What is momentum investing?
Momentum investing – the opposite of the “buy low, sell high” advice – is based on the observation that trends in the stockmarket can continue for longer than most investors expect.
How do you make money in the stockmarket? A common, if flippant, answer is: “buy low, sell high”. In other words, invest in companies that look cheap, and sell them if and when they get expensive.
How do you know that a company is cheap? There are many ways to value a company. But they mostly involve looking at its accounts. How much profit does it make? What are the assets it owns – from factories or shops, to brands and intellectual property – really worth? These are all sometimes known as “the fundamentals”.
But there’s another way to invest that doesn’t involve the fundamentals. In fact, it involves doing the opposite of the “buy low, sell high” advice. This is momentum investing. Momentum investing is based on the observation that trends in the stockmarket can continue for longer than most investors expect.
Subscribe to MoneyWeek
Subscribe to MoneyWeek today and get your first six magazine issues absolutely FREE
Sign up to Money Morning
Don't miss the latest investment and personal finances news, market analysis, plus money-saving tips with our free twice-daily newsletter
Don't miss the latest investment and personal finances news, market analysis, plus money-saving tips with our free twice-daily newsletter
Share prices that are already rising can simply keep going higher, even if they look expensive. Meanwhile, companies whose share prices are collapsing can keep falling ever lower, regardless of how cheap they look on a fundamental basis. In other words, momentum investors buy stocks that are going up, and avoid (or even sell) those that are going down.
How do momentum investors decide when a trend is worth joining, and when it might be coming to an end? They generally use technical analysis. Technical analysis involves looking at charts of share prices and using various pattern-spotting methods to find promising entry and exit points.
Momentum investing does rather contradict the academic idea that the market is efficient. In theory, rational investors shouldn’t buy a stock simply because lots of other people are. And yet, in practice, several studies have shown that momentum investing works.
As with any investment strategy, momentum does not outperform all the time. You should view it as another way to diversify your portfolio. Of course, unless you are willing to spend a great deal of time drawing lines on charts and researching technical analysis techniques, it’s very difficult for an individual investor to replicate the strategy.
However there are now several momentum strategy funds available, which allow private investors to access the strategy without having to do it themselves. For more on those, subscribe to MoneyWeek magazine.
-
-
Investment trust discounts hit 2008 levels. Here’s how to profit
Investment trust discounts have risen to levels not seen since 2008, here are three trusts looking to buy to profit.
By Rupert Hargreaves Published
-
A luxury stock to buy at a high street price
Investors wrongly consider Watches of Switzerland a high-street outlet.
By Dr Matthew Partridge Published
-
What is an investment trust?
Videos “Active” investment funds come in two main varieties, one of which is investment trusts. But what exactly is an investment trust?
By Rupert Hargreaves Published
-
What is a dividend yield?
Videos Learn what a dividend yield is and what it can tell investors about a company's plans to return profits to its investors.
By Rupert Hargreaves Published
-
High earners to pay nearly £2000 more in tax due to fiscal drag
Videos The government froze tax thresholds, which will drag employees into higher tax bands as wages rise with inflation. We explain what fiscal drag is, and how to avoid it.
By Nicole García Mérida Last updated
-
What is a deficit?
Videos When we talk about government spending and the public finances, we often hear the word ‘deficit’ being used. But what is a deficit, and why does it matter?
By moneyweek Published
-
Too embarrassed to ask: what is moral hazard?
Videos The term “moral hazard” comes from the insurance industry in the 18th century. But what does it mean today?
By moneyweek Published
-
Too embarrassed to ask: what is contagion?
Videos Most of us probably know what “contagion” is in a biological sense. But it also crops up in financial markets. Here's what it means.
By moneyweek Published
-
Too embarrassed to ask: what is a marginal tax rate?
Videos Your marginal tax rate is simply the tax rate you pay on each extra pound of income you earn. Here's how that works.
By moneyweek Published
-
Too embarrassed to ask: what is stagflation?
Videos Traditionally, economists and central bankers worry about inflation or recession. But there is one thing worse than both: stagflation. Here's what it is
By moneyweek Published