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Mining for Trading Strategies (Part 3)

I continue today with two more random simulations run on short CL.

Mining 5 is a repeat of Mining 4 (results of which I covered last time) with the same minor change I made to exit criteria. Also as mentioned in Part 2, I am now running the Randomized OOS x3 for confirmation (perhaps two would be sufficient?).

Out of the top 32 (IS) strategies, four demonstrated a lower Monte Carlo (MC) analysis average drawdown (DD) than backtested DD (2007-2015). Three of the four passed Randomized OOS and none passed incubation (2015-2019).

Focusing primarily on Randomized OOS, 14 of the top 33 passed but none passed incubation. Three of the 14 are strategies that passed the MC DD criterion just mentioned.

Because this was not encouraging, I re-randomized the entry criteria, made one change to the exit criteria (see Mining 6), and ran another simulation.

Focusing primarily on the MC DD criterion, 13 out of the top 32 (IS) strategies had a lower average MC DD than backtested DD. Only four of those 13 passed Randomized OOS, and one of those four also passed incubation.

Focusing primarily on Randomized OOS, 12 of the top 32 strategies passed and four of those 12 also passed the MC DD. The only strategy in this simulation to pass incubation was one of those four.

To recap the last few posts, I have run six simulations thus far with my latest methodology. The first simulation was long. This generated six strategies that passed incubation and two that were close (PNLDD 1.70/PF 1.42 and PNLDD 1.98/PF 1.37). The last five simulations were short. Mining 3 produced two strategies that passed incubation. Mining 4 and Mining 6 produced one strategy each that passed incubation.

In other words, Mining 1 was prolific while Mining 2 through Mining 6 were relatively dry. Why might this be?

I am concerned that passing incubation is not so much a matter of whether the strategy is robust as it is a matter of whether the incubation period is favorable for the strategy. If this is true, then should incubation really be the final arbiter? I can imagine a situation where a strategy passes incubation but does not pass either of the other test periods (four years each of IS and OOS); am I to think this strategy is any better than those from my simulations that don’t pass incubation?*

Maybe number of periods passed (e.g. with PNLDD > 2.0 and PF > 1.3) is most important. With each period being slightly different in terms of market environment [whether quantifiable or not], strategies that pass more periods would seem to be most likely to do well in the future when market conditions are likely to repeat (in sufficiently general terms).

This relates back to walk-forward optimization (WFO), but remains slightly different. In WFO, I get multiple test runs by sliding the window forward the length of the OOS period. The big difference there is that the rules can change with each run. What I really want to study are rolling returns (overlapping or not is a consideration) of the same strategy and then select strategies that pass the most rolling periods. Is it possible this could happen by fluke? If so then this approach would be invalidated.

Another possibility is to seek out a fitness function that reflects equity curve consistency. I need to research whether I have this at my disposal and consider what similarities exist compared to a tally of rolling returns.

* — Realize that I don’t incubate unless the strategy does well OOS, passes Randomized
       OOS (and/or MC DD), and is reasonably good IS (else it would not have appeared in
       the first place and/or would not pass Randomized OOS per third paragraph here).

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