Friday, July 30, 2010

Interpreting Studies

Apologies to readers as the blog has suffered from the summer doldrums a bit lately. I thought today I would address a few comments I got regarding a post from Tuesday.

In Tuesday’s post I showed a setup that suggested the market was likely to close higher on Wednesday than it did on Monday. This statement is based on the fact that all previous 16 instances did close higher 2 days later. I showed the results table for days 1-5 (Tues through next Mon). As sometimes happens when you deal in probabilities (and not certainties) the market did not adhere to historical norms and instead sold off. After it was clear that the SPX was not likely to finish higher on Wednesday I got a few comments from blog readers about the study.

The first commenter, Daniel, noted that “the odds and ratios up to 5 days out are still appealing from the bull side – even more so now that some short-term overbought conditions have been neutralized.”

The 2nd commenter, 24/5 Trader, remarked, “Isn’t this study showing a bearish edge at the third day?” He noted that while there was a perfect record through 2 days, day 3 showed a decent number of losers as well as a drop in total profits.

Let me first say that there is no “right” answer to the question of how to best evaluate a study or consider it useful. Both of these comments showed logical interpretations of the data. Now I’ll share my interpretation.

When I look at a study like this I generally only track it as long as the results remain consistent. While I could have looked to follow it further, the real value in this study in my eyes was what occurred in the first 2 days. So regardless of whether it works out over day 1 and 2, after that I’m on to looking at my next group of studies. In this case it didn’t work out. Does this tell me anything? Assuming I don’t have a data mining issue with this study (unlikely in this case) then all I’ve really found out for sure is that the market is not reacting as it normally does to that particular setup. Again, let’s assume the setup does provide an edge and it will continue to be useful in the future. (Not always the case but an assumption that need to be made for this discussion.)

Does this abnormal reaction affect my outlook? It was supposed to go up. It went down. Does that mean it will continue to go down? Does that mean it is now oversold and will likely bounce in the next couple of days? Taken as 1 individual study it is impossible to determine.

My studies tend to look at one or two specific aspects of the market. In this case it was strong consistent breadth. While I found this study to be the most interesting and “blogworthy” Tuesday morning, there was also a short-term bearish study that triggered Monday night which was published in the Subscriber Letter. Additionally, there were 3 other short-term bearish studies from the Sunday night letter that were also in effect. So it wasn’t terribly surprising that the market struggled Tuesday and Wednesday. And while the strong breadth was saying we were going higher, these other studies that looked at things such as the overbought price action and weak volume suggested a pullback was in order.

So in this particular case, when the market didn’t react in the “normal” way to the setup studied in Tuesday’s blog, it didn’t concern me. On the other hand, if there were a large number of bullish studies, and few or no bearish studies and the market traded lower, then I might get concerned. If this abnormal behavior persisted then I would view risk as elevated and would consider adjusting my position size and trade management accordingly.

My database looks at an awful lot of information. I try and share a few tidbits on the blog each week, which I hope are often useful. But that is really all they are – useful tidbits. They are not market calls and when the market reacts the way it normally does, it doesn’t me I was right. And when the market moves opposite a study it doesn’t mean I was wrong. I do suggest trade ideas in my Subscriber Letter and I have found studies such as those I often post to the blog to be very useful in determining my bias and in making index trades. My primary tool for interpreting all the studies is the Quantifiable Edges Aggregator. The Aggregator basically takes all of my currently “active” studies and uses them to make a projection for the next few days. If you would like to learn more about the Aggregator, then below are two links.

The first one is a detailed explanation of the tool from about 2 years ago.

http://quantifiableedges.blogspot.com/2008/07/quantifiable-edges-aggregator.html


The 2nd link is to a webinar I held for subscribers about a week and a half ago. It includes a detailed overview of the Aggregator as well as a question and answer period from subscribers that posed some interesting questions. The video is about 40 minutes, so it takes some time to watch. I should also apologize for the lack of editing. I just started holding these webinars and I need to get up to speed with all the tools. It takes about 40 seconds before the presentation really gets going.


The QE Aggregator - July 19, 2010

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

From R.Hanna followup blog:
“the real value in this study {ie past Tuesday's}......was what occurred in the first 2 days.”

With all due respect for the creator of the study, who shaped the analysis, I do not agree with this statement. I believe the real value of the study is that it was true and historical; that it summarized what actually HAPPENED in the past, that it was not conjecture.

I believe this is the real value of the entire QE blog.

True statements about historical phenomena are issued. NOT market predictions or prognostications. I have previously written here about how I cringe whenever someone posts a comment saying Nice call Rob or Lousy call Rob; that’s not what you do, you do NOT make calls, you note truly and consisely what actually happened under past ‘similar’ conditions.

In many cases, Rob, the way you filter and select studies before posting them on the site, or including them as headline items in your letter, causes the ensuing action the logical and sensible reader ‘ought’ to take to be fairly self-evident. Many times the clear conclusion to be drawn could be observed even without your clarifying text. (Otherwise, the great likelihood is that the study would not have made it past the ‘cutting room floor’ and onto the blog.) Even when you post a study with ambiguous results, the analysis itself is not ambiguous or vague-- and in such cases the logical implication is that sitting on one’s hands for a while might not be a bad idea.

After Monday’s action one of my OB indicators was jammed against the highest reading it had shown all year. For those first two days to be wildly bullish, I would’ve needed a much taller screen chart for that OB indicator... so that it did not crawl over the top of my computer screen.

So any ‘effect’ not showing up immediately did not totally surprise me, and probably many other readers as well, looking at similar ultrashort oscillators.

Your study--as with most of them-- unearthed a historical tendency. It showed that under ‘similar’ conditions, one should expect for the market to be at least ‘resilient’ for the next 5 days (especially the first two). It therefore tempered my bearishness all week, and for that I was quite grateful on Thursday and Friday.

Getting to the specifics of this post, as a working example, if I had simply read a Conclusion which stated that “..after such a condition has been observed in the past, a sell of an index or futures purchase, when executed 5 days later, has been a net gainer 11 times and a net loser 5 times, with the following metrics of risk-adjusted return that look pretty good...” I would call that encouraging. That most of the benefit USUALLY took place in the first two days would be of note but would not be determinative. And if you had said nothing about the two day result at all, it would still be a ‘bullish’ study.

I guess what I am saying here is that the Market always needs to be ‘interpreted’--but a well designed R.Hanna study merely needs to be absorbed, in its clear implications. I would contrast this with other forms of analysis, such as Elliot Wave analysis, sentiment indicators, support or resistance levels, and certain “accumulation” vs. “distribution” indicators, where by design an ‘interpretation’ is always needed. Inherently subjective pattern recognitions and classifications are involved.

I think all savvy investors know that they must blend the various signals they are receiving into some kind of aggregate. Your Aggregator model just takes it to another level of precision, but the approach is similar.

You are sui generis, RH.

Daniel