Alternative Market Signals: Investing with the Box Manufacturing Index

Investors are increasingly exploring alternative indicators to gain an edge in financial markets. Traditional signals, such as earnings reports or macroeconomic data, often come with delays or may already be priced in. As a result, unconventional metrics have attracted attention. In this article, we examine the Producer Price Index (PPI) for the Corrugated and Solid Fiber Box Manufacturing industry, including corrugated boxes and pallets. Our motivation is to evaluate this index’s effectiveness as a predictive signal for the S&P 500 ETF, sector-specific ETFs, and individual stocks such as Amazon (AMZN), one of the largest consumers of materials tracked by this index. We present several investment strategies that incorporate this indicator and assess whether it can enhance risk-adjusted returns.

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Can Technology Sector Leadership Be Systematically Exploited?

The U.S. equity market has periodically been dominated by a few technology-driven stocks, most recently the so-called “Magnificent Seven.” Historically, similar dominance occurred during the Nifty Fifty era in the 1960s–1970s and the dot-com boom in the 1990s. These periods of concentrated leadership often led to temporary outperformance, but systematically capturing such gains has proven challenging. Our study investigates the potential to exploit technology sector dominance using momentum-based strategies across Fama–French 12 industry portfolios, analyzing whether long-only, long-short, and rolling-basis approaches can generate persistent alpha, and assessing the limitations of simple timing methods.

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Front Running in Country ETFs, or How to Spot and Leverage Seasonality

Understanding seasonality in financial markets requires recognizing how predictable return patterns can be influenced by investor behavior. One underexplored aspect of this is the impact of front-running—where traders anticipate seasonal trends and act early, shifting returns forward in time. We have already explored seasonality front-running in commodities, stock sectors, and crisis hedge portfolios. Our new research examines whether this phenomenon extends to country ETFs, an asset class where seasonality has been less studied. By applying a front-running strategy to a dataset of country ETFs, we identify opportunities to capitalize on seasonal effects before they fully materialize. Our findings indicate that pre-seasonality drift is strongest in commodities but remains present in country ETFs, offering a potential edge in portfolio construction. Ultimately, our study highlights how front-running seasonality can enhance ETF investing, providing an additional layer of market timing beyond traditional trend-following approaches.

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Front-Running Seasonality in US Stock Sectors

Seasonality plays a significant role in financial markets and has become an essential concept for both practitioners and researchers. This phenomenon is particularly prominent in commodities, where natural cycles like weather or harvest periods directly affect supply and demand, leading to predictable price movements. However, seasonality also plays a role in equity markets, influencing stock prices based on recurring calendar patterns, such as month-end effects or holiday periods. Recognizing these patterns can provide investors with an edge by identifying windows of opportunity or risk in their investment strategies.

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Why Do US Stocks Outperform EM and EAFE Regions?

Investing in emerging markets (EM) or developed markets (DM) outside of the United States tends to follow cyclical trends. At times, it becomes popular and crowded to focus solely on U.S. stocks, while in other periods, the trend shifts to favor everything except U.S. equities. This inclination often relies on historical and past performance data, although it doesn’t guarantee identical outcomes in the future. But what drives these periods of popularity? When do U.S. markets outperform Emerging Markets or other Developed Markets? When do large-cap stocks outperform small-cap stocks, and when do growth stocks outperform value stocks? Are those ebbs and flows in the performance of major thematic investments somehow interlinked, and can we uncover some insights into why this occurs? Those are the questions we will try to answer in the following analysis.

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Lottery Effect in ETFs Across Several Asset Classes

Indisputably, we are witnesses of an ETF mega boom. From passive to active ETFs, their numbers seem to be ever-increasing. Since these exchange-traded funds can be excellent (accessible, transparent, liquid) instruments, it is a great necessity to examine their possible usage in active and systematic trading or investing. Therefore, the short research critically assesses the possibility of using ETFs in the Skewness Trading Strategy.

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Synthetic Lending Rates Predict Subsequent Market Return

It is indisputable that the data are changing financial markets – computing power has increased, allowing to rise the trends of ML/AI and big data (number of possible predictors or granularity) or HFT strategies. Indeed, not all the datasets are worth the time of academics, investors or traders, but we are always keen to analyze the novel and unique datasets. Of course, if we believe that the analysis is worthy of sharing, we are happy to do so. This post offers a shorter version of our newest research about Synthetic lending rates and subsequent market return. We hope that you find it enriching; enjoy the reading!

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