{"title":"Practical Applications of Crowded Trades: Implications for Sector Rotation and Factor Timing","authors":"W. Kinlaw, M. Kritzman, D. Turkington","doi":"10.3905/pa.8.1.378","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Practical Applications Summary In Crowded Trades: Implications for Sector Rotation and Factor Timing, in the July 2019 edition of The Journal of Portfolio Management, authors William Kinlaw and David Turkington of State Street Associates and Mark Kritzman of Windham Capital Management discuss how investors can locate investment bubbles, determine whether these are expanding or deflating, and most profitably manage their exposure to bubbles’ run-ups and sell-offs. The authors propose two measures: (1) asset centrality to identify crowded trades (often the harbinger of bubbles) and (2) a complementary relative-value metric to distinguish between centrality during a bubble’s expansion and its deflation. Applied together, these measures can identify expansions and retractions of sector and factor market bubbles, the authors assert, to the advantage of investors wanting to trade these events. The authors back test the effectiveness of their measures by studying how they behaved during the tech and financial bubbles, among others. The authors conclude that, over the past 30 years, investors could have outperformed several equity markets by applying a sector-rotation strategy jointly incorporating these two measures, and also could have outperformed selected markets by using these measures to time exposure to such factors as size and volatility.","PeriodicalId":179835,"journal":{"name":"Practical Application","volume":"8 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-04-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Practical Application","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3905/pa.8.1.378","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Practical Applications Summary In Crowded Trades: Implications for Sector Rotation and Factor Timing, in the July 2019 edition of The Journal of Portfolio Management, authors William Kinlaw and David Turkington of State Street Associates and Mark Kritzman of Windham Capital Management discuss how investors can locate investment bubbles, determine whether these are expanding or deflating, and most profitably manage their exposure to bubbles’ run-ups and sell-offs. The authors propose two measures: (1) asset centrality to identify crowded trades (often the harbinger of bubbles) and (2) a complementary relative-value metric to distinguish between centrality during a bubble’s expansion and its deflation. Applied together, these measures can identify expansions and retractions of sector and factor market bubbles, the authors assert, to the advantage of investors wanting to trade these events. The authors back test the effectiveness of their measures by studying how they behaved during the tech and financial bubbles, among others. The authors conclude that, over the past 30 years, investors could have outperformed several equity markets by applying a sector-rotation strategy jointly incorporating these two measures, and also could have outperformed selected markets by using these measures to time exposure to such factors as size and volatility.
在2019年7月版的《投资组合管理杂志》(the Journal of Portfolio Management)上,道富投资公司(State Street Associates)的威廉•金劳(William Kinlaw)和大卫•特金顿(David Turkington)以及温德姆资本管理公司(Windham Capital Management)的马克•克里茨曼(Mark Kritzman)讨论了投资者如何定位投资泡沫,确定这些泡沫是在扩大还是在缩小,以及如何最有效地管理他们对泡沫上涨和抛售的敞口。作者提出了两个衡量标准:(1)资产中心性,以识别拥挤的交易(通常是泡沫的前兆);(2)一个互补的相对价值度量,以区分泡沫扩张和紧缩期间的中心性。作者断言,这些措施一起应用,可以识别行业和要素市场泡沫的扩张和收缩,从而有利于想要交易这些事件的投资者。作者通过研究这些措施在科技和金融泡沫等时期的表现来验证其有效性。作者得出的结论是,在过去的30年里,投资者可以通过应用结合这两种指标的行业轮换策略来优于几个股票市场,也可以通过使用这些指标来确定规模和波动性等因素的时间敞口,从而优于选定的市场。