Short Premium Research Dissection (Part 16)
Posted by Mark on April 15, 2019 at 06:02 | Last modified: December 13, 2018 09:14Our author stops after the discussion on allocation and restates the [curve-fit] strategy as her full trading plan.
We get a relatively thorough methodology description here, contrary to my reference in this first sentence of paragraph #5.
She follows with a reprint of the previous performance graph and table of statistics discussed with one slight alteration. The asterisk, last discussed in the third paragraph here, now has a corresponding footnote:
> *Please Note: Hypothetical computer simulated performance results
> are believed to be accurately presented. However, they are not
> guaranteed as to the accuracy or completeness and are subject to
> change without any notice. Hypothetical or simulated performance
> results have certain inherent limitations. Unlike an actual
> performance record, simulated results do not represent actual
> trading. Also, since the trades have not actually been executed, the
> results may have been under or over compensated for the impact,
> if any, or certain market factors such as liquidity, slippage and
> commissions. Simulated trading programs, in general, are also
> subject to the fact that they are designed with the benefit of
> hindsight. No representation is being made that any portfolio
> will, or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those
> shown. All investments and trades carry risks.
Was this footnote meant to accompany all “hypothetical portfolio growth” graphs (i.e. Part 8, paragraph #2)?
She advises:
> …be realistic about your sensitivity to portfolio drawdowns…
> choose a trade size you can stick to long-term. Changing…
> sizes based on how aggressive/conservative you’re feeling on
> a particular day can lead to worse results.
I agree. I also think this would have been a great place to illustrate what parameters matter to us as traders versus what parameters matter to investors screening us as potential money managers. This is good fodder for a future blog post.
She closes with a howitzer:
> …based on the drawdowns observed in these backtests, and
> the unpredictable nature of the stock market, I personally
> do not recommend implementing any of the “undefined-risk”
> strategies shown in this section. I displayed the research
> anyway because I want you to see what can go wrong…
While I would like a couple more sentences detailing why, I appreciate these honest conclusions. I believe “undefined risk” should be accompanied with the worst sales pitch ever.
She gives clues about her thinking as the next section begins:
> The problem more conservative traders may have… is
> that the downside loss potential is substantial,
> especially when sizing trades based on a certain
> percentage loss on the premium received.
“Substantial” probably means the -24.3%, -22.8%, and -18% drawdowns in 2008, 2011, and 2015 respectively: numbers mentioned earlier. I wish she had proceeded to describe “your worst drawdown is ahead of you” (third-to-last paragraph here).