Forum: TradeBullet and Collective2
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| Subject: | System Signal (file) Download |
| Posted by: | Calvin Long |
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| When: | 2/22/06 (20:28) | |
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| | Some systems here have lots of orders for subscribers to input to their trade borkers. It is very slow and error prone for subscriber to retype from the web or email. ( I sold a position today with wrong quantity and got a small portion left ).
In additional to the current posting, it would be a nice feature for C2 to provide "download" the signal files,
Since TB supports text file input with .tb file extension, this existing text file format would be good for download.
It is a comma delimited format compatible to Microsoft Excel .csv format.
TB users could make direct input without change format.
MS Excel users just rename file extension to .csv before load it to spreadsheet.
It also allow users to make changes/modifications in text editor or in MS Excel.
Reverse Excel to TB conversion is just to rename the file extension:
Save data back to .csv ( available at Save As comma delimited file options )
then rename it back to .tb entension
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| | In response to post by Calvin Long of 2/22/06 (20:28) Some systems here have lots of orders for subscribers to input to their trade borkers. It is very slow and error prone for subscriber to retype from the web or email. ( I sold a position today with wrong quantity and got a small portion left )....
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Calvin,
TB fills are already automatically reported to C2.
Francis |
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What is the C2 Score?
Collective2 rates every trading advisor in its database and assigns a score between 100 and 1000.
In general, a rating above 500 is good. A rating above 700 is excellent.
Collective2 Ratings are recalculated daily based on the entire performance history in our database. The exact formula we use is proprietary, but there are several key variables that go into the Collective2 Rating. One of the most important factors is the length of time we have been able to observe the performance of the trader. Another key factor is the amount by which the trader over-performs or under-performs the S&P 500 index. Finally, the choppiness of the trader's results is taken into account. Certainly a more consistent trader will be rated more highly than a trader with erratic results.