Quote from AFJ Garner:
ââ¦As everyone and his uncle, mother, brother and granny now know, trend followers have increasingly hit bumps in the road over the past decade and in particular over the past two years. The patterns have changed â perhaps temporarily, perhaps not. Something has changed at any rate or these long standing CTAs would have ridden smoothly over the bumps without suffering historically high levels of drawdown. Many explanations for the different market conditions have been put forward: the rise of HFT, Government stop/go policies, globalisation increasing correlation between hitherto independent markets, too may trend followers doing the same thing in the same time frames. The list goes onâ¦â
ââ¦Such analysis is confirmed in the real world by the effective collapse of the methods of various long term trend followers in the mid 2000s: Dunn and JWH were lead to near ruin, Abraham and a slew of others were forced back to the drawing board and made changes to their portfolios and their systems.
2011 and 2012 wrought similar havoc among trend following CTAs. And a similar rush of head scratchingâ¦â
Hi AFJ,
Iâve been hearing about the woes of trendfollowers, especially John W. Henry & Co., for some time now. My understanding is that these guys tend to be breakout traders, buying breakout highs and lows and trying to catch a few long term trends and ride them as far as possible.
Your post made me go look at a few longer term charts from last year. There seem to be trends occurring that last up to 6 or 8 months in many futures and forex markets. Do you think that trendfollowers rode those trends successfully, but then got chopped to death the rest of the year?
Here's an index chart from last year:
ââ¦As everyone and his uncle, mother, brother and granny now know, trend followers have increasingly hit bumps in the road over the past decade and in particular over the past two years. The patterns have changed â perhaps temporarily, perhaps not. Something has changed at any rate or these long standing CTAs would have ridden smoothly over the bumps without suffering historically high levels of drawdown. Many explanations for the different market conditions have been put forward: the rise of HFT, Government stop/go policies, globalisation increasing correlation between hitherto independent markets, too may trend followers doing the same thing in the same time frames. The list goes onâ¦â
ââ¦Such analysis is confirmed in the real world by the effective collapse of the methods of various long term trend followers in the mid 2000s: Dunn and JWH were lead to near ruin, Abraham and a slew of others were forced back to the drawing board and made changes to their portfolios and their systems.
2011 and 2012 wrought similar havoc among trend following CTAs. And a similar rush of head scratchingâ¦â
Hi AFJ,
Iâve been hearing about the woes of trendfollowers, especially John W. Henry & Co., for some time now. My understanding is that these guys tend to be breakout traders, buying breakout highs and lows and trying to catch a few long term trends and ride them as far as possible.
Your post made me go look at a few longer term charts from last year. There seem to be trends occurring that last up to 6 or 8 months in many futures and forex markets. Do you think that trendfollowers rode those trends successfully, but then got chopped to death the rest of the year?
Here's an index chart from last year: