MachineGhost wrote:Yeah, well 2015 is not the past on a huge number of levels. My concern is about trend following becoming a crowded trade, not failing due to transaction costs or behavioral biases or whatever else the issue was in the past. It may be like an arms race and may require more and more complexity to outperform.mathjak107 wrote: personally i think you stand far better odds staying in a conservative model you can handle instead of some kind of a timing system which in the past has had sooooo many versions fail to show in any long term academic study that it actually worked any better or at all .
Seriously, at this point you would have me go 100% into overvalued stocks without some kind of downside risk management? I just cannot do it. There's a time and place for that and its at secular bear market lows not at secular bear market highs (1987-1994 was basically a bottom). And T-Bonds at 5,000 year lows in yields are a huge bet on its downside risk management continuing to work instead of going the other way which seems much more likely. What do you do then for a plan when T-Bonds go the wrong way? I don't need that risk.
i see nothing wrong with 25-30% equitys and an assortment of intermediate and short term bond funds if you are gun shy . success rates at 4% may be lower but if you want low volatility you got it