Book Image

Hands-On Financial Trading with Python

By : Jiri Pik, Sourav Ghosh
Book Image

Hands-On Financial Trading with Python

By: Jiri Pik, Sourav Ghosh

Overview of this book

Creating an effective system to automate your trading can help you achieve two of every trader’s key goals; saving time and making money. But to devise a system that will work for you, you need guidance to show you the ropes around building a system and monitoring its performance. This is where Hands-on Financial Trading with Python can give you the advantage. This practical Python book will introduce you to Python and tell you exactly why it’s the best platform for developing trading strategies. You’ll then cover quantitative analysis using Python, and learn how to build algorithmic trading strategies with Zipline using various market data sources. Using Zipline as the backtesting library allows access to complimentary US historical daily market data until 2018. As you advance, you will gain an in-depth understanding of Python libraries such as NumPy and pandas for analyzing financial datasets, and explore Matplotlib, statsmodels, and scikit-learn libraries for advanced analytics. As you progress, you’ll pick up lots of skills like time series forecasting, covering pmdarima and Facebook Prophet. By the end of this trading book, you will be able to build predictive trading signals, adopt basic and advanced algorithmic trading strategies, and perform portfolio optimization to help you get —and stay—ahead of the markets.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction to Algorithmic Trading
3
Section 2: In-Depth Look at Python Libraries for the Analysis of Financial Datasets
9
Section 3: Algorithmic Trading in Python

Introduction to risk management with PyFolio

Having a risk management system is a fundamental part of having a successful algorithmic trading system.

Various risks are involved in algorithmic trading:

  • Market risk: While all strategies lose money at some point in their life cycle, quantifying risk measures and ensuring there are risk management systems in place can mitigate strategy losses. In some cases, bad risk management can increase trading losses to an extreme and even shut down successful trading firms completely.
  • Regulatory risk: This is the risk that stems from either accidentally or intentionally violating regulations. It is designed to enforce smooth and fair market functionality. Some well-known examples include spoofing, quote stuffing, and banging the close.
  • Software implementation risk: Software development is a complex process and sophisticated algorithmic trading strategy systems are especially complex. Even seemingly minor software bugs can lead...