www.stockmarketfunding.com Stock Market History S&P 500 Index 10 Year Bear Market History s&p index, s&p 500, s&p 500 history, stocks The S&P 500 is a free-float capitalization-weighted index published since 1957 of the prices of 500 large-cap common stocks actively traded in the United States. The stocks included in the S&P 500 are those of large publicly held companies that trade on either of the two largest American stock market companies; the NYSE Euronext and the NASDAQ OMX. After the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 is the most widely followed index of large-cap American stocks. A bellwether for the American economy, and is included in the Index of Leading Indicators. Some mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, and other funds such as pension funds, are designed to track the performance of the S&P 500 index. Hundreds of billions of US dollars have been invested in this fashion. S&P 500 refers not only to the index, but also to the 500 companies
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In my last article I wrote about trading strategies you can use in a bear market. We're hearing a lot lately about being 'bearish' in these current markets, but it's worthwhile considering how you can use trends to help you with your trading decisions, even during these tough trading times.
How do you choose stocks to trade in volatile markets?
Thereâs no doubt that weâre seeing wild swings in the sharemarket, which is to say weâre seeing lots of volatility. In this article, Iâll take you through some studies that show how volatility impacts the performance of stocks.
You might be surprised by some of the findings, which really challenge some age-old assumptions. You may even change your trading strategy.
Volatility
Volatility describes how much a stock jumps around on a day-to-day, minute-to-minute basis.
So, does volatility play a part in the outperformance or the underperformance of stocks? We know thatexpected return has a small positive link with expected volatility, but what about actual returns?
Volatility and uncertainty â" a vicious circle
There seems to be a relationship between uncertainty and the underlying volatility of a stock.
One explanation is the speculative nature of certain stocks. Small cap and mining stocks tend to attract speculators. This leads to exaggerated bouts of optimism and pessimism. So when the market is uncertain, volatility often increases.
Risky stocks versus stable stocks
A common misconception is that the riskier and more volatile the stock, the higher the potential performance. But this may not be the case.
David Blitz and Pim Van Vliet in their paper âThe Volatility Effect: Lower Risk Without Lower Returnâ finds an interesting phenomenon. They present empirical evidence that lower volatility stocks tend to earn high risk-adjusted returns.
Thatâs right. Taking big risks might not be worth it!
Blitz & Vliet suggest that investors actually overpay for risky stocks. And their findings cannot be explained away by the âvalue effectâ or the âsize effectâ. Let me explain these âeffectsâ in more detail.
Value effect
The value effect describes the tendency for low P/E ratio stocks to outperform the market.
There have been a number of studies documenting this effect including studies from McWilliams, Midder and Widmann, Nicholson, Dreman and Basu.
Dreman and Berry in their paper âOverreaction, Underreaction, and the Low P/E ratio effectâ talk about the value effect being due to the marketâs tendency to overreact to recent information and discount older information.
Size effect (Banz)
The impact that the size of the company has on returns is explained by âsize effectâ. This is where small capitalisation stocks in general tend to outperform larger capitalisation stocks and the market.
The size effect was first published by Banz who looked at performance returns from 1926 to 1980. He divided the market into âquintilesâ, where each quintile holds 20%, or one fifth of companies across the market. He found that the smallest quintile, ie those companies with the smallest capitalisation, outperformed larger quintiles and indeed the market as a whole.
However, there is an argument that once you account for commissions, or brokerage, then the size effect advantage disappears.
Beta, VIX and expected returns
Volatility measures how much a stock price is likely to change. Itâs usually a historical measure. For individual stocks, volatility is measured by beta. Let me explain what beta is:
A beta reading of 1 means that the stock tends to move in line with the market.
A beta reading less than 1 means that the stock tends to move less than the market.
A beta reading greater than 1 means that the stock tends to move more than the market.
The volatility of the market can be measured by a volatility index. In the US, thatâs the VIX index. In Australia, thereâs the S&P/ASX 200 VIX with code XVI.
Below is a chart of the XVI over the last year. You can see that from August 2011 to October 2011, volatility has been elevated. For example, in the week commencing 17 October, the beta measure is +32.
So if youâre looking at a particular stock make sure you compare the beta of that stock against the market volatility or VIX. If itâs higher than the market, tread carefully.
What kind of trader are you?
While volatility is the lifeblood for a speculatorâs trading strategies, what does it mean for longer-term investors?
If youâre in this market for the long-term, you should challenge conventional wisdom which says that high volatility stocks should outperform over time while low volatility stocks would underperform. Actual evidence suggests the opposite.
What Iâve covered here shows you that you can easily fall into a trap of overpaying for risky stocks. So Iâd suggest that stocks showing high volatility tend to underperform over time. And low volatility stocks generally tend to outperform over time.
Now is as good a time as any to re-think your trading strategy.
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