By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

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On Stochastic Multi Criteria Decision Analytics and Artificial Intelligence for Efficient Stock Trading By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3 1 College of Business, University of Rhode Island 2 Center for School Improvement and Social Policy, University of Rhode Island 3 Thomson-Reuters, Boston, MA www.GHDash.net Preliminary X111 International Conference Applied Stochastic Models and Data Analysis June 30 – July 3, 2009

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X111 International Conference Applied Stochastic Models and Data Analysis June 30 – July 3, 2009. On Stochastic Multi Criteria Decision Analytics and Artificial Intelligence for Efficient Stock Trading. By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

On Stochastic Multi Criteria Decision Analytics and Artificial Intelligence for Efficient Stock

Trading

By

Gordon H. Dash, Jr.1, Nina Kajiji2, John Forman3

1College of Business, University of Rhode Island2Center for School Improvement and Social Policy, University of

Rhode Island3Thomson-Reuters, Boston, MA

www.GHDash.net Preliminary

X111 International ConferenceApplied Stochastic Models and Data Analysis

June 30 – July 3, 2009

Page 2: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

Justification

Increasing complexities of global markets

New mathematical modeling of stock price behavior gaining popularity

Traditional Brownian Motion Model assume stock price follow a random walk

Geometric Brownian Motions assumes stock returns follow a random walk

Stochastic methods are gaining popularity since they rely upon random and pseudorandom methods to define an asset’s price

Page 3: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

Objective

To join stochastic multi-criteria decision analytics with neural network based modeling to assign expected stocks to classification groups based on their trading profitability.

To examine the time-series efficiency of the DK4-AT via a double log (restricted Cobb-Douglas (CD)) production model

Page 4: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

A Trading System

Factors that define a trading system are: An identification of the markets to trade Position quantities to buy/sell Entry and exit decision that indicate when to

buy/sell When to exit a winning (losing) position

DK4-AT incorporates any number of advanced trading rules that conform to these factor decisions

Page 5: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

The Stock Trading Model

Shreve (2004) provides the framework for use of the stochastic integral to characterize uncertain stock trading. Specifically: Define the random variable Xt of a stock’s

market price, at time t. The probability space (Ω,Ѵ,Р), a measure space with P(Ω) = 1, as well as filtration.

Page 6: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

The Model (cont)

That is, Гi is loosely viewed as the set of events whose outcomes are certain to be revealed to investors as true or false by, or at, time t.

For any event, A, the probability assigned to A by investors is P(A). The price process X is said to be adapted if for all t, Xt is Vt measurable

Page 7: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

The Trading Strategy

We assumes a market that is not characterized by the no-risk unlimited profit arbitrage effects of trading on advanced knowledge.

We define a trading strategy θ that determines the quantity θt(ω) of each security held in each state ω Є Ω and at each time t.

Page 8: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

The Relation

Hence, given a price process X and a trading strategy θ that satisfies the no arbitrage conditions, the total financial gain between any times s and t ≥ s is defined as a stochastic integral

Page 9: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

Buy-Hold Strategy

A short-horizon element of the DK4-AT trading strategy captured by θ where an investor initiates a position immediately after some stopping time T and closes it at some later stopping time U.

Thus for a position size that is Vt measurable, the trading strategy θ is defined by θ = 1(T< t ≤ U) and the gain is:

.

Page 10: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

The n-dimensional Trading Strategy

Therefore, for n different securities, with price process X1 ,…, Xn the investor can choose an associated n-dimensional trading strategy θ = {θ1 ,…, θn} or some allowable set Ѳ, for which the total gain-from-trade process is:

Page 11: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

Why ANN?

Prediction capabilities of ANNs for high frequency stock market (Refenes, 1996)

Neural networks do not require a parametric system model

They are relatively insensitive to chaotic data patterns

Page 12: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

The RBF ANN Topology

Page 13: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

AT Algorithm

Page 14: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

Production System for a Profitable Stock

Pick a starting date – Case Study List Creation Date: 24-Jan-2009

Establish historical period: 01-Jan-2008 through 1-Jan-2009, inclusive.

Create research sample (SAM): Number of trades ≥ 25 throughout the historical period. Identify tickers where 50% or more of the trades generated a dollar profit. Identify the research sample → 915 securities.

For SAM, obtain stock fundamentals (source: Yahoo) EPS – estimate current year Market Capitalization 52Wk Range – real time Percent change from 50 day Moving Average Average Daily Volume EPS estimate next year EPS estimate next quarter Day’s Range

Page 15: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

Production System for a Profitable Stock

Execute K-SOM Target variable: Number of Positive Trades for the ith security Predictor variables: fundamentals 1x1 classification structure – primarily to obtain distance measure Create weighted probability of profitable trade – that is, % profitable x distance

Use K4 to estimate the CD production of the weighted probability of positive trades

Use K4 with softmax transfer function Identify production elasticity for each fundamental variable Interpret the returns to scale for profitable trading

Page 16: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

ResultsNumber of Positive Trades by Security

1,00191081972863754645536427318291

72

66

60

54

48

42

36

30

24

18

Page 17: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

ResultsKSOM Centroid Distance – First 819 Securities

89181072964856748640532424316281

0.30

0.25

0.20

0.15

0.10

0.05

0.00

Page 18: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

ResultsK4 Analysis Using Softmax Transfer Function

Dependent Variable: Weighted % Positive TradesIndependent Variables: Ln(Fundamental Variable)

Page 19: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

ResultsPlot of Actual and Predicted of Weighted % Positive Trades using K4

Actual Predicted

1,00191081972863754645536427318291

9

6

3

0

-3

-6

-9

-12

-15

-18

-21

-24

Page 20: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

ResultsZoom in View – Actual and Predicted

Actual Predicted

455

-3

Page 21: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

ResultsWeights from Comparative K4 Models

Dependent Variable: Weighted % Positive Trades

Model Chosen – Norm2

An increase in the 52 Wk Range or the Day’s Range increases the Weighted % Positive Trades. That is, higher the price differential higher the profit potential

Mkt. Cap also exhibits a positive relationship. That is, higher the mkt. cap the higher the stock’s propensity to trade.

The other five variables all have a negative relationship to Weighted % Positive Trades.

Page 22: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

Pseudo Elasticity EstimatesPTCP: % Positive Trades weighted by K-SOM Centroid Proximity

Page 23: By Gordon H. Dash, Jr. 1 , Nina Kajiji 2 , John Forman 3

Conclusions

The production system exhibits decreasing returns to scale (0.338); hence, a simultaneous 1% change in all fundamentals will result in a .34% increase in the % of weighted profitable trades (volatility is good).

The DK4-AT proved to be an efficient “engine” for predicting high-frequency stock trades.

A K-SOM 20-Minute Cluster produce Centroid proximity scores the weighted the % profitable trade in a meaningful manner for prediction estimation.

A double-log (restricted CD) production function estimated by the K4 RBF with Norm:2 data transformation on fundamental variables produced meaningful production elasticity estimates