In today's age of AI and machine learning, developing trading strategies from historical data is becoming increasingly accessible. As a result, a growing portion of the research process is shifting from model development to model validation. However, unlike the sell-side, where model validation guidelines are well established, the buy-side literature still lacks a coherent and unified framework for validating trading systems. Regardless of the modeling approach, walk-forward analysis remains an essential component of the validation process.
A walk-forward analysis repeatedly trains and tests a model on sequential time periods, providing a more realistic assessment of out-of-sample performance than the traditional single train-test split commonly used in the industry. Reference [1] applies a walk-forward testing framework to an ensemble of traditional statistical methods alongside modern neural approaches for cryptocurrency forecasting. The authors employ expanding-window walk-forward validation to avoid look-ahead bias and better mimic real-world deployment. They pointed out,
We introduced a reproducible walk-forward benchmark for cryptocurrency return and volatility forecasting. In the full benchmark, ARIMA remains strongest for one-day returns, Chronos is marginally strongest for seven-day returns, and PatchTST shows clear gains on one-day realized volatility, with a smaller and less statistically distinguished lead at the seven-day horizon. The broader lesson is methodological: in crypto forecasting, careful validation and strong baselines matter as much as model class. Our scope is intentionally narrow: daily data on five major assets, point forecasts only, and zero-shot use of one foundation model.
In short, the paper finds that neural and foundation models provide the greatest benefit when forecasting persistent signals such as volatility, but offer little advantage for noisy daily return prediction. More importantly, the results suggest that validation quality matters more than model novelty.
This paper once again emphasizes the importance of a robust model validation framework in systematic trading research.
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References
[1] Korir, G., Mbalu, N., Aranotu, C., & Tekenah, H. (2026), When Do Neural Forecasters Help? A Walk-Forward Benchmark on Cryptocurrency Returns and Volatility, Working paper
Post Source Here: Walk-Forward Analysis for Cryptocurrency Forecasting
source https://harbourfronts.com/walk-forward-analysis-cryptocurrency-forecasting/