Abstract: This paper aims to test whether moving average (MA) investment
timing strategy is applicable on individual stocks, portfolios formed from these
stocks, or both. Moreover, our objective is to compare the performance of MA
strategy with a buy-and-hold strategy. The data on individual stocks listed on
London Stock Exchange, United Kingdom (UK) is collected over the period
starting from December 31, 1999, through February 29, 2016. For the same
period, we use daily values of UK-DS Market-PRICE INDEX and 1-Month
Treasury bill rate. The paper follows Han et al. (2013) to peruse our
investigation. The study applies both MA and buy-and-hold strategies to
individual stocks and portfolios sorted by volatility. Since most results are
found insignificant, no evidence is found to support that one strategy is better
than the other when applied to individual stocks. However, trading behavior
and success ratios across groups provide mixed results, hinting slightly towards
the failure of MA strategy. The pervasive noise in daily stock return data is
the reason why MA strategy consistently produces insignificant results.
Moreover, when applied to volatility-sorted portfolios, MA strategy
substantially beats buy-and-hold strategy by yielding higher average return
and risk-adjusted returns, lower standard deviations, large-and-positive
skewness and Sharpe ratios, and much success ratios across portfolios. Both for
individual stocks and portfolios, dynamics of returns and especially trading
behavior suggest that the performance of MA strategy decreases with rising lag
lengths, meaning MA signal weakens for a longer history
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