One of my favorite Authors, Kevin Davey, preaches an idea that he calls the ‘Strategy Factory’ — and while all parts of the process are vital to the development of profitable strategies, without raw inputs (or new trading ideas), you will drastically limit your output. So how do you keep the ideas flowing, even after you’ve seemingly testing and optimized every combination of entry that you think viable ?
For me, I set a weekly threshold level of new ideas that I must test — in order to keep the inflow of signals constant. These aren’t always initial great ideas, but sometimes they inspire great ideas, or an improvement on something existing. I try to create 5 organic entry signals each week.
Let me speak to the entries a bit more — initially, I have a generic Exit package (TrailStop, Fixed Stop, Boolean Target), and something I call a signal exit; basically just an extension of the entry logic that would exit the position. It’s easier explained in an example — if I’m entering long when the 5 day MA crosses the 20 day MA, maybe my long signal exit is when the 5 day MA is negative, or when they’re both negative, or when 5 day is below the 20 day if it’s long only. Combined with my triple exit package — Pct Trailstop, Fixed stop, and Boolean Profit Target — I can basically copy and paste in my exit package, tweak the entry logic and I’m good to begin testing the strategy.
I do this for a few reasons —
1. Efficiency -- it allows me to keep my idea flow up. Sometimes I do add a new exit signal idea, and consider that one of my 5 unique ideas that week — but most of the time I stick with my generic stops package.
2. Consistency — By keeping the standard exit package, Im able to get an apples to apples comparison of how effective the entry signals are in a quick (Multichart’s performance report) way.
Exits are taken care of, so I can focus on the entries — my idea flow now depends solely on an entry signal. So where do I generate these entry ideas, after I’ve tested all reasonable technicals, fundamentals, and combinations of these signals ?
I’m a technicals guy, so I’ll admit that I have a preference towards price action here — but for me I always like looking at charts to find new entry ideas. I engulf myself in a symbol, and will change the timeframe, or pair up a few timeframes on same chart — maybe add an indicator or two, see if it’s showing me anything new.
Once I get something that looks like it could be a repeatable pattern, I then look for some mental entries on the chart. I try to find examples that disprove my signal — i.e. Entry signals that would have performed very poorly, been large losses, etc — and then I see if maybe a different interval, an added indicator, or some OHLC pattern possibly would have removed this bad entry from the mix. I look for filters, to make the pattern I found that much more reliable.
Keep in mind, to have an effective strategy you don’t want to limit your trades too much; you need a solid amount of entries not only to add the potential for larger excess returns, but also to increase your sample size and statistical significance. If you have one entry a month, you could easily have a 6Mo drawdown with 5 bad trades in a row. If you have an entry every hour or so, if you’re still trading in a 6mo drawdown then you’re a bolder man than I.
So where do I turn when I’m just not seeing anything new in my charts ? I have a few favorites for signal ideas, and if you give them a chance — I promise you’ll drastically improve your idea flow.
– TradingView — I browse popular chart markups, new indicator ideas, look for symbols I haven’t traded as often as others — and browse for general sentiment or biases I notice on a Macro level. Maybe every other chart is a Bitcoin to 50k chart, and maybe I disagree and can exploit this. Also -- Most Indicators have open code, easily replicated in Python or ELD, and some good developers have Indexes of ALL their indicators.
– Technical Analysis of Stocks and Commodities — (Magazine, or Website — Traders.com) This is one of my absolute favorites — not only do you get fresh charts and perspectives, but they always have a new indicator (or new take on an old indicator), and they have diverse markets and symbols that are always helpful in developing a new idea. Most issues literally have a strategy in them translated to any platform you’re comfortable in. Start here, and see if it gives you any ideas for something a bit different.
– Books — I find alot of new ideas from really old trading books, like Larry Williams old. They have some timeless patterns in here, and while it’s far from a fresh perspective in terms of technology, they often do offer a different perspective. Many of these older books are complete Gems, and new books can be really helpful as well (Bean, Chan, Davey, Prado, Pruitt are some of my favorite authors).
– Archive — When I’m developing a new strategy, if it doesn’t quite meet my expectations yet it’s still profitable, I archive it. I save it in a big database with it’s performance metrics, so that maybe later I can come back to it with something fresh. If I’m looking for a new idea, I sometimes start with strategies that didn’t quite pan out with fresh eyes and see if maybe I missed something. I’ve honestly been able to improve most of my the archived strategies simply by coming back to them later with new insights. Not all of them met my requirements once they were improved upon, but many of them did! Nothing feels better than salvaging an improved recycled entry idea that was very nearly in the trash. I also encourage you to go back through your ‘robust’ existing strategies list and see if maybe you can improve the ones that already meet your specs.
The important part isn’t where you’re finding new ideas, it’s that you’re continuing to generate them at a consistent rate. These sources are what inspire me to find new methods of entry, but yours could be completely different!
I also want to be clear, this isn’t an Indiana Jones movie, and we’re not in search of the Holy Grail here — the goal is new strategies that generate excess returns, with a negative correlation to existing Alpha models. If you combine enough of these signals, it very well could be an ingredient to a revolutionary system. One thing is for certain though, without trying new (or recycled) ideas — your repertoire of Alpha’s will never grow. Put yourself out there; create something new and bold, you never know — it could be an ingredient in your holy grail system.
While fresh ideas are the raw materials in your continued development, there are many ways to improve the bottom line — I.e. add new, robust trading strategies. I’ve found that even the best strategies are often quite simple — and while nobody knows what RenTec’s signals look like, I imagine they all started quite simple at the very least. They all must start somewhere, and I encourage you to do the same with these goals in mind.
-Happy Trading!
ZO
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