In other words, you're giving us these momentum rankings for short-term and long-term with no explicit meaningfulness.
Perhaps you might consider thinking about what momentum is, what it means, and ways it can be utilized. What is freely shared here is just the tip of the iceberg...
S&P 500 Sector ETF Short-Term Momentum Rankings: $XLV $XLI $XLY $XLK $XLF $XLRE $XLU $XLB $XLP $XLE Long-Term Momentum Rankings: $XLV $XLY $XLK $XLU $XLRE $XLI $XLP $XLF $XLE $XLB
S&P 500 Sector ETF Short-Term Momentum Rankings: $XLV $XLI $XLY $XLF $XLK $XLB $XLU $XLP $XLRE $XLE Long-Term Momentum Rankings: $XLV $XLY $XLK $XLU $XLRE $XLI $XLF $XLP $XLB $XLE
S&P 500 Sector ETF Short-Term Momentum Rankings: $XLV $XLK $XLY $XLI $XLF $XLRE $XLB $XLU $XLE $XLP Long-Term Momentum Rankings: $XLV $XLY $XLK $XRE $XLI $XLU $XLF $XLP $XLB $XLE
You're supposed to buy the green funds and sell the red funds because the green funds are doing better? Or should you buy the red funds and sell the green funds because the green funds are about played out and the red ones are due to start doing better?
Good questions. Please refer to the forex majors thread here for my response on how to use momentum and what the lists are for. Best, Jon