The Trend Bible

Trend-Based Investment Strategy

Make a portfolio with ten stocks. Buy and hold stocks in rising trends. Avoid very volatile stocks and replace stocks when they enter falling trends. Be aware that it takes time to achieve good statistical results.

Trend-Based Investment Strategy

The study of 350,297 signals from trends in stocks in the Nordic stock exchanges in the period 1996 to 2016 gave the following results presumed to be statistically significant:

Stocks in rising trends or breaking upwards from rising or sideways trends give excess return compared to benchmark.

  • Stocks in falling trends or breaking downwards from falling or sideways trends give negative excess return compared to benchmark.
  • Stocks breaking downwards from rising trend give statistical return in line with benchmark.
  • Signals from trend channels identified in Investtech’s short and medium long term price charts have better predictive power than the long term price charts.
  • The signals have better predictive power for stocks with medium high liquidity than for stocks with high liquidity, especially for the buy signals.
  • The predictive power is stronger in the first one to two months, but good for up to half a year after signals.

First some general criteria for stock market investments, that also take into account the nature of our statistical results.

  • Be long term and only invest in stocks if your investment perspective is five years or more. Fluctuations are great from year to year and investing short term gives a high risk of missing out on the excess return that the stock market statistically gives when compared to other investment possibilities.
  • Do not attempt to time entry and exit from the market. Be invested all the time. Investtech has no statistics on the effect of trend signals for indices and markets, only for individual stocks.
  • Make a portfolio of seven to fifteen stocks. This gives moderate distribution of risk while also a targeted enough portfolio with emphasis on the very best stocks. Also, such a small number of stocks will be easier to manage and follow up on a weekly basis.
  • Articulate a strategy, based on documented statistical conditions, and make routines for how to carry out the strategy in practice.
  • Stick to your strategy, also if in the first months or one to two years it does not show the good results you expected. Results can vary a lot over time, and only keeping a consistent strategy for a long time will approach annual long term statistical results.

A strategy must be adjusted to your personal premises and wishes in terms of risk tolerance, investment perspective, execution via (online) broker and trade frequency. Our starting point is medium large private investors with between 0.5 and 5 million Norwegian krone (NOK) in the market, who follows up the portfolio weekly and trades via an online broker in the daytime. Effective commission may be around 0.05 per cent, and at relatively passive execution trade prices could be near or a little better than volume weighted average. This allows fairly high trade frequency without negative impact on return possibilities.

General requirements for portfolio stocks:

  • The universe of potential stocks are listed Nordic stocks with an average daily turnover in the past month between one and five million NOK. Your home market can be your universe, which would be an advantage in terms of knowledge about news, share offerings, results presentations and other things that may influence prices. At the same time, it would be an advantage to have a bigger universe to be able to select the very best stocks. Sweden has two to three times as many potential stocks as Norway, which has more than Denmark, while there are fewer yet again in Finland. Including Sweden along with Norway gives good access to good stocks. If you only want to invest in Norway, Denmark or Finland, liquidity would have to be expanded to for instance 0.5 to 10 mNOK, to find the necessary number of candidates.
    Figures for average daily turnover are available in the table below the chart/recommendation on Investtech’s analysis pages.
  • Volatility of the stocks should be lower than extreme to avoid the risk of very steep falls. Information about volatility risk is located directly below the charts on Investtech’s analysis pages.
  • The stocks should be in rising trends or breaking upwards from rising or sideways trends in Investtech’s medium long term charts.
  • Quantitative requirements:
    • Stocks should show neutral or positive volume balance, since volume balance is another indicator that statistically gives excess return. Read the research report on volume balance.
    • Stocks should have positive or neutral momentum as measured by RSI, as this has given statistical excess return. Ideally RSI should be above 50, but at least above 30. Read the research report on RSI.
    • Stocks should be positive or neutral for insider trades (only available in Norway and Sweden), since this indicates that they are reasonable for fundamental conditions.

Purchase a start portfolio:

  • Go through all stocks in your universe, feel free to use Investtech’s Stock Selection tool if you can (available for Professional and Institutional subscribers). Select the stocks that satisfy the general requirements, especially rising trend or breaking upwards from rising or sideways trend, by giving them 5 points in “My rating” (available from Trader level subscriptions and up).
  • Go to My Stocks (requires at least a Trader level subscription) where you find all the stocks you have rated. Assess the long and short term charts, and increase the rating for stocks that have rising trends on both time perspectives and/or where some of the other quantitative requirements, like positive volume balance or moment are satisfied.
  • Go through the stocks again, this time with section diversification in mind. Rate stocks higher and lower such that the top ones combined give good sector diversification. Feel free to use volatility and liquidity as well to change the stocks’ rating.
  • Repeat the process with subjective assessment and control of other technical and portfolio conditions until you have from 7 to 15 stocks that stand out.
  • Assume that you wish to purchase ten stocks. Buy these and place about a tenth of the portfolio value in each stock.
    • Feel free to use an online broker and manual adjustment of limits throughout the day to achieve good entry prices.
    • The stock will statistically rise about 0.08 per cent a day, so it is more important to get good prices than quick entry.
    • Buy such a small percentage of the volume that you only marginally influence prices. Generally it is recommended to purchase no more than 30 per cent of volume.
    • Trade over several days if necessary.

Weekly control and replacements:

  • Sell stocks that have entered into falling trends in the medium long term or that are breaking downwards from sideways or falling trends.
  • Stocks that are breaking downwards from rising trends, give statistically neutral return. Consider selling these.
  • Consider selling other stocks if the combination of momentum, volume balance, insider trades (for Norway and Sweden) and other technical or quantitative conditions are clearly negative.
  • Find candidates among the stocks in the universe that you do not own. Assess these with the same criteria as the start portfolio. Select the very best and buy them.
  • Only sell stocks when you buy new ones, so you are always nearly fully invested in the market. However it is more important to get good intraday prices, so do not stress selling and buying at the exact same time.

For investors who want the opportunity to profit from short term fluctuations:

  • Check the portfolio for signals, especially from falling trends, every day instead of every week.
  • Check signals in Investtech’s short term price charts in addition to the medium long term.

Summary
Make a portfolio of some ten stocks and place roughly the same amount of money in each stock. Buy and hold stocks in rising trends or breaking upwards from rising or sideways trends in the medium long term. Preferably select stocks with an average daily turnover of between one and five million kroner and avoid highly volatile stocks.
Replace a stock when a portfolio stock enters a falling trend, and when it breaks downwards through the floor of a raising trend and there are other good candidates. Use Investtech’s analyses to determine when a stock is in a rising, falling or sideways trend, and to check when a trend is broken.
Be long term and disciplined and prepared that it will take time to achieve good statistical results.

The Trend Bible was written in 2016 by Investtech’s Head of Research Mr. Geir Linløkken. The research team behind the Trend Bible also consists of Senior Researchers Asbjørn Taugbøl and Fredrik Tyvand.

The Trend Bible - Start Page

Investtech has worked on research into behavioural finance and technical and quantitative stock analysis since 1997. The company has developed an analysis system that identifies trends, support and resistance, formations and volume patterns in stock prices, and uses these to generate buy and sell signals. Investtech uses advanced mathematical algorithms and statistical methods in computer programmes and online subscription services.

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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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