Way of the turtle
Robust Performance Measures
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Way of the turtle the secret methods of legendary traders PDFDrive
Robust Performance Measures
Earlier chapters in this book used the MAR ratio, CAGR%, and the Sharpe ratio as comparative performance measures. These measures are not robust, since they are very sensitive to the start and end dates for a test. This is especially true for tests of less than 10 years. Consider what happens when we adjust the start and end dates for a test by a few months. To illustrate this effect, let’s run a test that starts on February 1, 1996, instead of January 1 and that ends on April 30 instead of June 30, 2006, removing just one month from the beginning of the test and two months from the end. A test of the Triple Moving Average system with the original test dates returns 43.2 percent with a MAR ratio of 1.39 and a Sharpe ratio of 1.25. With the revised start and stop dates, the return jumps to 46.2 percent, with the MAR ratio increasing to 1.61 and the Sharpe ratio increasing to 1.37. A test of the ATR Channel Break- out system with the original dates shows returns of 51.7 percent, a MAR ratio of 1.31, and a Sharpe ratio of 1.39. With the revised dates, the return climbs to 54.9 percent, the MAR ratio increases to 1.49, and the Sharpe ratio increases to 1.47. 184 • Way of the Turtle The reason we see this sensitivity across all three measures is that the MAR ratio and the Sharpe ratio have return as a component of their numerators and return, whether expressed by CAGR% used for MAR or monthly average return used for the Sharpe ratio, is sensitive to start and stop dates. The maximum drawdown can also be sensitive to start and stop dates when that drawdown occurs near the beginning or end of a test. This has the effect of making the MAR ratio especially sensitive since it is composed of two compo- nents, both of which are sensitive to start and end dates; therefore, the effect of a change gets multiplied during the computation of this ratio. The reason CAGR% is sensitive to changes in start and stop dates is that it represents the slope of the smooth line that goes from the start of the test to the end of the test on a logarithmic graph; changing the start and stop dates can change the slope of that line significantly. Figure 12-1 shows this effect. Note how the slope of the line labeled “Revised Test Dates” is higher than that of the line labeled “Original Test Dates.” In the example above there was a drawdown at the beginning of the test On Solid Ground • Download 0.94 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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