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Python for Algorithmic Trading Cookbook

Python for Algorithmic Trading Cookbook

By : Jason Strimpel
4.2 (19)
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Python for Algorithmic Trading Cookbook

Python for Algorithmic Trading Cookbook

4.2 (19)
By: Jason Strimpel

Overview of this book

Discover how Python has made algorithmic trading accessible to non-professionals with unparalleled expertise and practical insights from Jason Strimpel, founder of PyQuant News and a seasoned professional with global experience in trading and risk management. This book guides you through from the basics of quantitative finance and data acquisition to advanced stages of backtesting and live trading. Detailed recipes will help you leverage the cutting-edge OpenBB SDK to gather freely available data for stocks, options, and futures, and build your own research environment using lightning-fast storage techniques like SQLite, HDF5, and ArcticDB. This book shows you how to use SciPy and statsmodels to identify alpha factors and hedge risk, and construct momentum and mean-reversion factors. You’ll optimize strategy parameters with walk-forward optimization using VectorBT and construct a production-ready backtest using Zipline Reloaded. Implementing all that you’ve learned, you’ll set up and deploy your algorithmic trading strategies in a live trading environment using the Interactive Brokers API, allowing you to stream tick-level data, submit orders, and retrieve portfolio details. By the end of this algorithmic trading book, you'll not only have grasped the essential concepts but also the practical skills needed to implement and execute sophisticated trading strategies using Python.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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Building an algorithmic trading app

When using the IB API, there’s a lot of code that can be reused across different trading apps. Connecting to TWS, generating orders, and downloading data are done the same way despite the trading strategy. That’s why it’s a best practice to get the reusable code out of the way first. But before we can start building our algorithmic trading app, we need to install TWS and the IB API.

We’ll begin with three important topics when using the IB API:

  • The first is the architecture of the IB API, which operates on an asynchronous model. In this model, operations are not executed in a linear, blocking manner. Instead, actions are initiated by requests, and responses to these requests are handled via callbacks.
  • The second concept is inheritance, which is common across all computer programming languages. Inheritance is where a new child class acquires the properties and methods of another, parent, class. Our trading...
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