| Article ID: | iaor20114064 |
| Volume: | 62 |
| Issue: | 6 |
| Start Page Number: | 1177 |
| End Page Number: | 1180 |
| Publication Date: | Jun 2011 |
| Journal: | Journal of the Operational Research Society |
| Authors: | Gardner E S, McKenzie E |
| Keywords: | exponential smoothing |
The damped trend method of exponential smoothing is a benchmark that has been difficult to beat in empirical studies of forecast accuracy. One explanation for this success is the flexibility of the method, which contains a variety of special cases that are automatically selected during the fitting process. That is, when the method is fitted, the optimal parameters usually define a special case rather than the method itself. For example, in the M3‐competition time series, the parameters defined the damped trend method only about 43% of the time using local initial values for the method components. In the remaining series, a special case was selected, ranging from a random walk to a deterministic trend. The most common special case was a new method, simple exponential smoothing with a damped drift term.