It’s time to get back to talking about quant portfolios. I haven’t posted on any quant related stuff in a while. Doesn’t mean anything. I’ve just been focused on other things. And my quant portfolios require very little maintenance so once they’re up and running there is not much to do. At least there shouldn’t be much to do. The temptation to fiddle and tweak is quite strong but usually leads to worse results in my experience. Anyway I have some more quant posts coming out over the next few weeks which will kind of re-balance the postings in the blog. Ok, lets get to the quant performance data for the first half of 2017.

Here are the 2017 YTD total return (1H 2017) and max drawdown numbers for the various quant strategies I track. For explanations of the various quant strategies see the portfolios page. All equity portfolios consist of 25 stocks and were formed at the end of 2016. No changes in the holdings since that time (except for the TAA Bond strategy and the Pure Momentum strategy which re-balance every 4 weeks).

In the table below I list various quant strategies along with their YTD performance and drawdowns. Also, listed are various benchmark indices. All performance numbers are from Portfolio123.com.

Just like the first half of the year, 2017 continues to be a tough year for the equity quant portfolios. The average performance of the 8 quant portfolios is 3.36% YTD with only 2 of the 8 outperforming the SPY and none outperforming the international markets. You could say 2017 seems like a payback year for the stellar performance of 2016 but hey the year is only half over. I’ll talk more about overall performance in a bit but let me talk about the details in the table above first.

The microcap portfolio (14.22%) and the utility value portfolio (12.04%) led the way in the first half of the year. Quite an odd combination of portfolios to lead the way. On the other side trending value and the value composite portfolio were the laggards. Both of these portfolios were had quite a few US energy companies at the beginning of the year which really hurt performance when the energy turnaround fizzled out. The foreign versions of these portfolios did quite a bit better. Foreign TV2 is up 7.68% for the year and Foreign VC is up 12.68% for the year. The other equity quant portfolios lagged the market as well but are positive for the year. On the bong side TAA Bond returned 2.09% for the first half while the more concentrated version TAA Bond 1 returned 3.47%.

Lets talk about more aggressive versions of the quant portfolios. I’ve talked about this in the past with respect to increasing performance. However, there is a risk reduction aspect as well. Sometimes the quant models get caught out, especially if a trend reverses itself or value goes on to become even more value before it turns around. After all the models are making their decisions at one point in time, on data as of Dec 31, 2016 in the cases above. Versions of these strategies that mitigate some of this timing effect can be useful. Aggressive is probably the wrong word. I mean versions of these portfolios that are both more concentrated and use some risk management in individual positions. In the table above, next to the quant portfolio, I listed what the equivalent aggressive portfolio has done in the 1H of 2017. In 7 out of the 8 portfolios performance was improved with similar drawdowns. The average performance of the aggressive versions was 7.41% for the first half. Still underperforming but much better. Something to consider for your quant portfolios.

We’ll see what the rest of 2017 holds for the quant portfolios but let me talk about measuring quant performance. Quant underperformance vs the benchmarks is one of the toughest things about quant investing. Tracking error is wonderful on the upside but really difficult on the downside. Your always wondering if it’s normal, has something changed to make your model obsolete, etc. Unfortunately, this a feature, not a bug, of quant investing. But it’s what helps sustain the outperformance over time. The table below shows the historical performance of the quant models I track.

‘Core 4’ in the table are the 4 quant portfolios I consider the core of a good quant portfolio. The 4 portfolios are XLP Value, XLU Value, TV2, and Momo.

The table shows the performance of my implementations of the various quant strategies and their performance as simulated in Portoflio123. Then the last column compares that to the published performance from the creator and source of these models, O’Shaugnessy’s What Works On Wall Street. The data shows no real deterioration in performance of the quant models over time which is what you want to see when you’re doing this kind of stuff on your own. But what I want to highlight is the base rates. As a quant investor, over the last 5 years, most of the time your are underperforming the SPY even though you are beating the index quite handily on a total return basis. Great news if you stick with these strategies but it sure does make the actual performance in the trenches quite a bit more difficult. I will add this table to the Portfolios page as well.

I’ve gone on long enough for today. In summary, 2017 is proving to be a challenging year so far for quant investing. There’s nothing unusual about this. Just par for the course in quant investing. But let’s hope for a better second half. After all, we’re human.

 


11 Comments

hector · July 3, 2017 at 7:21 am

And I thought I was following along ok … but you are back to speaking in tongues! 🙂

Tony · July 3, 2017 at 8:00 pm

Hi Paul,

Great reminder about the base rates. Hard to focus on the big picture sometimes when you are in the trenches.

Can you point me to where you discussed the more aggressive versions of the quants? Curious how to implement these.

Has your backtesting shown the more aggressive versions to outperform the traditional strategies over the longer-term?

    paul.novell@gmail.com · July 4, 2017 at 6:29 am

    Hey Tony, I just mention in several times in old posts, mainly along the lines of ‘aggressive versions do better’. I know, weak. Basically, ‘aggressive’ means;

    – less stocks (10 or 15 depending on the portfolio)
    – Use of stop losses (I usually use trailing stops from the most recent high since my position was opened). The effectiveness of
    the stop depends on its width. Momentum based portfolios like TV2 need wider stops.
    – More frequent re-balancing. A misnomer but that’s what it’s called. It really just means more checking of the portfolio to see if the rules are still valid.

    Finally, yes, the more aggressive versions outperform over the long term but with more drawdowns. But that can be mitigated with an econ filter to avoid the big bad drops.

    Paul

      Tony · July 4, 2017 at 2:10 pm

      That makes a lot of sense. Already doing some of those. With the trailing stops in the momentum portfolios, what’s a good guideline? Would 30% be enough?

        paul.novell@gmail.com · July 5, 2017 at 5:38 am

        30% works pretty well for momentum based portfolios.

Shawn Crichley · July 4, 2017 at 5:03 am

Very interesting commentary. Thank you. Can I ask what software is used for the foreign VC1 and VC2 screens? I subcribe to Portfolio123 as well, but there is limited foreign access.
I would expect foreign markets to do much better coming off the next recession and hope to apply some foreign value screens then. I know quant-investing.com offers some.

    paul.novell@gmail.com · July 4, 2017 at 6:21 am

    Hey Shawn. Same software. I just screen for ADRs for the Foreign portfolios. It is definitely a very limited subset but at least it gets around P123’s limited foreign info.

    I agree on the performance of foreign markets going forward.

    Paul

Pontus · July 6, 2017 at 1:59 am

For trailing stops, do you then sell e.g. 30% down from a recent high and then hold that position in cash until enough time passes so that it is time to rebalance the entire portfolio? Or do you screen again and buy a new stock? For how long do you hold that? One year or until the next portfolio rebalance?

What stop loss level is appropriate for a pure value portfolio?

I would be very interested to hear more about this part of the “AGG” strategies, if you’d like to share!

    paul.novell@gmail.com · July 6, 2017 at 5:04 am

    Depending on the portfolio I check (automated in P123) if the stops are violated either weekly or every 4 weeks. Positions are sold on the week or 4 week check and a new position is added at the same time.

    Paul

Kirk Doughty · July 6, 2017 at 6:52 pm

Paul,

Does TAA Bond 1 hold only the top bond ETF in the portfolio based on momentum?

Thanks.

    paul.novell@gmail.com · July 7, 2017 at 5:50 am

    Yes.

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