Abstract

PurposeThe study considers time-varying risk premium in investigating the capability of technical analysis (TA) to predict and outperform a buy–hold strategy in Bitcoin exchange rate returns.Design/methodology/approachThe study tests the technical trading rule of fixed moving average (FMA) on daily actual and equilibrium returns of Bitcoin exchange rates. The equilibrium returns are computed using dynamic CAPM in conjunction with a VAR-MGARCH (1, 1) system. The empirical evaluation of the study uses a case study of four Bitcoin exchange rates (BTC/AUD, BTC/EUR, BTC/JPY and BTC/ZAR) for the period 19 June 2010 to 30 October 2020.FindingsThe findings are consistent with related studies in conventional foreign exchange markets that find TA to be profitable, especially in emerging markets. Nevertheless, the consideration of risk premium has the effect of reducing the abnormal returns. Also, further robust tests reveal that Bitcoin returns possess a momentum effect which prompts further study in efficient market hypothesis research.Practical implicationsThe empirical findings of this study should benefit portfolio managers and active investors on the strength of TA to predict returns in a speculative market like the Bitcoin exchange rate market.Originality/valueThe study takes cognisance that cryptocurrency trading is speculative in nature which renders it a good candidate for TA methods. While there are studies that have explored the value of TA in Bitcoin exchange rates, these studies fail to incorporate the effects of time-varying risk premiums, the strength and focus of the current paper.

Highlights

  • Over the years, academics and practitioners have demonstrated an overwhelming interest in the profitability of technical analysis (TA) on practically all financial systems and assets

  • We report on TA performance based on the returns of moving average rules applied on conditional CAPM for BTC/AUD exchange rate

  • The paper examines the profitability of 24 technical trading rules (TTRs) in each of four Bitcoin exchange rates (BTC/ AUD, BTC/EUR, BTC/JPY and BTC/ZAR)

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Summary

Introduction

Academics and practitioners have demonstrated an overwhelming interest in the profitability of technical analysis (TA) on practically all financial systems and assets. Historical evidence indicates that technical trading strategies were profitable in foreign exchange markets and future markets (Smidt, 1965; Sweeney, 1986; Taylor, 1986), but not in stock markets (Fama and Blume, 1966; Van Horne and Parker, 1967). More recent empirical studies suggest that technical trading rules (TTRs) may generate positive profits in certain speculative markets, most notably in foreign exchange and futures markets (Nazario et al, 2017). The full terms of this license may be seen at http://creativecommons. org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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