Dollar Cost Averaging vs Moving Averages: Why Risk Management Wins Every Time
Dollar Cost Averaging vs Moving Averages: Why Risk Management Wins Every Time
Dollar Cost Averaging vs Moving Averages: Why Risk Management Wins Every Time

August 17, 2025

August 17, 2025

August 17, 2025

August 17, 2025

Dollar Cost Averaging vs Moving Averages: Why Risk Management Wins Every Time

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Read time: 6 min

TL;DR

  • Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) helps investors stay disciplined, but it doesn’t protect you from large drawdowns. You’re still exposed to big losses during market downturns.

  • The S&P 500 has had drawdowns lasting over a decade.

  • Some markets, like Japan’s Nikkei 225, have never recovered from past peaks.

  • Simple moving average systems can beat both DCA and buy-and-hold.

  • Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA) applies these same principles across multiple assets for even better results. 

Introduction: The Comfortable Lie About DCA

For decades, investors have been told, “Just keep buying no matter what the market does.”
It’s simple, it’s easy, and it’s emotionally comforting. That’s why Dollar Cost Averaging is so popular, it automates the process and removes the stress of trying to time the market.

But here’s the problem: DCA ignores the one thing that matters most for long-term success: risk management.

The Hidden Cost of “Just Holding On”

Look at a long-term chart of the S&P 500 and it’s easy to believe the market always goes up. But zoom in and the story changes.
The S&P 500 has had multiple deep drawdowns that lasted years, sometimes more than a decade. These aren’t small dips you forget about, they’re gut-wrenching periods where your portfolio stays underwater for years.

Read more: S&P 500 Drawdowns Since 1870

"The essence of investment management is the management of risks, not the management of returns." - Benjamin Graham

When your investment plan requires holding through a 50% decline and waiting 10+ years to get back to even, you’re not really managing risk, you’re just hoping the market eventually bails you out. 

When Markets Never Come Back

Some investors point to the U.S. market’s resilience as proof that you can just wait it out. But not every index bounces back.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 peaked in 1989 and, more than three decades later, still trades below that high. Imagine waiting your entire investing career to break even, that’s the reality for Japanese index investors who relied solely on buy-and-hold or DCA.

This is why it’s dangerous to assume that “markets always recover.” And this isn’t just a Japan problem. Any investor relying solely on buy-and-hold or DCA is exposed to the same danger if markets stall for years.


Nikkei 225 index showing three decades of stagnation, demonstrating why buy-and-hold can fail. 

Nikkei 225 index showing three decades of stagnation, demonstrating why buy-and-hold can fail. 

What Dollar Cost Averaging Actually Does

DCA is simple: you invest the same amount at regular intervals, regardless of market conditions.
It feels safe because you buy more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high. But DCA doesn’t change the fact that you remain fully invested through every downturn.

If the market is in a prolonged bear phase, you’re just buying more into losses without any plan to reduce risk.

Buy-and-Hold vs DCA: Same Risk Profile

Buy-and-hold and DCA may differ in how you enter the market, but once you’re fully invested, the ride is the same.
Both suffer the full impact of market drawdowns, and both require long recoveries after big losses.

If your goal is to grow wealth without devastating setbacks, you need something different, a strategy that adapts to market conditions.

For new investors, this might sound complicated, but it’s not. TAA can be implemented with a handful of ETFs and a few simple rules. You don’t need to be a professional trader to manage risk smarter. 

Introducing the Risk-Managed Alternative: Simple Moving Averages

A moving average is one of the simplest tools in investing. It takes the average price over a set period and plots it as a line on a chart.

When the price is above the moving average, you stay invested. When it drops below, you move to cash or bonds. 


Stock chart with simple moving average overlay highlighting reduced downside exposure. 

Stock chart with simple moving average overlay highlighting reduced downside exposure. 

This simple rule reduces exposure during downtrends, helping you avoid the worst parts of bear markets while still participating in uptrends. 

The Test: Moving Average vs Buy-and-Hold vs TAA vs DCA

We tested buy-and-hold against moving average strategy against Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio with DCA variation on a S&P500 stock index using $10K starting capital:

Key Findings:

  • Moving average rules cut maximum drawdowns dramatically.

  • Returns were equal to or higher than buy-and-hold over the test period.

  • Volatility was significantly reduced.

Real-World Stress Tests
Numbers aren’t just theory, here’s how these strategies performed in two of the toughest markets of our lifetime:

  • 2008 Financial Crisis:

    • Buy & Hold ended the year at –37%

    • SMA strategy ended at +1.63%

    • TAA (QuadEdge Portfolio) ended at +15.8%

  • March 2020 (COVID Crash):

    • Buy & Hold: –12.37%

    • SMA: +0.13%

    • TAA: +3.7%

These aren’t small differences. They show how risk-managed strategies don’t just survive downturns, they often come out ahead.


Drawdown comparison between SMA strategy and Buy-and-Hold showing smoother losses with SMA.

Drawdown comparison between SMA strategy and Buy-and-Hold showing smoother losses with SMA. 


Performance comparison of Buy-and-Hold, SMA, TAA, and DCA strategies showing net profit, CAGR, drawdowns, and risk-adjusted returns.

Performance comparison of Buy-and-Hold, SMA, TAA, and DCA strategies showing net profit, CAGR, drawdowns, and risk-adjusted returns. 

Quick guide to the metrics:

  • CAGR: Annualized return, showing how your money grows over time.

  • Max DD: The largest drop from peak to trough, showing how deep losses can get.

  • StDev: A measure of volatility, or how bumpy the ride feels.

  • Sharpe & Sortino Ratios: Higher is better, they show how much return you’re getting for each unit of risk.

  • Return/Exposure: How efficient the strategy is at putting capital to work.

The takeaway? Even a basic rule like this can meaningfully protect your capital and smooth your investment journey.

Beyond One Indicator: Tactical Asset Allocation

Moving averages work well on single markets, but they’re just the beginning.
Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA) applies similar principles, momentum, trend following, and diversification, across multiple asset classes.

By rotating into assets with positive momentum and avoiding those in downtrends, TAA portfolios can capture gains while sidestepping the worst declines.

Case Study: TAA Portfolio From My Service

One of the TAA portfolios I share with members combines U.S. stocks, global equities, bonds, and gold.
Over the past decade, it delivered strong returns with far lower drawdowns than buy-and-hold. The Sortino ratio, measuring returns per unit of downside risk, was significantly higher, showing the portfolio rewarded risk-takers more efficiently.


QuadEdge Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio growth versus 60/40 benchmark starting from 1971.

QuadEdge Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio growth versus 60/40 benchmark starting from 1971.

Why Simplicity Wins Over Complexity

You don’t need a room full of analysts or complex software to manage risk effectively.
A few simple, well-tested rules you can follow consistently will often outperform the most sophisticated “black box” systems, especially if they keep you invested in uptrends and out during major downtrends.

Beyond numbers, there’s also peace of mind. Imagine avoiding a decade of waiting just to break even, or sleeping better knowing your portfolio isn’t fully exposed when the next crisis hits. That emotional relief is one of the biggest advantages of TAA.

Video: Why DCA Falls Short

I break this topic down in detail in my recent YouTube video, showing the head-to-head results of DCA, buy-and-hold, and a moving average strategy. You’ll see why rules-based investing can outperform “set and forget” approaches.

Related Read: The Bucket System

If you want to manage risk while keeping your investing simple, check out my article: Investing Doesn’t Have to Be Hard: The Bucket System Simplified.
It explains how to split your money into short-, medium-, and long-term “buckets” so you can invest with more confidence and less stress.

Here are answers to some of the most common questions investors ask about Dollar Cost Averaging and Tactical Asset Allocation.

FAQs

  1. Is Dollar Cost Averaging ever a good strategy?
    Yes, for investors who value simplicity over risk control and don’t mind large drawdowns. It’s a great way to stay disciplined and automate investing, but it doesn’t protect you from major losses.

  2. Doesn’t Tactical Asset Allocation just try to “time the market”?
    Not in the emotional sense. TAA uses objective, rules-based signals like momentum or moving averages. It’s not about guessing tops and bottoms — it’s about systematically reducing exposure when risk is high.

  3. How does TAA perform during long bull markets compared to DCA?
    In strong bull markets, DCA and Buy-and-Hold strategies often appear more attractive because they maintain full investment. TAA may lag slightly, but it makes up for it by avoiding devastating losses during major downturns.

  4. What’s the minimum capital for a TAA portfolio?
    You can start small. Many portfolios can be implemented with just a few thousand dollars using ETFs.

  5. How much time does managing a TAA portfolio take compared to DCA?
    DCA is fully passive, while TAA usually requires monthly or quarterly rebalancing. Most TAA portfolios can be managed in less than 30 minutes per month.

  6. What are the risks of using TAA instead of Buy-and-Hold/DCA?
    No strategy is risk-free. TAA reduces drawdowns and volatility, but the results depend on consistently following the rules. The biggest risk is execution discipline.

  7. Are TAA portfolios tax-efficient?
    Because TAA involves rotation, there may be more taxable events compared to Buy-and-Hold. Using tax-advantaged accounts or ETFs with low turnover helps reduce the impact.

  8. Can I automate a TAA strategy like I can with DCA?
    Yes. While most brokerages automate DCA, TAA can also be automated with portfolio management tools, signals, or even simple spreadsheet reminders.

  9. Why don’t most financial advisors recommend TAA if it’s so effective?
    Traditional advisors prefer Buy-and-Hold because it’s easy to explain, scalable across many clients, and avoids the accountability of market timing. TAA requires more education and monitoring, which many advisors don’t provide.


"You can’t predict, but you can prepare." - Howard Marks

Conclusion

Dollar Cost Averaging is fine if your only goal is to keep investing without thinking. But if you want to grow wealth while controlling downside risk, you need a strategy that adapts to market conditions.

The S&P 500’s history of long drawdowns and the Nikkei’s multi-decade slump prove that “just holding on” isn’t always safe.
Simple moving averages already improve returns and reduce risk. TAA can take those results even further by applying the same principles to a diversified portfolio.

Ready to Improve Your Portfolio?

Don’t spend the next decade waiting to break even after the next crash. With a TAA portfolio, you can participate in growth while sidestepping the worst declines.

If you’re ready to move beyond set-and-forget investing and protect your wealth, explore my TAA service today.

TL;DR

  • Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) helps investors stay disciplined, but it doesn’t protect you from large drawdowns. You’re still exposed to big losses during market downturns.

  • The S&P 500 has had drawdowns lasting over a decade.

  • Some markets, like Japan’s Nikkei 225, have never recovered from past peaks.

  • Simple moving average systems can beat both DCA and buy-and-hold.

  • Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA) applies these same principles across multiple assets for even better results. 

Introduction: The Comfortable Lie About DCA

For decades, investors have been told, “Just keep buying no matter what the market does.”
It’s simple, it’s easy, and it’s emotionally comforting. That’s why Dollar Cost Averaging is so popular, it automates the process and removes the stress of trying to time the market.

But here’s the problem: DCA ignores the one thing that matters most for long-term success: risk management.

The Hidden Cost of “Just Holding On”

Look at a long-term chart of the S&P 500 and it’s easy to believe the market always goes up. But zoom in and the story changes.
The S&P 500 has had multiple deep drawdowns that lasted years, sometimes more than a decade. These aren’t small dips you forget about, they’re gut-wrenching periods where your portfolio stays underwater for years.

Read more: S&P 500 Drawdowns Since 1870

"The essence of investment management is the management of risks, not the management of returns." - Benjamin Graham

When your investment plan requires holding through a 50% decline and waiting 10+ years to get back to even, you’re not really managing risk, you’re just hoping the market eventually bails you out. 

When Markets Never Come Back

Some investors point to the U.S. market’s resilience as proof that you can just wait it out. But not every index bounces back.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 peaked in 1989 and, more than three decades later, still trades below that high. Imagine waiting your entire investing career to break even, that’s the reality for Japanese index investors who relied solely on buy-and-hold or DCA.

This is why it’s dangerous to assume that “markets always recover.” And this isn’t just a Japan problem. Any investor relying solely on buy-and-hold or DCA is exposed to the same danger if markets stall for years.


Nikkei 225 index showing three decades of stagnation, demonstrating why buy-and-hold can fail. 

Nikkei 225 index showing three decades of stagnation, demonstrating why buy-and-hold can fail. 

What Dollar Cost Averaging Actually Does

DCA is simple: you invest the same amount at regular intervals, regardless of market conditions.
It feels safe because you buy more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high. But DCA doesn’t change the fact that you remain fully invested through every downturn.

If the market is in a prolonged bear phase, you’re just buying more into losses without any plan to reduce risk.

Buy-and-Hold vs DCA: Same Risk Profile

Buy-and-hold and DCA may differ in how you enter the market, but once you’re fully invested, the ride is the same.
Both suffer the full impact of market drawdowns, and both require long recoveries after big losses.

If your goal is to grow wealth without devastating setbacks, you need something different, a strategy that adapts to market conditions.

For new investors, this might sound complicated, but it’s not. TAA can be implemented with a handful of ETFs and a few simple rules. You don’t need to be a professional trader to manage risk smarter. 

Introducing the Risk-Managed Alternative: Simple Moving Averages

A moving average is one of the simplest tools in investing. It takes the average price over a set period and plots it as a line on a chart.

When the price is above the moving average, you stay invested. When it drops below, you move to cash or bonds. 


Stock chart with simple moving average overlay highlighting reduced downside exposure. 

Stock chart with simple moving average overlay highlighting reduced downside exposure. 

This simple rule reduces exposure during downtrends, helping you avoid the worst parts of bear markets while still participating in uptrends. 

The Test: Moving Average vs Buy-and-Hold vs TAA vs DCA

We tested buy-and-hold against moving average strategy against Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio with DCA variation on a S&P500 stock index using $10K starting capital:

Key Findings:

  • Moving average rules cut maximum drawdowns dramatically.

  • Returns were equal to or higher than buy-and-hold over the test period.

  • Volatility was significantly reduced.

Real-World Stress Tests
Numbers aren’t just theory, here’s how these strategies performed in two of the toughest markets of our lifetime:

  • 2008 Financial Crisis:

    • Buy & Hold ended the year at –37%

    • SMA strategy ended at +1.63%

    • TAA (QuadEdge Portfolio) ended at +15.8%

  • March 2020 (COVID Crash):

    • Buy & Hold: –12.37%

    • SMA: +0.13%

    • TAA: +3.7%

These aren’t small differences. They show how risk-managed strategies don’t just survive downturns, they often come out ahead.


Drawdown comparison between SMA strategy and Buy-and-Hold showing smoother losses with SMA.

Drawdown comparison between SMA strategy and Buy-and-Hold showing smoother losses with SMA. 


Performance comparison of Buy-and-Hold, SMA, TAA, and DCA strategies showing net profit, CAGR, drawdowns, and risk-adjusted returns.

Performance comparison of Buy-and-Hold, SMA, TAA, and DCA strategies showing net profit, CAGR, drawdowns, and risk-adjusted returns. 

Quick guide to the metrics:

  • CAGR: Annualized return, showing how your money grows over time.

  • Max DD: The largest drop from peak to trough, showing how deep losses can get.

  • StDev: A measure of volatility, or how bumpy the ride feels.

  • Sharpe & Sortino Ratios: Higher is better, they show how much return you’re getting for each unit of risk.

  • Return/Exposure: How efficient the strategy is at putting capital to work.

The takeaway? Even a basic rule like this can meaningfully protect your capital and smooth your investment journey.

Beyond One Indicator: Tactical Asset Allocation

Moving averages work well on single markets, but they’re just the beginning.
Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA) applies similar principles, momentum, trend following, and diversification, across multiple asset classes.

By rotating into assets with positive momentum and avoiding those in downtrends, TAA portfolios can capture gains while sidestepping the worst declines.

Case Study: TAA Portfolio From My Service

One of the TAA portfolios I share with members combines U.S. stocks, global equities, bonds, and gold.
Over the past decade, it delivered strong returns with far lower drawdowns than buy-and-hold. The Sortino ratio, measuring returns per unit of downside risk, was significantly higher, showing the portfolio rewarded risk-takers more efficiently.


QuadEdge Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio growth versus 60/40 benchmark starting from 1971.

QuadEdge Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio growth versus 60/40 benchmark starting from 1971.

Why Simplicity Wins Over Complexity

You don’t need a room full of analysts or complex software to manage risk effectively.
A few simple, well-tested rules you can follow consistently will often outperform the most sophisticated “black box” systems, especially if they keep you invested in uptrends and out during major downtrends.

Beyond numbers, there’s also peace of mind. Imagine avoiding a decade of waiting just to break even, or sleeping better knowing your portfolio isn’t fully exposed when the next crisis hits. That emotional relief is one of the biggest advantages of TAA.

Video: Why DCA Falls Short

I break this topic down in detail in my recent YouTube video, showing the head-to-head results of DCA, buy-and-hold, and a moving average strategy. You’ll see why rules-based investing can outperform “set and forget” approaches.

Related Read: The Bucket System

If you want to manage risk while keeping your investing simple, check out my article: Investing Doesn’t Have to Be Hard: The Bucket System Simplified.
It explains how to split your money into short-, medium-, and long-term “buckets” so you can invest with more confidence and less stress.

Here are answers to some of the most common questions investors ask about Dollar Cost Averaging and Tactical Asset Allocation.

FAQs

  1. Is Dollar Cost Averaging ever a good strategy?
    Yes, for investors who value simplicity over risk control and don’t mind large drawdowns. It’s a great way to stay disciplined and automate investing, but it doesn’t protect you from major losses.

  2. Doesn’t Tactical Asset Allocation just try to “time the market”?
    Not in the emotional sense. TAA uses objective, rules-based signals like momentum or moving averages. It’s not about guessing tops and bottoms — it’s about systematically reducing exposure when risk is high.

  3. How does TAA perform during long bull markets compared to DCA?
    In strong bull markets, DCA and Buy-and-Hold strategies often appear more attractive because they maintain full investment. TAA may lag slightly, but it makes up for it by avoiding devastating losses during major downturns.

  4. What’s the minimum capital for a TAA portfolio?
    You can start small. Many portfolios can be implemented with just a few thousand dollars using ETFs.

  5. How much time does managing a TAA portfolio take compared to DCA?
    DCA is fully passive, while TAA usually requires monthly or quarterly rebalancing. Most TAA portfolios can be managed in less than 30 minutes per month.

  6. What are the risks of using TAA instead of Buy-and-Hold/DCA?
    No strategy is risk-free. TAA reduces drawdowns and volatility, but the results depend on consistently following the rules. The biggest risk is execution discipline.

  7. Are TAA portfolios tax-efficient?
    Because TAA involves rotation, there may be more taxable events compared to Buy-and-Hold. Using tax-advantaged accounts or ETFs with low turnover helps reduce the impact.

  8. Can I automate a TAA strategy like I can with DCA?
    Yes. While most brokerages automate DCA, TAA can also be automated with portfolio management tools, signals, or even simple spreadsheet reminders.

  9. Why don’t most financial advisors recommend TAA if it’s so effective?
    Traditional advisors prefer Buy-and-Hold because it’s easy to explain, scalable across many clients, and avoids the accountability of market timing. TAA requires more education and monitoring, which many advisors don’t provide.


"You can’t predict, but you can prepare." - Howard Marks

Conclusion

Dollar Cost Averaging is fine if your only goal is to keep investing without thinking. But if you want to grow wealth while controlling downside risk, you need a strategy that adapts to market conditions.

The S&P 500’s history of long drawdowns and the Nikkei’s multi-decade slump prove that “just holding on” isn’t always safe.
Simple moving averages already improve returns and reduce risk. TAA can take those results even further by applying the same principles to a diversified portfolio.

Ready to Improve Your Portfolio?

Don’t spend the next decade waiting to break even after the next crash. With a TAA portfolio, you can participate in growth while sidestepping the worst declines.

If you’re ready to move beyond set-and-forget investing and protect your wealth, explore my TAA service today.

TL;DR

  • Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) helps investors stay disciplined, but it doesn’t protect you from large drawdowns. You’re still exposed to big losses during market downturns.

  • The S&P 500 has had drawdowns lasting over a decade.

  • Some markets, like Japan’s Nikkei 225, have never recovered from past peaks.

  • Simple moving average systems can beat both DCA and buy-and-hold.

  • Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA) applies these same principles across multiple assets for even better results. 

Introduction: The Comfortable Lie About DCA

For decades, investors have been told, “Just keep buying no matter what the market does.”
It’s simple, it’s easy, and it’s emotionally comforting. That’s why Dollar Cost Averaging is so popular, it automates the process and removes the stress of trying to time the market.

But here’s the problem: DCA ignores the one thing that matters most for long-term success: risk management.

The Hidden Cost of “Just Holding On”

Look at a long-term chart of the S&P 500 and it’s easy to believe the market always goes up. But zoom in and the story changes.
The S&P 500 has had multiple deep drawdowns that lasted years, sometimes more than a decade. These aren’t small dips you forget about, they’re gut-wrenching periods where your portfolio stays underwater for years.

Read more: S&P 500 Drawdowns Since 1870

"The essence of investment management is the management of risks, not the management of returns." - Benjamin Graham

When your investment plan requires holding through a 50% decline and waiting 10+ years to get back to even, you’re not really managing risk, you’re just hoping the market eventually bails you out. 

When Markets Never Come Back

Some investors point to the U.S. market’s resilience as proof that you can just wait it out. But not every index bounces back.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 peaked in 1989 and, more than three decades later, still trades below that high. Imagine waiting your entire investing career to break even, that’s the reality for Japanese index investors who relied solely on buy-and-hold or DCA.

This is why it’s dangerous to assume that “markets always recover.” And this isn’t just a Japan problem. Any investor relying solely on buy-and-hold or DCA is exposed to the same danger if markets stall for years.


Nikkei 225 index showing three decades of stagnation, demonstrating why buy-and-hold can fail. 

Nikkei 225 index showing three decades of stagnation, demonstrating why buy-and-hold can fail. 

What Dollar Cost Averaging Actually Does

DCA is simple: you invest the same amount at regular intervals, regardless of market conditions.
It feels safe because you buy more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high. But DCA doesn’t change the fact that you remain fully invested through every downturn.

If the market is in a prolonged bear phase, you’re just buying more into losses without any plan to reduce risk.

Buy-and-Hold vs DCA: Same Risk Profile

Buy-and-hold and DCA may differ in how you enter the market, but once you’re fully invested, the ride is the same.
Both suffer the full impact of market drawdowns, and both require long recoveries after big losses.

If your goal is to grow wealth without devastating setbacks, you need something different, a strategy that adapts to market conditions.

For new investors, this might sound complicated, but it’s not. TAA can be implemented with a handful of ETFs and a few simple rules. You don’t need to be a professional trader to manage risk smarter. 

Introducing the Risk-Managed Alternative: Simple Moving Averages

A moving average is one of the simplest tools in investing. It takes the average price over a set period and plots it as a line on a chart.

When the price is above the moving average, you stay invested. When it drops below, you move to cash or bonds. 


Stock chart with simple moving average overlay highlighting reduced downside exposure. 

Stock chart with simple moving average overlay highlighting reduced downside exposure. 

This simple rule reduces exposure during downtrends, helping you avoid the worst parts of bear markets while still participating in uptrends. 

The Test: Moving Average vs Buy-and-Hold vs TAA vs DCA

We tested buy-and-hold against moving average strategy against Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio with DCA variation on a S&P500 stock index using $10K starting capital:

Key Findings:

  • Moving average rules cut maximum drawdowns dramatically.

  • Returns were equal to or higher than buy-and-hold over the test period.

  • Volatility was significantly reduced.

Real-World Stress Tests
Numbers aren’t just theory, here’s how these strategies performed in two of the toughest markets of our lifetime:

  • 2008 Financial Crisis:

    • Buy & Hold ended the year at –37%

    • SMA strategy ended at +1.63%

    • TAA (QuadEdge Portfolio) ended at +15.8%

  • March 2020 (COVID Crash):

    • Buy & Hold: –12.37%

    • SMA: +0.13%

    • TAA: +3.7%

These aren’t small differences. They show how risk-managed strategies don’t just survive downturns, they often come out ahead.


Drawdown comparison between SMA strategy and Buy-and-Hold showing smoother losses with SMA.

Drawdown comparison between SMA strategy and Buy-and-Hold showing smoother losses with SMA. 


Performance comparison of Buy-and-Hold, SMA, TAA, and DCA strategies showing net profit, CAGR, drawdowns, and risk-adjusted returns.

Performance comparison of Buy-and-Hold, SMA, TAA, and DCA strategies showing net profit, CAGR, drawdowns, and risk-adjusted returns. 

Quick guide to the metrics:

  • CAGR: Annualized return, showing how your money grows over time.

  • Max DD: The largest drop from peak to trough, showing how deep losses can get.

  • StDev: A measure of volatility, or how bumpy the ride feels.

  • Sharpe & Sortino Ratios: Higher is better, they show how much return you’re getting for each unit of risk.

  • Return/Exposure: How efficient the strategy is at putting capital to work.

The takeaway? Even a basic rule like this can meaningfully protect your capital and smooth your investment journey.

Beyond One Indicator: Tactical Asset Allocation

Moving averages work well on single markets, but they’re just the beginning.
Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA) applies similar principles, momentum, trend following, and diversification, across multiple asset classes.

By rotating into assets with positive momentum and avoiding those in downtrends, TAA portfolios can capture gains while sidestepping the worst declines.

Case Study: TAA Portfolio From My Service

One of the TAA portfolios I share with members combines U.S. stocks, global equities, bonds, and gold.
Over the past decade, it delivered strong returns with far lower drawdowns than buy-and-hold. The Sortino ratio, measuring returns per unit of downside risk, was significantly higher, showing the portfolio rewarded risk-takers more efficiently.


QuadEdge Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio growth versus 60/40 benchmark starting from 1971.

QuadEdge Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio growth versus 60/40 benchmark starting from 1971.

Why Simplicity Wins Over Complexity

You don’t need a room full of analysts or complex software to manage risk effectively.
A few simple, well-tested rules you can follow consistently will often outperform the most sophisticated “black box” systems, especially if they keep you invested in uptrends and out during major downtrends.

Beyond numbers, there’s also peace of mind. Imagine avoiding a decade of waiting just to break even, or sleeping better knowing your portfolio isn’t fully exposed when the next crisis hits. That emotional relief is one of the biggest advantages of TAA.

Video: Why DCA Falls Short

I break this topic down in detail in my recent YouTube video, showing the head-to-head results of DCA, buy-and-hold, and a moving average strategy. You’ll see why rules-based investing can outperform “set and forget” approaches.

Related Read: The Bucket System

If you want to manage risk while keeping your investing simple, check out my article: Investing Doesn’t Have to Be Hard: The Bucket System Simplified.
It explains how to split your money into short-, medium-, and long-term “buckets” so you can invest with more confidence and less stress.

Here are answers to some of the most common questions investors ask about Dollar Cost Averaging and Tactical Asset Allocation.

FAQs

  1. Is Dollar Cost Averaging ever a good strategy?
    Yes, for investors who value simplicity over risk control and don’t mind large drawdowns. It’s a great way to stay disciplined and automate investing, but it doesn’t protect you from major losses.

  2. Doesn’t Tactical Asset Allocation just try to “time the market”?
    Not in the emotional sense. TAA uses objective, rules-based signals like momentum or moving averages. It’s not about guessing tops and bottoms — it’s about systematically reducing exposure when risk is high.

  3. How does TAA perform during long bull markets compared to DCA?
    In strong bull markets, DCA and Buy-and-Hold strategies often appear more attractive because they maintain full investment. TAA may lag slightly, but it makes up for it by avoiding devastating losses during major downturns.

  4. What’s the minimum capital for a TAA portfolio?
    You can start small. Many portfolios can be implemented with just a few thousand dollars using ETFs.

  5. How much time does managing a TAA portfolio take compared to DCA?
    DCA is fully passive, while TAA usually requires monthly or quarterly rebalancing. Most TAA portfolios can be managed in less than 30 minutes per month.

  6. What are the risks of using TAA instead of Buy-and-Hold/DCA?
    No strategy is risk-free. TAA reduces drawdowns and volatility, but the results depend on consistently following the rules. The biggest risk is execution discipline.

  7. Are TAA portfolios tax-efficient?
    Because TAA involves rotation, there may be more taxable events compared to Buy-and-Hold. Using tax-advantaged accounts or ETFs with low turnover helps reduce the impact.

  8. Can I automate a TAA strategy like I can with DCA?
    Yes. While most brokerages automate DCA, TAA can also be automated with portfolio management tools, signals, or even simple spreadsheet reminders.

  9. Why don’t most financial advisors recommend TAA if it’s so effective?
    Traditional advisors prefer Buy-and-Hold because it’s easy to explain, scalable across many clients, and avoids the accountability of market timing. TAA requires more education and monitoring, which many advisors don’t provide.


"You can’t predict, but you can prepare." - Howard Marks

Conclusion

Dollar Cost Averaging is fine if your only goal is to keep investing without thinking. But if you want to grow wealth while controlling downside risk, you need a strategy that adapts to market conditions.

The S&P 500’s history of long drawdowns and the Nikkei’s multi-decade slump prove that “just holding on” isn’t always safe.
Simple moving averages already improve returns and reduce risk. TAA can take those results even further by applying the same principles to a diversified portfolio.

Ready to Improve Your Portfolio?

Don’t spend the next decade waiting to break even after the next crash. With a TAA portfolio, you can participate in growth while sidestepping the worst declines.

If you’re ready to move beyond set-and-forget investing and protect your wealth, explore my TAA service today.

TL;DR

  • Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) helps investors stay disciplined, but it doesn’t protect you from large drawdowns. You’re still exposed to big losses during market downturns.

  • The S&P 500 has had drawdowns lasting over a decade.

  • Some markets, like Japan’s Nikkei 225, have never recovered from past peaks.

  • Simple moving average systems can beat both DCA and buy-and-hold.

  • Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA) applies these same principles across multiple assets for even better results. 

Introduction: The Comfortable Lie About DCA

For decades, investors have been told, “Just keep buying no matter what the market does.”
It’s simple, it’s easy, and it’s emotionally comforting. That’s why Dollar Cost Averaging is so popular, it automates the process and removes the stress of trying to time the market.

But here’s the problem: DCA ignores the one thing that matters most for long-term success: risk management.

The Hidden Cost of “Just Holding On”

Look at a long-term chart of the S&P 500 and it’s easy to believe the market always goes up. But zoom in and the story changes.
The S&P 500 has had multiple deep drawdowns that lasted years, sometimes more than a decade. These aren’t small dips you forget about, they’re gut-wrenching periods where your portfolio stays underwater for years.

Read more: S&P 500 Drawdowns Since 1870

"The essence of investment management is the management of risks, not the management of returns." - Benjamin Graham

When your investment plan requires holding through a 50% decline and waiting 10+ years to get back to even, you’re not really managing risk, you’re just hoping the market eventually bails you out. 

When Markets Never Come Back

Some investors point to the U.S. market’s resilience as proof that you can just wait it out. But not every index bounces back.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 peaked in 1989 and, more than three decades later, still trades below that high. Imagine waiting your entire investing career to break even, that’s the reality for Japanese index investors who relied solely on buy-and-hold or DCA.

This is why it’s dangerous to assume that “markets always recover.” And this isn’t just a Japan problem. Any investor relying solely on buy-and-hold or DCA is exposed to the same danger if markets stall for years.


Nikkei 225 index showing three decades of stagnation, demonstrating why buy-and-hold can fail. 

Nikkei 225 index showing three decades of stagnation, demonstrating why buy-and-hold can fail. 

What Dollar Cost Averaging Actually Does

DCA is simple: you invest the same amount at regular intervals, regardless of market conditions.
It feels safe because you buy more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high. But DCA doesn’t change the fact that you remain fully invested through every downturn.

If the market is in a prolonged bear phase, you’re just buying more into losses without any plan to reduce risk.

Buy-and-Hold vs DCA: Same Risk Profile

Buy-and-hold and DCA may differ in how you enter the market, but once you’re fully invested, the ride is the same.
Both suffer the full impact of market drawdowns, and both require long recoveries after big losses.

If your goal is to grow wealth without devastating setbacks, you need something different, a strategy that adapts to market conditions.

For new investors, this might sound complicated, but it’s not. TAA can be implemented with a handful of ETFs and a few simple rules. You don’t need to be a professional trader to manage risk smarter. 

Introducing the Risk-Managed Alternative: Simple Moving Averages

A moving average is one of the simplest tools in investing. It takes the average price over a set period and plots it as a line on a chart.

When the price is above the moving average, you stay invested. When it drops below, you move to cash or bonds. 


Stock chart with simple moving average overlay highlighting reduced downside exposure. 

Stock chart with simple moving average overlay highlighting reduced downside exposure. 

This simple rule reduces exposure during downtrends, helping you avoid the worst parts of bear markets while still participating in uptrends. 

The Test: Moving Average vs Buy-and-Hold vs TAA vs DCA

We tested buy-and-hold against moving average strategy against Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio with DCA variation on a S&P500 stock index using $10K starting capital:

Key Findings:

  • Moving average rules cut maximum drawdowns dramatically.

  • Returns were equal to or higher than buy-and-hold over the test period.

  • Volatility was significantly reduced.

Real-World Stress Tests
Numbers aren’t just theory, here’s how these strategies performed in two of the toughest markets of our lifetime:

  • 2008 Financial Crisis:

    • Buy & Hold ended the year at –37%

    • SMA strategy ended at +1.63%

    • TAA (QuadEdge Portfolio) ended at +15.8%

  • March 2020 (COVID Crash):

    • Buy & Hold: –12.37%

    • SMA: +0.13%

    • TAA: +3.7%

These aren’t small differences. They show how risk-managed strategies don’t just survive downturns, they often come out ahead.


Drawdown comparison between SMA strategy and Buy-and-Hold showing smoother losses with SMA.

Drawdown comparison between SMA strategy and Buy-and-Hold showing smoother losses with SMA. 


Performance comparison of Buy-and-Hold, SMA, TAA, and DCA strategies showing net profit, CAGR, drawdowns, and risk-adjusted returns.

Performance comparison of Buy-and-Hold, SMA, TAA, and DCA strategies showing net profit, CAGR, drawdowns, and risk-adjusted returns. 

Quick guide to the metrics:

  • CAGR: Annualized return, showing how your money grows over time.

  • Max DD: The largest drop from peak to trough, showing how deep losses can get.

  • StDev: A measure of volatility, or how bumpy the ride feels.

  • Sharpe & Sortino Ratios: Higher is better, they show how much return you’re getting for each unit of risk.

  • Return/Exposure: How efficient the strategy is at putting capital to work.

The takeaway? Even a basic rule like this can meaningfully protect your capital and smooth your investment journey.

Beyond One Indicator: Tactical Asset Allocation

Moving averages work well on single markets, but they’re just the beginning.
Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA) applies similar principles, momentum, trend following, and diversification, across multiple asset classes.

By rotating into assets with positive momentum and avoiding those in downtrends, TAA portfolios can capture gains while sidestepping the worst declines.

Case Study: TAA Portfolio From My Service

One of the TAA portfolios I share with members combines U.S. stocks, global equities, bonds, and gold.
Over the past decade, it delivered strong returns with far lower drawdowns than buy-and-hold. The Sortino ratio, measuring returns per unit of downside risk, was significantly higher, showing the portfolio rewarded risk-takers more efficiently.


QuadEdge Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio growth versus 60/40 benchmark starting from 1971.

QuadEdge Tactical Asset Allocation portfolio growth versus 60/40 benchmark starting from 1971.

Why Simplicity Wins Over Complexity

You don’t need a room full of analysts or complex software to manage risk effectively.
A few simple, well-tested rules you can follow consistently will often outperform the most sophisticated “black box” systems, especially if they keep you invested in uptrends and out during major downtrends.

Beyond numbers, there’s also peace of mind. Imagine avoiding a decade of waiting just to break even, or sleeping better knowing your portfolio isn’t fully exposed when the next crisis hits. That emotional relief is one of the biggest advantages of TAA.

Video: Why DCA Falls Short

I break this topic down in detail in my recent YouTube video, showing the head-to-head results of DCA, buy-and-hold, and a moving average strategy. You’ll see why rules-based investing can outperform “set and forget” approaches.

Related Read: The Bucket System

If you want to manage risk while keeping your investing simple, check out my article: Investing Doesn’t Have to Be Hard: The Bucket System Simplified.
It explains how to split your money into short-, medium-, and long-term “buckets” so you can invest with more confidence and less stress.

Here are answers to some of the most common questions investors ask about Dollar Cost Averaging and Tactical Asset Allocation.

FAQs

  1. Is Dollar Cost Averaging ever a good strategy?
    Yes, for investors who value simplicity over risk control and don’t mind large drawdowns. It’s a great way to stay disciplined and automate investing, but it doesn’t protect you from major losses.

  2. Doesn’t Tactical Asset Allocation just try to “time the market”?
    Not in the emotional sense. TAA uses objective, rules-based signals like momentum or moving averages. It’s not about guessing tops and bottoms — it’s about systematically reducing exposure when risk is high.

  3. How does TAA perform during long bull markets compared to DCA?
    In strong bull markets, DCA and Buy-and-Hold strategies often appear more attractive because they maintain full investment. TAA may lag slightly, but it makes up for it by avoiding devastating losses during major downturns.

  4. What’s the minimum capital for a TAA portfolio?
    You can start small. Many portfolios can be implemented with just a few thousand dollars using ETFs.

  5. How much time does managing a TAA portfolio take compared to DCA?
    DCA is fully passive, while TAA usually requires monthly or quarterly rebalancing. Most TAA portfolios can be managed in less than 30 minutes per month.

  6. What are the risks of using TAA instead of Buy-and-Hold/DCA?
    No strategy is risk-free. TAA reduces drawdowns and volatility, but the results depend on consistently following the rules. The biggest risk is execution discipline.

  7. Are TAA portfolios tax-efficient?
    Because TAA involves rotation, there may be more taxable events compared to Buy-and-Hold. Using tax-advantaged accounts or ETFs with low turnover helps reduce the impact.

  8. Can I automate a TAA strategy like I can with DCA?
    Yes. While most brokerages automate DCA, TAA can also be automated with portfolio management tools, signals, or even simple spreadsheet reminders.

  9. Why don’t most financial advisors recommend TAA if it’s so effective?
    Traditional advisors prefer Buy-and-Hold because it’s easy to explain, scalable across many clients, and avoids the accountability of market timing. TAA requires more education and monitoring, which many advisors don’t provide.


"You can’t predict, but you can prepare." - Howard Marks

Conclusion

Dollar Cost Averaging is fine if your only goal is to keep investing without thinking. But if you want to grow wealth while controlling downside risk, you need a strategy that adapts to market conditions.

The S&P 500’s history of long drawdowns and the Nikkei’s multi-decade slump prove that “just holding on” isn’t always safe.
Simple moving averages already improve returns and reduce risk. TAA can take those results even further by applying the same principles to a diversified portfolio.

Ready to Improve Your Portfolio?

Don’t spend the next decade waiting to break even after the next crash. With a TAA portfolio, you can participate in growth while sidestepping the worst declines.

If you’re ready to move beyond set-and-forget investing and protect your wealth, explore my TAA service today.

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I will never spam or sell your info. Ever.

© 2024 StatOasis. All rights reserved.

I will help you make the leap to financial freedom

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live financially free

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drop 9 to 5

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pursue your passion

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Become a part of our growing community of over 4,500 savvy traders and investors. Subscribe to the AlgoTrader newsletter for weekly updates on cutting-edge strategies, expert analysis, tips and the latest tools to help you achieve consistent profitability in the financial markets.

I will never spam or sell your info. Ever.

© 2024 StatOasis. All rights reserved.

I will help you make the leap to financial freedom

Freedom to

live financially free

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drop 9 to 5

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pursue your passion

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live your life

Subscribe to begin.

Become a part of our growing community of over 4,500 savvy traders and investors. Subscribe to the AlgoTrader newsletter for weekly updates on cutting-edge strategies, expert analysis, tips and the latest tools to help you achieve consistent profitability in the financial markets.

I will never spam or sell your info. Ever.

© 2024 StatOasis. All rights reserved.