Momentum is the tendency for assets that have performed well (poorly) in the recent past to continue to perform well (poorly) in the future, at least for a short period of time. 1 In 1997, Mark Carhart, in his study “On Persistence in Mutual Fund Performance,” was the first to use a momentum factor, together with the three Fama–French factors (market beta, size, and value), to explain mutual fund returns. Initial research on momentum was published by Narasimhan Jegadeesh and Sheridan Titman, authors of the 1993 study “Returns to Buying Winners and Selling Losers: Implications for Stock Market Efficiency.” (summary here)
Momentum is most commonly defined as the last 12 months of returns excluding the most recent month (in other words, months two through 12 of the past year). The most recent month is excluded, as it tends to show a reversal, which some have attributed to microstructure (trading) effects. The momentum factor is the average return of the top 30 percent of stocks minus the average return of the bottom 30 percent as ranked by this measure. The momentum factor is referred to as UMD, or up minus down. Note that UMD is a relative (cross-sectional) measure of momentum, unlike trend-following (time-series) momentum, which is an absolute measure.
Both types of momentum have been found to be persistent across time and economic regimes; pervasive around the globe and across stocks, industries, bonds, commodities and currencies; robust to various definitions; and they have well-documented behavioral explanations for why they have persisted even after publication. And, with the use of patient trading strategies, they survive transaction costs.
Recent research on momentum has focused on factor momentum. For example, the 2019 study by Sina Ehsani and Juhani Linnainmaa “Factor Momentum and Momentum” covered 15 U.S. factors (accruals, betting against beta, cash-flow to price, investment, earnings to price, book-to-market, liquidity, long-term reversals, net share issues, quality minus junk, profitability, residual variance, market value of equity, short-term reversals, and momentum) and seven global factors (betting against beta, investment, book-to-market, quality minus junk, profitability, market value of equity, and momentum) and found the following:
These findings are consistent with those of Tarun Gupta and Bryan T. Kelly in their December 2018 paper “Factor Momentum Everywhere.” (Summary)” They built and analyzed a large collection of 65 characteristic-based factors that are widely studied in the academic literature, including a variety of valuation ratios (e.g., earnings/price, book/market); factor exposures (e.g., betting against beta); size, investment, and profitability metrics (e.g., market equity, sales growth, return on equity); idiosyncratic risk measures (e.g., stock volatility and skewness); and liquidity measures (e.g., Amihud illiquidity, share volume, and bid-ask spread). They found:
Gupta and Kelly concluded:
“Our findings of momentum among equity factors support the conclusion that factor momentum is a pervasive phenomenon in financial markets.”
Robert D. Arnott, Mark Clements, Vitali Kalesnik, and Juhani Linnainmaa contribute to the momentum literature with their 2019 study, “Factor Momentum.” Their sample covers the periods 1963 through 2016, focusing on cross-sectional (relative) momentum for 51 factors, 38 of which are accounting-based. Their strategy is long the top eight and short the bottom eight industries. Following is a summary of their findings:
Their findings led Arnott, Clements, Kalesnik, and Linnainmaa to conclude:
“Our results can yield new insights about the sources of momentum profits in well-diversified portfolios. The finding that industry momentum stems from factor momentum, for example, rules out some explanations for industry momentum. Industry momentum cannot, for example, be due to underreaction to industry-specific news; after all, our industry-adjusted factors do not make industry bets. If factor momentum is due to underreaction to information, this information must thus reside at the factor level. If factors relate to macroeconomic risks, then the market must be underreacting to macroeconomic news.”
They added that on the other hand:
“factors may relate to mispricing; under this view, return comovement emerges from common shocks to mispricing rather than correlated news about fundamental values.”
If mispricings build up over time and then begin to vanish when arbitrageurs enter, factor returns are serially correlated. Factor momentum may thus arise from cross-sectional persistence inflows that induce, and those that later correct, mispricing.
Notes:
The Explanatory Power of Factor Momentum was originally published at Alpha Architect. Please read the Alpha Architect disclosures at your convenience.