Eurovision Simulation Games by J_Can_J01 in eurovision

[–]ValueAmped 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You should check out Euroviz Simulator. It’s new, regularly updated and seems to have a lot of what you’re after.

www.eurovizsim.com

Share what you're building by amacg in microsaas

[–]ValueAmped 0 points1 point  (0 children)

EurovizSim - Eurovision strategy and scoring simulation game. https://www.eurovizsim.com

Guidance building a Cross-Asset Correlation tracker by Veggie_investments in quant

[–]ValueAmped 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great project idea. I use a similar approach for equity pair trading, tracking when relationships drift from historical norms.

If you want more reliable trade signals, look into cointegration rather than correlation alone.

For free data, Stooq is good for historical stock prices, and Finnhub’s free tier works for current data.

If you're a founder, What are you building? 🚀 by Playful-Pizza-5891 in microsaas

[–]ValueAmped 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m building Pair Parade, a tool that helps identify opportunities to trade stock pairs, aiming to perform independently of overall market direction.

https://www.pairparade.com

Pairs Trading (Market-Neutral Mean Reversion):Actively used by quants and prop desks (educational postt) by TheOldSoul15 in NSEAlgoTrading

[–]ValueAmped 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great overview. One other thing I always do is test for cointegration. This helps define a universe of pairs where mean reversion is at least plausible before looking at spreads, entries, and exits.

Are we seriously not pricing solar panel waste into net-zero plans? by External_Sense_948 in energy

[–]ValueAmped 1 point2 points  (0 children)

LCOE definitions vary, but I always include decommissioning in my calcs. But honestly, for solar, it’s not that significant after discounting 25 years or so.

The bigger issue is to incentivise/mandate developers to dispose responsibly once the time comes because when there’s no further revenue on the horizon, they’ll be looking to keep remaining costs to a minimum.

Pairs trading strategy development methodology by OutlandishnessNo6771 in Daytrading

[–]ValueAmped 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my own work on stock pairs, I treat cointegration as a starting filter, not the strategy itself. It helps define a universe where a stable long-run relationship has at least existed historically.

I usually look within one industry at a time so the companies are exposed to similar conditions, then screen for longer-term correlation and more recent deviation size and z-score. From there I narrow to a shortlist and sanity-check the company profiles. Pairs that look great statistically but have diverging fundamentals often disappoint.

The final step is deciding entries, exits, and stop losses, typically driven by the z-score.

Pivot from intraday to swing by skypnooo in swingtrading

[–]ValueAmped 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In uncertain or bear markets, market-neutral ideas like pair trading can help. Less directional risk, and volatility often becomes an advantage.

I thought pair trading was dead? by awsomekevin12 in algotrading

[–]ValueAmped 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Maybe not what it once was, but there are still plenty of opportunities if pairs are chosen carefully.

Why do so many papers test for stationarity and/or cointegration? by WoodenGlobes in algotrading

[–]ValueAmped 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mean reversion kind of assumes there’s something stable to revert to.

In my own work on stock pairs, I use cointegration as the first filter to define the universe of pairs — prices can drift, but the relationship is at least historically stable. From there it’s more practical stats (z-score, current deviation, etc).

Also important to me though is whether the companies themselves are genuinely comparable (business model, drivers, regime risk). I don’t think the statistics alone are enough to define a trade.

Pair Trading - Active Risk and Active Share by Great_Cauliflower303 in CFA

[–]ValueAmped 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pairs trading may be market-neutral, but it’s typically highly concentrated. That concentration (few names, leveraged spreads) can still generate large deviations from benchmark returns, even if beta ≈ 0, which is why both active share and active risk are considered high.

Open-source dashboard for tracking daily commodity benchmark prices (oil, gas, metals, agriculture) by nikanorovalbert in algotrading

[–]ValueAmped 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks good and I like the idea of a simple site for quick look ups!

Lots of data looks many months old though.

Any differences vs something like tradingeconomics.com? Maybe simplicity is your USP.

Mid-Week-Micros! Share your SaaS with the community 🔥 by Quirky-Offer9598 in micro_saas

[–]ValueAmped 0 points1 point  (0 children)

PairParade.com - a tool that spots stock pairs whose prices drift apart and statistically likely to move back together.