This looks very interesting and raises a couple of questions on how to use it effectively. Can you only create a Screener Watchlist on current data? It would be great if you could create comparative screens from various past dates – in your example, create the screener results as of May 13th 2023, and as of May 11th, 2022 as you need them. Is there a way to do this? Otherwise I presume you have to predict what you want to analyze, create screener watchlists at points in time, wait a year (or 2 in that example) and potentially reach the limit of your Watchlist. Reply
That would be the truly powerful addition. Such backtesting would allow one to see how the screener performed over time. It would be absolutely amazing to come up with criteria for a screener, screen for results as of a date in the past (let’s say 5/23/2023), and create an equal weighted portfolio and see how such portfolio would’ve performed over the following year.. Maybe one day!
Yes, that is correct. The idea is you create screeners over time and compare the results. To do what you want is a feature called backtesting, which is a feature the product doesn’t currently have, but is on our roadmap to address at some point in the future. Reply
I tried to run the “Snapshot Screener Results” with “Liberated Stock Trader Beat the Market Screener” using its View but I get an error message: “Stock Rover server could not process your request.” I was able to create a Snapshot using other screeners but not “Liberated…”. What am I doing wrong? Reply
Hello Doug, This is related to the length of the screener name, which is resulting in a watchlist name that exceeds 64 characters. The quick workaround is to rename the screener to a shorter screener name and then initiate the snapshot. Please see https://www.stockrover.com/help/screeners-help/additional-screener-actions/#Renaming_a_Screener Regards, Ken
I think a powerful complementary to this will be alerts based on the in/out of the screener. That way I don’t need to manually do it, but instead automatically see the changes over time. Reply