Hi,
I was playing with EMA crossover on some currency pairs. On one pair the system did awful using hourly bars but on a 4 hour bar the system performed brilliantly with a win:loss ratio of 7:3! I used the same time frame but just varied the time bar from hourly to 4 hours.
Is this an optical illusion?
red
Testing systems on different time bars.
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Yes, the number of bars were the same. Would this just be a case of curve fitting? Admitedly the time period I tested it over was only 6 months.
But this brought a little thought to my mind. How does the risk/profit profile change when you scale in or out at different time bars?
The ATR on daily bars would be significanlty larger than for example hourly bars. If you are basing your stop position based on a derivative of ATR would using longer time bars increase your risk? However, utilizing the turtle method the monetary risk would be adjusted. So would the monetary risk be equalised?
However then, given that with a narrower ATR you are able to take a larger position, would it not be more desirable to trade smaller time bars?
Is my logic completely flawed here?
red
But this brought a little thought to my mind. How does the risk/profit profile change when you scale in or out at different time bars?
The ATR on daily bars would be significanlty larger than for example hourly bars. If you are basing your stop position based on a derivative of ATR would using longer time bars increase your risk? However, utilizing the turtle method the monetary risk would be adjusted. So would the monetary risk be equalised?
However then, given that with a narrower ATR you are able to take a larger position, would it not be more desirable to trade smaller time bars?
Is my logic completely flawed here?
red