Where Stock Picking Still Pays: Adding Dispersion to the Rotation Graph

Mark TennenbaumAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Every sector chart tells you where the crowd is. Almost none tell you the thing a stock picker actually needs to know: Inside a given sector, how much room is there to beat the average name?

Julius de Kempenaer's Relative Rotation Graph comes closer than most. It shows a whole universe of sectors at once, each measured against a common benchmark and plotted by how strong it is and whether that strength is building or fading. It depicts all 11 GICS sectors rotating clockwise through leading, weakening, lagging, and improving. It is a beautiful picture of the crowd.

What it does not show is where selection gets paid. The chart recalls the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) growth-share matrix from grad school, the four-box grid whose bubbles were sized by revenue. RRG keeps the four boxes but drops that size dimension, and it benchmarks against an index that says less than it could about selection. I added both back.

Where the Standard Chart Stops

The two axes of an RRG describe relative strength and the momentum of that relative strength. The second of those, the velocity of relative strength, is a close relative to the momentum factor that four-factor models reward.

The two are not identical, since this axis is a short-horizon rate of change rather than a 12-month ranking, but they rhyme: Both axes describe systematic, crowd-level dynamics rather than selection skill. They tell us where the crowd is and how fast it is moving, not how much room a stock picker has inside any one sector. That is the question for which I extended the analysis.