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jswanson

Building A Better Trend Filter

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In this article I will create a trend filter (also known as market mode filter or regime filter) that is adaptable to volatility and utilizes some of the basic principles of hysteresis to reduce false signals (whipsaws). As you may know I often will use the 200-period simple moving average (200-SMA) to determine when a market is within a bull or bear mode on a daily chart. When price closes above our 200-SMA we are in a bull market. Likewise, when price is below our 200-SMA we are in a bear market. Naturally, such rules will create some false signals. By the end of this article you will have a market mode filter that can be used in your system development that produces better results than a standard 200-SMA filter. To build our better market trend filter we will use the following concepts:

  • Hysteresis
  • Price proxy

 

HYSTERESIS BASICS

 

When building trading systems many of the decisions have a binary outcome. For example, the market is bearish or bullish. You take the trade or you don’t. Introducing a “gray area” is not always considered. In this article I’m going to introduce a concept called Hysteresis and how it can be applied to our trading.

 

The common analogy to help understand the concept of Hysteresis is to imagine how a thermostat works. Let’s say we are living in a cool weather climate and we are using a thermostat to keep the temperature of a room at 70 degrees F (critical threshold). When the temperature falls below our critical threshold the heaters turn on and begin blowing warm air into the room. Taking this literally as soon as the temperature moves to 69.9 our heater kicks on and begins blowing warm air into the room driving the temperature up. Once the temperature reaches 70.0 our heaters turn off. In a short time the room begins to cool and our heaters must turn on again. What we have is a system that is constantly turning off and on to keep the temperature at 70 degrees. This is inefficient as it produces a lot of wear on the mechanical components and wastes fuel. As you might have guessed, hysteresis is a way to correct this issue. More in just a moment.

 

The purpose of this article is to improve our market mode filter. Below is the result of buying the S&P cash index when price closes above the 200-SMA and selling when price closes below the 200-SMA. This is similar to our thermostat example. Instead of turning on the furnace to heat a room we are going to open a new position when a critical threshold (200-SMA) is crossed. In order to keep things simple, there is no shorting. For all the examples in this article, $50 is deducted from each trade to account for both slippage and commissions.

 

SMA_Line = Average( Close, 200 );

If ( Close > SMA_Line ) then Buy next bar at market;

If ( Close < SMA_Line ) then Sell next bar at market;

 

SMA-Cross.png

 

SMA_Cross_Example.png

 

Going back to our thermostat example, how do we fix the problem of the furnace turning on and tuning off so many times? How do we reduce the number of signals? Let’s create a zone around our ideal temperature of 70 degrees. This zone will turn on the heaters when the temperature reaches 69 degrees and turn off when the temperature reaches 71 degrees. Our ideal temperature is in the middle of a band with the upper band at 71 and the lower band at 69. The lower band is when we turn on the furnace and the upper band is when we turn off the furnace. The zone in the middle is our hysteresis.

 

In our thermostat example we are reducing “whipsaws” or false signals, by providing hysteresis around our ideal temperature of 70 degrees. Let’s use the concept of hysteresis to attempt to remove some of these false signals. But like our ideal temperature we want an upper band and a lower band to designate our “lines in the sand” where we take action. There are many ways to create these bands. For simplicity let’s create the bands from the price extremes for each bar. That is, for our upper band we will use the 200-SMA of the daily highs and for the lower band we will use the 200-SMA of the daily lows. This band floats around our ideal point which is the 200-SMA. Both the upper and lower bands vary based upon the recent past. In short, our system has memory and adjusts to expanding or contracting volatility. The EasyLanguage code for our new system look something like this:

 

SMA_Line = Average( Close, 200 );

UpperBand = Average( High, 200 );

LowerBand = Average( Low, 200 );

If ( Close crosses over UpperBand ) then Buy next bar at market;

If ( Close crosses under LowerBand ) then Sell next bar at market;

Here are the results with using our new bands as trigger points.

Band-Cross.png

 

 

Looking at the chart above we can see an improvement in all important aspects of the system’s key performance. Most notably, the Band Cross column shows a reduced number of trades and increased the accuracy of the system. This suggests we eliminated unprofitable trades. Just what we want to see. Below is an example of a trade entry example. Notice the trade is opened when our daily bar closes above the upper band. The thick blue line is our 200-SMA.

 

Band_Example.png

PRICE PROXY

 

A price proxy is nothing more than using the result of a price-based indicator instead of price directly. This is often done to smooth price. There are many ways to smooth price. I won’t get into them here. Such a topic is great for another article. For now, we can smooth our daily price by using fast period exponential moving average (EMA). Let’s pick a 5-day EMA (5-EMA). Each day we compute the 5-EMA and it’s this value that must be above or below our trigger thresholds. By using the EMA as a proxy for our price we are attempting to remove some of the noise in our system. Let’s see how this effects our performance.

 

SMA_Line = Average( Close, 200 );

UpperBand = Average( High, 200 );

LowerBand = Average( Low, 200 );

PriceProxy = XAverage( Close, 5 );

If ( PriceProxy crosses over UpperBand ) then Buy next bar at market;

If ( PriceProxy crosses under LowerBand ) then Sell next bar at market;

 

Price-Proxy.png

 

Looking at the graph above we once again see a solid improvement in our system’s performance. We continue to reduce the number of losing trades. Our profit per trade has jumped from $7.15 to $23.17. That’s over a 300% increase. Below is an example of a trade entry example. Notice the trade is opened when our price proxy (yellow line) crosses over the upper band.

 

SMA_Price_Proxy_Example.png

 

The above code is a simple trading system designed to show you the benefit of our “better” trend filter. If we want to use this in a trading system it would be ideal to create a function from this code that would pass back if we are in a bear or bull trend. However, the programming aspect of such a task is really beyond the scope of this article. However, below is a quick example of setting two boolean variables (in EasyLanguage) that could be used as trend flags:

 

BullMarket = PriceProxy > UpperBand;

BearMarket = PriceProxy <= LowerBand;

 

In this article we have created a dynamic trend filter that smooths price by using a simple EMA as price proxy, it adapts to market volatility and utilizes hysteresis principles. With just a few lines of code we dramatically reduced the number of false signals thus, increasing the profitability of the trading system. This type of filter can be effective in building the trading system for ETFs, futures and forex on daily bars.

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1) Why you smoothed the price was not very clear.

 

2) I'm still lost on exactly what is "Hysteresis".

 

3) If the goal was to improve profitability, then the statistics currently available dont seem to prove this. Saying that your trades were more profitable simply because of less trades and an increase of profit per trade doesn't take into account:

 

- the fact that the drawdown did not decrease by the same proportion as the trades became more profitable.

- the sharpe ratios and annual rate of return remained the same for SMA cross, Band Cross, and Price Proxy Band Cross

- perhaps a more clear definition of what a "winning" and "losing" trade was (where were the TP and SL, what where the based on, etc).

 

From my point of view, the most profitability would be achieved by optimizing the management of the positions while in the trade (position sizing). But that doesn't seem to be explored in this scenario. The OP focus was on improving perceived entries and that by having "better" (more accurate forecasting) entries, the overall profitability increases. If anything, the OP data gathered suggests that entry accuracy alone cannot be the cause of greater profitability.

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1) Why you smoothed the price was not very clear.

 

2) I'm still lost on exactly what is "Hysteresis".

 

3) If the goal was to improve profitability, then the statistics currently available dont seem to prove this. Saying that your trades were more profitable simply because of less trades and an increase of profit per trade doesn't take into account:

 

- the fact that the drawdown did not decrease by the same proportion as the trades became more profitable.

- the sharpe ratios and annual rate of return remained the same for SMA cross, Band Cross, and Price Proxy Band Cross

- perhaps a more clear definition of what a "winning" and "losing" trade was (where were the TP and SL, what where the based on, etc).

 

From my point of view, the most profitability would be achieved by optimizing the management of the positions while in the trade (position sizing). But that doesn't seem to be explored in this scenario. The OP focus was on improving perceived entries and that by having "better" (more accurate forecasting) entries, the overall profitability increases. If anything, the OP data gathered suggests that entry accuracy alone cannot be the cause of greater profitability.

 

Hello,

 

1) Price was simply smoothed in an attempt to reduce noise.

 

2) Yeah, I may not have explained it very well. Think of it as price confirmation. Price must not simply cross a single threshold, but move beyond that threshold X amount.

 

3) The goal was to reduce whipsaws in an attempt to reduce "bad" trades and yes, improve profitability. While the sharpe ratio did not change, the drawdown did fall. Likewise the profit factor, and average profit per trade also climbed. This was also accomplished without changing the net profit very much.

 

Yes, there are all types of ways to improve this "system" including position sizing. However, this topic was outside the scope of the main point here, which was reducing whipsaws via the techniques described.

 

Thanks!

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On the Long side the Trend Filter is impressive and I like the idea of a buffer zone to minimise whiplash but surely the robustness of any filter is that it can also work for the Short side? Keeping things simple for me is allowing the Trend Filter to determine whether I go Short or Long otherwise I am using hindsight to filter the direction of the market.. Applying your rules in reverse and backtesting to 1980 I get the following results on the Short Side:

Total Loss: -62.1%

Maximum Risk: 94.6%

Win Rate: 13.9%

Avg Trade Win/Loss Ratio: 3.6 to 1

Total Nr Trades: 36

Avg Trade Duration: 66.2 periods

Avg Time in Trade: 29.3%

I have'nt calculated the outcome to combine both Long and Short (almost always in the market) but I suspect the drawdown would be unacceptable.

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