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Testing the Noise (Part 3)

Today I want to go through the Noise Test validation study, which I described in Part 2.

As I was reviewing screenshots for data evaluation, a few things came to light.

The consistency criterion (second-to-last paragraph of Part 2) is not an issue. All 167 strategies were “consistent” according to the Noise Test. When I decided to monitor this, I now wonder if I was remembering back to the Monte Carlo test instead.

Instead of consistency, I realized on some occasions all of the simulated curves were above zero. This percentage became dependent variable (DV) #2 and implies profitability regardless of noise. DV #1 describes where [Top, Mid(dle), or Bot(tom)] the original backtest terminal value falls within the equity curve distribution. DV #3 is net income range as a percentage of terminal net income for the original backtest.

I never saw the original backtest fall in the bottom third of the equity curve distributions (Bot, DV #1). This would be a most encouraging result that the software developers never presented as an example (see Part 1). Thanks for not deceiving us!

I found myself making some repetitive comments as I scored the data. On 19 occasions, I noted the original equity curve to be at the border of the upper and middle third of the distribution. Since equity values were estimated (platform does not have crosshairs or a data window), I simply alternated scoring Top and Mid whenever this occurred. I did not wish to feign more accuracy than the methods provide.

Also taking place on 19 occasions was a single simulated equity curve (out of 101) finishing below zero. One makes a big difference since the criterion is binary: all curves either avoid negative territory or they do not. This occurred 10 times for CL (split evenly between winning/losing groups), four times for GC (split evenly between winning/losing groups), and five times for ES (four winning and one losing strategy).

I recorded one CL strategy with an extremely profitable outlier and one GC and ES strategy, each, with an extremely unprofitable outlier.

I will present and discuss detailed results next time.