Value-Momentum on Canadian Stocks: 9.17% CAGR, +4.51% Alpha vs TSX Composite

Value-momentum composite on Toronto Stock Exchange from 2000 to 2025. 9.17% CAGR with zero cash periods, 40% down capture vs TSX Composite, and a 64.71% win rate.

Growth of $10,000 invested in Value-Momentum on TSX vs TSX Composite.

Canada produced the cleanest result of any non-US exchange we tested. Zero cash periods across the entire 25-year backtest. The screen always found enough qualifying stocks. No data gaps, no sparse-universe problems, no years sitting in cash while other exchanges built returns.

Contents

  1. Method
  2. The Screen
  3. What We Found
  4. Key Observations
  5. Limitations
  6. Takeaway
  7. Part of a Series

9.17% CAGR from 2000 to 2025, 4.80% alpha above the TSX Composite. Low volatility (16.35%), down capture of just 40.17% against the local index, and a 64.71% win rate. Measured against the Canadian market rather than the S&P 500, the alpha is meaningfully larger than it appeared.

Data: FMP financial data warehouse, 2000–2025. Updated March 2026.


Method

Parameter Value
Universe TSX (Toronto Stock Exchange)
Filters P/E 0-20, ROE > 10%, D/E < 1.0
Ranking 12-month momentum, composite percentile
Rebalancing Semi-annual (January, July)
Holding period 6 months
Max positions 30 stocks, equal weight
Cash rule Fewer than 10 qualifying stocks
Market cap > C$500M (~$362M USD)
Data source FMP via Ceta Research warehouse
Execution Next-day close (MOC execution model)
Transaction costs Size-tiered (0.1-0.5% one-way)
Benchmark TSX Composite (^GSPTSE)
Period 2000-2025

Based on Asness, Moskowitz, and Pedersen (2013). For the full methodology, see our US flagship post.

The Screen

-- Value-Momentum Canada (TSX) Screen
-- Run at: cetaresearch.com/data-explorer?q=Gls0Qvmdll

SELECT
    k.symbol,
    p.companyName,
    f.priceToEarningsRatioTTM as pe_ratio,
    k.returnOnEquityTTM * 100 as roe_pct,
    f.debtToEquityRatioTTM as debt_to_equity,
    k.marketCap / 1e9 as market_cap_billions
FROM key_metrics_ttm k
JOIN financial_ratios_ttm f ON k.symbol = f.symbol
JOIN profile p ON k.symbol = p.symbol
WHERE f.priceToEarningsRatioTTM > 0
    AND f.priceToEarningsRatioTTM < 20
    AND k.returnOnEquityTTM > 0.10
    AND f.debtToEquityRatioTTM >= 0
    AND f.debtToEquityRatioTTM < 1.0
    AND k.marketCap > 500e6
    AND p.exchange IN ('TSX')
ORDER BY f.priceToEarningsRatioTTM ASC
LIMIT 100

What We Found

Growth of $10,000 invested in Value-Momentum on TSX vs TSX Composite from 2000 to 2025.
Growth of $10,000 invested in Value-Momentum on TSX vs TSX Composite from 2000 to 2025.

Full period summary (2000-2025):

Metric Value-Momentum TSX Composite (^GSPTSE)
CAGR 9.17% 4.66%
Total Return 837.51%
Max Drawdown -47.73%
Volatility 16.35%
Sharpe Ratio 0.408
Sortino Ratio 0.626
Up Capture 111.37% 100%
Down Capture 40.17% 100%
Beta 0.868 1.0
Alpha 4.80%
Win Rate 64.71%
Cash Periods 0 of 51
Avg Stocks 28.6

Zero cash periods is unique in this study. Every other exchange had at least 2. Canada's exchange is deep enough in value names, across financials, energy, industrials, and consumer sectors, that the screen never ran out of qualifying stocks.

Down capture of 40.17% is the standout metric. When the TSX Composite fell, this portfolio absorbed less than half the decline. Combined with 111.37% up capture, the asymmetry is strong: full participation in rallies, less than half the pain in sell-offs.

Value-Momentum Canada vs TSX Composite annual returns from 2000 to 2025.
Value-Momentum Canada vs TSX Composite annual returns from 2000 to 2025.

Year-by-year results:

Year Value-Momentum TSX Composite Notes
2000 +31.69% +2.35% Gained while TSX was flat
2001 +14.32% -11.20% TSX fell, portfolio up
2002 +2.55% -11.86% Third positive year during bear market
2003 +24.72% +23.05%
2004 +28.60% +10.24%
2005 +37.57% +25.14% Commodity supercycle
2006 +9.78% +12.95%
2007 +2.72% +7.76%
2008 -40.16% -33.70% Max drawdown year
2009 +20.60% +28.51%
2010 +27.12% +12.94%
2011 -5.82% -8.91% Beat TSX in downturn
2012 +18.00% +2.72%
2013 +24.50% +8.40%
2014 +8.86% +8.53%
2015 -4.49% -12.38% Oil crash: beat TSX by 8pp
2016 +22.91% +19.15%
2017 +12.69% +5.89%
2018 -15.07% -12.03%
2019 +17.90% +19.19%
2020 -3.34% +2.50%
2021 +17.81% +21.16%
2022 -17.50% -8.44% Deeper than TSX this year
2023 +3.68% +7.35%
2024 +27.36% +19.29%
2025 +7.47% +7.92% YTD

Key Observations

2000-2002: the dot-com divergence. While the TSX Composite lost ground in 2001-2002, the value-momentum portfolio gained +31.69%, +14.32%, and +2.55%. Canada's value universe in that era was heavy in banks, pipelines, and resource companies. These sectors were cheap, profitable, and had nothing to do with the tech bubble. The strategy's value filter naturally avoided overpriced growth stocks.

40% down capture is exceptional. When the TSX Composite fell, this portfolio absorbed less than half the loss. That asymmetry, paired with 111% up capture, is why the strategy compounds at nearly double the index's rate. Canada's economy is diversified enough that the value universe doesn't concentrate in a single volatile sector. Banks, energy, industrials, consumer companies, and real estate all contribute qualifying stocks.

The 2008 drawdown was the worst year. -40.16%, worse than the TSX Composite's -33.7% that year. Canada's resource exposure cut both ways: energy and mining stocks that passed value screens in 2007 crashed hard in 2008 as commodity prices collapsed. The 40% down capture overall shows this was the exception, not the pattern. In most downturns, the portfolio fell less than the index.

Limitations

Returns are in CAD. The Canadian dollar has been roughly flat against the USD over the full 25-year period, moving between parity and C$1.45 per USD. Currency impact is lower than for emerging markets but still present.

Energy and commodity exposure. Canada's value universe includes energy companies (pipelines, oil sands producers) that pass value screens. When oil prices crash, these names drag the portfolio. 2008 and 2015 are examples.

-47.73% max drawdown is significant. Even with 40% down capture overall, the 2008 crash hit hard. The drawdown measures peak-to-trough, not a single year.

Takeaway

Value-momentum on TSX produced 9.17% CAGR with 4.80% alpha vs the TSX Composite over 25 years. Zero cash periods, 40% down capture, and a 64.71% win rate make this the most consistent non-US result in the study. The reliability is the point: not the highest CAGR, but a dependable contributor with strong downside protection against the local market.

The 2000-2002 divergence is the strongest argument for including Canadian value stocks. When the broader market sold off, the value-momentum portfolio held up.

Part of a Series


Data: Ceta Research. FMP financial data warehouse, 2000-2025.