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Founders' Momentum Baskets: February 2026 Performance

Monthly performance report for the SignalStrike founders' momentum baskets vs. SPY, QQQ, and SPMO.

By SignalStrike Team 2026-06-12 7 min read
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Founders' Momentum Baskets: February 2026 Performance — monthly returns vs. SPY, QQQ, and SPMO

This article reports the actual results of personal brokerage accounts owned and managed by SignalStrike’s founders for the period stated, using the SignalStrike platform with self-selected parameters. These are personal-account results — not the performance of any fund or pooled investment vehicle, not shown net of any fund fees, and not independently verified by a third party. They are not investment advice, not a solicitation, and not representative of any other investor’s outcome; another person’s results will differ, potentially materially, with their own parameters, timing, and market conditions. Past performance is not indicative of future results, and momentum strategies have historically suffered severe drawdowns — see Momentum Crashes. See the full disclosures at the end of this article.

February 2026 was a down month for large-cap and growth benchmarks, yet most of the founders’ baskets advanced — a month where momentum selection diverged sharply from the cap-weighted indices. Not every basket won: one Nasdaq basket slipped slightly with its benchmark.

The short version. In a month when SPY (−0.86%), QQQ (−2.34%), and SPMO (−0.33%) all fell, most of the founders’ baskets still advanced, with monthly returns spanning a modest loss to the high teens. Results reflect the founders’ personal accounts only and will differ from any other user’s outcome.

February 2026 in market context

February saw large-cap and growth indices give back ground: SPY −0.86%, QQQ −2.34%, and SPMO −0.33%. Beneath the index level, leadership narrowed and momentum dispersion widened — the environment where a concentrated momentum selection can separate from the cap-weighted benchmark in either direction.

Founders’ baskets — February 2026 results

Returns below are calendar-month figures for February 2026. Each basket column is the change in the founders’ actual end-of-day brokerage account balance; the SPY, QQQ, and SPMO columns are the same-month total returns (dividend-reinvested) for those ETFs.

Basket February 2026 SPY QQQ SPMO
SP500 Pure 60-Day +6.66% -0.86% -2.34% -0.33%
NASDAQ 100 Composite 60-Day -1.94% -0.86% -2.34% -0.33%
Russell 1000 Composite 60-Day +10.74% -0.86% -2.34% -0.33%
NASDAQ 15 Pure Risk 60-Day +15.60% -0.86% -2.34% -0.33%
S&P 30-Day Pure Risk +3.63% -0.86% -2.34% -0.33%
Russell 2000 Pure 30-Day +17.66% -0.86% -2.34% -0.33%
S&P 15 Pure 30-Day +4.08% -0.86% -2.34% -0.33%

Source: founders’ brokerage balances via signalstrike-portfolio.vercel.app; benchmark closes via Tiingo (dividend-reinvested). All seven baskets are individual brokerage accounts held by the founders.

⚠️ Performance disclosure. Returns shown reflect SignalStrike founders’ personal brokerage accounts for the stated period, achieved using the platform with self-selected parameters. They are personal-account results — not the performance of any fund, not net of any management or performance fees a fund would charge, and not independently verified by a third party. Any other user’s results will differ, potentially materially, based on their own parameters, entry and exit timing, and market conditions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. All investing involves risk, including the loss of principal.

What happened — abstracted commentary

Most baskets ran at scheduled cadence in February.

SP500 Pure 60-Day held a discretionary rebalance late in the month in which one position was omitted from the recommended allocation to avoid a wash-sale event and another position’s weight was reduced manually.

NASDAQ 100 Composite 60-Day rebalanced at normal cadence and was the month’s one decliner, slipping with its large-cap-growth benchmark.

The 30-day baskets (S&P 30-Day Pure Risk, Russell 2000 Pure 30-Day, S&P 15 Pure 30-Day) rebalanced on their faster cadence; the small-cap 30-day basket was the month’s standout as small-cap momentum names led.

Methodology

Frequently Asked Questions

Are these returns from real accounts or backtests?

They are from real brokerage accounts owned by SignalStrike’s founders. Each basket runs in a separate live account at Schwab or E*TRADE, and the figures are end-of-day account balances — not simulated or backtested results.

Are these returns representative of what a SignalStrike user would experience?

No. These are the founders’ personal accounts. A user’s results depend on their own strategy configuration, account size, brokerage, rebalance and execution timing, and tax situation. SignalStrike users build their own strategies with their own parameters; the founders’ baskets are not a model portfolio to replicate.

Why is SPMO included as a benchmark?

SPMO is the Invesco S&P 500 Momentum ETF — the most direct passive momentum comparison available. Beating the broad market (SPY) and beating a passive momentum implementation (SPMO) are different claims, so SPMO is included as the harder, more relevant benchmark for a momentum strategy.

What are the risks of these strategies?

Momentum strategies are vulnerable to severe, rapid drawdowns — especially during sharp reversals after extended trends, a pattern known as a “momentum crash.” Daniel and Moskowitz (2016) documented historical momentum drawdowns exceeding 70%. See Momentum Crashes.

How can the baskets be up when the market was down in February?

A concentrated momentum selection holds a small set of the strongest-trending names, which can diverge sharply from a cap-weighted index in either direction. In February that divergence was favorable for most baskets; in March it was not. Divergence is not a guarantee of outperformance.

Further Reading

Related Research


Disclosures

SignalStrike is a software platform providing research, screening, and backtesting tools focused on U.S. equity momentum. It is not a registered investment advisor (RIA), does not provide personalized investment advice, and is not a broker-dealer.

The performance shown in this article reflects the actual end-of-day brokerage account balances of SignalStrike’s founders for the specific period stated, achieved using the SignalStrike platform with self-selected parameters. These are personal-account results. They are not the performance of any fund or pooled investment vehicle, are not presented net of any fund management or performance fees, and have not been independently verified or audited by a third party. They are not a model portfolio, are not representative of any other investor’s experience, and are not a projection or guarantee of future returns. Any other user’s results — whether using SignalStrike’s platform or otherwise — will differ, potentially materially, based on the parameters they select, account size, brokerage, fee and tax considerations, rebalance and execution timing, and discretionary decisions.

The founders applied discretionary overrides during the periods reported (for example, defensive rotations to cash, selection-mode changes, and manual position adjustments). These strategies are therefore rules-based with discretion, not fully mechanical.

Past performance is not indicative of future results. All investing involves risk, including the loss of principal. Momentum-based strategies have historically suffered severe and rapid drawdowns during specific market regimes; some reported months were favorable for the strategy and are not representative of all market conditions.

Benchmark performance for SPY (SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust), QQQ (Invesco QQQ Trust), and SPMO (Invesco S&P 500 Momentum ETF) is calculated from Tiingo adjusted-close prices, which incorporate dividend reinvestment. Direct investment in an index is not possible; ETF returns may differ from the underlying index due to expenses and tracking error.

This article does not constitute an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, any security or investment product. SignalStrike does not custody funds or execute trades on behalf of users; users execute through their own brokerage accounts at their sole discretion.

Securities products and services referenced are offered through users’ own brokerage accounts under existing custodial relationships. Advisory firms evaluating any tool for use with client portfolios remain solely responsible for fiduciary, suitability, and disclosure obligations under applicable law.


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