OmniTrader Professional Forum OmniTrader Professional Forum
forums calendars search
today this week
 
register logon control panel Forum Rules
You are currently browsing as a guest.
You should logon to access more features
A Self-Moderated Community - ALL MEMBERS, PLEASE READ!
Vote for Members who contribute the most to your trading, and help us moderate content within the Forums.


  Current location        Thread information  
OmniTrader Professional Forum
OmniTrader Pro General Discussion
Equity Smoothness and Risk-Adjusted Performance
Last Activity 2/23/2025 4:01 AM
4 replies, 630 viewings

Jump to page : 1
Now viewing page 1 [25 messages per page]
 
back reply
Printer friendly version

^ Top
Frank Birch

Veteran
1002525
Posts: 171

Joined: 3/25/2006
Location: UK

User Profile
 
Subject : Equity Smoothness and Risk-Adjusted Performance
Posted : 3/5/2024 2:40 PM
Post #32414

Hi to all,

Its been a fantastic week and the indexes are in free fall even better since early session.
But whilst the markets have tanked ive been thinking along the idea of new metrics to use in testing.
as of now we just use say BT/FT, ROI/WDD and so forth.
I have come up with this formula to create a combined smooth equity curve?
Its clever i mean clever, take the old formulas and just use this one your BT/FT? food for thought.
Here's the explanation in detail.

Formula.



This formula is a simplified representation that aims to balance the contribution of positive performance indicators (Sharpe Ratio, Sortino Ratio, Win Rate, and Reward-to-Risk Ratio) against the negatives (Max Drawdown and Standard Deviation of Returns). The constants and denominators in this formula are arbitrary and could be adjusted based on specific trading objectives and risk tolerance.

Detailed Explanation and Justification:
Sharpe and Sortino Ratios:
These ratios measure risk-adjusted returns. A higher Sharpe Ratio indicates better performance per unit of risk, but it considers both upside and downside volatility. The Sortino Ratio, on the other hand, focuses only on downside risk, offering a clearer view of the negative volatility. Including both provides a balanced perspective on how well the strategy compensates for both overall and downside risks.
Max Drawdown and Standard Deviation of Returns:
Max Drawdown measures the largest peak-to-trough decline in the strategy's value, offering insight into potential losses. A lower Max Drawdown is preferable for a smoother equity curve. The Standard Deviation of Returns indicates the volatility of returns; lower values suggest more predictability and stability in performance. Penalizing the Smoothness Score for higher values of these metrics encourages strategies that are less prone to large fluctuations and losses.
Win Rate and Reward-to-Risk Ratio:
The Win Rate reflects the percentage of trades that are profitable. A higher Win Rate, when combined with a favorable Reward-to-Risk Ratio (the average profit of winning trades relative to the average loss of losing trades), suggests a strategy that consistently generates profits over losses. Multiplying these factors (normalized by dividing the product by 10 for scale adjustment) rewards strategies that not only win often but also manage losses effectively to ensure overall profitability.
Why This Approach Works:
The formula's effectiveness lies in its holistic approach, considering both the performance and risk aspects of a trading strategy. By rewarding higher risk-adjusted returns and penalizing volatility and large drawdowns, it promotes strategies that are likely to achieve smoother equity growth. This approach recognizes the importance of not just maximizing returns, but doing so in a way that is consistent, reliable, and aligned with the trader's risk tolerance.

Regards

Frank Birch

[Edited by Frank Birch on 3/5/2024 2:42 PM]

Attached file : New Formula.png (23KB - 273 downloads)

^ Top
MikeB

Member

Posts: 11

Joined: 4/7/2020
Location: Auckland NZ

User Profile
 
Subject : Rhinohull(10) change from up (blue) to Red (down)
Posted : 6/1/2024 5:08 AM
Post #32422 - In reply to #32414

can I hvae the omniscrip for a trade plan exit

see long signal I want to exit when the RhinoHull(10) changes from blue to red
Attached file : Capture.JPG (11KB - 81 downloads)
Attached file : Capture.JPG (11KB - 80 downloads)

^ Top
MikeB

Member

Posts: 11

Joined: 4/7/2020
Location: Auckland NZ

User Profile
 
Subject : Rhinohull(10) change from up (blue) to Red (down)
Posted : 6/1/2024 5:11 AM
Post #32423 - In reply to #32414

can I hvae the omniscrip for a trade plan exit

see long signal I want to exit when the RhinoHull(10) changes from blue to red
Attached file : Capture.JPG (11KB - 82 downloads)

^ Top
Frank Birch

Veteran
1002525
Posts: 171

Joined: 3/25/2006
Location: UK

User Profile
 
Subject : RE: Rhinohull(10) change from up (blue) to Red (do
Posted : 6/4/2024 1:02 PM
Post #32427 - In reply to #32423

Hi Mike and all,

Sorry i cannot help you i do not own the Rhino plug-in, seen you have asked for help on the forum hopefully someone will help you.

Regards

Frank
^ Top
Etherist

Member
25
Posts: 25

Joined: 6/9/2024
Location: South Australia

User Profile
 
Subject : RE: Equity Smoothness and Risk-Adjusted Performanc
Posted : 6/10/2024 6:35 AM
Post #32437 - In reply to #32414

Hey there MikeB ... try the reply here on RhinoHull Moving Average (RHMA):

https://www.omnitrader.com/currentclients/proforum/thread-view.asp?threadid=8169&posts=2

============================================================

Great work Frank on the Sharpe and Sortino Ratios :-)
Jump to page : 1
Now viewing page 1 [25 messages per page]
back reply

Legend    Action      Notification  
Administrator
Forum Moderator
Registered User
Unregistered User
E-Mail this thread to a friend
Toggle e-mail notification


Nirvana Systems
For any problems or issues please contact our Webmaster at webmaster@nirvsys.com.