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Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/14/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Thursday, 09/14/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • New Book from Rob Carver (@InvestingIdiocy): Smart Portfolios

    Smart Portfolios is about building and maintaining smart investment portfolios. At its heart are the three key questions every investor needs to answer: 1. What to invest in. 2. How much to invest. 3. When to make changes to a portfolio. Author Robert Carver addresses these three areas by providing a single integrated approach to portfolio management. He shows how to follow a step-by-step process
  • What Happens When You Data Mine 2 Million Fundamental Quant Strategies [Alpha Architect]

    As we have mentioned before, here, here and here, there is overwhelming evidence that the number of stock anomalies in the universe is much lower than originally thought. Most of the previous research papers attempt to filter out past anomalies in the literature (generally over 300+) by applying more stringent standards, such as higher p-values or more advanced statistical tests. A working paper
  • Podcast: Using creative thought and automation to bypass human flaws with @BMouler [Chat With Traders]

    It was exactly 100-episodes ago when I first had Bert Mouler on the podcast. This week, Im joined by him again for a second interview Bert is an algorithmic trader with a serious focus on machine learning. His trading decisions are driven purely by data, and he goes to great lengths to remove human bias and flaws through the use of automation. While listening, I encourage you to keep an open

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/12/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Tuesday, 09/12/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • There is Value in the Value Factor [Factor Research]

    Equity factors can be valued using fundamental metrics Value and Size are cheap while Low Volatility and Growth are expensive Likely more meaningful for medium- to long-term than short-term investors INTRODUCTION The term Factor Investing reached an all-time high this year according to Google Trends, which is mirrored by an abundance of smart beta and risk premia products being issued by
  • Dynamic Asset Allocation for Practitioners Part 4: Momentum Weighting [Invest Resolve]

    In the first three articles of our Dynamic Asset Allocation for Practitioners series (article 1, article 2, article 3), we focused on the first half of the total process. We specified a universe of global asset classes and sorted it on relative strength with 21 different raw and risk-adjusted momentum indicators, each subjected to a battery of robustness testing 250,000 tests in total. We now
  • High Frequency Trading II: Limit Order Book [Quant Start]

    In this article series Imanol Prez, a PhD researcher in Mathematics at Oxford University, and an expert guest contributor to QuantStart continues the discussion of high-frequency trading via the introduction of the limit order book. As we saw in the in the first article of the series, the objective of electronic markets is to match participants that are willing to sell an asset with participants
  • Support Academic Research by Filling Out The Financial Analysts Survey [Alpha Architect]

    Prof. Richard Price, an old friend, co-author, and Alpha Architect advisory board member, is working on some cool new co-authored research that requires audience participation! Dr. Price, alongside Professors Dipankar Ghosh, and Atul Rai, are conducting research to better understand what factors are used by professional financial analysts to assess a firm for investment purposes when the firm

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/09/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Saturday, 09/09/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • Exploring Our Scraped Options Data Bid-Ask Spreads (Part-2) [Black Arbs]

    Notes on Part-2 The Data Bid-Ask Spread Analysis How Do Aggregate Bid-Ask Spreads Vary with Days To Expiration? How Do Bid-Ask Spreads Vary with Volume? How Do Bid-Ask Spreads Vary with Volatility? Summary Conclusions Notes on Part-2 Some astute readers in the comments noted that analysis based on the absolute difference in bid-ask price is not robust when considering the price of the underlying
  • Trend-Following with Valeriy Zakamulin: Trading in Various Financial Markets – Part 8 [Alpha Architect]

    In our final blog post, that finishes the trend-following series, we briefly review the results of the forward-tests of the profitability of various trend following rules in different financial markets: stocks, bonds, currencies, and commodities. The results of these tests allow us to better understand the properties of the trend following strategies, their advantages, and their disadvantages.

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/08/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Friday, 09/08/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • How to Combine Commodity Style Strategies [Quantpedia]

    This paper develops a portfolio allocation framework to study the benefits of style integration and to compare the effectiveness of alternative integration methods in commodity markets. The framework is flexible enough to be applicable to any asset class for either long-short, long- or short-only styles. We study the nave equal-weighted integration and sophisticated integrations where the style
  • Night Terrors [Highly Evolved Vol]

    Following on from my recent posts about trading volatility over weekends, Im now going to briefly look at trading options overnight. Option traders have always complained when they were too long options overnight, expecting to usually lose money on overnight longs. This doesnt make sense in a pure Black-Scholes-Merton world. In that world the time decay (theta) will be balanced by the
  • Free Friday #20 Time Windows [Build Alpha]

    There has been a recent popularity regarding time windows and it is one I completely agree with! There are certain structural changes that happen throughout the 24 hour session and as a trader it is important to take note of these when designing a system or strategy (or just placing trades). For example, how is my strategy's performance when Asia closes? How about when the US opens? There are

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/07/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Thursday, 09/07/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • Two Strategies you can start trading tomorrow – Time of Day effects in FX continued [Quant Journey]

    My latest post at http://quantsjourney.blogspot.co.uk/2017/09/time-of-day-effects-in-fx.html was on time of days effects in FX and I was claiming that you can actually make money with simple strategies depending on time of day. Below you will find 2 very simple strategies you can play with and make some money. Do not forget sending my 20%, I know I can trust you. I will test these strategies with
  • StockTwits Sentiment Analysis [EP Chan]

    Exploring alternative datasets to augment financial trading models is currently the hot trend among the quantitative community. With so much social media data out there, its place in financial models has become a popular research discussion. Surely the stock markets performance influences the reactions from the public but if the converse is true, that social media sentiment can be used to
  • Best Operating System For Quant Trading? [Quant Start]

    One question that I am asked frequently is which operating system to use for quantitative trading research and implementation. The short answer, as of the writing date of this article, is if you want to carry out any serious/mathematical quant trading research (machine learning/deep learning) you should make use of Ubuntu 16.04 LTS Linux, with a desktop version on a local research machine and the

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/06/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Wednesday, 09/06/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • Time of Day effects in FX [Quant Journey]

    Time of day is critical for trading, it is even possible building trading strategies solely depending on time of day (I will keep this for another post) I will be using the concept of quality and define a high quality market, from an intraday timing perspective, as a market when trading range and volume are high and spread is low. I assume this as a good time to trade as trading cost (spread) is
  • A Random Forest Test For Jumps in Stock Markets Using R [Top of The Bell Curve]

    In the previous article we looked at how one can use Neural Networks to detect jumps present in returns of a particular stock. In this blog post, we build on the thinking established in the previous article and use a Random Forest to detect jumps present in stock market returns. I have build an interactive web application which allows the user to select the share they want to test for jumps, and
  • R vs MATLAB – round 4 [Eran Raviv]

    This is another comparison between R and MATLAB (Python also in the mix this time). In previous rounds we discussed the differences in 3d visualization, differences in syntax and input-output differences. Today is about computational speed. Spoiler alert: MATLAB wins by a knockout. A genuinely fair speed comparison across different software can be tricky. Almost all operations can be coded in more
  • Foreseeing the future: a user s guide [Quant Dare]

    Everybody would like to see the future. If youre a portfolio manager, youd definitely love to see the future. Many posts here on QuantDare deal with the challenge of predicting the future (with Prophet, Random Forests, Lasso, etc). This time, we talk about something different: imagine we are able to predict the future exactly. Now what? How could we exploit this priceless information? As we
  • Modeling Expected Drawdown Risk [Capital Spectator]

    There are no silver bullets for profiling risk, but drawdowns properties arguably give this metric a leg up over most of the competition. The combination of an intuitive framework, simplicity, and sharp focus on how markets actually behave is a tough act to beat. Perhaps the strongest argument in favor of drawdown can be summed up by recognizing that peak-to-trough declines always resonate with
  • Broken Strategy or Market Change: Investigating Underperformance [Alvarez Quant Trading]

    I recently had someone email me about the performance of a strategy I created back in late 2005/early 2006 and traded for a few years. I remember the strategy being a daily mean reversion set up with an intraday pullback entry. I figured it probably had not done well over the last decade. I stopped trading in the middle of 2008 because I did not like how it was behaving. In the backtest it did

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/05/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Tuesday, 09/05/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • Leverage Up When You re Down? [QuantStrat TradeR]

    This post will investigate the idea of reducing leverage when drawdowns are small, and increasing leverage as losses accumulate. Its based on the idea that whatever goes up must come down, and whatever comes down generally goes back up. I originally came across this idea from this blog post. So, first off, lets write an easy function that allows replication of this idea. Essentially, we have
  • Getting Started with Neural Networks for Algorithmic Trading [Robot Wealth]

    If youre interested in using artificial neural networks (ANNs) for algorithmic trading, but dont know where to start, then this article is for you. Normally if you want to learn about neural networks, you need to be reasonably well versed in matrix and vector operations the world of linear algebra. This article is different. Ive attempted to provide a starting point that doesnt
  • The Butterfly Effect in Retirement Planning [Flirting with Models]

    Summary The low current market outlook for stocks and bonds paints a gloomy picture for retirees under common retirement forecasting assumptions. However, assumptions such as net investment returns and retirement spending can have a large impact on forecasted retirement success, even for small changes in parameters. By boosting returns through a combination of broader asset class and strategy
  • State of Trend Following in August [Au Tra Sy]

    Slightly positive month for the State of Trend Following index but still negative Year-To-Date performance, in the double digits. Please check below for more details. Detailed Results The figures for the month are: August return: 0.79% YTD return: -11.1% Below is the chart displaying individual system results throughout August: StateTF August And in tabular format: System August Return YTD Return
  • Volume Filters (Part 1) | Trading Strategy (Entry & Exit) [Oxford Capital]

    Volume Filters: Part 1 | Trading Strategy (Entry & Exit) I. Trading Strategy Developer: R. D. Edwards, J. Magee (Volume Filters); R. D. Donchian (Price Breakout Channels). Concept: Trading strategy based on price breakouts confirmed by volume filters (i.e. volume breakouts). Research Question: Can volume filters improve price breakouts? Specification: Table 1. Results: Figure 1-2. Trade Setup:
  • Want to Work for Alpha Architect? We’re Hiring! [Alpha Architect]

    Our firm is growing rapidly and were looking to hire new teammates (one initially, possibly another down the road). If you are passionate about investor education and helping us deliver affordable alpha, please reach out! We just posted a new job for an execution trader/researcher role. Jack and Yang discussing a research project Please pass around to those who would be interested. The job
  • Trend Following Down in August [Wisdom Trading]

    August 2017 Trend Following: DOWN -1.61% / YTD: -16.60% August was only slightly negative thanks to a late recovery from the mid-month level, where the index was down by over 5%. The YTD performance is still strongly in the red. Below is the full State of Trend Following report as of last month. Performance is hypothetical. Chart for August: Wisdom State of Trend Following – August 2017 And the

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/04/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Monday, 09/04/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • Smart Portfolios: A post about a book, NN Taleb, and two conferences [Investment Idiocy]

    September 18th is the official publishing date of my second book, "Smart Portfolios: A practical guide to building and maintaining intelligent investment portfolios (Harriman House, 2017)". This blog post will give you some more information about the book, and more importantly help you decide if it's worth buying. I'll also let you know about a couple of forthcoming conferences
  • Value + Quality or High Quality Value Stocks? [Factor Research]

    SUMMARY Investors can either combine single-factors into a portfolio or sort stocks for several factor characteristics Double-sorting seems to work better for Value & Quality than for Value & Momentum The combination portfolios show the highest risk-return profiles, albeit at lower returns INTRODUCTION London recently hosted the World Championships in Athletics where sportsmen competed in
  • Profit Margins, Bayes Theorem, and the Dangers of Overconfidence [Philosophical Economics]

    Its the fall of 2011. Investors are caught up in fears of another 2008-style financial crisis, this time arising out of schisms in the Eurozone. The S&P 500 is trading at 1200, the same price it traded at in 1998, roughly 13 years earlier, despite the fact that its earnings today are almost three times as high as they were back then. The indexs trailing price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio sits
  • A Look At Historical Post-Labor Day SPX Performance [Quantifiable Edges]

    Way back in 2009 I showed a study that suggested Labor Day week performance has been somewhat dependent on whether the market has rallied over the 20 trading days leading up to it. I decided to take a new look at that study today. Below are updated results of post-Labor Day action when the previous 20 days have seen gains versus losses. 2017-09-04-1 This shows a poor performance record when there

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/02/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Saturday, 09/02/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • Tactical Asset Allocation in August [Allocate Smartly]

    This is a summary of the recent performance of a wide range of excellent tactical asset allocation strategies. These strategies are sourced from books, academic papers, and other publications. While we dont (yet) include every published TAA model, these strategies are broadly representative of the TAA space. Learn more about what we do or let AllocateSmartly help you follow these strategies in
  • Improving Your Sharpe Ratio by Adding Additional Strategies [Geodesic Edge]

    Identifying and building a portfolio of uncorrelated trading strategies is the main aim of many quantitative hedge funds. Given that one would like to add a new strategy to an existing set of strategies, what is the marginal gain the can be expected over the status quo? In addition, how can one optimize the Sharpe ratio of this new set of strategies by allocating capital between different

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

Quantocracy’s Daily Wrap for 09/01/2017

This is a summary of links featured on Quantocracy on Friday, 09/01/2017. To see our most recent links, visit the Quant Mashup. Read on readers!

  • Federal Regulations and Stock Market Returns [CXO Advisory]

    Do changes in the U.S. federal regulatory burden predict U.S. stock market returns? To check, we consider two measures of the regulatory burden: Annual number of pages in the Federal Register (FR) during 1936-2016 in which all newly proposed rules are published along with final rules, executive orders, and other agency noticesprovides a sense of the flow of new regulations issued
  • Trend-Following with Valeriy Zakamulin: Trading the S&P 500 Index (Part 7) [Alpha Architect]

    The Standard and Poors (S&P) 500 index is a value-weighted stock index based on the market capitalizations of 500 large companies in the US. This index was introduced in 1957 and intended to be a representative sample of leading companies in leading industries within the US economy. Stocks in the index are chosen for market size, liquidity, and industry group representation. The S&P 500

Filed Under: Daily Wraps

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