S&P 500 Momentum Strategy – As Simple As It Gets (Rules, Setup and Backtest Results) - Quantified Trading Strategies (2024)

Trading strategies

ByOddmund GroetteTrading strategies

Momentum trading is the opposite of buying low and selling high: momentum is about buying strength. Can we make a successful momentum strategy for S&P 500?

Yes, a momentum strategy for the S&P 500 works. We use monthly bars and a simple moving average strategy crossover system.

Let’s show you why a momentum strategy works:

Table of contents:

What is momentum?

First, if you are unsure what a momentum strategy is, we recommend an older blog post we made:

  • Momentum Trading Strategy

Does momentum work?

Momentum investing is an approach that seeks to buy stocks with the best historical performance over a given period and then periodically rebalance the portfolio such that at any given time, it’s invested in the stocks with the highest momentum.

This approach is based on the momentum hypothesis, which believes a strong correlation exists between 3-12 months ‘historical return and 3-12 months’ future return.

That is, stocks that performed the best over the medium term (3-12 months) are likely to continue performing well in the near future, say the next 3-12 months.

How momentum investing works

Here’s how it works:

  • A momentum investor buys stocks that have performed best over the last 6 months (can be 3, 9, or 12 months)
  • The investor rebalances his portfolio every month or 3 months by selling the least performing ones and buying new stocks currently performing better.

Why does momentum work?

We need to look at some facts to understand why momentum investing works:

Eric Crittenden ofLong Board Funds published a fascinating blog post in 2016 called 80 Percent Of Stocks Have A Lifetime Return Of Zero.

Crittenden looked at the distribution of returns for all stocks listed between 1989 and 2015. Put short, over the long term, a small minority of stocks drive all the returns for the overall market!

Approximately 20% of all stocks accounted for all the gains during the period, meaning that the remaining 80% accounted for zero returns. During the same period, S&P was up 12-fold! The majority of the stocks ended up worthless.

It’s like the Pareto principle:

Roughly 80% of consequences come from 20% of causes – the 80/20 rule

This is what the distribution looked like:

The chart is negatively skewed: many losers and a few winners that turn out to be multibaggers.

We quote from the blog post:

7.7% of all active stocks outperformed the S&P 500 Index by at least 500% during their lifetimes. Likewise, 976 stocks (6.8% of all active stocks) lagged the S&P 500 by at least 500%. The remaining 12,404 stocks performed above, at or below the same level as the S&P 500.

What are the implications of the research?

Navigating the market may be more efficient by playing defensively and avoiding underperforming investments.

Can this be done?

The fact is that picking winners is very difficult, but this is where momentum investing might come to the rescue: you are buying strong stocks and avoiding weak stocks.

(Eric Crittenden’s blog post was written before Hendrik Bessembinder published his famous paper Do Stocks Outperform Treasury Bills?)

Let’s backtest a simple monthly momentum strategy for S&P 500:

S&P 500 momentum strategy – trading rules

The trading rules can’t get any simpler and we backtest the following:

Trading Rules

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This is it – two simple rules. You can also enter at the open of the following month after a signal.

S&P 500 momentum strategy – backtest

Let’s backtest the strategy and evaluate the trading statistics and results. We used the cash index since 1960 for the backtest, and thus dividends are not considered, meaning the returns are understated, but that doesn’t alter the findings. We are interested in the relative performance between the strategy and the index; therefore, it should not matter.

Let’s look at the equity curve:

We started with 100 000 in 1960 and ended with 5.575 million in February 2023. This equals an annual return of 6.6% vs. buy and hold’s 7%.

The trading results and statistics are slightly worse than buy and hold, but we must consider that the strategy is only invested 69% of the time and has substantially smaller drawdowns (26% vs. 55%).

If we factor in the less time spent in the market, we argue the risk-adjusted return is 9.5% – substantially higher than buy and hold:

One of the reasons for the small drawdowns is the return distributions:

As you can see, there are a few losing trades, but that is more than offset by more big winners than losers. The average loss is less than 5%, while the average winner is almost 25%!

This is the complete trade list since 1960 (36 trades):

Does it matter what kind of moving average you are using? We tried two different ones (simple and exponential), and the former performed the best.

S&P Momentum Index

S&P has made a momentum index:

The S&P 500 Momentum Index measures the performance of stocks that show relative strength in the market (ticker code is SP500MUP). It’s an international index that covers all markets.

Since inception, the performance has been like this:

List of trading strategies

We have written over 1200 articles on this blog since we started in 2012. Many articles contain specific trading rules that can be backtested for profitability and performance metrics.

The trading rules are compiled into a package where you can purchase all of them (recommended) or just a few of your choice. We have hundreds of trading ideas in the compilation.

The strategies are taken from our landing page of profitable trading systems.

The strategies also come with logic in plain English (plain English is for Python trading and backtesting).

For a list of the strategies we have made, please click on the green banner:

These strategies must not be misunderstood for the premium strategies that we charge a fee for:

FAQ:

How does Momentum Investing work?

Momentum trading involves buying stocks with the best historical performance over a specific period and periodically rebalancing the portfolio based on the highest momentum stocks. It aims to capitalize on the correlation between past and future stock performance. Momentum investors buy stocks that have performed well in the last 3-12 months and regularly adjust their portfolios by selling underperforming stocks and buying those with better current performance.

Why does Momentum Investing work?

Momentum investing leverages the momentum hypothesis, suggesting a strong correlation between historical returns and future returns. Stocks that have performed well in the medium term are likely to continue performing well in the near future.

What is the rationale behind a Momentum Strategy for the S&P 500?

The Momentum Strategy for the S&P 500 aims to exploit the long-term uptrend in the stock market by buying strong stocks and avoiding weak ones, thus reducing losses and improving overall returns. Momentum investing helps navigate the market efficiently by avoiding underperforming investments. By focusing on strong stocks, it provides a defensive approach to investing.

S&P 500 Momentum Strategy – As Simple As It Gets (Rules, Setup and Backtest Results) - Quantified Trading Strategies (2024)
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