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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

Splitting data into training and test sets

Having completed the EDA, the next step is to split the dataset into training and test sets. The idea is to have two separate datasets:

  • Training set—on this part of the data, we train a machine learning model
  • Test set—this part of the data was not seen by the model during training and is used to evaluate its performance

By splitting the data this way, we want to prevent overfitting. Overfitting is a phenomenon that occurs when a model finds too many patterns in data used for training and performs well only on that particular data. In other words, it fails to generalize to unseen data.

This is a very important step in the analysis, as doing it incorrectly can introduce bias, for example, in the form of data leakage. Data leakage can occur when, during the training phase, a model observes information to which it should not have access. We follow up with an example. A common scenario is that of imputing...

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