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Python for Algorithmic Trading Cookbook

You're reading from   Python for Algorithmic Trading Cookbook Recipes for designing, building, and deploying algorithmic trading strategies with Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835084700
Length 404 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Jason Strimpel Jason Strimpel
Author Profile Icon Jason Strimpel
Jason Strimpel
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Acquire Free Financial Market Data with Cutting-Edge Python Libraries FREE CHAPTER 2. Chapter 2: Analyze and Transform Financial Market Data with pandas 3. Chapter 3: Visualize Financial Market Data with Matplotlib, Seaborn, and Plotly Dash 4. Chapter 4: Store Financial Market Data on Your Computer 5. Chapter 5: Build Alpha Factors for Stock Portfolios 6. Chapter 6: Vector-Based Backtesting with VectorBT 7. Chapter 7: Event-Based Backtesting Factor Portfolios with Zipline Reloaded 8. Chapter 8: Evaluate Factor Risk and Performance with Alphalens Reloaded 9. Chapter 9: Assess Backtest Risk and Performance Metrics with Pyfolio 10. Chapter 10: Set Up the Interactive Brokers Python API 11. Chapter 11: Manage Orders, Positions, and Portfolios with the IB API 12. Chapter 12: Deploy Strategies to a Live Environment 13. Chapter 13: Advanced Recipes for Market Data and Strategy Management 14. Index 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Fetching historical market data

Requesting historical market data using the IB API is an asynchronous process, emphasizing non-blocking, event-driven data retrieval. To kick off the process, we send a request for historical data by invoking the reqHistoricalData method, specifying parameters such as the financial instrument’s identifier, the duration for which data is needed, the bar size, and the type of data required. Once the request is made, the IB API processes it and begins sending back the data. However, instead of waiting for all data to be received before continuing with other tasks, the API employs a callback mechanism, specifically the historicalData method. This method is called asynchronously for each piece of data received from IB. Each invocation of historicalData provides a snapshot of market data for a specific time interval, which we can then process or store. In this recipe, we’ll set up the code to request and receive historical market data.

Getting...

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