Quantopian's community platform is shutting down. Please read this post for more information and download your code.
Back to Community
Updated Pairs Trading Lecture: Now With Less Wind Resistance

Here is an updated version of the pairs trading lecture. In addition I am working on an advanced version that deals with some of the more sophisticated math behind the concepts.

All lectures can be found here: https://www.quantopian.com/lectures

Disclaimer

The material on this website is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute an offer to sell, a solicitation to buy, or a recommendation or endorsement for any security or strategy, nor does it constitute an offer to provide investment advisory services by Quantopian. In addition, the material offers no opinion with respect to the suitability of any security or specific investment. No information contained herein should be regarded as a suggestion to engage in or refrain from any investment-related course of action as none of Quantopian nor any of its affiliates is undertaking to provide investment advice, act as an adviser to any plan or entity subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, individual retirement account or individual retirement annuity, or give advice in a fiduciary capacity with respect to the materials presented herein. If you are an individual retirement or other investor, contact your financial advisor or other fiduciary unrelated to Quantopian about whether any given investment idea, strategy, product or service described herein may be appropriate for your circumstances. All investments involve risk, including loss of principal. Quantopian makes no guarantees as to the accuracy or completeness of the views expressed in the website. The views are subject to change, and may have become unreliable for various reasons, including changes in market conditions or economic circumstances.

4 responses

Great Post Thanks.

Do you think their is still alpha to be captured at the minute level even with abunch of stat arb firms trading on tick data?

An interesting concept would be to see if news seniment scores from Accern are correlated with stock prices breaking cointegration or causing cointegrated stocks to deviate then wind up reverting

Great post, very informative.

@Miles I think there is definitely still alpha to be captured. It's from a different source, the types of signals that are strong at tick level are different from the signals that are strong at minute or week level. Time series can behave totally differently depending on sampling frequency, so it's almost like dealing in different worlds.

The news sentiment idea is also very interesting and worth some study. Another argument might be that news is precisely what drives the deviation from the mean spread in a pair of stocks. The idea is that the same macro-economic factors drive both in the same directions, but the small ups and downs that cause temporary higher and lower spread may be partially driven by the news events. So you could argue that news sentiment may both drive cointegration and break it depending on circumstances.

@Jason Thanks, check out the rest of the lecture series for more.