Investtech Research: Negative excess return after break downwards from falling trend

Published March 3, 2020

New research from Investtech shows that stocks breaking downwards from medium term falling trends have fallen 2.7 per cent in the following three months. These results largely confirm technical analysis theory, which states that breaks downwards from falling trends increase the fall rate.

Trends are one of the most important elements of technical analysis. They are visual and intuitive and describe in which direction a stock is moving. According to technical analysis theory, stocks in falling trends will continue to fall. A falling trend indicates that the company experiences negative development, that pessimism is spreading among investors and that buy interest is waning.

The trend gives the rising rate of the stock price, and the stock's price target is found by extrapolating trend lines. We distinguish between rising trends, horizontal trends and falling trends. More information on trends and how Investtech identifies different trends can be found here.

Investtech's algorithms identify trend breaks for you. A current example may be Boeing, which has broken downwards from a medium term falling trend per March 2nd.

Figure 1: Boeing CO. (The) (BA.US) Close: 275.11 (-12.65), Feb 28, 2020

Our subscribers can find stocks with these negative signals using for instance the tool Trend signals.

We wanted to study the statistical results yielded by sell signals from breaks downwards from falling trends and therefore studied return from Norwegian, Swedish, Danish and Finnish stocks following buy and sell signals from breaks upwards from rising trends and breaks downwards from falling trends identified in Investtech’s price charts in the short, medium and long term. We had up to 23 years of data, from 1996 to 2018. We defined a sell signal as the first day a stock entered a falling trend, or when the stock was in a falling trend and it had been more than 22 days since the previous signal.

The chart below shows average price development following sell signals from breaks downwards from falling trends identified in Investtech’s medium term price charts in the Nordic markets. The signals are triggered on day 0. Only days when the exchange is open are included, so 66 days equal approximately three months. The thick red line shows the development of sell signal stocks. The shaded areas are the standard deviation of the calculations. The thin red line shows benchmark development in the same period as the sell signal stocks.

Figure 2: Sell signal from break downwards through falling trend, medium term, 1996-2018, the Nordic markets combined.

Stocks breaking downwards from short term falling trends have historically had a weak rise in the first two weeks and moved sideways the rest of the month. They have given an annualised negative excess return of 1.9 percentage points.

Stocks breaking downwards from medium term falling trends fell 2.7 per cent in the next three months. Compared to benchmark in the same period, stocks breaking downwards from falling trends did 2.9 percentage points worse, which equals an annualised negative return of 10.8 percentage points.

Stocks breaking downwards from long term falling trends on average rose 0.4 per cent in three months. This is 1.3 percentage points worse than benchmark and equals a negative excess return of 5.1 percentage points.

The time period for the study is fairly long, the data quality is considered to be good and the algorithms used are entirely automatic. Stocks breaking downwards from medium term falling trends are expected to underperform and statistical measures suggest a high degree of significance.

The analyses also indicate that stocks breaking downwards from short and long term falling trends will underperform, but these results have lower statistical significance. However, it seems that breaks downwards from long term falling trends in individual stocks indicate weak return for the whole market. In addition, there is significant negative excess return three months after breaks downwards from short term falling trends.

Please find more details and results in the research reports here:

Break in trend direction, short term

Break in trend direction, medium term

Break in trend direction, long term

Keywords: h_TFBrD,help topic main report.

Written by

Asbjørn Taugbøl
Analyst
at Investtech

"Investtech analyses the psychology of the market and gives concrete trading suggestions every day."

Espen Grønstad
Partner & Senior Advisor - Investtech
 


Investtech guarantees neither the entirety nor accuracy of the analyses. Any consequent exposure related to the advice / signals which emerge in the analyses is completely and entirely at the investors own expense and risk. Investtech is not responsible for any loss, either directly or indirectly, which arises as a result of the use of Investtechs analyses. Details of any arising conflicts of interest will always appear in the investment recommendations. Further information about Investtechs analyses can be found here disclaimer. The content provided by Investtech.com is NOT SEC or FSA regulated and is therefore not intended for US or UK consumers.


Investtech guarantees neither the entirety nor accuracy of the analyses. Any consequent exposure related to the advice / signals which emerge in the analyses is completely and entirely at the investors own expense and risk. Investtech is not responsible for any loss, either directly or indirectly, which arises as a result of the use of Investtechs analyses. Details of any arising conflicts of interest will always appear in the investment recommendations. Further information about Investtechs analyses can be found here disclaimer. The content provided by Investtech.com is NOT SEC or FSA regulated and is therefore not intended for US or UK consumers.

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