MACD: Sweet anticipation?
Moving average convergence/divergence (MACD) is one of today's most popular trend-following indicators in analytical software packages and online services, but research shows the indicator isn't always so reliable, particularly in short-swing markets.
The problem with regular moving averages is that they are slow. Notice on the 40-day cycle chart that the crossover comes after the price peak.
MACD attempts to compensate for this delay by anticipating crossovers. Rather than waiting for crossovers, MACD reacts when the averages begin to converge (or diverge).
The MACD accomplishes this by computing delta, the difference between the 26 MA and the 12 MA. When crossovers occur, delta crosses zero. MACD tries to anticipate delta's crossing of zero by measuring when delta begins to trend toward zero.
MACD measures the trend of delta by yet another average, usually a nine-period moving average of delta. Delta signals its own trend by crossing its moving average.
Thus, MACD is a double exponential average crossover system that tries to anticipate crossovers by signaling when the distance between averages begins to converge.
In theory, MACD should outperform other moving average systems. However, the reverse appears to be true, according to several studies.
For instance, The Encyclopedia of Technical Market Indicators reports that MACD substantially underperforms a 40-week simple moving average crossover rule.
The Dow Jones Irwin Guide to Trading Systems notes that a five-year performance study shows MACD results inferior to Richard Donchian's 5-and-20 moving average method and the moving average combination of 4, 9 and 18 days.
Flaws of anticipation
Other testing corroborates these findings. The "anticipation" seems to be counterproductive.
The chart of Standard & Poor's 500 prices illustrates the problem with anticipating. Prices rarely move smoothly. The whole advantage of using moving averages is that they are slow and give signals when a market's trend is well under way. Trend traders believe the best time to trade is well into the trend, with momentum. While anticipation occasionally picks a top, it more likely picks a false jiggle and gets whipsawed.