Return prediction and stock selection from unidentified historical data
The experimental approach was applied to test the value of historical return series in technical prediction. Return sequences were randomly drawn cross-sectionally and over time from S&P500 records and participants were asked to predict the 13th realization from 12 preceding returns. The hypothesis that predictions (nominal or real) are randomly assigned to historical sequences is rejected in permutation tests, and the best-stock portfolios by experimental predictions significantly outperform the worst-stock portfolios in joint examination of mean return and volatility. The participants dynamically adjust their predictions to the observed series and switch from momentum riding to contrarian extrapolation when recent trends get extreme. The implicit tuning of predictions to specific series captures variabilities that could not be inferred by schematic statistical forecasting.
Year of publication: |
2014
|
---|---|
Authors: | Sonsino, Doron ; Shavit, Tal |
Published in: |
Quantitative Finance. - Taylor & Francis Journals, ISSN 1469-7688. - Vol. 14.2014, 4, p. 641-655
|
Publisher: |
Taylor & Francis Journals |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
SHORT-RUN ARBITRAGE IN CRISIS MARKETS — EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE
SONSINO, DORON, (2014)
-
A comparative study of lotteries-evaluation in class and on the Web
Shavit, Tal, (2001)
-
On the evaluation of options on lotteries : an experimental study
Shavit, Tal, (2002)
- More ...