Among other macroeconomic indicators, the monthly release of U.S. unemployment rate figures in the Employment Situation report by the U.S. Bureau of Labour Statistics gets a lot of media attention and strongly affects the stock markets. I investigate whether a profitable investment strategy can be constructed by predicting the likely changes in U.S. unemployment before the official news release using Google query volumes for related search terms. I find that massive new data sources of human interaction with the Internet not only improves U.S. unemployment rate predictability, but can also enhance market timing of trading strategies when considered jointly with macroeconomic data. My results illustrate the potential of combining extensive behavioural data sets with economic data to anticipate investor expectations and stock market moves.
In the past decade many researchers have proposed new optimal portfolio selection strategies to show that sophisticated diversification can outperform the naïve 1/N strategy in out-ofsample benchmarks. Providing an updated review of these models since DeMiguel et al. (2009b), I test sixteen strategies across six empirical datasets to see if indeed progress has been made. However, I find that none of the recently suggested strategies consistently outperforms the 1/N or minimum-variance approach in terms of Sharpe ratio, certaintyequivalent return or turnover. This suggests that simple diversification rules are not in fact inefficient, and gains promised by optimal portfolio choice remain unattainable out-of-sample due to large estimation errors in expected returns. Therefore, further research effort should be devoted to both improving estimation of expected returns, and possibly exploring diversification rules that do not require the estimation of expected returns directly, but also use other available information about the stock characteristics.
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