Glabadanidis, P.2016-11-082016-11-082017International Review of Finance, 2017; 17(3):353-3941468-24431468-2443http://hdl.handle.net/2440/102306First published 10 October 2016A combination of simple moving average trading strategies with several window lengths delivers a greater average return and skewness as well as a lower variance and kurtosis compared with buying and holding the underlying asset using daily returns of value-weighted US decile portfolios sorted by market size, book-to-market, momentum, and standard deviation as well as more than 1000 individual US stocks. The combination moving average (CMA) strategy generates risk-adjusted returns of 2% to 16% per year before transaction costs. The performance of the CMA strategy is driven largely by the volatility of stock returns and resembles the payoffs of an at-the-money protective put on the underlying buy-and-hold return. Conditional factor models with macroeconomic variables, especially the market dividend yield, short-term interest rates, and market conditions, can explain some of the abnormal returns. Standard market timing tests reveal ample evidence regarding the timing ability of the CMA strategy.en© 2016 International Review of Finance Ltd. 2016Timing the Market with a Combination of Moving AveragesJournal article003005759710.1111/irfi.121070004091091000022-s2.0-84995662773274645Glabadanidis, P. [0000-0003-0247-8430]