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Posted October 19, 2023 at 10:03 am
The article “Factor Investors: Momentum is Everywhere” first appeared on Alpha Architect blog.
The Jegadeesh and Titman (1993) paper on momentum established that an equity trading strategy consisting of buying past winners and selling past losers, reliably produced risk-adjusted excess returns. The Jegadeesh results have been replicated in international markets and across asset classes. As this evidence challenged and contradicted widely accepted notions of weak-form market efficiency, the academic community took notice and started churning out research. As a result, a very large number of academic studies were published on momentum. The article summarized here has conveniently summarized 47 articles deemed as the highest quality and published in either the Journal of Finance, the Review of Financial Studies, or the Journal of Financial Economics, all three considered premier journals in the finance discipline. It is difficult to understate the importance of having a well-curated summary of momentum research. Keep it in your library.
Over the last 30 years, momentum has been a dominant research topic in finance. The Jegadeesh and Titman (1993) research documented the outperformance of momentum strategies. When individual stocks were ranked on past one to four quarter returns, the long(winners)/short(losers) strategy returns almost 1.5% monthly. Given the sheer number of studies that followed and the quality of the research, momentum now represents a significant challenge to the weak-form market efficiency and consequently much of the foundation in asset pricing. The troublesome part is that the CAPM and its derivative forms are now directly contradicted in fundamental financial theory. This situation has essentially left the field with risk models that are factor-based and suggest that beta doesn’t play much of a role and needs to be replaced. Building out the expected return/risk model using the “correct” number of factors has occupied many a research agenda. A number of multi-factor models, almost all if not all include a momentum term, have been developed (remember APT?) and robustly tested, but all are really just loosely constructed empirical explanations of the variability in stock returns. The APT takes the view that systematic risk may not and need not be measured in only one way. It does not, however, specify exactly what the systematic risks are, or even how many risks exist. In any case, the idea is that the same procedures used to explain return can also be used to explain portfolio risk (Rosenberg,1974). If portfolio risk can be explained, then it can be estimated and approaches to target or minimize it can be used during the portfolio construction phase, all using quantitative methods. Commercially available risk models (BARRA-MSCI, Northfield, etc.) are in widespread use and are quite effective at this task. That is a considerable achievement and a significant benefit to money managers and investors. With the help of a practical quantitative model to effectively control risk, managers can concentrate on the task of finding assets that are potentially mispriced.

The results are hypothetical results and are NOT an indicator of future results and do NOT represent returns that any investor actually attained. Indexes are unmanaged and do not reflect management or trading fees, and one cannot invest directly in an index.
For over 30 years, extensive research has found corroborating evidence that past winners continue to yield higher returns than past losers. This momentum effect is robust across various asset classes and across the globe and presents perhaps the most pervasive contradiction of the efficient market hypothesis. This article reviews three strands of literature on momentum. First, I outline the construction of momentum strategies, emphasizing improvements and alternatives such as time-series momentum, residual momentum, and risk-managed momentum. Second, I summarize the most prominent behavioral-based and risk-based explanations for the origin of momentum. Finally, I present in detail the findings on commonality in stock momentum, namely on industry and factor momentum.
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