What is the best AI system to train
and use for this kind of objective? Is
a simple NN with back-propagation
training the best I can hope for?
First, the the people who suggest that the stock market is a random walk are parroting a non-technical, minority view of economics. This view comes from laymens who don't or aren't very good at investing for a living. Many smart people have written thick books and PhD dissertations on market forces and predictions, much more than I can summarize in a tiny post on SO.
There are a few industry standard ways of analyzing the stock market:
Fundamental Analysis:
Focuses on analyzing a company's financial stability and track record, such as a company's incoming and outgoing cash flow in, historical profit/earnings, etc. The idea here is whether the company's internal accounting is stable, or whether they're a credit risk. Fundamental analysts also consider the current economic climate and how it impacts a company's future growth, profitability, etc.
If you're a fundamental analyst, you want to look for stocks which are going to be financially viable for the next year or so. Obviously, you don't want you're stock to take a dive, but its ok if the stock doesn't shoot up either. So how do you make money on stocks which don't increase or decrease in value? You're not looking to make money on value of the stock, but instead on the dividend.
Not all stocks pay a dividend, but those which do are usually worth looking into. Dividends usually come in several flavors, though cash dividends and stock dividends are the most common. Let's say we have a stock valued at $10, you buy 100 shares, and the stock offers a 5% yearly dividend:
- We can redeem a cash dividend for 5% of the purchase price, or $10/share * 100 shares * 5% = $50 of untaxed income.
- Or we can redeem a stock dividend by converting it into more 5 more shares.
The main difference between cash and stock dividends is how you calculate the earnings. You know ahead of time how much money you'll earn when you get a cash dividend, because its based on the purchase price of the stock; you don't know much money you'll earn from a stock dividend since it depends on the sell price of the stock.
Quantitative Analysis:
A very technical field where quantitative analysts (quants) attempt to apply a numerical value to companies. And by "technical", I mean you can earn a PhD in this field, or win a nobel prize in economics.
Quants are to stock markets as meterologists are to nature: quants attempt to represent the economic climate with tons and tons of statistical models. In recent years, the Black-Scholes formula has become an industry standard, purely mathematical model of stock equity and option pricing.
Once we have a mathematical model of the market, we're able to make predictions based on our model, namely changes in price over time. The key to making quantitative analysis work is realizing that mathematical models are chaotic systems; they appear random, but they are in fact wholly and mathematically deterministic.
Many companies such as Jane Street Capital hire quants and programmers to assist in quantitative research and development.
Technical Analysis:
Technical analysis has a reputation for being "voodoo", however its also the most suitable kind of analysis for computers. Technical analysis uses a stocks historical data (particularly the open, high, low, close, volume) and a series of formulas, called indicators, to determine whether a stock is oversold (bullish) or overbought (bearish).
The simplest and most commonly encountered indicator is the simple stochastic oscillator, which looks like this:

Stochastics are presented by two lines, %K and %D, where
Fast stochastic
%K = (Close - Low) / (High - Low) * 100 and
%D = 3-day moving average of %K
Slow stochastic
%K = Same as fast %D
%D = 3-day moving average of %K
(Now, we can chose any length moving average. In my own experience, fast stochastic gives too many false signals, 3- and 9-day moving averages tend to be much "smoother".)
The idea here is that our two lines will normally keep pace with one another, and they'll always be between 0.0 and 1.0. However, when they are > 0.8 and the %K lines crosses %D with downward velocity, the stock is considered overbought; when its < 0.2 and %K crosses %D with upward velocity, its oversold. You can see the effect in the diagram above, where the velocity of the stock (usually) follows the stochastic indicators.
Now, with that said, there are literally dozens of indicators used by technical analysts. And that's what they are: indicators, not laws of nature. Its wholly possible for a stock to climb even when all of its indicators are telling you to sell.
In my own stock trading experience, I found the following indicators easiest to calculate and have a better than chance reliability (especially when considered in tandem):
- Stochastics, which are described above.
- Bollinger bands, which basically take the average and standard deviation of stock prices over the last N days. If the stocks price falls outside the bands, its an indicator of whether the stock is overbought or oversold.
- MACD (moving-average convergence/divergence), which uses two lines: one based on the on the difference between 26- and 12-day moving averages, and another line based on teh 9-day moving average. When the lines "cross", you have an indicator of overbought or oversold.
- Fast-fourier indicator (not commonly heard of or used). Some stocks "roll" or oscillate back and forth between two values. And FFT can tell you the oscillating frequencies and the period of oscillation.
Now, with all that being said, I don't think you'll be able to make reliable stock market predictions using a neural-net or AI, because then you'd be throwing away all of the statistical data you have at your fingertips.
Don't listen to anyone who says "stock markets are random" -- they're just wrong. If someone insists that stock market analyzation is based on psychology instead of statistics, they're misinformed. Yes, there are some non-statistical phenomena which impact the performance of a stock, such as a drug company's share taking a dive whenever their diet pills kill a celebrity -- but, you can protect yourself from these factors by investing in a wide variety of stocks and markets.
All three techniques have a wealth of scientific and mathematical papers dedicated to them, and many technical indicators have been empirically verified. There are plenty of people who make money using the three techniques I've described above; if you're a hobbyist and programmer, then technical analysis is the best available tool at your finger tips. If you want to get into this field, here are some tips:
Get yourself good stock charting software. I recommend Telechart, which contains hundreds of indicators for technical analysts, programmable indicators, the ability to export historical data into flat files for your own data crunching, and its is easy to use.
Figure out what kind of investing strategy you want. There are lots of people who day-trade and never get rich, and lots of people who hold on to stocks forever and get rich in 50 years. In my own experience, holding on to stocks for less than 3 months is a pretty safe way of trading.
Don't form emotional attachments to stocks, don't have a "favorite" stock, just let's the numbers choose your investments for you.
Always have a stop-gap. My stop-gaps are -5% and +15%. So, if the stock dips to 5% of the purchase price, I sell it and take the loss; if it goes above 15% of the purchase price, I sell and collect the profit. Regardless of whatever the stock is doing, or if your indicators tell you to buy, always sell at your stop-gap
- What I've described above is a very safe strategy. However, if you like taking risks, you can always double down to recover lost profit. Doubling-down is a simple strategy: if you buy 100 shares at $10, then your stock goes down to $9, you've lost 10% of your investment. If you buy 100 more shares at $9, then the average price you paid for your 200 shares is (100*10 + 100*9)/200 = $9.50, so now you've lost 5.3% on your investment. If the stock increases above $9.50, you've made a profit.
- I personally don't recommend doubling down at all, and I especially don't recommend doubling down more than once. I knew a guy who bought a bunch of Wachovia stock, and he just would not give it up. He has a pitiful story of doubling down, "I bought this stock at $63, $41, $34, $18. Do you know what it was when I finally sold it? $6." I think he lost something like $30,000 because he was emotionally attached to the stock, even when it showed all the signs of tanking.
Don't short-sell. Ever. Yeah, we've all heard about that time George Soros shorted the Pound and made a billion dollars in one day, but you're not George Soros and you don't have billions to spend. Shorting is dangerous because the theoretical maximum you can earn is capped at the purchase price * number of shares (i.e. this is how much you earn if the stock goes bankrupt), but the theoretical maximum you can lose is infinite since theres no upperbound on stock prices.
Ok, this post is really super long, but it should get you started.
Good luck!