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The Impact of Execution Delay on Kelly-Based Stock Trading: High-Frequency Versus Buy and Hold

Authors :
Hsieh, Chung-Han
Barmish, B. Ross
Gubner, John A.
Source :
Proceedings of the IEEE Conference of Decision and Control (CDC), pp. 2580-2585, Nice, France, 2019
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Stock trading based on Kelly's celebrated Expected Logarithmic Growth (ELG) criterion, a well-known prescription for optimal resource allocation, has received considerable attention in the literature. Using ELG as the performance metric, we compare the impact of trade execution delay on the relative performance of high-frequency trading versus buy and hold. While it is intuitively obvious and straightforward to prove that in the presence of sufficiently high transaction costs, buy and hold is the better strategy, is it possible that with no transaction costs, buy and hold can still be the better strategy? When there is no delay in trade execution, we prove a theorem saying that the answer is ``no.'' However, when there is delay in trade execution, we present simulation results using a binary lattice stock model to show that the answer can be ``yes.'' This is seen to be true whether self-financing is imposed or not.<br />Comment: Has been accepted to the IEEE Conference on Decision and Control, 2019

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Proceedings of the IEEE Conference of Decision and Control (CDC), pp. 2580-2585, Nice, France, 2019
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1907.08771
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/CDC40024.2019.9029292