Sure. If, for instance, you decide that the information you want to get from watching your investments is the value of pi, then provided you compute it in the right way (e.g., by ignoring your investments and summing a rapidly convergent series) it won’t be noisy at all.
I assume you mean something distinctly less trivial than that, but I’m not sure what. I’d have thought that in a typical case the feedback you’re seeking is something like “is this trading strategy I’m using a good one?” Meaning: “if I continue to use it, will I make money?”. I have never worked at an investment bank or hedge fund, but my impression is that usually it takes some time before the answer to that question becomes clear, if it ever does. (The fact that the market is changing beneath your feet as you observe it doesn’t make that any easier, of course.)
I’d have thought that in a typical case the feedback you’re seeking is something like “is this trading strategy I’m using a good one?”
Yes, that’s a fair example.
my impression is that usually it takes some time before the answer to that question becomes clear, if it ever does
Nope, people who can’t figure out the answer to this question fairly quickly go out of business on about the same time scale :-)
How quickly actually depends on the trading strategy. One of the big advantages of high-frequency trading, for example, is that the trader will know there is something wrong with the strategy in a matter of hours. He may fine-tune it for months, but whether it works or not is clear very quickly. On the other end of the spectrum are long-term illiquid investments like private equity. In those cases it can, indeed, take years before you know whether your choices were good ones.
I would say that typically a few weeks to a couple of months of losses (or a few months of neither making nor losing money) is enough to subject a trading strategy to scrutiny.
First, we’re talking about typically complex strategies that are designed to run for a long time. Usually they accept short-term variation, but think that they’ll come out ahead after the noise diversifies away. But trading ideas usually have much faster feedback cycles. For example, if you think that at the moment some asset XYZ is trading cheap because of a temporary imbalance in supply and demand and it will revert to its normal valuation in a few hours—you’ll find out if that idea was correct in a few hours.
Second, the strategies I mentioned have already passed a very high bar—they convinced a sufficient number of people that they are good enough to commit real money to. At the research stage, figuring out if a strategy looks decent takes a few minutes—you feed it to a trading simulator based on historical data and look at the results. The strategies in the grandparent post are the equivalent of clinical trials in pharma—there are already a lot of people convinced they would work.
Doesn’t that entirely depend on what kind of information you are interested in?
Sure. If, for instance, you decide that the information you want to get from watching your investments is the value of pi, then provided you compute it in the right way (e.g., by ignoring your investments and summing a rapidly convergent series) it won’t be noisy at all.
I assume you mean something distinctly less trivial than that, but I’m not sure what. I’d have thought that in a typical case the feedback you’re seeking is something like “is this trading strategy I’m using a good one?” Meaning: “if I continue to use it, will I make money?”. I have never worked at an investment bank or hedge fund, but my impression is that usually it takes some time before the answer to that question becomes clear, if it ever does. (The fact that the market is changing beneath your feet as you observe it doesn’t make that any easier, of course.)
Yes, that’s a fair example.
Nope, people who can’t figure out the answer to this question fairly quickly go out of business on about the same time scale :-)
How quickly actually depends on the trading strategy. One of the big advantages of high-frequency trading, for example, is that the trader will know there is something wrong with the strategy in a matter of hours. He may fine-tune it for months, but whether it works or not is clear very quickly. On the other end of the spectrum are long-term illiquid investments like private equity. In those cases it can, indeed, take years before you know whether your choices were good ones.
I would say that typically a few weeks to a couple of months of losses (or a few months of neither making nor losing money) is enough to subject a trading strategy to scrutiny.
Aha. I think our actual misunderstanding was about what counts as “rapid” feedback; I had in mind a shorter timescale than you did.
Keep in mind two additional points.
First, we’re talking about typically complex strategies that are designed to run for a long time. Usually they accept short-term variation, but think that they’ll come out ahead after the noise diversifies away. But trading ideas usually have much faster feedback cycles. For example, if you think that at the moment some asset XYZ is trading cheap because of a temporary imbalance in supply and demand and it will revert to its normal valuation in a few hours—you’ll find out if that idea was correct in a few hours.
Second, the strategies I mentioned have already passed a very high bar—they convinced a sufficient number of people that they are good enough to commit real money to. At the research stage, figuring out if a strategy looks decent takes a few minutes—you feed it to a trading simulator based on historical data and look at the results. The strategies in the grandparent post are the equivalent of clinical trials in pharma—there are already a lot of people convinced they would work.