Wayne A. Thorp, CFA , is senior financial analyst at AAII and editor of Computerized Investing. Follow him on Twitter at @AAII_CI.


Discussion

I like this system. The only problem for me would be picking a stock that oscillates around its EMA after I bought it.

posted about 1 year ago by K from Ohio

A dollar late and a day short (or a decade short)--this research shows that trend following does exactly what it is supposed to do and what diversified buy-and-hold has not done, that is, reduce risk and give better risk adjusted returns, preserve capital, etc, etc. Stovall cherry-picked data after the fact in his March 2010 AAII article--no one beforehand would have said that 60% Large Cap US stocks and 40% Long US Treasury Bonds is a well-diversified portfolio. A similar split between a broad stock market index and a broad bond index did nowhere near as well either in 2008 or in the decade. We all simply gave up too much following AAII's holy grail of risk management through diversification. My moderately aggressive well-diversified portfolio that Risk Grades rated as a balanced portfolio with less than market risk in mid-2007 was rated as risky as a single small cap stock by mid-2008, and a portfolio allocated 25% each to US stocks/International Stocks/US Bonds/and International Bonds wasn't doing much better. More follow-up on trend-following approaches would be helpful.

posted about 1 year ago by Brian from New York

Of course, it is a day late and a dollar short, not the reverse as I wrote in haste. Another plus of the trend following approaches noted in Wong's research is the reduction in volatility. Wouldn't it be nice to sleep better while doing better in the market with less draw down.

posted about 1 year ago by Brian from New York

Please see my post as it relates to this article: AAII Discussions » Investing Basics » Is it possible to make 98.9% return from May 2006 to Dec 2010? Link: http://www.aaii.com/boards/messageview.cfm?catid=74&threadid=780&enterthread=y

posted about 1 year ago by Bill from Texas

Seems buy-and-hold is based on little more than hope, faith and misplaced patriotism. It is also induced and propagated by the brokerage houses financially boxed into their clients always buying and never selling, for the fear of broker being dumped by a company from its secondary offering. It is documented that brokers make lot more money from secondary offerings than from client commissions. So, when brokers push buy-and-hold to unsuspecting Archie Bunkers, it is obvious what they are doing: concealing and deceiving to pursue their own interest. They even wrap it in the flag. It is a shame that Wong and other truth seekers have to dig so deep and exert so much just to unearth the truth buried under the rubble of buy-and-hold propaganda.

posted 8 months ago by Ramesh from Ohio

What's never accounted for in these long term studies is demographics; the baby boom. During the 90’s the baby boomers reached their peak earning and investing years and now they are reaching their peak retirement years. They will be drawing down their investments and investing fewer dollars. The only thing that can change this dynamic is if they continue to work past their retirement age, which they seem to be doing. The question is how many, what percentage of them will do this? Will they continue to invest or just draw down fewer dollars?

posted 8 months ago by Donald from Maryland

Mr. Wong had an excellent research piece about 1-2 years ago in which he found that the 6-period EMA was the optimal time frame for a MAC system. Having used a similar system real time in my own risk management process, it was instrumental in helping get my clients out of the market in late 2000, back in in early 2003, out again in January 2008, back in in July 2009 and out at the end of this past July. As Mr. Wong mentioned in his article, there is no "Holy Grail" in investing. After 10 years of investing through sound economics and fundamental analysis, 1987 happened. That changed my outlook and I began looking at charts and technical analysis - even though everyone scoffed at even the thought of placing any credibility in technical analysis, especially people like John Bogle of Vanguard who have a vested interest. I turned to trend following in the early 1990s and have never looked back. Mr. Wong's research should be considered very seriously by anyone who wishes to improve their risk management capability. While it may not be the "Holy Grail," my real life experience over the past twenty years validates all of Mr. Wong's research.

posted 8 months ago by James from Colorado

Are you sure that you computed the ema correctly? I can not reproduce your results by following your formula for the exponential moving average. Thanks.

posted 8 months ago by Milo from Texas

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