Quant Momentum Strategy

Stocks Expert United Kingdom CFD & Spread-Bet Stocks FTSE 350 Stocks FTSE All-Share Stocks Sector Indices

Works Best in Trending Markets with Clear Winners/Losers

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Quick Reference

Strategy Type Systematic Factor-Based Momentum with Quantitative Enhancements
Market Outlook Works Best in Trending Markets with Clear Winners/Losers
Risk Level Moderate to High
Time Horizon Medium Term (1-6 months holding, monthly rebalancing)
Best Conditions Trending markets, low correlation regime, clear factor performance, moderate volatility
Avoid When Momentum crashes, high correlation spikes, extreme volatility (VFTSE > 35), factor reversal periods

Payoff Profile

Quant Momentum systematically captures the momentum factor premium across a diversified portfolio

United Kingdom Market Details

Exchange LSE
Benchmark Indices MSCI UK official momentum factor index • High quality / alpha factor index • Higher-beta mid-cap segment
Momentum Metrics 12-1 month return (skip recent month) • Return / Volatility (Sharpe-like) • Stock return vs FTSE 350 return • Continuous small gains vs jumpy gains
Rebalancing Schedule Monthly (last trading day) • Over 2-3 days to minimize impact • UK CGT has no long/short holding-period distinction - shelter gains in an ISA/SIPP or trade via spread bets (CGT-exempt); there is no tax reason to delay rebalancing

Frequently Asked Questions

What returns can I expect from a quant momentum strategy?

Historically, momentum strategies in the UK have generated roughly 3-5% annual alpha over broad market benchmarks like the FTSE 350. However, returns vary significantly by year - some years +15% alpha, others -5%. Expect higher volatility than index investing. Long-term (5+ years) investors benefit most from momentum's compounding alpha.

How many stocks should be in a momentum portfolio?

25-35 stocks is the sweet spot. Fewer than 20 creates concentration risk and high tracking error. More than 50 dilutes momentum exposure and approaches index returns. 30 stocks provides good diversification while maintaining meaningful momentum tilt.

Why use 12-month momentum instead of 1-month or 6-month?

Research shows 12-month (excluding recent month) is optimal. 1-month has too much noise and reversal effects. 6-month works but misses some momentum. 12-month captures the full momentum cycle. The '12-1' formulation (skipping recent month) further improves by avoiding short-term reversal.

How often should I rebalance a momentum portfolio?

Monthly is standard - it captures momentum shifts while keeping turnover manageable (~200% annually). Quarterly rebalancing reduces costs but may miss momentum changes. Weekly is too frequent and costly. Monthly with buffer zone (exit at rank 40, not 30) optimizes the trade-off.

Can momentum strategy lose money?

Yes, momentum can and does lose money, especially during 'momentum crashes' when past winners sharply underperform. Crashes of -20% or more happen every few years (2009, 2020, 2022). However, over full market cycles (5+ years), momentum has historically delivered positive alpha. Risk management (volatility scaling, stops) helps manage drawdowns.

How do I protect against momentum crashes?

Multiple approaches: (1) Volatility scaling - reduce exposure when VFTSE > 25. (2) Portfolio stop-loss at -15% drawdown. (3) Factor monitoring - reduce if momentum factor underperforms 2+ months. (4) Diversify with other factors (quality, low volatility). (5) Hedging with FTSE 100 index puts during elevated risk. Combining approaches provides layered protection.

Should I use equal weight or momentum-weighted portfolios?

Equal weight is simpler and more diversified - each stock gets same allocation. Momentum-weighted concentrates on strongest stocks for potentially higher returns but more risk. Risk-parity (inverse volatility) weighting is another option that balances risk. For most investors, equal weight with sector constraints works well.

How do I combine momentum with other factors?

Several approaches: (1) Sequential screening - first filter for momentum, then quality. (2) Composite scoring - weighted sum of momentum, quality, value scores. (3) Separate portfolios - allocate 60% to momentum, 40% to quality, rebalance between them. (4) Intersections - only buy stocks in top quartile of BOTH factors. Start simple (sequential) and add complexity as needed.

What transaction costs should I expect?

For liquid FTSE 350 stocks: Commission 0.02-0.05%, Stamp Duty 0.5% on every buy (AIM shares exempt), spread/impact 0.05-0.15%. Total round-trip: ~0.6-0.9%, dominated by the buy-side stamp duty (the opposite leg to India's sell-side STT). With 200% annual turnover, expect ~0.7% annual cost. Reduce via: buffer zone (-20% turnover), TWAP execution (-30% impact), and routing turnover through spread bets/CFDs (no stamp duty).

How do I backtest momentum strategy properly?

Key requirements: (1) 10+ years data, survivorship-bias free (include delisted stocks). (2) Point-in-time universe (FTSE 350 as of each date, not current constituents). (3) Walk-forward testing (train on 70%, test on 30%, roll forward). (4) Include realistic transaction costs (0.5% stamp duty on buys, commission, spread). (5) Out-of-sample validation - expect 20-30% performance decay from in-sample. Use out-of-sample results for planning, not in-sample optimized results.

How do I implement machine learning for momentum?

Feature engineering: 12-1 return, risk-adjusted momentum, relative strength, earnings momentum, RSI, sector momentum, VFTSE. Target: Top tercile classification or return regression. Model: XGBoost or LightGBM (best for tabular data). Training: Time-series split, walk-forward retraining monthly. Integration: ML probability as 40% weight combined with 60% traditional momentum. Expect 2-3% additional alpha from ML enhancement.

How do I build a long-short momentum portfolio in the UK?

Long leg: Buy top 40 stocks by momentum (50% of capital). Short leg: Short bottom 40 via CFDs or spread bets (another 50%; Eurex single-stock futures for the largest names). Gross exposure 200%, net exposure ~0%. Challenges: Limited single-stock derivative coverage beyond mega-caps, borrow/financing costs, FCA net-short disclosure above 0.2% of issued capital. Practical approach: Short only liquid large/mid-caps, may have slight net long bias. Rebalance monthly, monitor shorts more frequently (squeeze risk). Higher Sharpe but more complex execution.

What is risk parity in momentum context?

Risk parity weights each stock inversely to its volatility so each contributes equal risk. Formula: Weight_i = (1/Vol_i) / Sum(1/Vol_j). Low-vol stocks get more capital, high-vol less. Combined with momentum: select by momentum, weight by inverse vol. Add volatility targeting: scale total exposure to maintain target portfolio vol (e.g., 15%). Result: Momentum exposure with balanced, consistent risk.

How do I implement dynamic momentum allocation?

Base allocation 100%. Modifiers: VFTSE > 25 -> -25%; VFTSE > 35 -> -50%. Momentum factor negative 2 months -> -25%. Bear market regime -> -25% to -50%. Ranging market -> -25%. Calculate weekly, but smooth transitions over 2-4 weeks. Example: VFTSE 30 (-25%), factor weak (-25%) = 50% allocation. When multiple signals negative, compound reductions but maintain 25% minimum.

What infrastructure do I need for production momentum strategy?

Data pipeline: Automated daily price/volume updates, corporate action adjustments, quality checks. Execution: Broker API integration, order generation from targets, TWAP/VWAP algorithms. Risk: Real-time position monitoring, drawdown alerts, factor exposure tracking. Reporting: Daily P&L, weekly risk, monthly attribution. Governance: Change management process, backtest before modifications. Start simple, add sophistication as AUM grows.

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