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I would like to know if certain identities for averages (mean) also hold for the exponential moving average (EMA). I can verify the mean case, but not the exponential case. Can somebody tell me if the same basic identities hold?

$$\begin{align*} \mathrm{mean}(A_i + B_i) &= \mathrm{mean}(A_i ) + \mathrm{mean}(B_i)\\ \mathrm{mean}(R * A_i) &= R* \mathrm{mean}(A_i) \end{align*}$$ Now, for an EMA we have the basic formula: $$\mathrm{EMA} = S_i = S_{i-1} + \alpha * (A_i - S_{i-1})$$ Where $\alpha$ is a weighting factor $(0 < \alpha < 1)$.

So the question is, "are the following also true?": $$\begin{align*} \mathrm{EMA}(A_i + B_i) &= \mathrm{EMA}(A_i) + \mathrm{EMA}(B_i)\\ \mathrm{EMA}(R *A_i) &= R * \mathrm{EMA}(A_i) \end{align*}$$ For the second case it seems to hold based on a quick analysis (as I can completely factor out $R$). But for the first case I'm not so good with factoring the recursive relationship, so I don't know.

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    By the way, the identities you're interested in are called "linearity" (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear).2011-05-26
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    @joriki, Thanks. Is my question then "Is EMA Linear?"2011-05-26
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    @edA-qa mort-ora-y: Yes.2011-05-26
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    Linearity usually includes both adding data sets pointwise and scaling a dataset by multiplying by a constant (which ema satisfies). It seems to me that anything called an average ought to be linear.2011-05-26
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    @Ross how about the geometric mean or harmonic mean? Or, more generally, f-means? Instead of being additive, the geometric mean is multiplicative, making it more appropriate for data that are to be multiplied rather than added, for example financial returns. Most f-means (geometric and power means are the exception) aren't even homogeneous, let alone translation invariant. They are, however, self-distributive, in that if M(x,y) is the mean of x and y, then M(x,M(y,z)) = M(M(x,y),M(x,z)).2011-05-26
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    @Chris: you are right. I was thinking of mean, median, mode, etc.2011-05-26

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Yes, you start with $ema(A_1+B_1)=ema(A_1)+ema(B_1)$. Then consider what happens when you add another term. Nothing disturbs the relation, so it continues. This can be formalized by induction.

Added: to show the induction, assume it is true for $n$ terms. I will use $ema(A_n)$ to mean the exponential moving average of the first $n$ terms of $A$. So $ema((A+B)_n)=ema(A_n)+ema(B_n).$

$ema((A+B)_{n+1})=ema((A+B)_n)+\alpha((A_{n+1}+B_{n+1})-ema((A+B)_n))$

$=ema(A_n)+ema(B_n)+\alpha (A_{n+1}-ema(A_n))+\alpha (B_{n+1}-ema(B_n))=ema(A_{n+1})+ema(B_{n+1})$

where the first equality is the definition of $ema$, the second uses the induction hypothesis and the distributive law, and the third reuses the definition of $ema$.

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    Can you show me how? I get stuck on the recursive aspect to the function -- that is, I can't get both sides into a an equivalent form.2011-05-26
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    I think I've got it now.2011-05-26
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To add to the post answer (nailed by Ross), notice that the exponential moving average (also called recursive average, AR(1) filter, one-pole smoothing, etc) can also be expressed as

$\displaystyle s_i = \beta \; s_{i-1} + \alpha \; a_i \;\;\; $ with $\beta = 1 - \alpha $

which is computationally equivalent (except perhaps for numerical stability), but conceptually more enlightening: it shows that the output is a weighted average of the current input and the previous output.