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V1 Barry Bonds | DereckN | Beta: 0.16 | Sharpe: 2.06 | Calmar: 2.65
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A symphony is an automated trading strategy — Learn more about symphonies here

About

A tactical, multi-asset tilt strategy that shifts between bonds/hedges and equity/tech exposure based on market trend (SPY vs 200-day MA) and momentum signals (RSI across bond, index, and tech proxies). It uses a mix of defensive ETFs (bonds, low-vol, inverse/leveraged bets, volatility futures) and equity/tech ETFs with equal-cash weighting in branches to seek good risk-adjusted returns with risk controls.
NutHow it works
Plain-language description: - What it watches: a set of ETFs that proxy bonds, tech stocks, the broader market, inverse tech bets, and hedges. Examples include SHV (short Treasuries), TLT (long Treasuries), QQQ (tech stocks), ROM (leveraged tech), PSQ (inverse QQQ), SQQQ (3x inverse QQQ), TQQQ (3x leveraged QQQ), SPY (S&P 500), VIXY (volatility ETF), TMF (levered long Treasuries), SPLV (low-volatility stocks), BTAL (market-neutral anti-beta). The goal is to measure “risk-on” vs “risk-off” conditions and to tilt the portfolio accordingly. - The big trend check: it looks at SPY’s price relative to its 200-day moving average. If SPY is below this long-term trend line, the system treats the environment as risk-off and tilts toward defensive holdings (more bonds, hedges, and cash). If SPY is above the trend line, the environment is considered more favorable for equities and the system searches for the strongest ally among bonds vs inverse tech to decide the tilt. - The momentum checks: the strategy compares momentum gauges (RSI) across assets on short windows (around 10–14 days) to see which group is currently stronger. In practice, it might compare RSI(TLT,14) to RSI(PSQ,14) or RSI(QQQ,14) to RSI(TLT,14) to decide whether bonds or inverse tech look stronger. - The tilt logic (simplified): 1) If the market looks weak (SPY under 200-day MA): favor defensive elements (e.g., SHV, other safe or hedging instruments). 2) If the market looks strong (SPY above 200-day MA): compare whether bonds are acting stronger than an inverse tech proxy. If bonds look stronger, add exposure to bonds; if not, tilt toward tech/equities (using instruments like ROM or QQQ-related products) while applying hedges (e.g., VIXY, SQQQ, TMF) to manage risk. - Weighting: the rules show repeated use of equal cash weights in sub-branches, indicating exposure is often distributed rather than concentrated in a single instrument. The exact mix can shift heavily with each signal, but the intent is to maintain diversification and limit single-point risk. - What’s the end result you’d see: a flexible, market-adaptive allocation that spends more days in a balanced or mildly defensive posture, but can commit to leveraged tech or hedges when signals align. It’s designed to produce positive risk-adjusted returns (as suggested by the listed Sharpe and Calmar figures) while limiting drawdowns through hedges and diversification.
CheckmarkValue prop
This strategy reduces drawdowns and improves risk control with diversified tilts between bonds/hedges and tech. Out-of-sample drawdown ~12.6% vs SPY ~18.8% and Calmar ~1.22, offering steadier, capital-protective exposure vs SPY.

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Invest in this strategy
OOS Start Date
Sep 22, 2023
Trading Setting
Threshold 1%
Type
Stocks
Category
Tactical asset allocation, multi-asset, risk-controlled, levered/ inverse etf signals
Tickers in this symphonyThis symphony trades 13 assets in total
Ticker
Type
BND
Vanguard Total Bond Market
Stocks
BTAL
AGF U.S. Market Neutral Anti-Beta Fund
Stocks
PSQ
ProShares Short QQQ
Stocks
QQQ
Invesco QQQ Trust, Series 1
Stocks
ROM
ProShares Ultra Technology
Stocks
SHV
iShares Trust iShares 0-1 Year Treasury Bond ETF
Stocks
SPLV
Invesco S&P 500 Low Volatility ETF
Stocks
SPY
State Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust
Stocks
SQQQ
ProShares UltraPro Short QQQ
Stocks
TLT
iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF
Stocks

FAQ

A Composer symphony is an automated trading strategy that executes trades based on parameters of your choice. Some symphonies are similar to holding one ETF in normal conditions and rotating to a different ETF when market conditions shift, for example a 5% drop in the S&P 500, while others use complex rules with dozens of triggers. However, complex doesn’t always mean better. A simple, well-structured symphony can be just as effective as an intricate one. Learn more about how symphonies work here.

The symphony is currently performing the same as yesterday today. Performance updates in real time during market hours.

The symphony is currently allocated toSHVandSPLV. Holdings automatically adjust as market conditions change based on the strategy's rules.

Year-to-date, the symphony has returned 15.58%. You can adjust the performance chart above to view returns across different time horizons.

The maximum drawdown for the symphony is 12.62%. The maximum drawdown measures the largest peak-to-trough decline. It's an important metric to evaluate risk and the strategy's behavior during market stress.

To invest in the symphony, simply click the Invest button on this page. You'll need to open an account with Composer if you don't have one yet, then you can start investing. Composer will automatically execute the trades for you based on the strategy's rules. Composer also supports trading individual stocks, ETFs, and options.