2-Year Notes Momentum: Extracting Term Structure Anomalies from FOMC Cycles

4.March 2026

For many investors, short-term interest rates are often treated as something the market “discovers.” In reality, the Federal Reserve has enormous control over how the front end of the yield curve evolves. While textbooks often portray the Fed’s policy rate as a flexible tool that reacts quickly to economic data, the actual behavior of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) looks very different. In practice, monetary policy tends to move in long, persistent cycles. The Fed spends years hiking rates, or years cutting them, and only rarely reverses direction quickly. For anyone trading rates, bonds, or rate-sensitive assets, this persistence matters. It means that the path of short-term interest rates over the next one to two years is often largely shaped by the Fed’s policy trajectory rather than by constantly shifting market expectations.

This observation has an important implication: the short end of the Treasury curve often behaves less like a forecasting market and more like a gradual reflection of the Fed’s policy cycle. When the Fed enters a tightening or easing phase, that trend tends to propagate through Treasury yields from one month out to roughly two years. In this article, we show that these policy-driven trends can be measured and used. By identifying whether the Fed is in a tightening, easing, or neutral phase, investors can improve their expectations about the near-term evolution of the yield curve. For fixed-income portfolio managers and macro traders, recognizing these policy regimes can help sharpen rate forecasts, improve duration positioning, and better manage risks tied to interest-rate movements.

Continue reading

Systematic Allocation in International Equity Regimes

26.February 2026

This research examines the critical quantitative investment problem of systematic tactical allocation to international equity mandates—specifically Emerging Markets (EM) and Europe, Australasia, and the Far East (EAFE)—amidst conjectured macroeconomic regime transitions. The investigation is precipitated by observable deteriorations in USD hegemony, elevated geopolitical risk premiums, and protracted macroeconomic uncertainty. These factors collectively challenge the post-Global Financial Crisis paradigm of consistent US equity outperformance, suggesting a potential inflection point in relative returns and currency-adjusted Sharpe ratios.

The central research question is whether a statistically robust, signals-based framework can be engineered to systematically time exposure to EAFE equities, thereby capitalizing on these postulated regime shifts. We move beyond traditional, static mean-variance optimization by developing a dynamic model that integrates momentum variables to generate actionable, out-of-sample allocation signals.

Continue reading

Evaluating Reversal Potential in Niche Alternative ETFs

23.February 2026

Alternative ETFs sit at an unusual intersection of public-market accessibility and hedge-fund-style investment techniques. They package managed futures, merger arbitrage, and option-based income strategies into exchange-traded products, yet they remain thinly traded and relatively niche compared to mainstream equity or bond ETFs. This combination makes them intriguing: they offer exposure to alternative risk premia, and their limited liquidity raises possibilities to build short-term reversal strategies. 

Continue reading

Combining Calendar Strategies into the Trading Portfolio

17.February 2026

Calendar strategies are often viewed as weak when assessed individually. Their annualized returns tend to be low, market exposure is limited, and trading activity is sparse. Compared to trend following or swing strategies, which can remain invested for extended periods, calendar strategies may appear inefficient at first glance. This impression, however, largely stems from evaluating these strategies outside of their intended context. Calendar strategies are not designed to operate as standalone trading systems. Their primary role is within a portfolio, where their structural properties become relevant rather than their individual performance metrics.

Continue reading

Quantpedia in January 2026

11.February 2026

Hello all,

What have we accomplished in the last month?

– A three new volatility-based regime filters for the Trading Edge Analysis Report
– 7th episode of our YouTube video series QuantBeats, this time with David Kaiser from Methodical Investments
– And the Quantpedia Awards 2026 competition is back!
– 11 new Quantpedia Premium strategies
– 8 new related research papers
– 9 new backtests written in QuantConnect code
– and finally, 5 new blog posts on our Quantpedia blog

Continue reading

Pragmatic Asset Allocation Across Market Cycles

6.February 2026

Pragmatic Asset Allocation is a systematic, multi-asset investment strategy designed to adapt dynamically to evolving market conditions. Rather than maintaining a static equity exposure, the model actively allocates capital across a diversified set of asset classes—including equities, bonds, commodities, gold, and cash-like instruments—using momentum-based signals and disciplined periodic rebalancing. The strategy’s primary objective is to deliver attractive long-term returns while materially reducing drawdowns during adverse market environments.

It has now been two highly volatile years since we first published our paper on PAA, making this an opportune moment to review the strategy’s performance over the past year.

Continue reading
Subscription Form

Subscribe for Newsletter

 Be first to know, when we publish new content
logo
The Encyclopedia of Quantitative Trading Strategies

Log in