8.4 KiB
Edge positioning
This page explains how to use Edge Positioning module in your bot in order to enter into a trade only if the trade has a reasonable win rate and risk reward ratio, and consequently adjust your position size and stoploss.
NOTICE: Edge positioning is not compatible with dynamic whitelist. it overrides dynamic whitelist.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Trading is all about probability. No one can claim that he has a strategy working all the time. You have to assume that sometimes you lose.
But it doesn't mean there is no rule, it only means rules should work "most of the time". Let's play a game: we toss a coin, heads: I give you 10$, tails: You give me 10$. Is it an interesting game ? no, it is quite boring, isn't it?
But let's say the probability that we have heads is 80%, and the probability that we have tails is 20%. Now it is becoming interesting ...
That means 10$ x 80% versus 10$ x 20%. 8$ versus 2$. That means over time you will win 8$ risking only 2$ on each toss of coin.
Let's complicate it more: you win 80% of the time but only 2$, I win 20% of the time but 8$. The calculation is: 80% * 2$ versus 20% * 8$. It is becoming boring again because overtime you win 1.6
(80% x 2$) and me 1.6 (20% * 8
) too.
The question is: How do you calculate that? how do you know if you wanna play?
The answer comes to two factors:
- Win Rate
- Risk Reward Ratio
Win Rate
Means over X trades what is the percentage of winning trades to total number of trades (note that we don't consider how much you gained but only If you won or not).
W = (Number of winning trades) / (Number of losing trades)
Risk Reward Ratio
Risk Reward Ratio is a formula used to measure the expected gains of a given investment against the risk of loss. It is basically what you potentially win divided by what you potentially lose:
R = Profit / Loss
Over time, on many trades, you can calculate your risk reward by dividing your average profit on winning trades by your average loss on losing trades:
Average profit = (Sum of profits) / (Number of winning trades)
Average loss = (Sum of losses) / (Number of losing trades)
R = (Average profit) / (Average loss)
Expectancy
At this point we can combine W and R to create an expectancy ratio. This is a simple process of multiplying the risk reward ratio by the percentage of winning trades, and subtracting the percentage of losing trades, which is calculated as follows:
Expectancy Ratio = (Risk Reward Ratio x Win Rate) – Loss Rate
So lets say your Win rate is 28% and your Risk Reward Ratio is 5:
Expectancy = (5 * 0.28) - 0.72 = 0.68
Superficially, this means that on average you expect this strategy’s trades to return .68 times the size of your losers. This is important for two reasons: First, it may seem obvious, but you know right away that you have a positive return. Second, you now have a number you can compare to other candidate systems to make decisions about which ones you employ.
It is important to remember that any system with an expectancy greater than 0 is profitable using past data. The key is finding one that will be profitable in the future.
You can also use this number to evaluate the effectiveness of modifications to this system.
NOTICE: It's important to keep in mind that Edge is testing your expectancy using historical data , there's no guarantee that you will have a similar edge in the future. It's still vital to do this testing in order to build confidence in your methodology, but be wary of "curve-fitting" your approach to the historical data as things are unlikely to play out the exact same way for future trades.
How does it work?
If enabled in config, Edge will go through historical data with a range of stoplosses in order to find buy and sell/stoploss signals. It then calculates win rate and expectancy over X trades for each stoploss. Here is an example:
Pair | Stoploss | Win Rate | Risk Reward Ratio | Expectancy |
---|---|---|---|---|
XZC/ETH | -0.03 | 0.52 | 1.359670 | 0.228 |
XZC/ETH | -0.01 | 0.50 | 1.176384 | 0.088 |
XZC/ETH | -0.02 | 0.51 | 1.115941 | 0.079 |
The goal here is to find the best stoploss for the strategy in order to have the maximum expectancy. In the above example stoploss at 3% leads to the maximum expectancy according to historical data.
Edge then forces stoploss to your strategy dynamically.
Position size
Edge dictates the stake amount for each trade to the bot according to the following factors:
- Allowed capital at risk
- Stoploss
Allowed capital at risk is calculated as follows:
allowed capital at risk = total capital X allowed risk per trade
Stoploss is calculated as described above against historical data.
Your position size then will be:
position size = allowed capital at risk / stoploss
Example:
Let's say your total capital is 3 ETH, you would allow 1% of risk for each trade. thus your allowed capital at risk would be 3 x 0.01 = 0.03 ETH. Let's assume Edge has calculated that for XLM/ETH market your stoploss should be at 2%. So your position size will be 0.03 / 0.02= 1.5ETH.
Notice: if Edge is enabled, the stake_amount config is overriden by total_capital_in_stake_currency config explained below (see configuration part)
Configurations
Edge has following configurations:
enabled
If true, then Edge will run periodically
(default to false)
process_throttle_secs
How often should Edge run in seconds?
(default to 3600 so one hour)
calculate_since_number_of_days
Number of days of data against which Edge calculates Win Rate, Risk Reward and Expectancy
Note that it downloads historical data so increasing this number would lead to slowing down the bot
(default to 7)
total_capital_in_stake_currency
This your total capital at risk in your stake currency. If edge is enabled then stake_amount is ignored in favor of this parameter
allowed_risk
Percentage of allowed risk per trade
(default to 1%)
stoploss_range_min
Minimum stoploss
(default to -0.01)
stoploss_range_max
Maximum stoploss
(default to -0.10)
stoploss_range_step
As an example if this is set to -0.01 then Edge will test the strategy for [-0.01, -0,02, -0,03 ..., -0.09, -0.10] ranges.
Note than having a smaller step means having a bigger range which could lead to slow calculation.
if you set this parameter to -0.001, you then slow down the Edge calculation by a factor of 10.
(default to -0.01)
minimum_winrate
It filters pairs which don't have at least minimum_winrate.
This comes handy if you want to be conservative and don't comprise win rate in favor of risk reward ratio.
(default to 0.60)
minimum_expectancy
It filters paris which have an expectancy lower than this number .
Having an expectancy of 0.20 means if you put 10$ on a trade you expect a 12$ return.
(default to 0.20)
min_trade_number
When calculating W and R and E (expectancy) against historical data, you always want to have a minimum number of trades. The more this number is the more Edge is reliable. Having a win rate of 100% on a single trade doesn't mean anything at all. But having a win rate of 70% over past 100 trades means clearly something.
(default to 10, it is highly recommended not to decrease this number)
max_trade_duration_minute
Edge will filter out trades with long duration. If a trade is profitable after 1 month, it is hard to evaluate the strategy based on it. But if most of trades are profitable and they have maximum duration of 30 minutes, then it is clearly a good sign.
NOTICE: While configuring this value, you should take into consideration your ticker interval. as an example filtering out trades having duration less than one day for a strategy which has 4h interval does not make sense. default value is set assuming your strategy interval is relatively small (1m or 5m, etc).
(default to 1 day, 1440 = 60 * 24)
remove_pumps
Edge will remove sudden pumps in a given market while going through historical data. However, given that pumps happen very often in crypto markets, we recommend you keep this off.
(default to false)