Trend-following Bitcoin

Bitcoin, along its blockchain brethren, is an interesting, relatively new instrument that has emerged from utter obscurity.  When two different exchanges are rushing to launch a new financial future, a hedge fund you interviewed with has abandoned its other investments to focus solely on bitcoin, and governments are shutting off access to a market, you know a market is HOT, but also not fully understood or trusted.  Whether crytpocurrencies are in the long-run a legitimate alternative to sovereign currencies or centuries old stores of value like gold and silver is another question.  It is, as many new technologies and instruments are prone to be, an object of intense speculation. Calling this is a bubble or a mania is semantics.  Gauging the levels of dumb money or retail participation is difficult because of the lack of centralized exchange and public information about who is buying.  Nevertheless, the price swings are huge, and the historic losses have been awful.  But if you were an early investor, or miner who held on, the rewards were incredible.

But those returns, shown in the chart above, assume you stood the course, because it was a rough, rough ride as you can see in the next chart. Losses of 80% and 90% of your investment were simply the norm.  Expect the same in future.

Since there is little data at this point, we don’t really have enough sample size to get any meaningful numbers on monthly seasonality. When you dig into daily seasonality, you don’t see a ton either. Its noisy, though as you can see in the next chart, Tuesdays and to larger extent Mondays have tended to be days that Bitcoin goes up most consistently.

One thing Bitcoin does do consistently is trend, so an investor may consider a tactical timing strategy built around some such rules. The rules applied below were as follows: buy bitcoin if it has been up over the last 250 days, and for the first year when 250 days were not available, buy it if Bitcoin is up over the last month, otherwise don’t hold bitcoin. This turns out to have worked a lot better than buy and hold strategy, since your $100 would be worth $31 million dollars instead of a paltry $17.5 million.

And the ride on the downside, while less horrific than a buy and hold strategy, was still rather violent and scary since you still lose 90% of your money at one point.

Whether Bitcoin will continue to soar and offer buy and hold investor or trend followers the same spectacular returns is unknown. What seems certain is the volatility of 79% annualized will probably be the norm for awhile.

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Is There a Canadian Housing Bubble?

Anecdotal evidence from newspapers (a recent NY Times article on Toronto affordability) and online blogs like Zero Hedge would have you believe, if you like to keep a handy list of financial bubbles around the house like I do, that Canadians have lost their minds, and are in the midst of a housing bubble.  But the fact is that the numbers just don’t bear this out.

To get a financial bubble, especially one in housing, you need to have a lot of loans collateralized by rising home values.  Growth in residential loans remains historically anemic at around 6% at a national level.  Looked at over longer periods of time, mortgage loan growth looks to be in slow decline. Sorry.  No bubble here.

(Data from Cansim & Teranet)

Rising prices should also be incentivizing real estate developers to build new homes or to fix existing houses for an easy flip.  But, Canada’s housing permits and housing starts growth have gone nowhere for 6 years.  Sorry.  No bubble.

As you can see in the last chart, there is really only frothy price behavior evident in two Canadian cities: Toronto and Vancouver.  If you live in Montreal, Quebec City or Halifax, your home value has only kept track with broader Canadian inflation.  While if you live in an oil-producing city like Edmonton, Calgary or Winnipeg, you have made about 10% on your home over the last two years.  Hardly the 60% and 80% appreciation that has happened in Vancouver and Toronto respectfully.  Sorry.  No Canadian housing bubble.  Put another way, housing appreciation in NY and LA is not indicative of the US as a whole.  Same holds here.  Canada is not merely Toronto and Vancouver.

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