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Dealing With Strings Of Wins And Losses

Published 05/12/2015, 01:27 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Three more reader questions this week: how do we deal with runs of wins and losses? What about applying technicals to non-linear (or derived time series) and how do we translate trading strategies to options from the underlying instruments?

Alan asks:

Hi Adam, hope all is well. I was mulling over a trading question, and would like your professional perspective. I have noticed that over the last several months that breakout trades have rarely worked. The current stock market seems to lack any momentum, up or down. If you accept my premise, how does a pro handle it? Do you sit and wait for a better market environment, or do you keeping trying with less risk?

In the answer, I talk about:

  • Markets go through “regimes” in which some types of trades work and others don’t.
  • Therefore, trading systems also have strings of wins and losses.
  • Some ideas for dealing with these string, and how the right answer will vary depending on your psychology and the specifics of your trading system.
  • Behavioral aspects might trump mathematically correct answers. (See my post on discipline here.)

Adithya asks two more questions:

At a recent gathering of traders , I heard one of the more experienced traders describe how to use charts on options time series. Even applying technicals like moving averages ,trendlines etc.

I took his question into a bit of a different direction, and talked about technicals applied to non-market time series, but I think the concept applies to derivative time series as well. Short answer: ehhh… maybe. Be careful. I’m suspicious, but most things don’t work like people think they do anyway, so it’s a hard question to answer.

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While I agree that you can apply technical analysis to anything that is actively traded , options in particular have very specific characteristics – in particular a non linear response to price moves , and a bias wrt time decay , and finally the volatility of option price changes dynamically through the life of the option (fairly volatile at the beginning , to low volatility at expiry unless the option is exactly at the money.

I wanted to get your thoughts on this. Is it ok to apply technicals (and maybe build a trading system) on options? I expect the backtest to work out as it worked on the underlying futures. But am not sure if technicals that usually apply to linear instruments would be applicable to non linear options without any modification.

If I could make text flash, I would. (Well, I could but I’d have to Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) the html and you can just pretend I did.) I think the biggest question here is assuming that a trade on a derivative would work out as on the underlying, but Adithya has provided the answer himself: do the back test and find out. Do the back test; do your out of sample, and do proper walk forward. Correct system testing protocol will protect you and will answer this question for you, but, with subjective tools, it’s not simple to test. Good question and good food for thought.

To both of these gentlemen: thank you for your questions! This show is really evolving based on reader feedback and discussions, and I’d love to have more of them. Drop me an email adam@adamhgrimes.com with any questions you might have.

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