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Intrinsic Momentum Diversified across Futures

| | Posted in: Commodity Futures, Momentum Investing

Is simple momentum the secret sauce of Managed Futures funds? In their 2013 paper entitled “Demystifying Managed Futures”, Brian Hurst, Yao Ooi and Lasse Pedersen examine how well simple trend-following strategies based on time series (intrinsic or absolute) momentum explain the performance of Managed Futures funds. Their simple intrinsic momentum strategy goes long (short) a contract series with a positive (negative) return relative to the risk-free rate over 1-month, 3-month and 12-month look-back intervals. They apply the strategy to a liquid universe of 24 commodity futures, 9 equity futures, 13 government bond futures and 12 currency forwards. They adopt a simple diversification weighting that targets 40% annualized volatility for each position. They rebalance the diversified portfolio weekly at the Friday close based on data from the Thursday close. They ignore rebalancing/roll frictions. Using daily and weekly prices for 58 futures contract and currency forward series during January 1985 through June 2012, they find that:

  • There is strong evidence that futures/forwards follow trends across asset classes and for different look-back intervals. 
    • The intrinsic momentum strategy generates positive gross returns in almost every case, with average annualized gross Sharpe ratios across assets of 0.29 for the 1-month interval, 0.36 for the 3-month interval and 0.38 for the 12-month interval. Average pair-wise correlation of single-asset momentum returns is less than 0.1 for each look-back interval.
    • Longer momentum measurement intervals outperform shorter ones, but even the 1-month interval diversified across all assets has a gross annualized Sharpe ratio of 1.3.
    • Annualized gross Sharpe ratios of portfolios diversified by asset class across look-back intervals range from 0.78 for equities to 1.05 for commodities.
    • For a portfolio diversified across all assets and look-back intervals, the annualized gross Sharpe ratio is 1.8.
  • The diversified intrinsic momentum portfolio is itself a good diversifier of traditional asset classes, with return correlations of: -0.02 with the S&P 500 Index; 0.23 with the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index; and, 0.05 with the S&P GSCI.
  • The intrinsic momentum strategy works especially well during prolonged equity bull and bear markets.
  • Gross performances of daily and weekly rebalancings are similar, trailing off for monthly and quarterly rebalancings.
  • Regarding execution of the intrinsic momentum strategy:
    • Annual transaction costs of a Managed Futures fund are about 1-4% for a sophisticated trader, but possibly much higher for less sophisticated traders. Transaction costs decline over time. Transaction costs generally increase with rebalancing frequency.
    • Margin requirements are 8-12% for a large institutional investor, but more than double that for a small investor.
  • A regression of Managed Futures index and manager returns on diversified intrinsic momentum strategy returns generates R-squared statistics of 0.36 to 0.64, suggesting that trend-following is an important component of fund strategies. In fact, controlling for diversified intrinsic momentum returns drives the alphas of most indexes and managers below zero.

The following chart, taken from the paper, tracks cumulative gross values of $100 initial investments at the end of 1985 in: (1) the intrinsic momentum strategy diversified across all assets as described above; and, (2) the S&P 500 Index. The diversified intrinsic momentum strategy performs very consistently over the sample period.

diversified-intrinsic-futures-momentum-cumulative-performance

In summary, evidence indicates that an intrinsic momentum strategy diversified across liquid futures/forwards contracts performs consistently well on a gross basis and may be a good substitute for a Managed Futures fund.

Cautions regarding findings include:

  • As noted in the paper, findings are gross, not net. Incorporating reasonable trading frictions would lower performance (more for small investors than large).
  • Implementation of the diversified futures portfolio may be infeasible for many investors.
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