This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Thursday, 10/29/2020. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!
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Trading the US Election Profiting from Known Unknowns [Robot Wealth]Youve probably noticed that theres a US election on the horizon. This is an event of known uncertainty: a known unknown in the now immortal language of Donald Rumsfeld. In trading, we sometimes observe marginal pricing inefficiencies around these known unknowns. For example, ahead of stock earnings announcements or significant economic or policy announcements, we tend to find:
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Slippage and low liquidity stocks [Alvarez Quant Trading]Recently, I have been working on a strategy that trades stocks with low dollar turnover. The initial performance was attractive and I was liking the strategy. But there were two issues that I needed to deal with in the backtesting. How much slippage to add to these stocks. The strategy enters and exits on the open and while looking over the trade list, I noticed some trades entered at the low of
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Dream team: Combining classifiers [Quant Dare]When you are in front of a complex classification problem, often the case with financial markets, different approaches may appear while searching for a solution. These systems can estimate the classification and sometimes none of them is better than the rest. In this case, a reasonable choice is to keep them all and then create a final system integrating the pieces. At least we would have a more
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Best Ways to Use Momentum [Dual Momentum]There are many ways to use momentum. Some are better than others. Let us look at some of the best approaches. Stock Momentum In 2018, Dimensional Fund Advisors (DFA) issued a report on the performance of all public momentum funds from June 2003 through 2017. Only one fund had outperformed the Russell 3000 broad market benchmark. That fund was the iShares Edge MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF (MTUM).