Technical trading rules have a long history of being used by practitioners in
financial markets. Their profitable ability and efficiency of technical trading
rules are yet controversial. In this paper, we test the performance of more
than seven thousands traditional technical trading rules on the Shanghai
Securities Composite Index (SSCI) from May 21, 1992 through June 30, 2013 and
Shanghai Shenzhen 300 Index (SHSZ 300) from April 8, 2005 through June 30, 2013
to check whether an effective trading strategy could be found by using the
performance measurements based on the return and Sharpe ratio. To correct for
the influence of the data-snooping effect, we adopt the Superior Predictive
Ability test to evaluate if there exists a trading rule that can significantly
outperform the benchmark. The result shows that for SSCI, technical trading
rules offer significant profitability, while for SHSZ 300, this ability is
lost. We further partition the SSCI into two sub-series and find that the
efficiency of technical trading in sub-series, which have exactly the same
spanning period as that of SHSZ 300, is severely weakened. By testing the
trading rules on both indexes with a five-year moving window, we find that the
financial bubble from 2005 to 2007 greatly improve the effectiveness of
technical trading rules. This is consistent with the predictive ability of
technical trading rules which appears when the market is less efficient.Comment: 11 Latex pages including 2 figures and two table