TRADING SYSTEMS
Extending Your Trading System Toolkit

Managing Dynamic Portfolios

by Kevin Morgan
Here's how to build an automated trading system that reselects its preferred trading symbols on a recurring basis.

Computerized trading system development and execution platforms are oriented around trading a single or fixed set of stock, index, or commodity symbols. Backtesting, walk-forward testing, and real-time incremental execution occur against this fixed symbol set. Changing the set is a manual process, and the backtesting and generation of integrated results for a sequence of different symbol portfolios over time are not typically supported functions.

At the highest level of its design, an advanced trading system may utilize a methodology for regularly reselecting a preferred set of trading vehicles (say, stock). By adapting the preferred set of stocks to be traded, a more aggressive and adaptive "trade with the trend" approach can be implemented, versus using a fixed set of trading vehicles and waiting for them to demonstrate preferred trading behaviors.

$PECIAL-K

On a weekly basis, the $pecial-K trading system reselects its preferred set of approximately 100 leading stocks from the NYSE, AMEX, and NASDAQ universes based on technical and fundamental factors. The approach is to trade short term, generating relatively small per-trade profits with a high win/loss ratio. The entry management logic focuses strictly on short-term price behaviors for entry selection. You achieve superior results by making sure your entry takes place only on stocks that show strong and consistent upward trends.

How? You need to select leading stocks with excellent technical and fundamental characteristics. In order to efficiently backtest this system, it is necessary to automate the process of shifting the stock portfolio on a regular basis, generating correct trade reports and managing the complexity of this system.

There are many examples of sources of dynamic portfolios over time. Whenever changes are made in common stock indexes (DJIA, S&P 100, NDX, and so on), asynchronous changes occur in widely used portfolios. Many services generate regular (weekly, monthly, quarterly) preferred stock lists of many types, such as the Investor's Business Daily and Value Line lists. And finally, you can develop scanning and selection algorithms. All such preferred trading vehicle selection approaches create a dynamic portfolio management scenario.

SWITCHING SYMBOL SETS

I will assume that the dynamic portfolio selection process is operated external to the trading system platform, and that you routinely modify the specific portfolio of symbols within the trading platform. Another feasible approach is to keep a complete universe of all possible symbols internal to the trading platform and reselect subsets of them. The design concepts presented in this article are applicable to both approaches, although the implementation details described here focus on external preferred symbol set selection.

There are two fundamental requirements for the trading system automation using a dynamic portfolio. The first is the ability to incrementally, on a real-time basis, generate trade information (new trades, continuing open trades, and closed trades) via reports and historical results files. The second is the ability to execute long-term backtests against a historical landscape of portfolios.

Here I focus on the first requirement, real-time execution on a daily basis. Backtest automation is a small incremental effort once your daily execution support is in place. The presumption in this article and in the algorithms presented is that the trading system is based on daily bar analysis, and the periodicity of symbol portfolio reselection is weekly, occurring on the weekend. However, the concepts and algorithms can be extended to any time frame based trading system and any desired periodicity of symbol portfolio reselection.

...Continued in the May issue of Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES


Excerpted from an article originally published in the May 2007 issue of Technical Analysis of
STOCKS & COMMODITIES magazine. All rights reserved. © Copyright 2007, Technical Analysis, Inc.



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