Forecasting S&P 500 Stock Index Using Statistical Learning Models

Abstract

Forecasting the movement of stock market is a long-time attractive topic. This paper implements different statistical learning models to predict the movement of S&P 500 index. The S&P 500 index is influenced by other important financial indexes across the world such as commodity price and financial technical indicators. This paper systematically investigated four supervised learning models, including Logistic Regression, Gaussian Discriminant Analysis (GDA), Naive Bayes and Support Vector Machine (SVM) in the forecast of S&P 500 index. After several experiments of optimization in features and models, especially the SVM kernel selection and feature selection for different models, this paper concludes that a SVM model with a Radial Basis Function (RBF) kernel can achieve an accuracy rate of 62.51% for the future market trend of the S&P 500 index.

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Liu, C. , Wang, J. , Xiao, D. and Liang, Q. (2016) Forecasting S&P 500 Stock Index Using Statistical Learning Models. Open Journal of Statistics, 6, 1067-1075. doi: 10.4236/ojs.2016.66086.

1. Introduction

With the dramatic development of financial engineering, quantitative methodologies play an increasingly significant role in forecasting the price of various financial products. Among different quantitative methods, statistical learning is one of the most efficient and widely applicable tools. This paper focuses on S&P 500 stock index forecasting, since the prediction of the movement of stock market is a long-time attractive topic to researchers from different fields.

The S&P 500 Index is a free float-adjusted market capitalization-weighted stock market index in the United States. It is used to record and monitor daily changes of the largest companies of the American stock market and is the main indicator of the overall market performance in the United States. As US is one of the financial centers across the world, the S&P 500 is considered as one of the most important global financial indicators. This paper finds that the value of S&P 500 may be influenced by other major financial indexes across the world, like FTSE 100, NIKKEI 225, SSE, DJIA and NASDAQ, and exchange rates like USD/CNY, USD/JPY and USD/GBP. Besides, we have to consider the technical indicators of the S&P 500 itself, and the crude oil price as well as gold price could also influence the stock price. Based on that, we tried different statistical learning classification methods to forecast the moving direction of S&P 500 index. The higher accuracy rate we can get, the more confidence we will develop a profitable trading strategy.

This paper is organized as follows; section 2 explains how data is collected and processed. Section 3 and 4 introduce various statistical learning models implemented to predict the stock market trends, such as logistic regression, Gaussian Discriminant Analysis (GDA), Naive Bayes (NB) and Support Vector Machines (SVM) [1] for the classification. To optimize these models, the SVM models with three different kernels are used to improve the preformation of SVM. After that, the forward search method is used for the feature selection and further improves the predictability. Finally, section 4 presents the results and analyzed the entire models.

2. Data Preparing

2.1. Feature Types and Date Range

Different financial features data from 01/01/2004 to 12/31/2014 are collected. This paper analyzes the features as shown in the Features Table in Appendix. There are three types of features. One type is other global financial market indexes in addition to the S&P 500, such as FTSE 100, NIKKEI 225 and SSE. The second one is some currency rates corresponding to different stock index for different stock exchanges and commodity price that may have important impact on financial market, particularly crude oil and gold. The third type is the technical indicator of S&P 500 itself, because these mathematic formulas give us clues about the trend of the market. Among many technical indicators, momentum and rate-of-change are chosen as inputs. All features may have possible impacts on S&P 500 index. All feature data is extracted from yahoo finance website and Bloomberg terminal.

2.2. Data Transformation

Data obtained from the above resources is the absolute daily price information. However, the daily return data rather than the absolute daily price is more important from a financial perspective. So this paper transformed the daily price into daily return using the formula as shown below:

(1)

Note that Pn is the nth daily price and Pn−1 is the (n − 1)th daily price and rn is the nth daily return. To simplify the prediction of S&P 500 index, this paper classified S&P 500 daily return into two states, which are upward state and downward state. If the daily return of S&P 500 index is negative, the output is downward state, which will be presented as −1; otherwise, if the daily return of S&P 500 index is non-negative, the output is upward state, which will be presented as 1.

2.3. Data Cleansing

After data transformation, the next step is data cleansing. There are two main assignments of data cleansing. One is dealing with missing data, and the other is data alignment.

The first consideration is dealing with missing data. Features used in this paper are from different assets and from different area. Because of different holiday setup and different trading day arrangements, there are some missing data in different time zones. Since this paper used enough historical data, it’s reasonable to exclude those data unavailable in some dates.

Another consideration is data alignment. The trading periods of different assets and regions are different. Specifically, the market of S&P 500, NASDAQ and DJIA are traded in the same time period while market in Asia such as NIKKEI 225 and SSE are traded before the market in US, though dates are the same. So this paper uses the daily data of NASDAQ and DJIA in previous date and data of NIKKEI 225 and SSE in the same date to forecast the moving direction of S&P 500.

To avoid the influence of different data scales, this paper scales feature values linearly in a range of [−1, 1]. Otherwise the features with large numeric range in value will dominate those with small numeric range.

2.4. Feature Correlation Analysis

For an initial analysis, this paper calculates the correlation coefficients between the moving directions of S&P 500 denoted by 1 and −1, and the processed feature data.

Table 1 shows that crude oil is the main feature for the classification due to its large correlation with the S&P 500 movement. Other features’ correlations with the market movement are not very significant and therefore further analyses about those features are needed. In the following sections, various statistical learning methods were used to model the S&P 500 movement and find out features that provide the best predictability.

Table 1. The correlation of S&P 500 moving direction and different features.

3. Methodology

3.1. Model Selection

There are four kinds of supervised learning models, including Logistic Regression, GDA, Naive Bayes and SVM in the forecast of S&P 500 index [2] . In order to test the validation of those models, 2/3 data are used for training and 1/3 data for testing.

Firstly these four models are trained with all 16 features and their accuracies are examined using the testing dataset. The results are shown in Table 2.

Table 2 concludes that without any improvement, logistic regression and GDA perform better than NB and SVM. Since in theory the accuracy rate of random guessing the movement of stock price should be 50%, these four models all in certain degree help the predictability of stock market trend. However, all the results are not very satisfactory and we have to improve those models in many aspects.

Next, we will focus on improving the four models by feature selection, besides we could further improve SVM by kernel selection.

3.2. SVM Kernel Selection

Before doing feature selection, three different kernels in SVM were implemented such as linear kernel, polynomial kernel and Radial Basis Function (RBF) [3] . This paper also develops programs to decide the parameter values for different models for the best sake of the accuracy. The accuracy of SVM using three kernels are shown in Table 3.

The linear kernel of SVM achieved the highest accuracy among the three kernels for now. But this is just a preliminary result owing to the potential over-fitting between different features. Therefore, we implement feature selection to avoid this problem.

4. Feature Selection

This paper used the forward search method to select features for the logistic regression, GDA, Naive Bayes and SVM model. The set of 16 features that we initially assume could influence the S&P 500 movement may be too large and some features may provide

Table 2. Accuracy rate without improvement.

Table 3. SVM kernel improvement.

over-fitting information. In order to deal with the possible overlapping features, feature selections are implemented on all models and it turns out that it is very necessary in decreasing data complexity and increasing the prediction accuracy.

Generally speaking, feature selection algorithms include the filter methods and wrapped methods. Filter methods require no feedback from the classifier. However, the wrapped methods are classifier dependent, which is suitable for the forecasting of the moving direction of S&P 500. A proper wrapper method can be used to evaluate the fitness of the selected feature subset and yield better performance. Meanwhile, the high computational complexity of wrapper methods can be balanced by the sample size, which further substantiates the use of wrapper methods in the feature selection.

This paper can’t implement all the models under the possible feature subsets for 16 different features. Therefore, this paper should require the feature selection algorithms to proceed greedily, specifically forward selection method and backward selection method. However, eliminating one feature among totally 16 features could cause tiny change for the accuracy. Therefore, it is difficult for backward to eliminate one feature to improve the accuracy efficiently. For forward selection method, this paper chooses these important features firstly from 16 features to reduce the error from the over-fitting problems. When we achieve the biggest accuracy rate, we can train learning models with this subset of selected features. The results are shown below.

In Table 4 and Figure 1, this paper concludes that each of the forecasting models is improved through feature selection. Especially for SVM with RBF kernel, the accuracy rate increases by 6.64% and achieves the highest accuracy in all the forecasting models. This can be attributed to RBF kernel’s function to map samples non-linearly into a higher dimensional space and that it has fewer hyper-parameters than polynomial kernel, which has an impact on the complexity of model selection. Parameters in SVM and RBF need to be turned for the best performance of the machine learning methods such as the penalty factor (C) and Epsilon (ε).

In section 2, this paper calculates the correlation between different features and the moving directions of S&P 500. Due to the highest correlation between crude oil and the moving direction, it is the only one feature selected by every model (see Table 5). Besides, for other features with high correlation coefficients, including S&P 500 lag one day, Nikkei, SSE and DJIA, many different models also select them. In addition, Table 5 shows that the number of features selected by most of models is no more than 8. It

Table 4. Accuracy rate before and after feature selection.

Figure 1. Accuracy rate before and after feature selection.

Table 5. Feature selected for different models.

means that feature selection addresses the over-fitting problem efficiently and eliminates those less important features. Combined by Table 4, which compares the accuracy rate with and without the feature selection, SVM with different kernels significantly increases the accuracy rate. Therefore, SVM is the most efficient tool to handle the over-fitting problem in this paper and SVM with RBF kernel performs the best among three kernels.

5. Future Work and Conclusions

Every model has its own advantages and disadvantages. This research may be improved from several aspects. For instance, features with different time periods may also influence the forecasting of the stock market. Future research can include several time series features in the classification models and use better feature selection algorithms in order to generate a better prediction result.

Further work may consider how to apply the research method in creating applicable strategies in the real financial market. In order to achieve this, several more steps must be implemented. First of all, more back tests are suggested within different time periods to make sure that the strategy is robustly profitable. In addition, with the new data and results, models need to be updated.

When data is changed, model performance will be affected. Data needs to be cleaned and data imputation is a necessary step before a model is set up. For example, missing values and outlier need to be processed well otherwise unprocessed data will affect the model performance significantly. In addition, training and test datasets need to be carefully selected to reflect the main features of the whole dataset otherwise it’s hard to find the true patterns for this dataset [4] [5] . In addition, over fitting problems can be alleviated by cross validation techniques. Also parameters in SVM and RBF need to be turned for the best performance of the machine learning methods. If there are too many features, variance may be too big for the best performance of a regression method. Then a dimension reduction method such as principle component analysis (PCA) is a necessary step to reduce the dimension firstly before a machine learning method is applied. If data is huge, big data techniques such as Spark MLlib is an efficient way to implement the machine learning techniques [6] [7] .

In addition, future research may examine whether the SVM with RBF kernel is still the best model and whether the features selected are good enough. Second it’s suggested to apply the strategy in the real test for a certain period, such as a test beyond the sample data. Besides, the strategy needs to be evaluated with some criteria such as Sharpe Ratio or Maximum Drawdown. In order to obtain an applicable and mature strategy based on the methods of forecasting S&P 500 index discussed above, some further research needs to be done.

The prediction of stock market movements has always been an interesting and challenging task since the market trends could be affected by so many random factors. However, the interactions among different financial indices, commodity prices and technical indicators give us an opportunity to capture the relationship between the S&P 500 movement and those relevant factors. This paper investigates the use of several statistical learning models in the prediction of S&P 500 movement. It finds out that all the Logistic Regression, GDA, Naïve Bayes and SVM can provide predictability to a certain degree. Besides, among those models, SVM with RBF kernel is the most promising tool for the market trend forecasting, although it does not show its strengths before the feature selection. The initial screening of features is based on the understanding of the whole economy, so overlapping problem arises due to the high-dimensionality of features. Feature selection helped to increase the accuracy rates of all models to 60%, with 62.51% being the highest accuracy rate. This can be interpreted as an indication for financial analysts and traders, which may bring a certain level of profits.

Appendix

Feature Table

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Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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