| Reality Check
A full report on actual performance of all strategies since going live in
April 2000 is available by email for institutional investors and financial advisors only.
Please include company name for verification

Investment Opinions
Buy = All components are unanimously bullish
Add = A majority of components are bullish
Hold = No signal generated
Reduce = A majority of components are bearish
Sell = All components are unanimously bearish


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Our
Hypothesis
Our hypothesis is that, when averaging results
across all markets, modest success for individual strategies compounds when strategies are
combined. Furthermore, exponential improvements in performance may be possible when
winnowing out that minority of markets where the strategies are unanimously bullish or
bearish.
We believe that such combinations should improve results, because the chosen strategies
appeal to a variety of market participants motivated by different investment philosophies.
Combinations may drive different groups of investors to make the same Buy or Sell
decisions at the same time.
As illustrated by the XY
scattergraph for international stock markets since 1977 alongside, the rationale for our
hypothesis is that an individual strategy (One Strategy) may beat international stock markets (World Index) in the long term even though a substantial minority
of its signals can be wrong in the short term. Thus if strategies are combined such that
buy signals are only generated when a majority are bullish (Two Strategies), or even better only when all strategies
are unanimously bullish (Three
Strategies), this will
both improve the chances for beating the markets (Horizontal Axis = Monthly Odds of Success) by eliminating a sizeable proportion of
loss-makers and also increase the average gain (Vertical axis = Annual Returns in US Dollars).
While the combination of one, two
and three strategies generates modest improvements in the monthly odds of success above
50%, the changes for profitable transactions are substantially higher, because the
strategies are designed to hold positions for an average of six months, to minimise
transaction costs. A couple of months may be loss-making, but if the majority of months
are profitable, the trade should be profitable overall. Thus trading into and out
of Wall Street since 1977 on the basis of Three Strategies would have been successful
in 60% of the months, and in 14 out of 20 trades. However that is equivalent to 70% of
trades succeeding, before dealing expenses.
To be as fair as possible this
hypothesis was further tested for relative performance to a global stock market index and
measured in total returns, combining capital gains and dividends for monthly performance
of average Buy and Sell recommendations, as shown in the second chart alongside. This
shows how improving odds in this way can generate exponential differences in performance,
when markets are grouped into bands as defined in the notes alongside.
Fortunately it has been possible to
simulate performance by back-testing three of our four trend strategies to create
Composite Indicators as shown in the chart alongside.
- Fundamentally based, Liquidity
strategies (or Key Indicators for the Styles RouteMap) are derived from interest rates,
exchange rates, industrial condifence surveys and commodity prices all of which are
published on a timely basis.
- Chart technical Momentum strategies
are themselves a combination of moving averages, rates of change and overbought / oversold
indicators, all of which are based on long established national stock market indices,
benchmark long term government bonds and exchange rates. These have been published for
decades on daily, or at worst, month-end basis. Only in the Styles RouteMap has it been
necessary to partially rely on retrospectively calculated indices.
- Similarly Seasonal Trading Patterns
are based on the same long established source data as the Momentum strategies.
- Our fourth Trend Strategy is based on
revisions of earnings expectations derived from changes in top-down economic forecasts. As
full past records of forecasts are unavailable, this component is not included in the
Composite Trend Indicator, illustrated in the chart. However there is a large body of
academic research collated by I/B/E/S that has successfully tested the validity of this
strategy for equity investing by using bottom-up earnings estimates.
Investors should however be aware
that following a Buy strategy on this basis may at times involve holding investments in
very small numbers of markets, as shown in the notes to performance for each RouteMap
accessed from the navigation bar below.
However to be conservative and
comparable with individual strategies, the statistics in the table of each RouteMap for
Buy includes both Add & Buy recommendations and for Sell includes both Reduce &
Sell recommendations. Thus all markets are included either on the Buy or on the Sell sides
of this chart. As an example of cumulative disaggregated performance, a fan chart for
performance of the Composite Trend Indicator in selecting world stock markets is shown
below.
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