I created a Long Strategy with about 35% annualized gain for the last 20 years. And a Short Strategy with about 19% annualized gain for the same period.
I thought if I combine these two with a "Combined Strategy" the return should go higher than 35%.
But to my surprise it could not surpass the 35%. In my case it seems to make no difference if I use only a long strategy or an additional short strategy. Even that I tried very many combinations regarding priority and capital allocation.
So my question: Is this a common problem and how to avoid that (i.e. how to create a short strategy which enhances the return you get from your long strategy)? On what do you have to focus while creating a short strategy to avoid this problem?
Thanks for every answer!
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Please keep in mind a peculiarity of Combination Strategies: a child strategy's equity is not being readjusted bar by bar with regard to its % of starting equity allocation. That's how it works. This may explain the % return lower than you expect.
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Each strategy is assigned its allocation at the beginning of the simulation and the individual equity curves are combined for the result. For more info: User Guide > Strategy Window > Combination Strategy
To combine strategies that draw from the same source of funds and therefore affect the same equity curve, all the rules have to be in one strategy.
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OK, thank you for your answers. I might work on the short strategy from now on always next to the long strategy. So that I see right from the beginning which short strategies adds overall profit and which do not. I think developing a stand-alone short strategy was my mistake.
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