Hello,
Thanks for your kind words. We wish 2007 will be as good as 2006 for you...
Now, about the portfolios' behavior in bearish markets, it is a fact that the Low PEG Ratio is less volatile than the Price Momentum portfolios for three main reasons:
- It usually holds more stocks
- It selects stocks for which prices are not in a growth phase as spectacular as the Price Momentum does
- It tends to elect bigger capitalization stocks
For those reasons it makes sense that a bearish market does not hit the Low PEG Ratio portfolio performances as bad as the Price Momentum portfolios.
But, if you look at what happened in spring 2006, even the Low PEG Ratio portfolio had a large drawdown. It was less than the Price Momentum portfolios, but I would not say that this portfolio performs always well in a bearish market.