Calculating Sharpe ratio with examples provided
6 visualizaciones (últimos 30 días)
Mostrar comentarios más antiguos
olayinka ola
el 1 de Nov. de 2020
Comentada: olayinka ola
el 5 de Nov. de 2020
I am trying to work through code from a book on Quantitative trading I am reading. The problem is that the code from the book is old and in some cases out of date.
I tried to re-create the code in R2020b however my result is not right according to the expected out put
my result - 8.3184
the expected result - 0.7618
Edit - I now know that my error is with this line
cls = sortrows(cls, 1); % Sort cls into ascending order of dates
Its suppose to match sort cls by the date column but instead it orders cls in ascending order. What is the way to create this association correctly?
Your help is must appreciated. (Spreadsheet attached)
Here is the OLD code from the book
clear; % make sure previously defined variables are erased.
[num, txt]=xlsread('IGE'); % read a spreadsheet named "IGE.xls" into MATLAB.
tday=txt(2:end, 1); % the first column (starting from the second row) contains the trading days in format mm/dd/yyyy.
tday=datestr(datenum(tday, 'mm/dd/yyyy'), 'yyyymmdd'); % convert the format into yyyymmdd.
tday=str2double(cellstr(tday)); % convert the date strings first into cell arrays and then into numeric format.
cls=num(:, end); % the last column contains the adjusted close prices.
[tday sortIndex]=sort(tday, 'ascend'); % sort tday into ascending order.
cls=cls(sortIndex); % sort cls into ascending order of dates.
dailyret=(cls(2:end)-cls(1:end-1))./cls(1:end-1); % daily returns
excessRet=dailyret - 0.04/252; % excess daily returns = strategy returns - financing cost, assuming risk-free rate of 4% per annum and 252 trading days in a year
sharpeRatio=sqrt(252)*mean(excessRet)/std(excessRet) % the output should be 0.7618
Here is my code.
T = readtable("IGEv3.xlsx");
Warning: Column headers from the file were modified to make them valid MATLAB identifiers before creating variable names for the table. The original column headers are saved in the
VariableDescriptions property.
Set 'VariableNamingRule' to 'preserve' to use the original column headers as table variable names.
tday=T{2:end, 1}; %The First Columns (from second row)
tday.Format = 'yyyy-MMM-dd'; % Convert the format into yyymmdd
cls=T(:, end); % The last Column contains the adjusted close prices
[tday, sortIndex] = sort(tday, 'ascend'); % Sort tday into ascending Order
cls = sortrows(cls, 1); % Sort cls into ascending order of dates
dailyret=(cls{2:end, :}-cls{1:end-1, :})./cls{1:end-1, :}; % Daily Returns
excessRet = dailyret - 0.04/252; % Excess daily returns assuming risk-free rate of 4% per annum and 252 trading days in a year
sharpeRatio = sqrt(252)*mean(excessRet)/std(excessRet) % The output should be 0.7618
sharpeRatio =
8.3184
0 comentarios
Respuesta aceptada
Maadhav Akula
el 4 de Nov. de 2020
Hi,
Upon using the data and the first code you have provided I got the sharpeRatio to be 0.7873
Now coming to your 2nd snippet, I have modified the code to achieve the same result as the first one:
clear;
T = readtable("IGE.xlsx");
%If you dont want the warning,
%T = readtable("IGE.xlsx",'VariableNamingRule','preserve');
tday=T{1:end, 1}; %In the table you dont have the var names in the first row hence 1:end
tday.Format = 'yyyy-MMM-dd'; % Convert the format into yyymmdd
cls=T{:, end}; % Modified cls to be an array instead of table
[tday, sortIndex] = sort(tday, 'ascend'); % Sort tday into ascending Order
cls = cls(sortIndex); % Sort cls into ascending order of dates
dailyret=(cls(2:end)-cls(1:end-1))./cls(1:end-1); % Daily Returns
excessRet = dailyret - 0.04/252; % Excess daily returns assuming risk-free rate of 4% per annum and 252 trading days in a year
sharpeRatio = sqrt(252)*mean(excessRet)/std(excessRet) % The output is 0.7873
I am not sure why you are using cls as a table instead of an array, modified cls to an array.
Sortrows, sorts according to the data provided, as you have provided cls it sorted cls in ascending order, modified it to sort according to the dates.
Hope this helps!
Más respuestas (0)
Ver también
Categorías
Más información sobre Financial Toolbox en Help Center y File Exchange.
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!