stocks that have a fighting chance of going up. I'd rather have consistent small winners and not have to depend on an occasional big winner to save my hide. |
costner 31 posts msg #36847 - Ignore costner |
7/11/2005 7:18:29 PM Very wise statements, corsino. I completely agree. If you are not trading you are not making money. So you need enough stocks to trade with per week. And roi is only worth something if the stocks can be liquidated. So all these 1000% plus roi filters that get posted are often worthless due to lack of liquidity. For this reason I do not use mininum average volume, instead I use minimum dollar volume. Because it is the dollars that count. "Are there enough dollars being traded to buy in and sell out of my trade without a problem?" As I said I use Dollar volume thusly ... set{price30,MA(30)} set{vol30,average volume(30)} set{AvDollTradVol30,price30*vol30} and AvDollTradVol30 > 500000 So this figure above represents stocks trading at a 30 day average of $500,000 dollars a day. I am figuring that if I am going to trade $5000 on a trade, that 5000 x 100 may be a good enough for easy liquidation. "I am not certain that this ratio is the best (100 to 1), any advice would be appreciated on that subject." But I am certain that if you applied this formula to many of the hi roi's posted, they would fall apart do to lack of liquidity. Now you have my definition of what I meant by good liquidity in the post above. A great filter must be liquid. Give me a high roi filter with my liquidity cammands above added, plus 80 plus stocks returned |
cocky_pusher 12 posts msg #36868 - Ignore cocky_pusher |
7/12/2005 12:29:05 PM Are these instructions ready to be copy pasted? set{price30,MA(30)} set{vol30,average volume(30)} set{AvDollTradVol30,price30*vol30} and AvDollTradVol30 > 500000 |
TheRumpledOne 6,411 posts msg #36869 - Ignore TheRumpledOne |
7/12/2005 1:13:13 PM Average dollar trade volume is a great addition to the Stock Dashboard Display: CLICK ON THE MAGNIFYING GLASS ICON: MAY ALL YOUR FILLS BE COMPLETE. |
costner 31 posts msg #36879 - Ignore costner |
7/12/2005 6:20:39 PM Yes they are ready for copy paste. RumpledOne, are you saying there is already a foumula on SF for this purpose? Also, I am a little confused as to your posting. What does your filter accomplish? Thanks for the help. |
costner 31 posts msg #36880 - Ignore costner |
7/12/2005 6:29:14 PM RumpledOne, nevermind, I jumped the gun on my question. By the way, I'm liking those "add" commands, is it possible to use them to add columns in backtesting?? Thanks again. |
StockFetcher Forums · General Discussion · How to use ROI . . . | << 1 2 >>Post Follow-up |
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