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How to Search for the Ideal Metatrader EA

April 20th, 2009 No comments

Important Risk Factors to Consider When Choosing a Metatrader Expert Advisor

With thousands of Metatrader EAs out there, it can be tough to cut through the noise and find one suitable for your trading style and risk tolerance. To help you in this search, I’ve compiled the statistics that many traders find to be very beneficial when analyzing any Metatrader EA.

Keep in mind that many of these backtesting statistics look solely at past performance. It’s important to mention here that past performance is not indicative of future results.

With that said, the very first thing many traders look for, and this is rather intuitive, is: How well has this EA performed in the past? Obviously it’s important to look for one that has shown profitable results, but stopping there could lead to some detrimental results.
These returns need to be adjusted for risk. If the Metatrader EA has shown some eye opening profits, but took on a ton of risk, these returns may not have been worth your while. To quantify profitability while also considering the risk taken on by the EA, many traders look at a statistic known as the “Profit Factor.”

Profit Factor:

This ratio when further combined with performance measures you will get a fair idea of what to expect with a particular EA. However, past performance does not guarantee future results. The profit factor is calculated as:

(profit – commission)/(max drawdown + commission)

A Metatrader EA with a profit factor less than 1 is a historically poor performing EA. The returns that it has produced do not justify the amount of risk taken on. Take a look at the table below for statistics of three hypothetical Metatrader EAs.

As you can see from this table, EA 3 has a profit factor less than one, and can be immediately eliminated from your decision. If you look closely, EA 3 actually was profitable (Total Gain – Total Loss = $890), however this return does not justify the amount of risk (drawdown) taken on.

The risk measurement that many traders tend to focus on are the drawdowns that the Metatrader expert advisor has produced.

Drawdown Analysis:

When first analyzing the drawdowns of an EA, a good place to start is simply by looking at the equity curve. An EA with a choppy and sporadic equity curve shows a historically volatile EA (see the chart below to the left); whereas a smoother equity curve shows a historically more stable EA (see the chart to the right).

Equity Curve – Volatile EA

Equity Curve – More Stable EA

Now, to further quantify the drawdown analysis; there are three measures that many traders look at.

  1. Max Drawdown:
    • This is the largest drawdown (in percentage terms) that the EA has realized over its trading life
    • This is the best indicator of a worst case scenario
    • A good way to think about this is: If this drawdown occurred immediately after opening your account, could you stomach this type of risk?
  2. Average Drawdown:
    • The average drawdown size (in percentage terms) realized by the EA over its historical performance.
    • Calculated by summing up all the losses (%) and dividing by the actual number of losses.
      • In most cases this statistic can be provided by your EA vendor
    • The average drawdown will give you an idea of what you might typically see (on average) in a peak-to-trough cycle.
  3. Drawdown Recovery:
    • Shows the time frame the trading robot has taken, on average, to recover from a drawdown back to a positive balance.
    • A less volatile Metatrader expert advisor will often take longer to recover.
      • Keep this in mind before deciding that a fast recovery is a good attribute.
      • More volatile EAs often recover quicker, but this is due to large fluctuations and swings in performance.

These risk measurements will certainly be helpful when selecting the right EA for you. Keep each of these risk statistics in mind when analyzing any Metartrader EA, and always evaluate how they fit your personal risk tolerance. There are many more statistics and factors to consider when choosing an EA, and I will explain these in later articles.

Why Metatrader is the best way to trade Forex?

February 8th, 2009 No comments

Many Forex traders that enter the market are clueless on how to trade. Most, if not all Forex brokers offer demo practice accounts to get you adjusted to their platform. The great thing is a lot of them are Metatrader brokers. This means their core platform comes from a company called Metaquotes. These brokers more or less lease the software and allow the traders to build their trading strategies.

The most powerful thing you can do with this software is create your own trading strategies and program them into an Expert Advisor or EA for short. These EA’s are state of the art and allow you to auto trade the strategies. Auto trading is a phenomenal thing, in that you don’t have to be at your computer for trades to open and close. The stability of the platform is fantastic and the only thing that may carry some worry when you are not present is your Internet connection.

The top 10 reasons why you should use the Metatrader ( MT4) platform:

  1. The Metatrader platform is versatile and very stable.
  2. There are plenty of Metatrader brokers to choose from.
  3. You can find metatrader expert advisor programmers to create your strategies into EAs if you can’t do it yourself.
  4. If you look hard enough you can find free meta trader EA’s.
  5. The software is free to demo with for as long as you want.
  6. You can create your own Forex Trading Robot.
  7. You can create as many Trading templates as you wish.
  8. You can manually back test all the strategies you plug into the system.
  9. The charts are very clean and very easy to read.
  10. The reporting gives you full statements and information without logging into a broker website.

So, why wouldn’t you use Metatrader as your platform for your Forex trading? The only real way to know if this platform is for you is to open a demo account and start practicing with it.