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Python for Finance Cookbook – Second Edition

You're reading from   Python for Finance Cookbook – Second Edition Over 80 powerful recipes for effective financial data analysis

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803243191
Length 740 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Eryk Lewinson Eryk Lewinson
Author Profile Icon Eryk Lewinson
Eryk Lewinson
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Acquiring Financial Data FREE CHAPTER 2. Data Preprocessing 3. Visualizing Financial Time Series 4. Exploring Financial Time Series Data 5. Technical Analysis and Building Interactive Dashboards 6. Time Series Analysis and Forecasting 7. Machine Learning-Based Approaches to Time Series Forecasting 8. Multi-Factor Models 9. Modeling Volatility with GARCH Class Models 10. Monte Carlo Simulations in Finance 11. Asset Allocation 12. Backtesting Trading Strategies 13. Applied Machine Learning: Identifying Credit Default 14. Advanced Concepts for Machine Learning Projects 15. Deep Learning in Finance 16. Other Books You May Enjoy
17. Index

Finding the best-fitting ARIMA model with auto-ARIMA

As we have seen in the previous recipe, the performance of an ARIMA model varies greatly depending on the chosen hyperparameters (p, d, and q). We can do our best to choose them based on our intuition, the statistical tests, and the ACF/PACF plots. However, this can prove to be quite difficult to do in practice.

That is why in this recipe we introduce auto-ARIMA, an automated approach to finding the best hyperparameters of the ARIMA class models (including variants such as ARIMAX and SARIMA).

Without going much into technical details of the algorithm, it first determines the number of differences using the KPSS test. Then, the algorithm uses a stepwise search to traverse the model space searching for a model that results in a better fit. A popular choice of evaluation metric used for comparing the models is the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC). The metric provides a trade-off between the goodness of fit of the model and its simplicity...

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