How much trend? – MAN

How much trend - MAN

Today’s post looks at a recent paper from MAN on how much trend following to include in your portfolio.

Honey, I Shrunk the Trend Following

For reasons that I hope will become clear, the paper is called “Honey, I Shrunk the Trend Following”.

  • The subtitle is clearer: “How much trend-following should investors hold in a portfolio?”

The paper was published in April 2024 and begins by listing trend’s desirable properties:

Comparable long-term returns to equities, zero long-term correlation to traditional assets, and historically-observed strong performance in crisis periods. 

So how much trend do you need?

The textbook answer would be the proportion that generates the optimal risk-adjusted reward, or Sharpe ratio.

However, MAN feels that real-world constraints could shrink this allocation (hence the title).

LOMA

As a baseline, MAN uses a typical long-only multi-asset (LOMA) allocation – a global 60/40 stock-bond portfolio.

  • This was a great portfolio until recently, with both assets rising in price and low correlations between them.

But correlations have now turned positive, something that used to be quite common.

Stock bond correlation (7 Circles)

This only makes the argument for adding trend as further diversification more powerful.

Optimal Sharpe

Optimal Trend with Sharpe (7 Circles)

The chart shows the optimal combination (that produces the max Sharpe) for a variety of lookback periods (to December 2023).

  • Lookbacks shorter than three years become very noisy (and allocations to trend very high, given the outperformance post-2022).

The optional allocation ranges from 20% to more than 60%, or 50% if you stick to periods longer than 10 years.

  • MAN settles on 40% as the optimal allocation (over the longest time frame).

This just about matches with previous studies I have seen, which produce targets between 10% and 40%.

Trend-following has a relatively higher optimal weight in the early period of the sample given its outperformance, and on a relatively lower level of volatility, throughout the dot-com bubble burst and the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), periods where traditional assets struggled. However, following the GFC, trend-following entered what many regard as the ‘CTA winter’, where returns were broadly flat, which leads to a drop in optimal weight. 

Drawdown

Optimal Trend with Max drawdown (7 Circles)

Investors who are expressly interested in trend-following’s defensiveness may consider drawdown to be the most pertinent measure of optimal.

This bumps up the optimal allocation to 63%.

Tracking error

Trend tracking error (7 Circles)

Next, they look at the annualised tracking error for trend versus global equities.

Trend-following’s convexity means that this tracking error to 60/40 is generally at its greatest when we need it most, in other words, when 60/40 is at its worst.  The spikes in the tracking error curves are contemporaneous to drawdowns for 60/40, while the curves taper towards their lows when 60/40 rallies.

The paper doesn’t say this explicitly, but my take is that we needn’t worry about tracking errors.

Implementation

Cash efficient implementations (7 Circles)

The next section looks at the ease of adding a trend allocation.

The cash efficiency of instruments traded by trend-following strategies means that little additional cash is needed to fund an allocation. Allocating 90% of cash to the LOMA and 10% to trend-following, with the latter levered up by 4x, leads to roughly roughly 40% trend-following, 90% LOMA (or 30% trend-following and 70% LOMA in normalised allocation terms).

An alternative implementation replicates 100% of the LOMA using futures (or swaps) and allocates 40% of the remaining cash to trend.

See also:  AQR on Managed Futures

Solution 2, with the same amount of 60/40 as our original 60/40 portfolio, enhances the return of 60/40 by 2.3% per annum on similar volatility and drawdown.

Conclusions

This is a short and easy-to-read paper that provides ammunition for allocations to trend of between 20% and 63%.

  • I’ve never met a UK-based private investor with even a 20% allocation to trend, and given the difficulty of accessing ready-made trend ETFs here in the UK, I don’t expect that to change soon.

DIY trend is time-consuming to implement, so my own approach is to lump TAA strategies (which are simpler to execute) into the same bucket.

  • At the time of writing my Trend/TAA allocation is 7.6%, and I should hit 11% or 12% by the end of 2024.

I can see a 15% or 20% allocation in my future, but probably not 63%.

  • Until next time.

Mike is the owner of 7 Circles, and a private investor living in London. He has been managing his own money for 40 years, with some success.

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8 Responses

  1. mrbatch says:

    you may want to review wintoin trend fund, ,mortlake dunn wmai fund and recently made available dbmf dbi fund – all available on ii platform in uk.
    fti my trend allocation is circa 20%

  2. lawrence batchelor says:

    Thanks Mike,
    Yes – the wealth of etf options in USA for this and other leveraged / exotic ideas is depressing that none has/will launch similar etf’s here. I would love them as well.
    How did you get to trade dbmf – interactive brokers with financial knowledge proof ?
    I pair my trend stuff currently with wtef the gbp share class of NTSX – a leveraged 90/60 usa large cap / intermediate treasury to free up some space for the alts i have like managed futures/trend and gold

    Thanks for your article – trend like gold historically seem to add to an overall portfolio but people seem to avoid it !???

    • Mike Rawson says:

      I use TastyTrade and Stake for US ETFs. I have an IBRK ISA already and didn’t want to turn my account professional. There’s also spread betting to consider.

      I have a ton of WTEF – it’s my biggest holding. The fund is finally getting bigger but not long after the launch last year I held around 10% of it. Again, I wish we had more capital efficient ETFs in the UK.

  3. lawrence batchelor says:

    what a small world – yes aum is upto about 13mill $ now but a slow climb. will be very interesting to see how wtef performs in an equity downturn with the bonds compared to a straight usa large cap etf eg spxl at 3bps vs wtef 25bps. i spoke to them about bond duration and their 4/5 bond futures are brought to mimic intermediate bonds they said – we shall see…..

  4. lawrence batchelor says:

    hi mike

    alot of volume in wtef today – unsure if buying or selling

    the dbmf ucit got off to a bad start for me recently with the japan cary trade unwind. winton / dunn did much better at rebound after this shock

  5. lawrence batchelor says:

    Mike,
    New global WTEF etf launced WGEC IE00077IIPQ8
    What you think – wtef replaced by this. BAsed on ftse dev world and has global bonds …well 4 country.

    • Mike Rawson says:

      I think its a nice addition but it’s very small at the moment and I have a lot of money in WTEF already. I will probably put new money into WGEC and build up gradually over a few years.

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How much trend? – MAN

by Mike Rawson time to read: 2 min