AgPa #26: Trading on Price Charts

(Re-)Imag(in)ing Price Trends (2022)
Jingwen Jiang, Bryan T. Kelly, Dacheng Xiu
The Journal of Finance, Forthcoming, URL

This week’s AGNOSTIC Paper is about technical analysis. Full disclosure: I never believed in technical analysis in the sense of drawing lines on charts or imagining somewhat arbitrary patterns.

But the approach of this week’s authors is quite different. They borrow methodology from image recognition and train a machine learning model to detect predictive patterns in price charts (Yes, the machine receives the price chart as picture, not the underlying numbers!)…

  • The model identifies very profitable short-term signals
  • The signals are also profitable over longer horizons
  • Some of the machine-learning-signals are explainable
  • The model disagrees with conventional technical analysis

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AgPa #23: Trading on the Weather

Global weather-based trading strategies (2022)
Ming Dong, Andréanne Tremblay
Journal of Banking & Finance, Volume 143, 106558, URL/SSRN

People tend to be in a better mood when the sun is shining. That’s nothing dramatically new but this week’s AGNOSTIC Paper shows that this apparently also applies to investors. An investment strategy that went long (short) the stock market index from the country with the best (worst) weather on a particular day generated meaningful (hypothetical) outperformance…

  • The global long-short weather strategy returned 15.2% p.a. between 1993 and 2012
  • The long-only version of the strategy returned 13.4% p.a.

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AgPa #20: Performance of ESG Exclusions

The Expected Returns of ESG Excluded Stocks. The Case of Exclusions from Norway’s Oil Fund (2022)
Erika Berle, Wanwei (Angela) He, Bernt Arne Ødegaard
SSRN Working Paper, URL

This week’s AGNOSTIC Paper examines the ESG exclusions of a popular investor: the Norwegian sovereign wealth fund, also known as the “oil fund”. Between 2005 and 2021, the fund excluded 189 companies that engage in different types of “bad” practices or products. These exclusions are interesting because they reveal insights about the impact of ESG for a large real-world institutional investor…

  • ESG-excluded stocks generated up to 6.85% alpha per year
  • There seems to be a return premium on “bad” stocks

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AgPa #18: ESG Confusion (1/2)

ESG Rating Disagreement and Stock Returns (2021)
Rajna Gibson Brandon, Philipp Krueger, Peter Steffen Schmidt
Financial Analysts Journal 77(4), 104-127, URL/SSRN

This week’s AGNOSTIC Paper is about a quite controversial topic: Environmental, Social, and Governance a.k.a. ESG. ESG refers to the idea that investors should consider those dimensions in their decisions and thereby contribute to a more sustainable economy. But as this week’s paper shows, there is little agreement on what ESG actually is…

  • ESG ratings disagree: the average correlation is just 0.45
  • There is less ESG disagreement for larger, more profitable firms with credit ratings
  • Investors demanded a risk premium for ESG uncertainty

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AgPa #16: Concentrated Stock Markets (7/7)

Mutual Fund Performance at Long Horizons (2022)
Hendrik Bessembinder, Michael J. Cooper, Feng Zhang
SMU Cox School of Business Research Paper No. 22-11 via SSRN, URL

The seventh and final AGNOSTIC Paper on the extreme concentration in stock markets. This one is an out-of-sample test and documents very similar concentration and positive skewness for US mutual funds between 1991 and 2020.

  • Longer investment-horizons lead to extremer return distributions – also for mutual funds
  • Most active managers underperform passive benchmarks – especially over the long-term
  • Compared to the S&P 500, mutual fund investors lost about $1.3T between 1991 and 2020

But a picture is worth a thousand words…


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AgPa #15: Concentrated Stock Markets (6/7)

Extreme Stock Market Performers, Part I: Expect Some Drawdowns (2020)
Hendrik Bessembinder
SSRN Working Paper, URL

The sixth of seven AGNOSTIC Papers on the extreme concentration in stock markets. This one shows that even for the top wealth-creators, the road to success has been anything but smooth…

  • Even the best companies during their best decades had substantial drawdowns
  • Today’s drawdowns of tomorrow’s winners are even worse

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AgPa #14: Concentrated Stock Markets (5/7)

Extreme Stock Market Performers, Part IV: Can Observable Characteristics Forecast Outcomes (2020)
Hendrik Bessembinder
SSRN Working Paper, URL

The fifth of seven AGNOSTIC Papers on the extreme concentration in stock markets. This one will finally examine how to identify the few big winners ex-ante (at least it will try). Future winners have some distinct fundamental characteristics today. That said, the picture remains noisy and it’s very difficult to find them systematically…

  • Future top-performers tend to be younger, produce higher drawdowns, and spend more on R&D
  • Future wealth-creators tend to be older, more levered, and pay higher dividends
  • Identifying big winners remains challenging

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AgPa #13: Concentrated Stock Markets (4/7)

Extreme Stock Market Performers, Part III: What are their Observable Characteristics? (2020)
Hendrik Bessembinder
SSRN Working Paper, URL

The fourth of seven AGNOSTIC Papers about the extreme concentration in stock markets. This one goes one step further and examines the fundamental characteristics of big winners ex-post. The main insight is quite intuitive: outstanding stock performance usually comes with outstanding fundamental performance of the underlying company…

  • Big winners grow faster, are more profitable, and have smaller drawdowns
  • Observable fundamentals still explain relatively little

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AgPa #12: Concentrated Stock Markets (3/7)

Extreme Stock Market Performers, Part II: Do Technology Stocks Dominate? (2020)
Hendrik Bessembinder
SSRN Working Paper, URL

The third of seven AGNOSTIC Papers about the extreme concentration within stock markets. This one examines the industry composition of the most and least successful companies between 1950 and 2019 in the US. Unfortunately, just looking at industries is not really helpful to identify the few big winners…

  • The Tech-Industry is not as dominant as it seems at first glance
  • There is (unfortunately) not “the one” industry to look at

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AgPa #11: Concentrated Stock Markets (2/7)

Long-Term Shareholder Returns: Evidence from 64,000 Global Stocks (2021)
Hendrik Bessembinder, Ta-Feng Chen, Goeun Choi, K.C. John Wei
SSRN Working Paper, URL

The second of seven AGNOSTIC Papers about the extreme concentration within stock markets. This one goes beyond the US and examines global stock markets between 1990 and 2020. The pattern of extreme concentration is very similar for 41 countries beside the US and in some cases even stronger.

  • Longer investment-horizons lead to extremer return distributions – also outside the US
  • Just 2.4% of all companies created the entire net wealth in global stock markets
  • All stock markets are concentrated but there are regional differences

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