Introduction: The Significance of Trading Systems

What are Trading Systems?

Trading Systems are an incredibly powerful way to profit from all financial markets including the stock market, cryptocurrencies, futures, and forex markets. Some very robust trading systems can even by applied to several financial exchanges with little to no modification, providing global diversification and profit potential with minimal effort. If you are new to trading or struggling to get consistent results, systems trading is the fastest and most reliable way to learn stock trading.

Built correctly, your system should be rock solid and make you money well into the future. BUT, if built the wrong way, you’re more likely to encounter drawdown and losses.

Let’s first define what a trading system actually is…

Before we go into detail, I want to clear up one super common question. All of the following terms basically mean the same thing and can be used interchangeably. They are all different terms for basically the same thing – 100% objective rules based trading. At Enlightened Stock Trading we refer to them mostly as ‘Trading Systems’, but all of these other terms are essentially referring to the same thing:

  • Trading Systems
  • Quantified Trading Strategies
  • Active Trading Strategies
  • Algos
  • Algorithmic Trading
  • Algorithmic Trading Systems
  • Mechanical Trading
  • Mechanical Trading Systems
  • Trading bots

A trading system is a comprehensive set of rules (similar to those used by many hedge funds) based on technical indicators like bollinger bands or moving averages or objectively defined chart patterns dictating how you enter, exit, and manage risk in the financial markets. The goal is to ensure that you earn more than you lose over many trades, even after accounting for commissions and slippage.

The primary advantage of system trading is its ability to eliminate human emotion, which is often a significant source of trading mistakes. By following a predefined set of rules, you can make consistent, informed trading decisions without being swayed by psychological factors.

Mechanical trading systems, or algos, leave no room for discretion. Every decision is dictated by fully codified rules designed to handle all potential market scenarios. This approach ensures your actions are in line with the system’s guidelines, not personal emotions or biases.

Why Does Systems Trading Work?

Many traders battle with psychological biases that can negatively impact their trading decisions. Discretionary traders must delve deep into trading psychology and eliminate these biases if they are to become profitable – this can take years of psychological work. Systems trading provides a faster, more disciplined alternative, allowing traders to bypass the pitfalls of emotion and become consistent sooner.

Systems trading also allows traders to answer the critical question – Do I have a real and measurable edge in the markets.

As you will see in this article, by adopting a systematic approach to trading you eliminate discretionary and subjective decisions from your trading. This results in an objective, testable approach which you can validate on past market history to ensure it is profitable (this is called backtesting).

Trading systems work because they bypass the psychological issues that plague most traders and can ensure you make informed trading decisions and have a positive edge in the market.

Trading System Diving Deep: Components and Types

Trading System Components

Many traders will be acquainted with the four core components of a trading system:

  • Trade Setup: Defines the conditions under which trades are sought.
  • Entry Signal: Pinpoints the exact entry into a trade, encompassing aspects like pyramiding and re-entry.
  • Initial Stop Loss: Determines the point of exit should the trade result in a loss.
  • Exit Signal: Establishes when a trade should be closed or when the position should be reduced.

However, a comprehensive system actually comprises 12 distinct components. These components can be observed in the subsequent diagram:

Trading system components

Figure 1. There are 12 trading system components in a complete system.

6 Types of Trading Systems

There are many different types of trading systems retail traders can use. Each of these types of trading system has advantages and disadvantages – none are perfect, but a diversified portfolio of systems is pretty much the holy grail of systematic trading.

The first trading system you choose should resonate with your Personality, Objectives, and Lifestyle because this will make it much easier to follow in the early stages of your trading career. Once you have mastered a trading system that suits you, then you can start to experiment with other types of trading systems from the list below.

Whether you’re hunting for systems tailored to stocks, futures, forex, or cryptocurrencies, trading systems predominantly fall into these categories:

Predominantly, mechanical trading systems lean towards rules based in traditional technical analysis, deploying price, volume, and technical indicators or custom indicators for decision-making. It is also possible to introduce fundamental analysis rules into your mechanical system, though this data can be more difficult and expensive to get in a timely way.

A good example of how trading systems can combine both technical analysis rules and fundamental rules is my article on the impact of a stock’s dividend growth on trend-following systems and my deep dive into trading stock dividend aristocrats.

The crux of any mechanical trading system, whether founded on technical, fundamental, or a fusion of data sources, is the incorporation of non-subjective, mechanical rules. Such objectivity eliminates emotional biases by giving clear-cut signals: buy, sell, hold, or stand aside.

For long-term traders, mechanical investing systems can help you objectively profit from broader market trends or sectors of strength and keep you safe during capital devouring bear markets.

Regardless of the type of trading system you are using, the most important thing you can do is build absolute confidence in your rules by learning to backtesting correctly. Such historical validation instils the confidence required to follow its signals, even amidst inevitable losses and drawdowns.

The Power of Mechanical Trading Systems

Mechanical trading systems offer a resilient and efficient approach for those seeking consistency in their trading decisions. They act as a shield against the overwhelming emotional biases that often infiltrate trading decisions, while also reducing the you’re your daily trading decisions take and ensuring consistency over time. Whether you’re just dipping your toes into the trading world or you’re a seasoned trader, trading systems are the cornerstone you need for better decision-making.

Mechanical Trading Systems: An Emotion-Free Approach

Mechanical trading revolves around a predetermined set of rules or algorithms, removing subjective judgment from trading decisions. Before adopting mechanical systems, many traders, including myself, would second-guess decisions, act impulsively, and spend hours stressing over each trade. Implementing a mechanical system reduces trading time and can increase profitability.

Whether you’re trading stocks, cryptocurrencies, futures, or forex, the principles of a mechanical system remain consistent. These systems can range from simple strategies, like moving average crossovers, to more intricate algorithms which analyse the price data to make trading decisions.

In essence, mechanical trading streamlines decision-making, neutralizing emotional trading decisions and offering a systematic, objective approach to the financial markets.

Advantages of Mechanical Rules and Edges

Mechanical trading systems offer huge advantages, some of which include:

  • Efficiency in execution, allowing traders more leisure and less screen time.
  • Extracting the trader from the decision-making process, reducing confusion, mistakes and overwhelm.
  • Offering a consistent decision-making approach irrespective of the trader’s emotional state.
  • Reducing emotions and biases that often plague traders.
  • Holding the system accountable rather than self-blame, providing room for research and improvement.

Critically, mechanical rules are the backbone of consistent trading decisions, helping eradicate emotional biases and ensuring objective judgments. They introduce efficiency, allowing you to swiftly scan international stock exchanges and vast crypto marketplaces daily, with technology doing most of the heavy lifting.

By basing these rules on market indicators, price patterns, and risk management techniques, the influence of cognitive biases and trading psychology is curtailed, leading to consistent profits, fewer trading errors and greater, more consistent profitability.

Gaining an Edge with Mechanical Trading

My journey in stock and crypto trading has always been driven by the desire to find an edge. Mechanical trading systems granted me that edge, turning my trading career around after years of grappling with discretionary strategies.

But the real game-changer is the capability to backtest trading ideas. Backtesting empowers traders to verify the profitability of their trading rules. Coupled with trading software, it’s possible to automate the trading process, freeing up time for research, analysis, and system refinement.

Mechanical trading offers a rules-based, data-driven decision-making process that gives consistent, more profitable outcomes. This gives systematic traders a substantial advantage over traditional discretionary counterparts.

And a crucial takeaway: mechanical trading isn’t reserved for the elite. Many novice traders could fast-track their proficiency and achieve profitability sooner by prioritizing mechanical over discretionary strategies.

Why Discretionary Trading Systems Fall Short

Discretionary trading systems, while flexible, fall prey to human biases and emotions. With discretion comes subjectivity, allowing cognitive biases such as loss aversion, confirmation bias, and overconfidence to infiltrate decision-making processes. These systems blend trading choices with a trader’s psychological vulnerabilities, leading to decisions based on impulse, fear, or greed rather than objective criteria.

If your trading process is even 1% discretionary, then effectively it is 100% discretionary!

In contrast, mechanical trading systems are driven by a fixed rule set, ensuring consistent and repeatable trading processes. They fend off human errors rooted in emotions and biases. Performance analysis is straightforward due to the unchanging rules over time. In essence, while the flexibility of discretionary systems may give the illusion of some benefit, in reality, mechanical rules are far more likely to result in long term profitability.

Who Can Benefit From Mechanical Trading Systems

Mechanical trading systems cater to a broad spectrum of traders, from trend traders, swing traders, and position traders to technical and price action traders, day traders, and long-term investors. All of these groups, benefit from the objective nature of mechanical trading systems. Even day traders, who are often exposed to the volatility and market fluctuations, can significantly benefit by implementing mechanical rules to insulate their decisions from emotions.

Every trader, irrespective of their chosen timeframe or strategy, grapples with trading emotions that can compromise the consistency and quality of their decisions. If you often find yourself swayed by market sentiments, failing to maintain a consistent, calm, and profitable stance, mechanical trading strategies can help you improve your results.

Good Trading Systems – How to tell the difference

The difference between a robust and an inferior trading system is nuanced yet critical in systematic trading. While many trading systems impress you with astronomically high returns from their trading strategy backtest, the real test lies in real-time performance against unforeseen market data.

A sound strategy, simplicity, and adaptability underpin dependable systems. Your system should have a minimal number of rules, avoid over-optimization, perform consistently across varied markets, and maintain profitability after accounting for trading costs.

For newcomers, the path to crafting a solid system is laden with potential missteps. This section aims to clarify the distinct traits of good trading systems, helping you sidestep common pitfalls and choose and / or build stronger strategies.

Sound Trading Strategy: The Heartbeat of a Good System

At the core of every successful trading system lies a well-structured and proven trading strategy. Such strategies are underpinned by a clear philosophy or principle that gives you an edge in the market. For instance, recognizing that markets trend and positioning oneself in an existing trend can offer positive returns. The rules of these systems are typically based on hypotheses and should encapsulate the essence of the strategy they’re built upon.

To truly harness the potential of your trading strategy, it’s imperative to:

  • Choose a proven trading strategy that aligns with your beliefs.
  • Refrain from diving into system development until you’ve zeroed in on a strategy.
  • Ensure that your system’s design is in complete harmony with the chosen strategy.

Complexity: Navigating the Fine Line

When it comes to trading systems, complexity can be both a friend and a foe. Flawed trading systems tend to lean heavily on complex mathematical derivations from price and volume data. They often use overly specific market conditions as rules and require a myriad of conditions for trade execution.

On the contrary, the best trading systems embrace simplicity. They employ clear rules based on straightforward price and volume data, with few conditions dictating trade entry and exit. To harness the power of simplicity, traders should:

  • Strive to express their algorithmic trading strategies as simply as possible.
  • Avoid over-optimizing rules, which can result in misleading historical results.

Adaptive Behaviour: The Art of Flexibility

The financial markets are dynamic, and trading systems must evolve in tandem. Poor systems often remain anchored to static references such as absolute price levels or specific percentage changes. Such rigidity can prove detrimental in the long run because it doesn’t allow the system to adapt to behavioural changes in the underlying market.

In contrast, robust systems possess the agility to adjust based on market volatility. They utilize metrics like Average True Range (ATR) or Standard Deviation to keep pace with the ever-changing market temperament. To ensure adaptability, it’s wise to:

  • Focus on metrics that adjust with market volatility.
  • Reference price movements that consider recent market behaviour.

Rule Restriction: Finding the Sweet Spot

While rules are essential, they can be counterproductive if overly restrictive. Inferior systems drown in a sea of rules, often layered with complex criteria. This not only complicates the trading process but can also stifle profitability and excessively reduce the number of trades.

Superior systems, however, operate on the principle of minimalism. They function optimally with a limited set of consistent rules— for a stock trading system this would typically mean 4-6 rules. To streamline your trading system:

  • Determine a rule cap and adhere to it.
  • Aim for simplicity and consistency.
  • Eliminate unnecessary, low value and marginal rules.

Optimization: Walking the Tightrope

Optimization can be a double-edged sword. In most cases optimization can improve your system’s performance, but excessive optimization degrades results. Be wary of falling into the trap of excessive optimization, chasing the perfect hypothetical outcomes. Good trading systems focus on optimizing a select number of parameters to ensure stability rather than focusing on finding the best possible parameter set.

For traders aiming to perfect the art of optimization:

  • A deep understanding and the right application of optimization techniques are paramount.
  • Optimizing for stability rather than maximum performance.

Exit Strategy: Preparing for All Contingencies

Every seasoned trader knows the importance of a well-defined exit strategy. Weak systems falter with ambiguous exit rules, leaving traders vulnerable. Strong systems, in contrast, have rules that ensure there’s always a clear exit point, irrespective of market dynamics.

To fortify your exit strategy:

  • Anticipate all potential market movements post-trade and design your exit strategy accordingly.
  • Ensure there are no market conditions in which you would not get an exit signal.
  • Design your exit rules to match your system’s underlying trading strategy.

Market Transferability: Broadening the Horizon

A hallmark of a robust trading system is its versatility. While inferior systems are pigeonholed into specific markets, superior ones can work across a diverse range of markets. For example, the trend following system you learn in The Trader Success System is profitable when applied to most of the different stock markets globally. Similarly a well designed stock trading system for the Australian Stock Exchange should also be profitable when applied to similar markets like the Toronto Stock Exchange. A well-designed trend-following system can even be effective between stocks, futures, and forex.

If versatility is your goal:

  • Diversify your system’s applicability.
  • Focus on broad-based historical testing to ensure adaptability.

Profit Margins and Trading Opportunities: Striking the Balance

Profitability is the ultimate litmus test for any trading system. While poor systems with very small average profit per trade may look good in historical backtests, in real time trading they often struggle once slippage and commissions are taken into account. Good trading systems typically have a higher average profit per trade (I aim for greater than 1% per trade on average) to allow for any slippage and commissions during live trading.

To optimize profitability:

  • Ensure your system generates consistent and high average profit per trade.
  • Regularly assess your strategies to ensure their edge is stable.

By understanding and implementing these insights, traders can enhance their trading systems without curve fitting so their systems work in real time trading.

3 Steps to Harnessing the Power of Trading Systems

In the dynamic sphere of trading, the ideal system is not merely a purchased product; it’s a tailored fit aligning with one’s beliefs, objectives, and lifestyle. This section outlines essential steps to successfully leverage trading systems tailored to individual needs, leading to consistent trading results. The steps are:

  1. Set System Goals
  2. Choose the Right Strategy
  3. Choose / Build and Document your System

Set System Goals

Trading goals are paramount, just as they are in personal and professional realms. To embark on the trading journey with direction and purpose, specific goals should be established. Rather than adopting generalized aspirations, traders should:

  • Define specific outcomes such as “achieve 15% annual return on average over a 30 year backtest” instead of ambiguous goals like “be more disciplined”.
  • Envision the lifestyle aspired to through trading gains.
  • Dedicate a predetermined amount of time for trading daily.
  • Determine risk per trade limits.
  • Establish maximum allowable drawdown percentages.

Choose the Right Strategy

Trading strategies form the backbone of any system. They must be rooted in discernible market behaviors to be effective. Some of the most successful strategies for retail traders include:

  • Trend Following: A highly profitable, low-maintenance strategy that profits from long-term trends. It targets rising stocks, holding them until trends reverse. Its strength lies in the potential for extremely large winning trades and small losing trades, yielding substantial annual profits even with few wins.
  • Swing Trading: More active than trend following, this strategy leverages the oscillations around the primary trend. While it generates trades frequently, the average profit per trade tends to be lower.
  • Mean Reversion: This strategy capitalizes on market overreactions. By positioning against short-term extremes, such as sudden stock drops due to unforeseen news, traders profit from the subsequent market bounce-back.

Selecting a strategy that aligns with one’s trading beliefs and then moulding a system around it is the foundation of a successful long term trading career.

Why a Trading System Should Suit Your Personality

Delving into the trading world often starts with a self-reflective question – traders should not ask “How do you make money trading?” but instead ask “How can I make money trading?”. This distinction is paramount.

Every individual is unique, which means blindly following tips, subscribing to newsletters, applying any strategy you find online is not be the key. Instead, the essence lies in crafting or choosing a strategy that resonates with your personality, objectives and lifestyle while also achieving your trading goals.

For instance:

  • Action seekers might struggle with a long-term weekly approach.
  • Those who value patience might find day trading overwhelming.
  • A perfectionist might find it hard to reconcile with a strategy that’s often wrong, even if profitable in the long run.
  • If you’re juggling trading with a full-time job, an end-of-day system might be more suitable to prevent any clash with work commitments.

Debunking popular myths, trading doesn’t necessarily entail constant market monitoring, day trading, high-frequency trades, or insider knowledge. In fact, strategies like day trading or scalping can be more taxing as a regular 9-5 job, negating the allure of flexibility. For those seeking time and location freedom, medium to long-term trading styles, such as trend trading, are more effective!

Ultimately, the most effective system isn’t necessarily the most complex or popular one. Whether you’re navigating the stock market, futures, forex, options, or any other domain, the best system is the one tailored to your understanding and needs.

Choose / Build and Document Your System

As we have seen, consistency in profitability demands a systematic approach. You have two alternatives for finding that system – either choose an existing trading system like those provided for you in The Trader Success System, or develop your own system. Developing a mechanical trading strategy, regardless of the market, involves the following steps:

  1. Hypothesis Formulation: Propose hypotheses for individual system components.
  2. Signal Identification: Pinpoint trading signals that correspond with the proposed hypotheses.
  3. Backtesting: Evaluate the system’s historical performance to refine its efficiency.
  4. Risk and Position Management: Lay out specific rules for risk management and position sizing.

Once you have your trading system in place, a thorough and documented trading plan is crucial. This plan not only dictates market approach but also prepares traders for unforeseen events, ensuring that investments remain protected regardless of market turbulences or personal adversities.

Mastering Trading System Application

Mastering the application of trading systems goes beyond just following the rules. It requires meticulous attention to detail, astute risk management, and embracing technology and software to your advantage. Here’s how you can elevate your trading system mastery…

Backtest for Confidence and Profitability

Backtesting is pivotal to developing and refining trading systems as well as building confidence in those systems. By simulating strategies on historical market data, traders can gauge a system’s theoretical performance before venturing into live markets. This not only gives insights into a system’s potential profitability under different market conditions but also arms the trader with confidence.

However, it’s vital to tread cautiously. Issues like overfitting or not factoring in trading costs can distort results. Always remember, past performance doesn’t guarantee future results. For a comprehensive understanding of backtesting, view our detailed article.

Risk and Portfolio Management Rules

All trading systems give you exposure to market risk which must be managed if you are to be a successful trader long term. Risk management is a cornerstone of successful trading. Proper planning, establishing stop-loss points, trade sizes and prudent market exposure limits are critical to prevent wiping out your account. Many traders unfortunately sabotage their gains due with bad trades, magnified by highly leveraged positions or missing stop losses. A strategic approach to risk and portfolio management is non-negotiable if you are to survive long term as a systematic trader.

Selecting Suitable Software

The right software is vital for testing trading ideas, keeping tabs on market opportunities, and ensuring accurate trade execution. Amibroker is a stellar recommendation for its speed, backtesting capabilities, flexibility, and value for money. It stands out as one of the best trading software for stock traders – several other backtesting software packages are also available to perform this task including Real-Test and Wealth Lab.

Automated Trading Systems: The Intersection of Software & Trading

Automated trading systems represent the fusion of technology and trading strategy, promising an efficient trading experience, reduced errors and mistakes along with lower time commitment than manual trading. With automated systems, traders can allocate their time better, diversify effectively across markets and strategies, minimize trading errors, and execute trades flawlessly. For users of Amibroker and Interactive Brokers, the Smart Stock Automation Engine ensures effortless trading automation.

Sadly though, if you are looking for automatic trading systems that will make you rich with no effort then you are going to be disappointed. Even with good automated trading systems you still need to closely monitor the automated trade execution and ensure all of your technology performs correctly each day.

Recommended Reading on Mechanical Trading Systems

For those keen on delving deeper, several influential trading books illuminate the intricacies of mechanical trading systems. ‘Mechanical Trading Systems’ by Richard Weissman stands out and has left an indelible mark on my own trading. Other essential reads include:

  1. Mechanical Trading Systems by Richard Weissman
  2. Trade Your Way to Financial Freedom by Van K. Tharp
  3. Market Wizards, Updated: Interviews With Top Traders by Jack D. Schwager
  4. Trading Systems and Money Management by Thomas Stridsman
  5. Evaluation and Optimization of Trading Strategies by Robert Pardo

Eliminating Trading Mistakes

Trading mistakes are part of a trader’s journey, but minimizing them is crucial if you are to become profitable and make money long term. Emotions often spur errors, be it from boredom or the dreaded FOMO.

Before any trade, always ask yourself – am I following my trading rules exactly?

By recognizing and learning from previous mistakes, traders can develop strategies to counteract emotional decisions and see the larger market picture. Dive into the intricacies of trading psychology to further your understanding.

Next Steps to Master Systematic Trading!

If this article has inspired you to master systematic trading and transform your results, then I want you to know that mastery is more accessible than you think. The Trader Success System isn’t just another course; it’s a transformational membership experience designed to accelerate your trading success, give you unshakeable confidence and launch your diversified portfolio of trading systems. When you join The Trader Success System you will shorten your learning journey from the typical 3-5 years to just a few months!

Dive deep into proven strategies, master backtesting and trading system analysis, get implementation support, learn to build your own trading systems, and be part of a community that’s as invested in your success as you are. Don’t let another moment slip by! This is your chance to redefine and dramatically accelerate your trading journey.

💡 Ready to conquer the markets? Take the leap into the Trader Success System and redefine what’s possible in your trading journey. Join us now and let’s chart the path to your trading goals together! 💡

Frequently Asked Questions about Stock Trading Systems

I want to start using trading systems – What do I do next?

Mechanical Trading Systems are what I have been focusing on for over 20 years now and I have built a portfolio of systems along with a comprehensive training and mentoring program into The Trader Success System.

If you want to shorten your learning journey from the typical 3-5 years to just a few months and get access to a ready-made and diversified portfolio of mechanical trading systems covering a range of trading strategies, markets and timeframes, then joining The Trader Success System is your best next step.

What is a good trading system?

A good trading system is one that consistently produces profitable outcomes over a significant sample size and adapts to varying market conditions. No trading system makes money on every trade, but over many trades good trading systems will generate positive returns. A good trading system should be based on a sound strategy, be well-optimized without being overfitted, and consider trading costs such as slippage and commissions.

What is a system in trading?

In trading, a system refers to a set of predefined rules and criteria that guide entry, exit, and risk management decisions. It provides a structured approach to trading, ensuring decisions are based on objective criteria rather than emotions.

What are the components of a trading system?

The main components of a trading system include the trade setup (filters or conditions that determine the market environment’s suitability for trading), entry rules (when to enter a trade), exit rules (when to close a trade), Initial stop loss & risk management guidelines (how much capital to risk on each trade).

How do I create my own trading system?

Creating your own trading system involves identifying a strategy or edge in the market, formulating rules around this strategy, backtesting the system on historical data to evaluate its performance, and then refining it to improve the system’s performance.

Is automated trading profitable?

Automated trading can be profitable, but its success depends on the underlying trading system’s robustness. Automation eliminates emotional decision-making and allows for more precise execution, but the system must be periodically reviewed and adjusted to changing market conditions. There are good systems and poor systems – you should only look to automate your trading once you are confident you have a good, consistent and profitable system.

How do I start a trading system?

Starting a trading system involves identifying a trading idea or hypothesis, formulating a set of rules to trade this idea, backtesting the system on historical data, and then implementing the system in real-time trading—either manually or through automation—while continually monitoring and adjusting as necessary.

What is stock trading system?

A stock trading system is a complete set of objective rules that tells you exactly how to trade in the stock market. It defines every action you take including: when to buy, how much to buy, when to sell, and how to manage risk; without relying on subjective judgment or emotions.

Here’s what a trading system typically includes:

  • Setup Conditions: These are the criteria that determine when you’ll consider a stock for trading. For example, the stock might need to be in an uptrend or meet certain liquidity requirements.
  • Entry Trigger: This is the precise rule for entering a trade. For instance, you might buy when the stock closes above its 50-day high or when a moving average crossover occurs.
  • Exit Rules: These define when you’ll sell. It could be based on a trailing stop, a price target, or a reversal in trend.
  • Initial Stop Loss: This protects your capital by limiting losses if the trade doesn’t work out. For example, you might set a stop loss a certain percentage below your entry price.
  • Position Sizing: This determines how much of your capital to allocate to each trade, ensuring you manage risk effectively.

The beauty of a trading system is that it’s entirely objective, meaning it eliminates emotional decision-making and allows you to trade consistently and systematically. Plus, you can backtest it on historical data to ensure it has a positive edge before risking real money.

How does stock trading work?

Stock trading works by buying and selling shares of publicly listed companies on stock exchanges. Here’s a breakdown of how it works:

  • Ownership: When you buy a stock, you’re purchasing a small ownership stake in a company. If the company grows and becomes more profitable, the value of your shares may increase.
  • Stock Exchanges: Trades happen on stock exchanges like the NYSE or NASDAQ. These exchanges provide a marketplace where buyers and sellers meet to trade shares.
  • Price Movement: Stock prices fluctuate based on supply and demand. Factors like company performance, economic conditions, and market sentiment influence these movements.
  • Trading Accounts: To trade, you need a brokerage account. This is where you deposit funds and place buy or sell orders.
  • Types of Trading: There are different styles, like day trading (short-term, frequent trades), swing trading (holding for days or weeks), and long-term investing (holding for years).
  • Risk and Reward: Stock trading carries risks, as prices can go up or down. Successful trading requires a clear strategy, risk management, and emotional discipline

What is the stock market system?

A stock market system refers to a structured and objective approach to trading or investing in the stock market. It’s essentially a set of rules or processes that guide your decisions about what to buy, when to buy, how much to buy, and when to sell. The goal of a stock market system is to eliminate emotional decision-making and ensure consistency and profitability over time.

Here’s what a stock market system typically includes:

  • Market Selection: Deciding which markets or stocks to trade. For example, you might focus on large-cap stocks, small-cap stocks, or specific sectors.
  • Entry Rules: Clear criteria for when to buy a stock. This could be based on technical indicators (e.g., moving averages, breakouts) or fundamental factors.
  • Exit Rules: Specific conditions for when to sell a stock, such as hitting a profit target, trailing stop, or a reversal in trend.
  • Risk Management: Rules for managing your risk, including position sizing and stop-loss levels to protect your capital.
  • Diversification: Ensuring your portfolio is spread across multiple stocks or markets to reduce risk.

The beauty of a stock market system is that it’s objective and repeatable. It allows you to backtest your rules on historical data to ensure they have a positive edge before trading live.

What are stock trading strategies?

Stock trading strategies are structured approaches to buying and selling stocks, designed to exploit specific market behaviors or patterns to generate profits. These strategies are based on clear rules and hypotheses about how the market works, and they form the foundation of any successful trading system.

Here are some common stock trading strategies:

  • Trend Trading (or Trend Following): This strategy involves identifying stocks that are trending strongly in one direction (up or down) and riding the trend until it reverses. The hypothesis is that trends tend to persist longer than most people expect, making it profitable to follow them.
  • Swing Trading: This focuses on capturing short-term price swings within a larger trend. Stocks rarely move in a straight line, so swing traders aim to profit from the natural oscillations in price as they move up or down.
  • Mean Reversion: This strategy assumes that prices will revert to their average or mean over time. Traders look for stocks that are overbought or oversold relative to their historical averages and position themselves for a reversal.
  • Fundamental Analysis: This involves analyzing a company’s financial health, valuation, and competitive position to identify undervalued stocks to buy and overvalued stocks to sell. It’s more research-intensive and long-term focused.

Each strategy has its own strengths and weaknesses, and the key is to choose one that aligns with your personality, goals, and risk tolerance.

How to make a stock trading system?

To make a stock trading system, you need to create a complete set of objective rules that guide every aspect of your trading. Here’s how to do it step by step:

  1. Define Your Objectives:
    • Decide what you want to achieve (e.g., consistent monthly returns, long-term growth).
    • Consider your risk tolerance, time commitment, and trading style (e.g., trend following, mean reversion).
  2. Formulate a Hypothesis:
    • Observe market behavior and identify patterns or trends you believe could be profitable. For example, “Stocks that break above their 50-day high tend to continue rising.”
  3. Develop System Components:
    • Setup Conditions: Define which stocks you’ll trade (e.g., based on liquidity, volatility, or sector).
    • Entry Rules: Specify when to buy (e.g., when a stock closes above its 50-day high).
    • Exit Rules: Set clear criteria for selling (e.g., trailing stop loss or profit target).
    • Risk Management: Determine position sizing and stop-loss levels to protect your capital.
  4. Backtest Your System:
    • Test your rules on historical data to evaluate profitability and refine them. Watch out for overfitting – your system should work (or at least remain stable) across different market conditions.
  5. Document Your Plan:
    • Write down all your rules and procedures. This ensures consistency and prepares you for unexpected scenarios.
  6. Validate and Optimize:
    • Test your system on out-of-sample data or in a live environment with small capital. Refine it over time based on performance.

A well-designed system eliminates emotional decision-making and allows you to trade consistently.

What are the systematic trading techniques?

Systematic trading techniques are all about using objective, rules-based strategies to make trading decisions. Here are some key techniques:

  • Trend Following: This involves identifying and riding long-term trends in the market. You buy when the price is trending up and sell when it’s trending down. It’s great for capturing big moves and works well across various markets.
  • Mean Reversion: This technique focuses on identifying when prices deviate significantly from their average and are likely to revert back. Traders look for overbought or oversold conditions to enter trades.
  • Breakout Trading: This involves entering trades when the price breaks through a significant level of support or resistance. Breakouts often signal the start of a new trend and can be used as an entry point for trend-following systems.
  • Sector Rotation: This strategy involves shifting investments between sectors based on their performance or economic cycles. It’s a way to capitalize on the relative strength of different industries.
  • Backtesting and Optimization: A critical part of systematic trading is testing your rules on historical data to ensure they have a positive edge. This helps you refine and validate your strategies before trading live.

The beauty of systematic trading is that it removes emotional decision-making and allows you to focus on executing your rules consistently. 

Is systematic trading good?

Systematic trading is not just good – it’s brilliant for most traders, especially those looking for consistency, objectivity, and long-term success. Here’s why:

  • Removes Emotional Decision-Making: By following a set of objective, pre-defined rules, systematic trading eliminates the emotional rollercoaster of fear, greed, and second-guessing. You simply follow the system, which makes decisions far more consistent.
  • Backtesting for Confidence: You can test your trading rules on decades of historical data to see how they perform in different market conditions. This builds confidence in your strategy and ensures you’re not trading blindly.
  • Diversification: Systematic trading allows you to manage a large number of positions – sometimes 20, 50, or even more – because you’re not bogged down by subjective analysis. This reduces stock-specific risk and smooths out your returns.
  • Time Efficiency: Once your system is set up, maintaining it takes as little as 10-30 minutes a day. This frees up your time for other pursuits while still growing your wealth.
  • Consistency Over the Long Term: Unlike discretionary trading, which can be inconsistent due to mood or market noise, systematic trading provides a repeatable process. This is key for achieving success over decades, not just months.

For traders serious about long-term success, systematic trading is a game-changer. 

What is systematic vs algo trading?

Systematic trading and algorithmic (algo) trading are closely related, but they’re not exactly the same. Here’s the distinction:

  • Systematic Trading: This refers to trading based on a set of objective, pre-defined rules. These rules dictate when to buy, sell, how much to trade, and how to manage risk. The focus is on removing emotions and making decisions consistent and repeatable. Systematic trading doesn’t necessarily require automation – it can be done manually by following the rules, though many traders choose to automate parts of the process for efficiency.
  • Algorithmic (Algo) Trading: Algo trading is a subset of systematic trading. It involves using computer programs to execute trades automatically based on the rules of a trading system. Essentially, the trading system is coded into an algorithm, and the software handles everything from scanning the market to placing trades. This approach is highly efficient and allows for trading large volumes or multiple markets simultaneously.

In short, all algo trading is systematic, but not all systematic trading is algo trading. Systematic trading can be done manually, while algo trading relies on automation. Both approaches aim to eliminate emotional decision-making and improve consistency.

What is the difference between systematic and discretionary trading?

The difference between systematic and discretionary trading boils down to how decisions are made:

  • Systematic Trading: This approach is entirely rules-based. You create a set of objective rules that dictate when to buy, sell, and manage risk. These rules are consistent and can be tested on historical data to ensure they have a positive edge. For example, if conditions A, B, and C are met, you buy, if D or E occurs, you sell. The beauty of this is that it removes emotional decision-making and ensures consistency. Once the system is built, the ongoing work is minimal – you just follow the rules, which makes it efficient and scalable.
  • Discretionary Trading: This relies on the trader’s judgment and interpretation of market conditions. Decisions are made based on a mix of factors like charts, news, and personal intuition. While this allows for flexibility, it’s highly subjective. Two traders with the same information might make completely different decisions because their interpretations and emotions differ. Discretionary trading often leads to inconsistency because decisions can vary depending on mood, confidence, or external influences.

In short, systematic trading is objective, consistent, and testable, while discretionary trading is subjective, flexible, but prone to emotional and psychological pitfalls.

How to learn to trade systematically?

To learn to trade systematically, you need a structured approach that builds your skills step by step. Here’s how to get started:

  • Understand the Basics: Learn what systematic trading is and why it works. It’s all about using objective, rules-based strategies to make consistent decisions and eliminate emotions from trading.
  • Start with a Simple System: Implement a basic trading system, ideally one that’s already proven and tested. This helps you understand how systems work without getting overwhelmed. Many traders begin with systems sourced from books or courses.
  • Learn Backtesting: Backtesting is critical. It involves testing your trading rules on historical data to see how they would have performed. This builds confidence and ensures your system has a positive edge.
  • Use the Right Tools: Get trading software like Amibroker to backtest and analyze your systems. You’ll also need historical stock price data, which is inexpensive and easy to access.
  • Join a Program: Programs like the System Trader Launchpad or the Trader Success System are designed to teach you systematic trading in a structured way. They cover everything from building systems to backtesting and diversification.
  • Practice and Refine: Once you’ve learned the basics, start testing and refining your own systems. Observe market behavior, document ideas, and convert them into rules you can test.

Systematic trading is a journey, but with the right steps, you can master it. The Trader Success System will take you from Launch to Mastery of systematic trading in just 6 months.

 

What are the risks of systematic trading?

Systematic trading has many advantages, but like any approach, it comes with risks. Here are the key ones to be aware of:

  • Over-Optimization (Curve Fitting): This happens when you tweak your system to perform exceptionally well on historical data, but it ends up being too specific to past conditions. As a result, it may fail in live markets where conditions differ. This is a common pitfall for new traders who get overly excited about perfect backtest results.
  • Market Changes: Markets evolve over time, and a system that worked in the past may stop working in the future. For example, changes in volatility, regulations, or market structure can impact your system’s performance.
  • Execution Risk: Even with a great system, poor execution – like slippage, delays, or errors in placing trades – can erode profitability. This is especially true in fast-moving markets or with illiquid instruments.
  • Psychological Challenges: While systematic trading removes emotions from decision-making, sticking to the system during drawdowns or periods of underperformance can be mentally tough. Many traders abandon their systems at the worst possible time.
  • Data and Technology Dependence: Systematic trading relies heavily on accurate data and reliable technology. Bad data or software glitches can lead to poor decisions or missed trades.

Managing these risks requires robust backtesting, ongoing monitoring, and disciplined execution

Are systematic and market risk the same?

No, systematic risk and market risk are not the same, though they are closely related. Let me break it down:

  • Systematic Risk: This refers to the risk inherent to the entire financial system or market as a whole. It’s the kind of risk that affects all investments, regardless of the specific asset or strategy you’re using. Examples include economic recessions, geopolitical events, or major regulatory changes. Systematic risk is unavoidable – you can’t diversify it away because it impacts everything.
  • Market Risk: This is a subset of systematic risk. It specifically refers to the risk of the overall market moving against you. For example, if you’re trading stocks and the entire stock market crashes, that’s market risk. It’s tied to the broader movements of the market you’re trading in, like the ASX or the US stock market.

So, while market risk is part of systematic risk, systematic risk is broader and includes other factors like systemic financial crises or infrastructure failures. Both are critical to consider when trading systematically, as they can impact your portfolio regardless of how well-designed your system is.

More Articles about Trading Systems

Read these articles for more insights about the benefits of trading systems and how to implement them into your own portfolio.

author avatar
Adrian Reid Founder and CEO
Adrian is a full-time private trader based in Australia and also the Founder and Trading Coach at Enlightened Stock Trading, which focuses on educating and supporting traders on their journey to profitable systems trading. Following his successful adoption of systematic trading which generated him hundreds of thousands of dollars a year using just 30 minutes a day to manage his system trading workflow, Adrian made the easy decision to leave his professional work in the corporate world in 2012. Adrian trades long/short across US, Australian and international stock markets and the cryptocurrency markets. His trading systems are now fully automated and have consistently outperformed international share markets with dramatically reduced risk over the past 20+ years. Adrian focuses on building portfolios of profitable, stable and robust long term trading systems to beat market returns with high risk adjusted returns. Adrian teaches traders from all over the world how to get profitable, confident and consistent by trading systematically and backtesting their own trading systems. He helps profitable traders grow and smooth returns by implementing a portfolio of trading systems to make money from different markets and market conditions.