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Top Ten Blog Posts on Quantpedia in 2025

2.January 2026

One year is again behind us (in this case, it was 2025), and we are all a little older (and hopefully richer and/or wiser). Turn-of-the-year period is usually an excellent time for a short recap. Over the past 12 months, we have kept our pace and published nearly 70 short analyses of academic papers and our own research articles. So let’s summarize 10 of them, which were the most popular (based on the Google Analytics ranking). The top 10 is diverse, as usual; once again, we hope that you may find something you have not read yet …

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Cryptocurrency as an Investable Asset Class – 10 Lessons

24.October 2025

Cryptocurrencies have matured from experimental curiosities into a viable investable asset class whose return-generation and risk characteristics merit treatment within empirical asset pricing. A recent paper by Nicola Borri, Yukun Liu, Aleh Tsyvinski, Xi Wu summarizes ten facts from the literature that show cryptocurrencies share important similarities with traditional markets—comparable risk-adjusted performance and a small set of cross-sectional factors—while retaining distinctive features such as frequent large jumps and price signals embedded in blockchain data. Key themes include portfolio diversification, factor structure, market microstructure, and the evolving role of regulation and derivatives in shaping market discovery and stability.

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Cross-Sectional and Dollar Components of Currency Risk Premia

26.September 2025

Currency strategies often appear simple on the surface – go long high-yielding currencies, short low-yielding ones, or take a position on the U.S. dollar. But these trades actually mix two distinct components: a Dollar component, which bets on broad movements of the U.S. dollar against all others, and a Cross-Sectional (CS) component, which exploits relative differences across countries. The question is, which of these components really drives currency risk premia? A new paper by Vahid Rostamkhani tackles this long-standing question by decomposing the predictive power of eleven macroeconomic fundamentals—such as interest rates, inflation, unemployment, and fiscal variables—into these two components across almost a century of data (1926-2023). This approach directly tests whether it is more rewarding to time the dollar itself or to focus on cross-country fundamental spreads.

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The Best Strategies for FX Hedging

22.August 2025

Foreign exchange (FX) markets are a cornerstone of global finance, offering investors and corporations opportunities to manage currency risk, enhance returns, and optimize portfolio performance. Among the most critical challenges in FX is the design of robust hedging strategies to mitigate exposure to volatile currency movements. How does the financial industry deal with this task? We can draw inspiration from the paper written by Castro, Hamill, Harber, Harvey, and Van Hemert, which explores strategies such as dynamic hedging, trend-following, and momentum-based approaches, the concept of carry, and the interplay of these strategies with fundamental concepts like Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) and valuation metrics.

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Why Most Markets and Styles Have Been Lagging US Equities?

18.June 2025

Over the past decade and a half, the US equities have set the hard-to-beat performance benchmark. Nearly all of the other countries, no matter if small or big, emerging or developed, have lagged behind. However, what are the forces behind this outperformance? Why did most of the other markets and even investing styles bow to the US large-cap growth dominance? A new paper written by David Blitz nicely analyses the rise of the behemoth.

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Out-of-Sample Test of Formula Investing Strategies

16.January 2025

Can we simplify the complexities of the stock market and distill them into a simple set of quantifiable metrics? A lot of academic papers suggest this, and they offer formulas that should make the life of a stock picker easier. Some of the most compelling methodologies within this realm are the F-Score, Magic Formula, Acquirer’s Multiple, and the Conservative Formula. These quantitative strategies are designed to identify undervalued stocks with robust fundamentals and potential for high returns. But do they really work out-of-sample? A new paper by Marcel Schwartz and Matthias X. Hanauer tries to answer this interesting question…

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