If you've ever watched a stock that just keeps climbing — day after day, week after week — and wondered why some assets seem to have an unstoppable upward trajectory, you've already observed momentum in action.
Momentum investing is the strategy of buying assets that have been rising in price and selling (or avoiding) those that have been falling. It sounds almost too simple. Yet decades of academic research and real-world market data have confirmed that momentum is one of the most persistent and powerful effects in financial markets.
In this guide, we'll break down exactly what momentum investing is, why it works, how everyday investors can apply it, and — importantly — what risks to watch for.
This article is for educational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Always consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.
What Is Momentum Investing?
At its core, momentum investing is based on a simple observation: stocks that have performed well recently tend to continue performing well in the near future, and stocks that have performed poorly tend to continue underperforming.
This contradicts the intuition many people have about investing. We're often told to "buy low and sell high" — which implies buying things that have fallen. Momentum takes the opposite view: buy things that are already rising, because they are likely to keep rising.
The momentum "effect" was formally documented in a landmark 1993 study by Narasimhan Jegadeesh and Sheridan Titman, who found that stocks which performed well over the past 3–12 months significantly outperformed stocks that had performed poorly over the same period. This finding has since been replicated across dozens of markets, time periods, and asset classes — including stocks, bonds, commodities, and currencies.
Two Types of Momentum
There are two main flavors of momentum that investors use:
- Absolute momentum (trend following): Looking at an asset's own recent performance to decide whether to hold it. If a stock is above its 12-month average, it has positive momentum; below, negative.
- Cross-sectional (relative) momentum: Comparing multiple assets against each other and buying the strongest performers while avoiding or shorting the weakest. This is what most academic research focuses on.
Many momentum strategies combine both approaches — they first filter for assets with positive absolute momentum, then rank them by relative performance and buy the top performers.
Why Does Momentum Work?
This is one of finance's most debated questions. If markets are perfectly efficient — as the Efficient Market Hypothesis suggests — then past price performance shouldn't predict future prices. Yet momentum has persisted for over a century of market data. Why?
1. Behavioral Biases
The most widely accepted explanation is that momentum is driven by how humans actually behave with money. Two cognitive biases are particularly important:
- Underreaction to news: When a company reports great earnings, investors don't immediately bid the stock to its full fair value. They're cautious, skeptical. The price rises slowly over weeks or months as more investors gradually recognize the good news — creating momentum.
- Herding behavior: As a stock rises, it attracts attention. Media coverage increases. More investors pile in, driving the price higher still. This creates a self-reinforcing cycle that can extend far beyond what fundamentals alone would justify.
2. Investor Anchoring
Many investors anchor to the price they paid for a stock. When a stock falls significantly from their purchase price, they hold on — hoping to "get back to breakeven." This prevents the price from quickly reflecting negative information, meaning bad stocks can stay artificially high before momentum eventually drags them lower.
3. Institutional Behavior
Large institutional investors — pension funds, mutual funds — often face performance evaluation periods. Managers are incentivized to buy stocks that have been rising (which makes their reports look good) and to sell stocks that have been falling. This institutional behavior can reinforce momentum trends.
Momentum works precisely because markets aren't perfectly efficient. Human psychology creates predictable patterns — and disciplined investors can capitalize on those patterns.
How to Use Momentum as an Investor
You don't need to be a professional quant to incorporate momentum into your investing. Here are practical approaches at different levels of involvement:
Simple Approach: Trend Following With Moving Averages
One of the most accessible momentum strategies uses moving averages to determine whether an asset is in a positive or negative trend.
A common approach: if a stock or ETF is trading above its 200-day moving average, it's in a positive trend (upward momentum). If it's below, avoid it or exit the position. This simple rule has historically kept investors on the right side of major market trends.
Example: 200-Day Moving Average
If the S&P 500 ETF (SPY) is trading at $520 and its 200-day moving average is $490, the market is in a positive momentum regime. Many trend-followers use this as a signal to stay invested in equities rather than cash.
Intermediate Approach: Relative Strength Rankings
A more active approach involves comparing the performance of multiple assets over a set lookback period (often 3, 6, or 12 months) and investing in the top-ranked performers.
For example, you might compare 11 sector ETFs every month. You calculate how each sector performed over the past 6 months, then invest in the top 3–4 sectors for the next month, rotating as rankings change. This is called a sector rotation strategy.
Using Momentum Signals
At FutureInvestingforYou, we track several educational momentum-based signal concepts to help investors understand market conditions:
- Alpha Momentum: Identifies assets exhibiting strong, sustained upward price momentum across multiple timeframes.
- Alpha Resumption: Looks for assets where momentum paused or pulled back, then resumed — often a high-quality setup.
- Alpha Liquidity Surge: Combines momentum with volume patterns, identifying when price strength is backed by significant buying interest.
Remember: these are educational signal concepts, not trading recommendations.
The Risks of Momentum Investing
Momentum is a powerful strategy, but it comes with real risks that every investor must understand before using it.
1. Momentum Crashes
Momentum strategies can suffer sudden, severe drawdowns known as "momentum crashes." These typically occur during market reversals — when the stocks that had been rising sharply are suddenly the ones that fall hardest. The 2009 financial crisis recovery, for example, saw extreme momentum reversals as beaten-down financials surged and recent winners sold off.
Momentum strategies can experience periods of sharp underperformance, especially during market reversals and regime changes. Past momentum does not guarantee future performance. You may lose money. Never invest more than you can afford to lose.
2. Higher Trading Costs and Taxes
Momentum strategies require more frequent portfolio turnover compared to buy-and-hold investing. This means more trading costs and, in taxable accounts, more frequent realization of capital gains — which can significantly reduce net returns.
3. Crowding
As momentum strategies have become more popular (especially among systematic hedge funds), the same trades can become crowded. When everyone rushes for the exit at the same time, losses can be severe.
4. Behavioral Difficulty
Momentum investing requires buying assets that have already risen — which feels uncomfortable. It also requires selling assets that have fallen — which also feels uncomfortable. Following the strategy requires discipline that many investors find genuinely difficult to maintain.
What the Research Says
The evidence for momentum as an investment factor is extensive:
| Study / Source | Finding | Markets |
|---|---|---|
| Jegadeesh & Titman (1993) | Top-performing stocks outperformed by ~1% per month over 3–12 months | US Stocks |
| Rouwenhorst (1998) | Momentum effect confirmed across 12 European markets | Europe |
| Asness et al. (2013) | Momentum works across stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities | Global / Multi-Asset |
| Geczy & Samonov (2016) | Momentum documented back to 1880 in US stocks | US (historical) |
These studies suggest that momentum is not simply a data artifact or the result of data mining — it appears to be a genuine, persistent feature of financial markets driven by the behavioral patterns of investors.
Momentum vs. Other Investment Strategies
How does momentum stack up against other popular approaches?
- Momentum vs. Value Investing: Value investing buys cheap, beaten-down assets — the opposite of momentum. Both have long-term track records, but they perform in different market environments. Interestingly, combining value and momentum often produces better risk-adjusted returns than either alone.
- Momentum vs. Buy and Hold: Momentum involves active trading, while buy and hold is passive. Buy and hold wins on simplicity and low costs. Momentum can potentially produce higher returns but requires active management and carries the risk of momentum crashes.
- Momentum vs. Fundamental Analysis: Fundamentals look at company financials (earnings, revenue, debt). Momentum looks at price behavior. Many successful investors use both — confirming a fundamental thesis with a momentum signal before entering a position.
Many professional investors use momentum as one factor among many — not in isolation. Combining momentum with quality or value filters can reduce the risk of buying into bubbles while maintaining exposure to strong trends.
Getting Started With Momentum Concepts
If you're interested in incorporating momentum thinking into your investment approach, here's a practical starting path:
- Start with education: Understand the concept thoroughly before applying it with real money. Read this article, explore our other guides, and consider reading academic research on factor investing.
- Paper trade first: Track momentum ideas without real money for 3–6 months. See how they perform and whether you can stick to the rules when things go wrong.
- Keep position sizes small: When you do invest, size positions conservatively. Use our position sizing tools to calculate appropriate exposure.
- Set clear rules: Define your lookback period, rebalancing frequency, and exit criteria before you start. Changing the rules mid-strategy is a form of behavioral bias that will hurt your returns.
- Consult a professional: Before committing real capital to any strategy, speak with a licensed financial advisor who can assess your personal financial situation.
Conclusion
Momentum investing is one of the best-documented and most powerful patterns in financial markets. It works because human psychology is predictable — underreaction to news, herding, and anchoring all create trends that disciplined investors can exploit.
But like all investment strategies, momentum requires discipline, risk management, and a clear understanding of when it works — and when it doesn't. Momentum crashes are real. Costs matter. And following the strategy when it feels uncomfortable is genuinely difficult.
At FutureInvestingforYou, we believe in empowering investors with knowledge. Understanding momentum is the first step — applying it wisely, with appropriate risk management, is the goal.
Want to practice the math behind momentum trades? Try our free calculator tools — including our Range Calculator and Target Profit Calculator.