with a 27.3% drawdown. We cut the drawdown in half from the buy and hold
system. This reduces the pain of drawdown dramatically by simply having a stop
loss sell signal for our equity positions.
- If we traded SPY using the 250-day SMA as an end of day buy/sell indicator
from January 3, 2000 to October 20, 2015, the 250-day SMA returns were
120.5% with a 23.1% drawdown. We cut the drawdown in half and actually
increased the return versus a buy and hold system that used SPY. We moved or
stop loss further out so we were not stopped out prematurely on noise around the
200-day, and picked up more on the bounce back over the 200-day. We stayed
out of the worst bear markets and were quick to get
back into rallies early when
price broke back over the 250-day.
- If we traded SPY using the 20/200-day crossover as an end of day buy/sell
indicator from January 3, 2000 to October 20, 2015, the 20-day/ 200-day SMA
crossover returns were 173.6% with a 17.3% drawdown. We cut the drawdown
in half and almost doubled the return of buy and hold investing in SPY. This
system gives us a buy signal when the 20-day crosses over the 200-day and a sell
signal when the 20-day crosses back under the 200-day. The 20-day acts as a
filter on the 200-day, keeping us in our positions longer before exiting and
waiting for more confirmation with the 20-day before we get back in. It
dramatically reduces the trading activity we would experience with the 200-day
alone by filtering out much of the noise.
- If we traded SPY using the 50/200-day crossover as an end of day buy/sell
indicator from January 3, 2000 to October 20, 2015, the 50-day/ 200-day SMA
crossover returns were 204.2% with a 17.3% drawdown. We cut the drawdown
by over one third and more than doubled our returns
versus just buying and
holding SPY. This system gives us a buy signal when the 50-day crosses over the
200-day, and a sell signal when the 50-day crosses back under the 200-day. The
50-day acts as a filter on the 200-day keeping us in our positions longer before
exiting and waiting for more confirmation with the 50-day before we get back in
after being stopped out. It reduces trade signals even more than the trading
activity we would experience with the 20/200-day cross, by filtering out most of
the noise in the past 15 years and catching almost
all significant moves up in
price. Trading the 50-day crossing over the 200-day is called the golden cross
and is very bullish, while the 50-day crossing under the 200-day is said to be
bearish. This backtest shows this to be true in the SPY.
The Legendary Turtle Traders System
Have you ever heard of the legendary Turtle traders? Millionaire trader Richard
Dennis set out to find out if traders
were just born to trade, or if they could be
trained to be successful in the markets.
The answer? IF THEY COULD FOLLOW RULES THEY COULD BE
SUCCESSFUL.
“I always say that you could publish my trading rules in the newspaper and no
one would follow them. The key is consistency and discipline. Almost anybody
can make up a list of rules that are 80% as good as what we taught our people.
What they couldn’t do is give them the confidence to stick to those rules even
when things are going bad.” –Richard Dennis: Founder of the ‘Turtle Traders’.
The Turtle system proved that traders could be trained.
The traders that followed
the rules went on to be millionaires and to manage money professionally. Their
rules were made public many years ago, and here is a brief explanation of their
buy signals and sell signals:
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