52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (2024)

  • Pricing
  • Product
  • How it works
  • About
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Awards
  • Login
  • Get Subscription

Back to list of strategies

52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks

Quantpedia is The Encyclopedia of Quantitative Trading Strategies

We’ve already analyzed tens of thousands of financial research papers and identified more than 700 attractive trading systems together with hundreds of related academic papers.

Browse Strategies

Get Quantpedia Premium or Pro

  • Unlocked Screener & 300+ Advanced Charts
  • 700+ uncommon trading strategy ideas
  • New strategies on a bi-weekly basis
  • 2000+ links to academic research papers
  • 500+ out-of-sample backtests
  • Design multi-factor multi-asset portfolios

Upgrade subscription

The “52-week high effect” states that stocks with prices close to the 52-week highs have better subsequent returns than stocks with prices far from the 52-week highs. Investors use the 52-week high as an “anchor” against which they value stocks. When stock prices are near the 52-week high, investors are unwilling to bid the price all the way to the fundamental value. As a result, investors under-react when stock prices approach the 52-week high, and this creates a 52-week high effect.

This effect could be enhanced with a strategy using a narrower investment universe and buying stocks in industries in which stock prices are close to 52-week highs. The strategy is related to the momentum effect, but research shows it is independent of it. The strategy should not be implemented in January as it has negative results in this month (like momentum). Most of the gains for the long-short version are from long positions, which makes the “52-week high effect” easier to implement in real-world trading.

Fundamental reason

Academics speculate that this effect is connected to “adjustment and anchoring bias”. Anchoring is a psychological bias that says that people start with an implicitly suggested reference point (the “anchor” -> 52-week high in our example) and then make incremental adjustments based on additional information. The financial paper says that traders use the 52-week high as a reference point in which they evaluate the potential impact of news. When good news has pushed a stock’s price near or to a new 52-week high, traders are reluctant to bid the price of the stock higher even if the information warrants it. The information eventually prevails, and the price moves up, resulting in a continuation. It works similarly for 52-week lows.

Get Premium Strategy Ideas & Pro Reporting

  • Unlocked Screener & 300+ Advanced Charts
  • 700+ uncommon trading strategy ideas
  • New strategies on a bi-weekly basis
  • 2000+ links to academic research papers
  • 500+ out-of-sample backtests
  • Design multi-factor multi-asset portfolios

Upgrade subscription

Markets Traded

equities

Backtest period from source paper

1963-2009

Confidence in anomaly's validity

Moderately Strong

Indicative Performance

11.75%

Notes to Confidence in Anomaly's Validity

OOS back-test shows slightly negative performance. It looks, that strategy’s alpha is deteriorating in the out-of-sample period.

Notes to Indicative Performance

per annum, annualized (geometrically) monthly return 0,93% from table 11 for long-short portfolio and 3-month holding period

Period of Rebalancing

Monthly

Notes to Period of Rebalancing

Notes to Estimated Volatility

estimated from t-statistic 6,85 from table 11

Number of Traded Instruments

1000

Maximum Drawdown

Notes to Number of Traded Instruments

more or less, it depends on investor’s need for diversification

Notes to Maximum drawdown

not stated

Complexity Evaluation

Complex strategy

Sharpe Ratio

0.7

Notes to Complexity Evaluation

Region

United States

Financial instruments

stocks

Keywordsequity long shortfactor investingsmart betastock picking

Simple trading strategy

The investment universe consists of all stocks from NYSE, AMEX, and NASDAQ (the research paper used the CRSP database for backtesting). The ratio between the current price and 52-week high is calculated for each stock at the end of each month (PRILAG i,t = Price i,t / 52-Week High i,t). Every month, the investor then calculates the weighted average of ratios (PRILAG i,t) from all firms in each industry (20 industries are used), where the weight is the market capitalization of the stock at the end of the month t. The winners (losers) are stocks in the six industries with the highest (lowest) weighted averages of PRILAGi,t. The investor buys stocks in the winner portfolio and shorts stocks in the loser portfolio and holds them for three months. Stocks are weighted equally, and the portfolio is rebalanced monthly (which means that 1/3 of the portfolio is rebalanced each month).

Hedge for stocks during bear markets

Not known - Source and related research papers don’t offer insight into the correlation structure of the proposed trading strategy to equity market risk; therefore, we do not know if this strategy can be used as a hedge/diversification during the time of market crisis. The strategy is built as a long-short, but it can be split into two parts. The long leg of the strategy is surely strongly correlated to the equity market; however, the short-only leg can be maybe used as a hedge during bad times. Rigorous backtest is, however, needed to determine return/risk characteristics and correlation.

Source paper

Out-of-sample strategy's implementation/validation in QuantConnect's framework (chart+statistics+code)

Related picture

52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (2)

Other papers

Share onLinkedInTwitterFacebookRefer to a friend

Get Quantpedia Premium or Pro

  • Unlocked Screener & 300+Advanced Charts
  • 700+ uncommon trading strategy ideas
  • New strategies on a bi-weekly basis
  • 2000+ links to academic research papers
  • 500+ out-of-sample backtests
  • Design multi-factor multi-asset portfolios

Upgrade subscription

See Also
The 80% Rule

Browse next Strategies

Betting Against Beta Factor in Stocks

Investment Factor

ROA Effect within Stocks

How to Use Lexical Density of Company Filings

Combining Fundamental FSCORE and Equity Short-Term Reversals

Soccer Clubs' Stocks Arbitrage

Subscribe for Newsletter

Be first to know, when we publish new content

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (3)

    The Encyclopedia of Quantitative Trading Strategies

    Log in

    Forgot Password

    Sign-up for free to continue

    You’ve reached your limit for viewing up to 5 strategies for free

    By signing up you agree with our

    Do you have an acount? Login here.

    After free sign-up you’ll be able to browse all free strategies in our library for free

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (4)

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (5)

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (6)

    MORE INFO

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (7)

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (8)

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (9)

    We boasts a total prize pool of $15,000

    Gain a Share of a Total Prize Pool of $15.000

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (10)

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (11)

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (12)

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (13)

    MORE INFO

    $15.000

    Gain a Share of a Total Prize Pool

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (14)

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (15)

    SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER AND GET:

    - bi-weekly research insights -

    - tips on new trading strategies -

    - notifications about offers & promos -

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (16)

    Subscribe

    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

    52-Weeks High Effect in Stocks - QuantPedia (2024)

    References

    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Mr. See Jast

    Last Updated:

    Views: 5786

    Rating: 4.4 / 5 (55 voted)

    Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Mr. See Jast

    Birthday: 1999-07-30

    Address: 8409 Megan Mountain, New Mathew, MT 44997-8193

    Phone: +5023589614038

    Job: Chief Executive

    Hobby: Leather crafting, Flag Football, Candle making, Flying, Poi, Gunsmithing, Swimming

    Introduction: My name is Mr. See Jast, I am a open, jolly, gorgeous, courageous, inexpensive, friendly, homely person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.