Seasonal Bonds Strategy Bounces Back

  • SumoMe

I hate to whine but Murphy (of Murphy’s Law fame) really hates me.  To wit, on 3/11/15, I wrote about a very pronounced tendency for t-bonds to rise during the last 5 trading days of the month (and to basically suck wind the rest of the time).

On 3/15/15 I wrote about an even more aggressive strategy using triple-leveraged ticker TMF that tracks long-term t-bonds using leverage of 3-to-1.

So of course the bond market rewarded my “brilliance” with a swift kick in the you know where in the months of March and April 2015 and especially in August 2015.

This would typically be enough to cause many people to go, “Well that guy’s and idiot” and to move on.  But fortunately in this case, the market is a marathon and not a sprint.

Update

Figure 1 displays the results generated by:

*Holding long 1 t-bond futures contract ONLY for the last 5 days of each month since 12/30/1983

*Holding long 1 t-bond futures contract during all other days since 12/30/19831Figure 1 – Long 1 t-bond futures contract ONLY during last 5 trading days of month (blue) versus long 1 t-bond futures contract on all other days  (red); 12/31/1983-8/12/2016

The results sort of speak for themselves.

After I wrote about my aggressive TMF strategy, TMF (of course) got hit very hard (as triple leveraged ETFs will do from time to time, hence the use of the words “aggressive” and “risky”), in March 2015 (-4.5%), April 2015 (-5.3%) and especially in August 2015 (-11.5%).

Still, as you can see in Figure 2, things have rebounded nicely since (hmmm, maybe I should be worried).2Figure 2– Growth of $1,000 Long ETF ticker TMF ONLY during last 5 trading days of month (blue) versus long TMF all other days; (red); 12/9/2009-8/12/2016

So far the “Long TMF on the last 5 day of each month” strategy is up +31.8% for the year in 2016.

Year Last 5 TDM Long TMF
2009* +12.9%
2010 +33.4%
2011 +15.2%
2012 +35.7%
2013 +6.7%
2014 +45.7%
2015 +6.8%
2016** +31.8%

*-Starting 4/16/2009 when TMF started trading

**-Through 8/12/2016

Summary

So did this odd little strategy “weather the storm” and “take the market’s best shot” in 2015 and now it is “smooth sailing”?  Probably not.  Make no mistake – this is a strategy that entails a great deal of risk.  Still, for aggressive traders looking for an “edge”, it might be worth a closer look.

Jay Kaeppel

 

2 thoughts on “Seasonal Bonds Strategy Bounces Back

  1. I have used this strategy to make money and ‘witnessed’ some of turbulance you wrote about. I started to use the macd to temper my involvement in a given month and that helped a lot. If there is an overall downtrend I risk less or won’t play for a month. I admit that I didn’t backtest beforehand.

    Love your work!

Comments are closed.