Pairs Trading (Copulas)
Pairs Trading (Copulas)
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Quantitative Finance
(Received 17 September 2015; accepted 3 March 2016; published online 27 April 2016)
We perform an extensive and robust study of the performance of three different pairs trading
strategiesthe distance, cointegration and copula methodson the entire US equity market from
1962 to 2014 with time-varying trading costs. For the cointegration and copula methods, we design a
computationally efficient two-step pairs trading strategy. In terms of economic outcomes, the distance,
cointegration and copula methods show a mean monthly excess return of 91, 85 and 43 bps (38,
33 and 5 bps) before transaction costs (after transaction costs), respectively. In terms of continued
profitability, from 2009, the frequency of trading opportunities via the distance and cointegration
methods is reduced considerably, whereas this frequency remains stable for the copula method.
Further, the copula method shows better performance for its unconverged trades compared to those of
the other methods. While the liquidity factor is negatively correlated to all strategies returns, we find
no evidence of their correlation to market excess returns. All strategies show positive and significant
alphas after accounting for various risk-factors. We also find that in addition to all strategies performing
better during periods of significant volatility, the cointegration method is the superior strategy during
turbulent market conditions.
Keywords: Pairs trading; Copula; Cointegration; Quantitative strategies; Statistical arbitrage
JEL Classication: G11, G12, G14
1. Introduction
Gatev et al. (2006) show that a simple pairs trading strategy
(PTS), namely the Distance Method (DM), generates profit
over a long period. However, Do and Faff (2010) document
that the profitability of the strategy is declining. They associate this decrease to a reduction in arbitrage opportunities
during recent years, as measured by the increase in the proportion of pairs that diverge but never converge. Do and Faff
(2012) show that the DM is largely unprofitable after 2002,
once trading costs are taken into account. Jacobs and Weber
(2015) find that the profitability of the DM is immensely timevarying. Nonetheless, there are other tools such as cointegration and copulas that can be used to implement statistical
arbitrage trading strategies. Although such concepts are cursorily introduced in the pairs trading literature, their performance has not been robustly evaluated. Accordingly, our basic
goal is to evaluate the performance of two sophisticated PTS,
namely copula and cointegration methods, using a long-term
and comprehensive data-set. We also assess if there is a decline in pairs trading profitability for these more sophisticated
H. Rad et al.
2. Literature review
Research on PTS fall under the general finance banner of
statistical arbitrage. Statistical arbitrage refers to strategies
that employ some statistical model or method to take advantage of what appears to be mispricing between assets while
maintaining a level of market neutrality. Gatev et al. (2006)
is the earliest comprehensive study on pairs trading. They
test the most commonly used and simplest method of pairs
trading, the DM, against the CRSP stocks from 1962 to 2002.
Their strategy yields a monthly excess return of 1.3%, before
transaction costs, for the DMs top five unrestricted pairs, and
1.4% for its top 20. In addition, after restricting the formation
of pairs to same-industry stocks, Gatev et al. (2006) report
monthly excess returns of 1.1, 0.6, 0.8 and 0.6% on top 20
pairs in utilities, transportation, financial and industrial sectors, respectively. This study is an unbiased indication of the
strategys performance as they interpret the simplest method
that practitioners employ as PTS. To avoid any criticisms that a
profitable trading rule is data-mined and applied in their study,
the authors re-evaluate the original strategy after four years
and show that it remains profitable.
Do and Faff (2010, 2012) further examine the DM strategy of
Gatev et al. (2006) to investigate the source of its profits and the
effects of trading costs on its profitability using CRSP data from
1962 to 2009. Do and Faff (2010) find that the performance of
the DM peaks in 1970s and 1980s, and begins to decline in the
1990s. The two exceptions to the plummeting performance of
the DM strategy both occur during bear markets of 20002002
and 20072009. During these two periods, the DM shows solid
performance, which is a slight reversal in the declining trend
in the strategys profitability across the period from 1990 to
2009. Moreover, they show that increased performance during
the first bear market, i.e. 20002002, is due to higher profits of
pairs that complete more than one round-trip trade, rather than
an increase in their number. By contrast, in the second bear
market, i.e. 20072009, the increase in the number of trades
that complete more than one round-trip trade is the driver of
strategys strong profitability. After taking into account timevarying transaction costs, Do and Faff (2012) conclude that
DM on average is not profitable. However, for the duration of
the sample period, the top 4 out of the 29 portfolios constructed
show moderate monthly profits of average 28 bps or 3.37% per
annum. In addition, for the period from 1989 to 2009, the DM
is profitable, albeit the majority of its profits occur in the bear
market from 20002002.
Several studies explore pairs trading using the DM in different international markets, sample periods and asset classes
(Andrade et al. 2005, Perlin 2009, Broussard and Vaihekoski
2012). Jacobs and Weber (2015) comprehensively analyse the
Return on employed capital.
Unrestricted pairs are the pairs that have not been formed based on
specific criteria such as belonging to the same industry.
DM in 34 countries and find that although the strategy generates positive return, this return varies considerably over time.
They attribute the source of the strategys profitability towards
investors under or over-reaction to news information.
PTS may be categorized under algorithmic trading strategies
that presently dominate most markets order books. Within
this stream of literature, Bogomolov (2013) adapts technical
analysis in pairs trading. Using two Japanese charting indicators (i.e. the Renko and Kagi indicators), the study has a
non-parametric approach to pairs trading, and thus, does not
rely on modelling the equilibrium price of a pair. These indicators model the variability of the spread process within
a pair. Based on the premise that the pair expresses meanreverting behaviour, this variability is used in calculating how
much the spread should deviate, before a trade becomes potentially profitable. Thus, this strategy relies on the stability of
the statistical properties of the spread volatility. The strategy
yields a positive before-costs monthly return between 1.42 and
3.65%, when tested on the US and Australian markets. Yang et
al. (2015) use limit orders to model the trading behaviour of
different market participants in order to identify traders, and
equivalently, algorithmic traders. They do so by solving an
inverse Markov decision process using dynamic programming
and reinforcement learning. They show that this method leads
to accurate categorization of traders. All PTS apply the use
of a threshold that when crossed by the spread, triggers a
trade. Zeng and Lee (2014) aim to find the optimum value for
this threshold, given the spread follows a OrnsteinUhlenbeck
process, by defining it as an optimization problem. They focus
on maximizing the expected return per unit time. Several other
studies also focus on deriving automated trading strategies
from technical analysis or creating profitable algorithms based
on different cross-disciplinary concepts (Dempster and Jones
2001, Huck 2009, 2010, Creamer and Freund 2010).
PTS can be implemented using cointegration. Vidyamurthy
(2004) presents a theoretical framework for pairs trading using
cointegration based upon the error correction model representation of cointegrated series by Engle and Granger (1987).
Huck and Afawubo (2015) and Huck (2015) implement a PTS
using the cointegration method, and using S&P 500 and the
Nikkei 225 stocks, they show that it generates positive returns.
Bogomolov (2011) studies the performance of three different PTS. DM, cointegration and stochastic spread strategies
are implemented and tested on the Australian share market
from 1996 to 2010. The study concludes that while all three
trading strategies are profitable before transaction costs, much
of the profits are diminished after costs and liquidity issues
are taken into account. Caldeira and Moura (2013) also use
a cointegration-based trading strategy on the Sao Paolo exchange. They find that the strategy generates a 16.38% excess
return per annum with a Sharpe ratio of 1.34 from 2005 to
2012. Lin et al. (2006) also motivate the use of cointegration as
a model that can capture the long-term equilibrium of the price
spread, while addressing the deficiencies of simpler statistical
techniques used in pairs trading such as correlation and regression analysis. Using cointegration coefficient weighting, Lin
et al. (2006) implement a theoretical framework that ensures
Cointegration coefficient weighting refers to the method in which
position weights are calculated as a function of the cointegration
coefficient.
H. Rad et al.
some minimum nominal profit per trade (MNPPT). They proceed to introduce a five step set of trading rules to apply the
framework in pairs trading. Finally, their empirical analysis
uses a small data-set of a 20 month sample period for two
Australian bank stocks, and concludes that the MNPPT does
not put excessive constraints on trading if adapted along with
commonly-used values for trading parameters such as open
and close trade triggers. Galenko et al. (2012) implement a
PTS based on cointegration and examines its performance with
four exchange traded funds. Nevertheless, these studies share a
common shortcoming, where the empirical evidence provided
to support the cointegration-based PTS are either non-present
(being theoretical constructs) or severely limited in their analysis. For example, the strategy proposed in Vidyamurthy (2004)
is not analysed on real data and Caldeira and Moura (2013) use
data from the Sao Paulo stock exchange for a period of less than
seven years.
Due to the properties of copulas in allowing the freedom
to select marginal distributions and to flexibly model joint
distributions (particularly lower tail dependence) copulas have
also been frequently used in risk management (Siburg et al.
2015, Wei and Scheffer 2015) and asset allocation (Patton
2004, Chu 2011, Low et al. 2013, Low, Faff et al. 2016).
Okimoto (2014) studies the asymmetric dependence structure in the international equity markets including the US and
concludes that firstly, there has been an increasing trend in
the dependence within the equity markets over the last 35
years. Secondly, with the aid of copulas, the study finds strong
evidence of the asymmetry of upper and lower tail dependence
structure and points out the inadequacy of the multivariate
normal model in capturing the characteristics of equities. Given
the recent developments in the equity dependence outlined by
this study, employing traditional correlation in modelling the
joint behaviour, as done in the majority of quantitative methods
to date, would poorly represent the true relationship among
assets, and therefore, is no longer appropriate. This motivates
the use of copulas in our study, in order to overcome this
deficiency and accurately model the joint behaviour of equity
pairs.
The application of copulas in quantitative trading strategies
such as PTS is limited. Xie and Wu (2013), Wu (2013), and
Xie et al. (2014) attempt to address this limitation. Wu (2013)
points out that the main drawbacks of distance and cointegration PTS lie in the linearity restriction and symmetry that
correlation and cointegration enforce on the pairs dependence
structure. The application of copulas would be beneficial in
relaxing these restrictions. Thus, they propose a PTS that uses
copulas to measure the relative undervaluation or overvaluation of one stock against the other. Their study compares the
performance of a copula method to those of the DM and a
cointegration method, but using a limited analysis of 3 sameindustry pairs with a sample period of 36 months. Furthermore, pre-specified stock pairs with the same SIC code whose
prices are known to be related are used, and so the strategy
performance when it has the freedom to form pairs cannot be
evaluated. The results show that the copula approach yields
higher returns than the other two approaches. The copula approach also presents more trading opportunities than the distance and cointegration methods. Xie et al. (2014) employ a
similar methodology but use a broader data-set comprising of
3. Data
Our data-set consists of daily data of the stocks in CRSP from
1 July 1962 to 31 December 2014. The data-set sample period is
13216 days (630 months) and includes a total of 23 616 stocks.
In accordance with Do and Faff (2010, 2012), we restrict our
sample to ordinary shares, which are identified by share codes
10 and 11 in the CRSP database. In order to avoid relatively
high trading costs and complications, we have further restricted
our sample to liquid stocks. This is done by removing the
bottom decile stocks, in terms of market cap, in each formation
period. For the same reason, stocks with prices less than $1
in the formation period are also not considered. To increase
the robustness of our results and to replicate practical trading
environments as closely as possible, we use trading volume to
filter out stocks that have at least one day without trading in any
formation period in the respective trading period. In summary,
our data-set is consistent with that of Do and Faff (2012).
4. Research method
Pairs trading is a mean-reverting or contrarian investment strategy. It assumes a certain price relationship between two securities. Since pairs trading is a long-short strategy, modelling this
relationship would allow us to take advantage of any short-term
deviations by simultaneously buying the undervalued and selling short the overvalued security. Upon the restoration of the
price relationship, we would close, or reverse, the two opened
positions and realize the profit. We examine the performance
of three different PTS using CRSP database consisting of US
stocks from 1962 to 2014. For all strategies, we use a period
of 6 months, the trading period, to execute the strategy using
the parameters estimated in the previous 12 months, which we
call the formation period. We run the strategies each month,
without waiting six months for the current trading period to
complete. As a result, we have six overlapping portfolios,
with each portfolio associated with a trading period that has
started in a different month.
In the DM (section 4.1), potential security pairs are sorted
based on the SSD in their normalized prices during the formation period.After the pairs are formed, their spread is monitored
throughout the trading period and any deviations beyond a
certain threshold in that spread would trigger the opening of
two simultaneous long and short positions. We use this strategy
as our main benchmark to evaluate the cointegration and copula
based PTS.
By definition, cointegrated time series maintain a long-term
equilibrium and any deviation from this equilibrium is caused
(1)
(2)
(4)
H. Rad et al.
(8)
C(u 1 , u 2 )
(11)
u 2
C(u 1 , u 2 )
h 2 (u 2 |u 1 ) = P(U2 u 2 |U1 = u 1 ) =
u 1
Using functions h 1 and h 2 , we can estimate the probability
of outcomes where one random variable is less than a certain
value, given the other random variable has a specific value. The
application of these functions in a PTS is that we can estimate
the probability of one stock of the pair moving higher or lower
than its current price given the price of the other stock.
h 1 (u 1 |u 2 ) = P(U1 u 1 |U2 = u 2 ) =
4.3.2. Trading strategy. Similar to the DM, we sort all possible pairs based on SSD in their normalized price during
the formation period and nominate 20 pairs with the least
SSD to trade in the trading period. We continue to fit nominated pairs to copulas using the Inference for Margins method
The formation and trading periods are kept at 12 and 6 months,
respectively, to be consistent with the distance and cointegration
methods.
(13)
H. Rad et al.
Table 1. Proportion of selected copulas and marginal distributions.
Panel A: Copulas
Copulas
% of Pairs
Clayton
Rotated Clayton
Gumbel
Rotated Gumbel
Student-t
6.59
11.54
9.85
10.38
61.64
Normal
Logistic
2.61
11.10
86.14
0.15
Notes: This table shows the proportion of copula models selected for each stock pair as a parsimonious fit (Panel A), along with the proportion of marginal
models selected for the stocks as a parsimonious fit (Panel B).
Copula
h(u 1 , u 2 ; , ) = t+1 x1 x2
Student-t
Clayton
Rotated Clayton
(+x22 )(1 2 )
+1
(1, 1)
xi = t1 (u i ), u i (0, 1)i = 1, 2
t : Students t-distribution cumulative distribution function with degrees of freedom.
1 1
(+1)
u
h(u 1 , u 2 ; ) = u 2
1 + u2 1
1 1
(+1)
(1 u 1 ) + (1 u 2 ) 1
h(u 1 , u 2 ; ) = 1 (1 u 2 )
Gumbel
Rotated Gumbel
1
h(u 1 , u 2 ; ) = C (u 1 , u 2 ) [( ln u 1 ) + ( ln u 2 ) ] ( ln u 2 )1 u12
1
C (u 1 , u 2 ) = ex p [( ln u 1 ) + ( ln u 2 ) ]
1
C (u 1 , u 2 ) = exp [( ln u 1 ) + ( ln u 2 ) ]
>0
>0
>0
>0
>0
Note: This table shows the conditional probability functions of copulas used in the copula method.
CVaR
JB test
Skewness
Kurtosis
(95%)
(95%)
p.value
0.3498
0.3497
0.0749
0.3491
0.3565
0.5127
13.2586
8.5718
6.9598
0.0106
0.0121
0.0107
0.0190
0.0173
0.0150
0
0
0
0.0122
0.0111
0.0071
0.7517
0.7703
0.6032
0.2231
0.8130
0.2073
9.0419
7.3561
5.7007
0.0075
0.0068
0.0066
0.0150
0.0126
0.0111
0
0
0
0.0089
0.0085
0.0053
0.3566
0.3483
0.1008
0.3723
0.6462
0.4790
24.1712
12.3600
6.8850
0.0074
0.0091
0.0082
0.0135
0.0144
0.0115
0
0
0
0.0102
0.0097
0.0055
0.6729
0.6969
0.5410
0.8152
1.3934
0.3170
14.6456
10.8547
6.3584
0.0050
0.0058
0.0056
0.0104
0.0105
0.0092
0
0
0
Strategy
Mean
t-stat
Std. Dev.
Sharpe ratio
0.0110
0.0099
0.0067
Notes: This table reports key distribution statistics for the monthly excess return time series of three different PTS - i.e. the distance, cointegration, and copula
methods - for July 1962 to December 2014. The formation and trading period for all strategies are set to 12 and 6 months, respectively. The column labeled
JB Test tests the null hypothesis of normality of the series using the Jarque-Bera Test.
significant at 1% level.
significant at 5% level.
significant at 10% level.
To further demonstrate the relative performance of the strategies, figure 1 compares the cumulative excess return for each
of the three strategies from 1963 to 2014. It can be seen that
the DM and cointegration methods performance are almost
identical to each other with the cointegration method slightly
underperforming compared to the DM. In contrast, the copula
method performs poorly in terms of cumulative excess return.
However, the gap between the copula method and the other
two strategies is narrower on a risk-adjusted basis, as shown
in figure 2.
The five-year rolling sample Sharpe ratio (figure 2) also
confirms the nearly identical performance of the DM and the
cointegration method. In addition, it shows the risk-adjusted
performance of all three strategies fluctuate greatly, but generally maintain an upward trend until around 1985, where they
experience their peak and the trend reverses. More importantly,
the reversal in this trend occurs in the copula, cointegration
and the DM, thus none of the strategies avoid this decline.
However, after the downward trend begins, the gap between
the risk-adjusted performance of the copula method and the
other two strategies becomes smaller than before. It appears
that as we move closer to recent years, the three strategies
show a very close risk-adjusted performance and there is no
clear winner among them.
10
H. Rad et al.
Distance
Cointegration
Copula
11
1
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
Year
1
0.8
Sharpe Ratio
1.2
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
-0.2
-0.4
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
Year
Drawdown measures
Sortino ratio
Kappa 3
Max drawdown
Calmar ratio
Sterling ratio
Burke ratio
0.6419
0.6774
0.1083
0.3350
0.4093
0.0705
0.1052
0.1718
0.1845
0.0366
0.0201
0.0027
0.3434
0.3499
0.0530
0.0195
0.0180
0.0028
0.9520
1.3344
0.7606
0.0737
0.0459
0.0418
0.1241
0.1858
0.1023
1.0415
1.0335
0.6229
0.0687
0.0826
0.0430
Notes: This table reports key risk-adjusted performance measures for the monthly excess return time series of three different PTSi.e. the distance, cointegration,
and copula methodsfor July 1962 to December 2014. The formation and trading period for all strategies are set to 12 and 6 months, respectively.
The cointegration method exhibits the best before-cost riskadjusted performance with the best figures for all but the maximum drawdown and Sterling ratio measures. However, its
after-cost performance is similar to that of the DM. The
copula method is the poorest PTS among the three, except for
showing the least before-cost maximum drawdown. The major
contributor to the low performance of the copula method is the
insignificance of its mean returns. This can be verified by the
fact that the strategy transforms from having the best maximum drawdown to the worst when transaction costs are taken
into account. At a lower magnitude, the other two strategies
also suffer considerably when transaction costs are taken into
account. We can see the after-costs Omega ratio decreases by
70% or more for all strategies. The same decrease is observed
in the Sortino ratio of DM and the cointegration method, while
for the copula method this figure rises above 90%.
11
12
H. Rad et al.
4000
7000
3500
6000
1800
1600
2500
2000
1500
5000
Frequency
Frequency
3000
Frequency
2000
4000
3000
0
-0.8
-0.6
-0.4
-0.2
0.2
0.4
0.6
0
-1.5
1000
800
400
1000
500
1200
600
2000
1000
1400
200
-1
-0.5
Trade Returns
0.5
0
-0.8
1.5
-0.6
-0.4
-0.2
0.2
0.4
0.6
Trade Returns
Trade Returns
Sum of
Trade
% of
Strategy
pairs
D.P.P.M.
type
trades
Days open
Distance
4061
15087
C
U
62.53
0.0426
37.47 0.0399
Cointegration
4421
17348
C
U
Copula
4100
13463
C
U
Mean
St.D.
S.R.
Positive
Skewness
Mean
Median
trades (%)
0.0238
1.7889
0.0702 0.5691
2.1702
2.3428
21.15
14
98.42
61.35
0.0437
38.65 0.0436
0.0270
1.6173
0.0754 0.5782
5.8236
2.7620
22.65
15
98.64
39.98
0.0395
60.02 0.0215
0.0377
1.0485
0.0752 0.2855
1.7030
0.9488
26.30
17
94.41
Notes: This table reports key distribution statistics for converged and unconverged trade return series after transaction costs. The Trade Type column classifies
trades into converged (C) and unconverged (U ). # Distinct Pairs and Sum of D.P.P.M columns report the number of distinct pairs and sum of distinct
pairs per month for each trading strategy throughout the study period, respectively. The St.D and S.R columns report standard deviation and Sharpe ratio,
respectively. Two columns under the Days Open title show the mean and median number of days that a converged trade remains open. Positive Trades (%)
shows the percentage of converged trades with positive returns. Note that all calculations are based on after-transaction cost returns.
Positive return
Negative return
Positive return
Negative return
29%
Positive return
Negative return
31%
41%
59%
71%
69%
negative effect on profits, but only for the DM and the cointegration method. Interestingly, liquidity is unable to explain the
profits of the copula method neither before nor after costs, as
opposed to postulations of Engelberg et al. (2009) who suggest
otherwise. This further demonstrates the unique nature of the
copula method in comparison to the other PTS. Surprisingly,
no other factor, including the market excess return in the copula method, is correlated to the strategies returns, which is
further evidence for the market-neutrality of these strategies.
From an investors perspective, this market neutrality can have
diversifying effects on investment portfolios, by reducing risk,
3.5
22
20
2.5
18
16
1.5
2
25
14
1
30
2.5
25
20
20
35
Average trades per pair per 6 month period
Average days open per converged trade
Days
24
Trades
26
3.5
30
Average trades per pair per 6 month period
Average days open per converged trade
Days
Trades
4.5
Days
28
Average trades per pair per 6 month period
Average days open per converged trade
Trades
13
15
1
Opening threshold
1.5
0.2
Opening threshold
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
15
0.8
Opening threshold
1.6
1.4
1.2
0.8
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
Year
0.5
Distance
Cointegration
Copula
Mean/CVaR(95%)
0.8
0.4
0.7
Sortino Ratio
0.35
0.3
0.25
0.2
0.15
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.1
0.2
0.05
0.1
0.3
0.9
Distance
Cointegration
Copula
0.45
Sharpe Ratio
1.8
Crisis
Normal
Distance
Cointegration
Copula
0.25
0.2
0.15
0.1
0.05
Crisis
Normal
Crisis
Normal
ence between the returns of conservative and aggressive portfolios. Results, reported in Panels C and D of table 6, show that
there is a negative correlation between before-cost pairs profit
and RMW for all three strategies. This relationship is statistically significant at 1, 5 and 10% for the DM, cointegration and
14
H. Rad et al.
Table 6. Monthly return risk profile.
Strategy
Alpha
MKT
SMB
HML
MO
LIQ
RMW
CMA
0.0095
(0.5373)
0.0093
(0.6125)
0.0026
(0.2449)
0.0341
(2.9074)
0.0311
(2.5911)
0.0133
(1.8706)
0.0395
(3.2232)
0.0391
(3.7265)
0.0053
(0.9097)
0.0106
(0.6342)
0.0042
(0.2520)
0.0027
(0.2855)
0.0041
(0.2036)
0.0033
(0.1874)
0.0054
(0.5180)
0.0344
(2.3164)
0.0316
(2.6092)
0.0105
(1.4562)
0.0480
(3.6379)
0.0471
(4.1281)
0.0076
(1.1992)
0.0004
(2.2536)
0.0003
(1.6281)
0.0001
(1.1523)
0.0001
(0.4173)
0.0000
(0.2170)
0.0000
(0.0244)
0.0006
(2.1017)
0.0003
(1.2827)
0.0003
(1.6446)
0.0002
(0.3922)
0.0001
(0.3341)
0.0002
(0.6542)
0.0004
(1.9671)
0.0002
(1.2680)
0.0001
(0.7304)
0.0002
(0.5878)
0.0000
(0.1123)
0.0001
(0.4058)
0.0008
(2.4880)
0.0005
(1.7344)
0.0004
(2.0318)
0.0002
(0.4487)
0.0001
(0.1707)
0.0001
(0.2532)
0.0086
(0.3225)
0.0214
(0.9314)
0.0073
(0.5435)
0.0320
(2.3645)
0.0312
(2.8805)
0.0129
(1.8637)
0.0379
(3.1539)
0.0383
(3.6670)
0.0044
(0.7576)
0.0005
(1.6848)
0.0002
(0.6737)
0.0002
(1.3997)
0.0000
(-0.0771)
0.0003
(0.6717)
0.0002
(0.8898)
0.0010
(0.0341)
0.0129
(0.4914)
0.0003
(0.0227)
0.0314
(2.0577)
0.0308
(2.5201)
0.0095
(1.3372)
0.0458
(3.5961)
0.0458
(4.1141)
0.0064
(1.0278)
0.0006
(2.1341)
0.0003
(1.1944)
0.0003
(1.8470)
0.0001
(0.1778)
0.0002
(0.4646)
0.0001
(0.4151)
0.0277
(1.4603)
0.0135
(0.7529)
0.0062
(0.5395)
Notes: This table shows results of regressing monthly return series (after and before transaction costs) against Fama-French 3 factors plus momentum and
liquidity factors (Panels A and B), Fama-French 5 factors (Panels C and D), and Fama-French 5 factor plus momentum and liquidity factors (Fama and French
2015) (Panels E and F). The column labeled Alpha reports the estimated regression intercept, while columns MKT, SMB, HML, MO, LIQ, RMW,
and CMA report the estimated coefficients for the following factors respectively: Market Excess Return, Small minus Big, High minus Low, Momentum,
Liquidity, Robust minus Weak, and Conservative minus Aggressive (CMA) portfolios. For the liquidity factor, the Innovations in Aggregate liquidity measure
(Pstor and Stambaugh 2003) from WRDS is applied. The t-statatistics for each regression coefficient, are given in parentheses and calculated using NeweyWest standard errors with 6 lags.
significant at 10% level.
significant at 5% level.
significant at 1% level.
15
0.2
0.0001
0.0291
0.0210
0.0061
0.3
0.0004
0.0286
0.0258
0.0060
0.4
0.0006
0.0254
0.0252
0.0061
0.5
0.6
0.0005
0.0455
0.0231
0.0067
0.0006
0.0391
0.0243
0.0073
0.7
0.8
0.0007
0.0479
0.0355
0.0080
0.0007
0.0513
0.0318
0.0086
Note: This table reports statistics for sensitivity of the copula methods monthly return on employed capital after transaction cost to different opening thresholds.
Mean
Median
Std. Dev.
Sharpe ratio
0.0038
0.0038
0.0035
0.0032
0.0121
0.0110
0.3173
0.3498
Skewness
Kurtosis
VaR
(95%)
CVaR
(95%)
0.3806
0.3491
11.5077
13.2586
0.0132
0.0106
0.0222
0.0190
Notes: This table reports key distribution statistics for the monthly excess return time series of the MTDM and DM. MTDM is a form of DM where the opening
threshold is increased from two standard deviations to two standard deviations plus transaction costs.
16
H. Rad et al.
0.01
Distance
Cointegration
Copula
0.008
0.006
0.004
0.002
0
-0.002
-0.004
1963-66
1967-71
1972-76
1977-81
1982-86
1987-91
1992-96
1997-2001
2002-06
2007-11
2012-14
Years
0.018
Distance
Cointegration
Copula
0.016
0.012
0.01
0.008
0.006
0.004
0.002
0
1963-66
1967-71
1972-76
1977-81
1982-86
1987-91
1992-96
1997-2001
2002-06
2007-11
2012-14
Years
600
0.014
Distance
Cointegration
Copula
500
400
300
200
100
0
1963-66
1967-71
1972-76
1977-81
1982-86
1987-91
1992-96
1997-2001
2002-06
2007-11
2012-14
Years
6. Conclusion
Pairs trading is a popular market neutral trading strategy that
purports to profit regardless of market conditions. The strategy
was first pioneered in the 1980s by traders Gerry Bamberger
and the quantitative trading group headed by Nunzio Tartaglia
at Morgan Stanley (Bookstaber 2007). Prior to the spectacular
series of events that led to Long-Term Capital Management
(LTCM)s demise, LTCM itself engaged in pairs trading strategies (Lowenstein 2000). Although Gatev et al. (2006) find that
a simple pairs trading strategy (i.e. the DM) generates profits
from 1962 to 2002, Do and Faff (2010, 2012) report their
declining profitability, after accounting for transaction costs.
Other studies (Vidyamurthy 2004, Wu 2013) introduce more
sophisticated methodologies to improve the strategies using
cointegration and copula frameworks, respectively. However,
these studies are limited in terms of stock pairs investigated,
sample period, and robustness of analysis. Thus, in this paper
it leads us to ask, in a long-term study in the US market,
do pairs trading strategies using sophisticated divergence and
convergence models lead to an increase in profits? Are these
profits sustainable, even after transaction costs? What riskfactors are these pairs-trading strategies exposed to? What is
the performance of these pairs trading strategies during highly
turbulent market conditions?
Our study examines and compares the performance of three
pairs trading strategies using daily US stock data from July
1962 to December 2014: the distance, cointegration and copula
methods. We use a time-varying series of trading costs. We find
that the DM shows a slightly higher monthly return than the
cointegration method, but the cointegration method exhibits a
slightly higher Sharpe ratio. However, on a risk-adjusted basis,
the two strategies perform equally well over the full sample
period. The copula method does not perform as well as the other
two methods in either economic or risk-adjusted performance.
We find that the markets excess return fails to account for the
performance of the three strategies. This further demonstrates
the market neutrality of such strategies that motivates their
use by practitioners as an alternative investment strategy for
reducing exposure to market risk and support by academics
in asset allocation that pairs trading strategy is an effective
diversifier in an investment portfolio. We provide evidence
that the DM and cointegration methods economic and riskadjusted performance are higher in crisis periods. Therefore,
such strategies can be included in investment portfolios in
17
18
H. Rad et al.
Funding
The authors acknowledge funding from the (1) Australia
AwardsEndeavour Research Fellowship (2) Australian
Institute for Business and Economics (AIBE) in support of
Dr Rand K.Y. Low at the Stern School of Business, New York
University. The authors also acknowledge financial support for
this research from the following funding bodies (1)
Accounting & Finance Association of Australia and New
Zealand (AFAANZ) 2013/2014 research grants (2) UQ Postdoctoral Research Grant entitled Portfolio optimization and
risk management techniques for financial crisis.
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