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Andromeda Small Sample Portfolio

Minimum Account Size: $20,000

Portfolio of 5 markets: Corn, Dollar Index, Palladium, Five Year T-Notes, Sugar

  • Tested Jan 1'st 1980 – Jan 1'st 2012. (32 years)
  • $50 deducted per trade for commission & slippage
  • No Starting Capital Applied. Only Net Profits Shown
  • Based on single contracts per trade

*NOTE: the vertical green line on the chart above shows the release date. Performance to the left of the line is pre-release performance and performance to the right is post-release, i.e. performance on un-tested data that was not available (had not happened yet) when the system was released to the public back in April 2002.

Profit Analysis Summary:

Total Net Profit:
$285,801
Average Net Profit per Year:
$8931
Average Net Profit per Month:
$744

Trade Analysis Summary

Total Gross Profit for Closed Trades:
$545,891
Total Gross Loss for Closed Trades:
$260,810
Profit Factor (gross profit / gross loss):
2.09
Total Number of Trades:
467
Percent Profitable:
39%
Average Winning Trade:
$2966
Average Losing Trade:
$921
Ratio Avg. Win to Avg. Loss (2 dec. pl):
3.22
Average Trade (Winners & Losers):
$610
Largest Winning Trade:
$11,675
Largest Losing Trade:
$4,080
Average duration of profitable trades (excluding weekends and holidays):
80 days
Average duration of losing trades (excluding weekends and holidays):
26 days
Average duration per trade, both winners & losers (excluding weekends and holidays):
47 days
Total amount deducted for commission & slippage:
$23,350


Annual Performance Breakdown

Year
Net Profits
1980
$2,404
1981
$13,927
1982
$8,550
1983
$5,427
1984
$5,115
1985
-$594
1986
$1,644
1987
$15,937
1988
$3,983
1989
-$3,106
1990
$21,531
1991
$13,849
1992
$14,758
1993
-$4,689
1994
$6,905
1995
$8,963
1996
-$736
1997
$1,628
1998
$7,485
1999
$8,185
2000
$23,602
2001
-$2,048
2002
$21,516
2003
$2,479
2004
$18,729
2005
$702
2006
$10,437
2007
-$2,239
2008
$42,155
2009
$16,044
2010
$28,646
2011
-$4,675


Drawdown Analysis

How to read this chart:

We first considered each trade as a possible starting point. Since there were 467 trades that means that there were 467 different possible starting points where a trader would have started trading the system. We then calculated the worst Start Trade Drawdown (STDD) for each of these possible 467 starting points. These resulting drawdown figures were then sorted from smallest to largest and the above chart was constructed.

Example A: I want to know what percent of STDDs fell below $5000?

Start on the Y axis and find $5000. Then go across until it intercepts the curve on the chart. The corresponding value on the X axis is about 71% or so. This means that 71% of STDDs were less than $5000 and thus 29% were above it. Hence you would have had a 71% chance that your STDD would have been below $5000 and a 29% chance that it would have been above it.

Example B: I want to know what value did 90% of STDDs fall under?

This time start with the 90% value on the X axis and go to 90%. Move up to where it intersects with the curve and then check the corresponding value on the Y axis. In this example the above chart tells us that 90% of STDD for this particular portfolio were approximately below $8000.

This is how you would read this chart. Notice that about 10% of STDDs were zero; this means that in about 10% of cases you would have suffered no STDD at all. You would have been profitable right from the start and never have been under at all.

The median score (50%) came in around $2500. This means that half the STDDs out of a total of 467 runs (one for each starting point) fell below this value and half were above it. This chart is obviously very useful than merely spitting out drawdown figures. It not only tells you what the STDDs were but more importantly also gives you the probabilities as well

The highest of all STDDs came in at around $17,000. This means that out of 467 different starting points over a 32 year period, the worst case scenario was a maximum STDD of that value. The maximum total daily drawdown over the 32 year period was $18,241.

See the About Start Trade Drawdown on this website for a detailed explanation about this type of drawdown.

Download free information pack on our systems. See Download Free User Manuals & Demos on this website.

*Note: different traders have different risk tolerances. The sample minimum account size is for aggressive traders willing to incur higher risk. Conservative traders should substantially increase their starting account size.

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