Short thread about momentum as a risk factor and why you should take it seriously. At first glance it sounds stupid — why would stocks that recently went up continue to move together in the future?
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It’s common to neutralise momentum to other factors (eg sectors, countries, size etc). In the limit where you neutralize to all known factors, momentum is a summary of exposure to all the *unknown* factors, the stuff you didn’t model because you didn’t know about it.
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That’s why you should include momentum in your risk model even if you don’t plan to use it as a source of alpha — it’s a simple, robust way of modelling the risks that you aren’t smart enough to think of in advance.
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@breakingthemark I feel like you have been thinking about momentum in a way that this thread circles a bit -
So I do think the momentum factor "loads up" on volatile stocks. The outliers are much more likely to be volatile, and cross sectional momentum is an outlier investment strategy. As far as them being correlated and moving together, I'm not sure if that's a good thing.
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