April 15th, 2010, 6:00 pm
Thanks Marine,So part of my question I suppose was what are typical margin financing fees (any ballpark) for an individual and also what about a large fund? My question pertaining to the selling short portion of the trade is when I sell short I am given the proceeds from my sale, I use these proceeds to purchase the opposing stock. Do I not have to pay a finacing fee to my broker for the proceeds received from my sale? This is essentially borrowed money by me, no? I understand I'd have to maintain a minimum amount value when shorting a stock to prove I can cover the mark to market potential loss, but is there any additional overhead of shorting the stock versus simply going long a stock?I'm not totally sure what I'm looking for in this next part below, but maybe some more direction on analyzing the back-testing of my strategy. I've analzyed the previous 20 years worth of trading opportunities and found 6,700 trades with a win percentage of 74%. Assuming no leverage whatsoever and that I maintain the exact cash in my account for the price I sell short my one stock and matain the exact cash for the purchase of the stock, I see Mean returns of 6% and median returns of 10.02% with an average trade duration of ~100 days. I'm trying to figure out some standards for more extensively analyzing these results. My next step is to determine max draw downs, sharpe ratio, beta, and alpha. Typically, what else is evalutead? My main concern in back testing thoroughly, historically, is the survivors basis and how to find data for ALL stocks. I'm finding it extremely difficult to find data sets that include re-organized and bankrupted companies, whic may account for a large percentag of losing trades that I'm missing.