The Credit Crisis Financial Stocks Short Journal

The $25b cut in agency debt purchases looks like its just a technical issue. It would make no sense for the fed to do a mini-exit like that for no reason
 
Quote from Daal:

I need to see a chart of the TF stock system against a chart of an index of all stocks traded in the US. I doubt the outperformance(if it exists) is big enough to justify all the hassle(not to mention that it could be random)
You can look at the Value Line Arithmetic Index, see http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=^VAY. It is an equal weight index of around 1800 US stocks that is rebalanced daily, free of survivorship bias. It had a 60% max drawdown in 2008. The Blackstar stock system had half of that: 29.3%. This was out of sample, a true forward walk.

The risk adjusted returns of this stock system are twice as good as buy and hold.

BTW: No stock trendfollowing system will ever produce any iota of alpha in a straight up market as the mid 90s. It's impossible by definition.
 
Quote from Daal:

I actually agree with VN regarding the blackstar paper. Look at the chart of the returns against the S&P500. There is virtually no alpha from 1990 to 1999. Then from 2000 to 2008 there is, that system tends to be long smaller cap stocks compared to the S&P500, the outperformance period is also a period where smaller caps beat big caps. I need to see a chart of the TF stock system against a chart of an index of all stocks traded in the US. I doubt the outperformance(if it exists) is big enough to justify all the hassle(not to mention that it could be random)

We equal weighted the 3,000 most liquid stocks and rebalanced once per year. The result was lower returns, higher volatility, and greater drawdown relative to the S&P 500. It's not because of small caps stocks that the trend following system outperformed. There are several reasons for the outperformance, one of which is discussed in this paper:

http://www.michaelcovel.com/pdfs/blackstar-sell.pdf

We also recently applied a very simple, unoptimized channel breakout system to all stocks:

http://www.michaelcovel.com/pdfs/DoesTrendFollowingWorkOnStocks_2.pdf
 
Quote from ecritt:

We equal weighted the 3,000 most liquid stocks and rebalanced once per year. The result was lower returns, higher volatility, and greater drawdown relative to the S&P 500. It's not because of small caps stocks that the trend following system outperformed. There are several reasons for the outperformance, one of which is discussed in this paper:

http://www.michaelcovel.com/pdfs/blackstar-sell.pdf

We also recently applied a very simple, unoptimized channel breakout system to all stocks:

http://www.michaelcovel.com/pdfs/DoesTrendFollowingWorkOnStocks_2.pdf

You mentioned there was several reasons for the outperformance, the data you provided(which I found interesting) tells me that system beats the market simply because it appears that there is an inneficiency in stock markets where badly performing stocks tend to be overpriced therefore being long the stock market ex-bad performers(those who had significant declines) beats the market with lower volatility, regardless of trends

I look forward for your evidence on the other reasons why the breakout system works
 
Quote from makloda:

You can look at the Value Line Arithmetic Index, see http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=^VAY. It is an equal weight index of around 1800 US stocks that is rebalanced daily, free of survivorship bias. It had a 60% max drawdown in 2008. The Blackstar stock system had half of that: 29.3%. This was out of sample, a true forward walk.

The risk adjusted returns of this stock system are twice as good as buy and hold.

BTW: No stock trendfollowing system will ever produce any iota of alpha in a straight up market as the mid 90s. It's impossible by definition.

It appears that the VAY has beaten the S&P500 by a wide margin over the last decade
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=^VAY&t=my&l=on&z=m&q=l&c=^GSPC
It matched during 90's, then outperformed during 00's
 
Quote from makloda:

Remember VAY is rebalanced daily without slippage nor transaction costs. It is not an investable index.

The Russell 2000 beat the S&P500 from 2000 to 2009 by quite a bit. That should explain at least part of the returns of that system
 
Yes obviously you are right. The SP500 is not a good benchmark.

But: the maximum drawdown even against the VAY (which is a "fair" benchmark even though doesn't account for slippage nor for transaction costs!) was cut in half by the Blackstar Funds approach, out of sample (!). Isn't that amazing? IMO, it is.

Why are you just looking at profits, not at drawdowns and standard deviation?

I think I've said it in another thread once: Trendfollowing in my book was never designed to provide superior nominal returns. But I believe it can be utilized to achieve superior risk adjusted returns: participating in a good chunk of the upside/downside in many markets while limiting downside/upside tail risk.
 
Quote from makloda:

Yes obviously you are right. The SP500 is not a good benchmark.

But: the maximum drawdown even against the VAY (which is a "fair" benchmark even though doesn't account for slippage nor for transaction costs!) was cut in half by the Blackstar Funds approach, out of sample (!). Isn't that amazing? IMO, it is.

Why are you just looking at profits, not at drawdowns and standard deviation?

I think I've said it in another thread once: Trendfollowing in my book was never designed to provide superior nominal returns. But I believe it can be utilized to achieve superior risk adjusted returns: participating in a good chunk of the upside/downside in many markets while limiting downside/upside tail risk.

Profits is what pay the bills, low drawdowns is nice though. Here is the thing if that system excess returns came from the small cap effect and avoiding stocks that had large declines, then it doesnt really support trend following.

Even though avoiding stocks in large downtrends 'worked', that seems likely due the fact the large hedge funds have a hard time arbing those stocks due, borrowing difficulties, costs, liquidity and low profit potential compared to AUM, so it would be more like a anomaly that wasnt closed due technical factors rather than TF working. But I'm waiting for Eric's defense
 
Quote from Daal:

Profits is what pay the bills, low drawdowns is nice though. Here is the thing if that system excess returns came from the small cap effect and avoiding stocks that had large declines, then it doesnt really support trend following.
IMO it does. If nominal profits is all you're after and you don't care about drawdowns you can use leverage on the above system and suddenly you have a system that has the same (historical) drawdown as the benchmark but double the profits.

Most diversified futures trendfollowing systems are leveraged with exactly this rationale. They (try to ) neutralize tail risk out of markets and then feel more comfortable using leverage. It's like being long volatility (trend following) vs. being short volatility (counter trend, mean reversion).

Here's an interesting short paper on the subject

http://www.estlander-roennlund.de/binaer_view.asp?BinaerNr=70
 
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