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Revisiting GoPro

Summary Shares of GoPro, a top stock pick of a social data startup in late September, tumbled to a 52-week low on Friday after an analyst downgrade. According to the social data startup’s co-founder, more recent social data on GoPro has been “concerning”. We look at the status of an October hedge on GoPro and discuss possible courses of action for hedged GoPro shareholders. Sourcing Securities For Hedged Portfolios In a series of articles earlier this fall, we wrote about constructing hedged, or “bulletproof” portfolios. The general idea of hedged portfolios is to buy and hedge a handful of securities that have high potential returns net of their hedging costs: if the securities do well, you’ll do well, and if they don’t, your downside will be strictly limited. Broadly speaking, there are two methods of finding securities to include in a hedged portfolio: Start from scratch, rank every hedgeable security by potential return net of hedging cost, and select the highest-ranked names with share prices suitable for the size of your portfolio (to facilitate purchasing round lots, which lowers hedging costs). This is the method Portfolio Armor’s automated hedged portfolio construction tool uses if you don’t provide security symbols of your own when using it. Start from a smaller list of securities, such as a list of recent purchases by top investors, the top holdings in a leading fund, or the top names surfaced by a firm with a quantitative ranking system. This a more feasible approach if you aren’t using an automated tool, since you will have fewer names to calculate potential returns and hedging costs for. In an October article (“Building A Bulletproof Portfolio Of Top LikeFolio Picks”), we built a hedged portfolio using the top picks of a startup called Likefolio. As we mentioned in that article, Likefolio aggregates social media mentions of brands, and ties them to the publicly traded stocks those bands roll up to. In late September, Likefolio highlighted five stocks as have having promising social data metrics: GoPro (NASDAQ: GPRO ), Michael Kors (NYSE: KORS ), Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ), Crocs (NASDAQ: CROX ), and Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT ). One of those stocks, GoPro, has dropped precipitously since our article was published. In this post, we’ll revisit GoPro and discuss courses of action for hedged GoPro shareholders. GoPro Hits 52-Week Low Shares of GoPro, maker of wearable cameras such as the ones pictured above (image from the company’s website ) hit a 52-week low intraday Friday, after downgrade by Baird, as Mamta Badkar reported in the Financial Times over the weekend (“GoPro slopes back to the bush league after broker downgrade”). Badkar noted Baird had cut its price target on the stock from $36 to $18, and quoted Baird analyst William Power on his firm’s view of GoPro’s sales trend: “Our checks have not suggested a meaningful pick-up in GoPro camera sales.” A Former LikeFolio Top Pick As of Friday, December 4th’s close, GPRO is down 38% from when we wrote our LikeFolio article. Given the drop and the recent downgrade, I reached out to LikeFolio co-founder Andy Swan via Twitter over the weekend to see what his company’s current social data metrics were saying about GoPro. His response, as you can see in the image below, indicated the recent data wasn’t positive. Considerations For Hedged GoPro Shareholders Given the stock’s precipitous drop, the Baird downgrade, and the inauspicious updated data from LikeFolio, hedged GoPro shareholders may be considering their next moves now. We’ll look at the status of the October 9th GPRO hedge we included in our previous article below and discuss possible courses of action for GPRO investors. A Closer Look At The October 9th GPRO Hedge: The optimal collar below was designed to limit an investor’s downside to a drawdown of no more than 20% by mid-April, 2016, while capping his potential upside at 71.2%. The reason the cap was set as 71.2% was because 71.2% was the potential return calculated for GPRO at the time using the consensus price target of sell-side Wall Street analysts (since Portfolio Armor only calculated positive potential returns for two of the Likefolio picks included in our October article, AMZN and CROX, we used analysts’ consensus price targets to calculate potential returns for all of them). How That October 9th Hedge Responded To GoPro’s Drop Here is an updated quote on the put leg of the collar as of Friday. And here is an updated quote on the call leg: How That Hedge Protected Against GPRO’s Drop GPRO closed at $29.08 on Friday, October 9th. A shareholder who owned 1800 shares of it and opened the collar above then had $52,344 in GPRO stock plus $9,990 in puts, and if he wanted to buy-to-close his short call position, he would have needed to pay $1,548 to do that. So, his net position value for GPRO on October 9th was ($52,344+ $9,990) – $1,548 = $60,786 GPRO closed at $18 on Friday, December 4th, down 38% from its closing price on October 9th. The investor’s shares were worth $32,400 as of 12/4, his put options were worth $18,450 (using the bid price of $10.25, to be conservative, as that particular put option didn’t trade on Friday) and if he wanted to close out the short call leg of his collar, it would have cost him $198. So: ($32,400 + $18,450) – $198 = $50,652. $50,652 represents a 16.7% drop from $60,786. Slightly More Protection Than Promised So, although GPRO had dropped by 38% at the time of the calculations above, and the investor’s hedge was designed to limit him to a loss of no more than 20%, he was actually down only 16.7% on his combined hedge + underlying stock position by this point. Courses Of Action For Hedged Sketchers Shareholders Being hedged gives an investor breathing room to decide what his best course of action is. A GPRO investor hedged with this collar could exit his position with a 16.7% loss now (instead of a 38% loss), he could wait to see what happens, or if he remains a long term bull, he could buy-to-close the call leg of this collar, to eliminate his upside cap. If he’s even more bullish, he could sell his appreciated puts, and use those proceeds to buy more GPRO. When backtesting the hedged portfolio method , we tested variations of the first two of those four scenarios. Specifically, we looked at securities that fell below the decline threshold we hedged them against (which was 20% in the case of GPRO), and whether, on average, hedged portfolio performance was better if those losing positions were exited 3 months into the duration of the portfolio, or held for 6 months, or until just before their hedges expired, whichever came first. We found that, on average, investors were better off holding their losing positions for six months or until just before their hedges expired, whichever came first. Tradeoff: Time Value Versus Time for Recovery The tradeoff involved there is this: the longer you hold the position, the more time the price of the underlying security has to recover; on the other hand, the sooner you exit the position, the more time value your in-the-money put options have (time value is why the GPRO hedge offered slightly more protection than promised in the calculations above). In this case, given that there’s not a lot of difference between the current drawdown (16.7%) and the maximum drawdown for this hedge (20%), GPRO shareholders hedged in this way may want to consider holding a bit longer. A positive surprise in holiday sales might boost the stock, while, in the worst case scenario, shareholders hedged with the collar above will be down another 3.3%.

Building A Bulletproof Portfolio Of Top Likefolio Stocks

Summary An investor can “bullet-proof” his portfolio while maximizing his expected return using the hedged portfolio method. When creating a hedged portfolio, you can start from scratch or start with a list of stock picks. We explore the second method here. The stock picks we start with are ones with promising social data metrics, as determined by Likefolio, a startup that uses social media to measure sentiment about brands. We provide a sample hedged portfolio of top Likefolio stocks designed for an investor unwilling to risk a drawdown of more than 20%. Using Social Data To Gauge Market Sentiment Several years ago, one of the early pioneers in using social media data for investment purposes was London-based Derwent Capital Markets, which launched a hedge fund in 2011 using Twitter (NYSE: TWTR ) data to gauge market sentiment. The idea for the fund came from a research paper by Johan Bollen, Huina Mao, and Xiao-Jun Zeng that claimed to have found a method of using Twitter data to determine the daily direction of Dow Jones Industrial Average with 87.6% accuracy. Derwent’s Twitter hedge fund was shut down, shortly after opening, prompting Martin Bryant of The Next Web to comment : it appears that there simply isn’t much market appetite for investments powered by social media sentiment. It seems that the market simply isn’t ready to put its faith in the wisdom of digital crowds just yet. Bryant may have spoken too soon. Today, both institutional investors as well as retail investors are using social data aggregated by Likefolio (for example, TD Ameritrade (NYSE: AMTD ) now offers its retail customers social data provided by Likefolio, as AMTD managing director Nicole Sherrod explains in this Fox Business interview). Unlike earlier approaches such as Derwent Capital’s short-lived fund, Likefolio’s approach isn’t to gauge market sentiment directly, but to gauge sentiment about brands that roll up to publicly traded stocks. Using Social Data To Source Stock Ideas There’s a lot of chatter on social media about individual stocks, but a challenge with generating any useful data from it is the tendency of an investor to ” talk his book “: anyone who is long a particular stock is likely to make bullish comments about it, and vice-versa. Likefolio avoids this challenge by mining comments about brands owned by publicly traded companies, rather than the stocks themselves, as the image above from its website illustrates. Someone who comments about Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM ) on Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ), Twitter, or other social media platforms, may be talking his book, but, for every YUM investor there are many more Taco Bell, KFC, and Pizza Hut customers, and they are sharing their thoughts about those brands on social media constantly (to see an example for yourself, enter “Taco Bell” in the search field on Twitter now, and click the “Live” tab). According to Likefolio, a drop in social data sentiment and volume on Yum Brands offered a warning in late June that was confirmed by the company’s dissappointing earnings release in October. The Risks of Investing in Social Data-Sourced Stocks As with any style of stock investing, when using social data to source stock picks, you face two kinds of risks: idiosyncratic risk , the risk of something bad happening to one of the companies you own, and market risk , the risk of your investments suffering due to a decline of the market as a whole. Two Ways of Limiting Stock-Specific Risk One way to limit stock-specific risk is via hedging; another way is via diversification. In a previous article (“How to Limit Your Market Risk”), we discussed ways to limit market risk for a diversified portfolio. In this post, we’ll look at how to “bulletproof” a concentrated portfolio of top Likefolio stocks using the hedged portfolio method . In that method, you limit both stock-specific and market risk via hedging. Top Likefolio Stocks In a recent post (“5 Stocks with Sizzling Social Data Metrics”), Likefolio co-founder Andy Swan highlighted five stocks for which social data trends were strongly bullish: Michael Kors Holdings (NYSE: KORS ) Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ) Crocs (NASDAQ: CROX ) Walmart (NYSE: WMT ) GoPro (NASDAQ: GPRO ) We’ll use those stocks as a starting point to construct a “bulletproof”, or hedged portfolio for an investor who is unwilling to risk a drawdown of more than 20%, and has $400,000 that he wants to invest. First, though, let’s address the issue of risk tolerance, and how it affects potential return. Risk Tolerance and Potential Return All else equal, with a hedged portfolio, the greater an investor’s risk tolerance — the greater the maximum drawdown he is willing to risk (his “threshold”, in our terminology) – the higher his potential return will be. So, we should expect that an investor who is willing to risk a 25% decline will have a chance at higher potential returns than one who is only willing to risk a 15% drawdown. In our example, we’ll be splitting the difference and using a 20% threshold. Constructing A Hedged Portfolio We’ll outline the process here briefly, and then explain how you can implement it yourself. Finally, we’ll present an example of a hedged portfolio that was constructed this way with an automated tool. The process, in broad strokes, is this: Find securities with promising potential returns (we define potential return as a high-end, bullish estimate of how the security will perform). Find securities that are relatively inexpensive to hedge. Buy a handful of securities that score well on the first two criteria; in other words, buy a handful of securities with high potential returns net of their hedging costs (or, ones with high net potential returns). Hedge them. The potential benefits of this approach are twofold: If you are successful at the first step (finding securities with high potential returns), and you hold a concentrated portfolio of them, your portfolios should generate decent returns over time. If you are hedged, and your return estimates are completely wrong, on occasion — or the market moves against you — your downside will be strictly limited. How to Implement This Approach Finding promising stocks In this case, we’re going to start with the five stocks mentioned in the Likefolio blog post we linked to above. To quantify potential returns for these stocks, you can, for example, use analysts’ consensus price targets for them, to calculate potential returns in percentage terms. For example, via Nasdaq’s website , the image below shows the sell-side analysts’ consensus 12 month price target for AMZN as of October 9th, 2015: Since AMZN closed at $539.80 on October 9th, the consensus price target suggests a 20% potential return over 12 months. In general, though, you’ll need to use the same time frame for each of your potential return calculations to facilitate comparisons of potential returns, hedging costs, and net potential returns. Our method starts with calculations of six-month potential returns. Finding inexpensive ways to hedge these securities Whatever hedging method you use, for this example, you’d want to make sure that each security is hedged against a greater-than-20% decline over the time frame covered by your potential return calculations (our method attempts to find optimal static hedges using collars as well as protective puts going out approximately six months). And you’ll need to calculate your cost of hedging as a percentage of position value. Select the securities with highest, or at least positive net potential returns When starting from a large universe of securities, you’d want to select the ones with the highest potential returns, net of hedging costs. In this case, we’re starting with just a handful of securities, but we’ll at least want to exclude any of them that has a negative potential return net of hedging costs. It doesn’t make sense to pay X to hedge a stock if you estimate the stock will return 70% over 6 months, maybe it’s worth it to you to pay up to hedge your downside risk. Despite the high cost of the GPRO hedge, the overall hedging cost of the portfolio is negative. Possibly More Protection Than Promised In some cases, hedges such as the GPRO one, or the other ones in the portfolio above can provide more protection than promised. For an example of that, see this instablog post on hedging the iPath S&P 500 VIX ST Futures ETN (NYSEARCA: VXX ). [i] To be conservative, this optimal collar shows the puts being purchased at their ask price, and the calls being sold at their bid price. In practice, an investor can often buy the puts for less (i.e., at some point between the bid and ask prices) and sell the calls for more (again, at some point between the bid and ask). So the actual cost of opening this collar would have likely been less.

Building A Bulletproof Portfolio Of A+ Growth Stocks

Summary An investor can “bullet-proof” his portfolio while maximizing his expected return using the hedged portfolio method. When creating a hedged portfolio, you can start from scratch or start with a list of stock picks. We explore the second method here. The stock picks we start with are ones rated “A+” by S&P Capital IQ for growth and stability of earnings and dividends. We provide a sample hedged portfolio of “A+” stocks designed for an investor unwilling to risk a drawdown of more than 14%. Growth Investing versus Value Investing The idea of buying a stock for less than its ” intrinsic value ” has an innate appeal to value investors, but, as leading buy-and-hold investing blogger Eddy Efenbein suggested in a recent quip, not everyone is cut out for it: Give a man a value stock and he’s invested for a day, but teach a man value investing and he’ll be in anxiety-ridden mess for life. – Eddy Elfenbein (@EddyElfenbein) September 24, 2015 Unlike bargain-shopping value investors, growth investors are willing to pay more for a stock, in return for the prospect of higher future earnings growth. But that doesn’t necessarily eliminate anxiety. As with any style of stock investing, with growth investing, you face two kinds of risks: idiosyncratic risk , the risk of something bad happening to one of the companies you own, and market risk , the risk of your investments suffering due to a decline of the market as a whole. Two Ways of Limiting Stock-Specific Risk One way to limit stock-specific risk is via hedging; another way is via diversification. In a previous article (“How to Limit Your Market Risk”), we discussed ways to limit market risk for a diversified portfolio. In this post, we’ll look at how to “bulletproof” a concentrated portfolio of growth stocks using the hedged portfolio method . In that method, you limit both stock-specific and market risk via hedging. First, we’ll need a list of growth stocks to start with. For that, we’ll use a screen devised by the research firm S&P Capital IQ . A+ Stocks with High Projected Growth The goal of this screen is to find stocks likely to extend their superior historical earnings and dividend growth records. It uses two criteria: Forward annual earnings growth estimates of 12% or better over the next 3-5 years. An S&P Capital IQ Earnings and Dividend Rank of A+, which means a 10-year history of high growth and stability of earnings and dividends. On Wednesday, Fidelity’s screener identified seven stocks meeting those S&P Capital IQ criteria: Advance Auto Parts (NYSE: AAP ) CVS Health (NYSE: CVS ) Echolab (NYSE: ECL ) Ross Stores (NASDAQ: ROST ) Tupperware Brands (NYSE: TUP ) UnitedHealth Group (NYSE: UNH ) Walt Disney Co. (NYSE: DIS ) We’ll use those stocks as a starting point to construct a “bulletproof”, or hedged portfolio for an investor who is unwilling to risk a drawdown of more than 14%, and has $500,000 that he wants to invest. First, though, let’s address the issue of risk tolerance, and how it affects potential return. Risk Tolerance and Potential Return All else equal, with a hedged portfolio, the greater an investor’s risk tolerance — the greater the maximum drawdown he is willing to risk (his “threshold”, in our terminology) – the higher his potential return will be. So, we should expect that an investor who is willing to risk a 24% decline will have a chance at higher potential returns than one who is only willing to risk a 14% drawdown. Constructing A Hedged Portfolio We’ll outline the process here briefly, and then explain how you can implement it yourself. Finally, we’ll present an example of a hedged portfolio that was constructed this way with an automated tool. The process, in broad strokes, is this: Find securities with high potential returns (we define potential return as a high-end, bullish estimate of how the security will perform). Find securities that are relatively inexpensive to hedge. Buy a handful of securities that score well on the first two criteria; in other words, buy a handful of securities with high potential returns net of their hedging costs (or, ones with high net potential returns). Hedge them. The potential benefits of this approach are twofold: If you are successful at the first step (finding securities with high potential returns), and you hold a concentrated portfolio of them, your portfolios should generate decent returns over time. If you are hedged, and your return estimates are completely wrong, on occasion — or the market moves against you — your downside will be strictly limited. How to Implement This Approach Finding promising stocks In this case, we’re going to start with the stocks generated by the A+ high growth screen. To quantify potential returns for these stocks, you can, for example, use analysts’ price targets for them and then convert these to percentage returns from current prices. In general, though, you’ll need to use the same time frame for each of your potential return calculations to facilitate comparisons of potential returns, hedging costs, and net potential returns. Our method starts with calculations of six-month potential returns. Finding inexpensive ways to hedge these securities Whatever hedging method you use, for this example, you’d want to make sure that each security is hedged against a greater-than-14% decline over the time frame covered by your potential return calculations (our method attempts to find optimal static hedges using collars as well as protective puts going out approximately six months). And you’ll need to calculate your cost of hedging as a percentage of position value. Selecting the securities with highest net potential returns In order to determine which securities these are, out of the list above, you may need to first adjust your potential return calculations by the time frame of your hedges. For example, although our method initially calculates six-month potential returns and aims to find hedges with six months to expiration, in some cases the closest hedge expiration may be five months out. In those cases, we will adjust our potential return calculation down accordingly, because we expect an investor will exit the position shortly before the hedge expires (in general, our method and calculations are based on the assumption that an investor will hold his shares for six months, until shortly before their hedges expire or until they are called away, whichever comes first). Next, you’ll need to subtract the hedging costs you calculated in the previous step from the potential returns you calculated for each position, and exclude any security that has a negative potential return net of hedging costs. Fine-tuning portfolio construction You’ll want to stick with round lots (numbers of shares divisible by 100) to minimize hedging costs, so if you’re going to include a handful of securities from the sort in the previous step and you have a relatively small portfolio, you’ll need to take into account the share prices of the securities. Another fine-tuning step is to minimize cash that’s left over after you make your initial allocation to round lots of securities and their respective hedges. Because each security is hedged, you won’t need a large cash position to reduce risk. And since returns on cash are so low now, by minimizing cash you can potentially boost returns. In this step, our method searches for what we call a “cash substitute”: that’s a security collared with a tight cap (1% or the current yield on a leading money market fund, whichever is higher) in an attempt to capture a better-than-cash return while keeping the investor’s downside limited according to his specifications. You could use a similar approach, or you could simply allocate left over cash to one of the securities you selected in the previous step. Calculating Expected Returns While net potential returns are bullish estimates of how well securities will perform, net of their hedging costs, expected returns, in our terminology, are the more likely returns net of hedging costs. In a series of 25,412 backtests over an 11-year time period, we determined two things about our method of calculating potential returns: it generates alpha, and it overstates actual returns. The average actual return over the next six months in those 25,412 tests was 0.3x the average potential return calculated ahead of time. So, we use that empirically derived relationship to calculate our expected returns. An Automated Approach Here we’ll show an example of creating a hedged portfolio starting with S&P Capital IQ’s A+ growth stocks using the general process described above, facilitated by the automated hedged portfolio construction tool at Portfolio Armor . In the first step, we enter the ticker symbols in the “Tickers” field, the dollar amount of our investor’s portfolio (500000), and in the third field, the maximum decline he’s willing to risk in percentage terms (14). In the second step, we are given the option of entering our own return estimates for each of these securities. Instead, in this case, we’ll let the site supply its own potential returns. A couple minutes after clicking the “Create” button, we were presented with the hedged portfolio below. The data here is as of Wednesday’s close. Why These Particular Securities? The site included all of the entered securities for which it calculated a positive potential return, net of hedging costs. In this case, that turned out to be all of them except TUP. In its fine-tuning step, Portfolio Armor added Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ) as a cash substitute. Let’s turn our attention now to the portfolio level summary. Worst-Case Scenario The “Max Drawdown” column in the portfolio level summary shows the worst-case scenario for this hedged portfolio. If every underlying security in it went to zero before their hedges expired, the portfolio would decline 13.8%. Negative Hedging Cost Note that, in this case, the total hedging cost for the portfolio was negative, -1.98%, meaning the investor would receive more income in total from selling the call legs of the collars on his positions than he spent buying the puts. Best-Case Scenario At the portfolio level, the net potential return is 5.76% over the next six months. This represents the best-case scenario, if each underlying security in the portfolio meets or exceeds its potential return. A More Likely Scenario The portfolio level expected return of 2.02% represents a conservative estimate, based on the historical relationship between our calculated potential returns and backtested actual returns. How to Get a Higher Expected Return The site calculates potential returns using an analysis of price history and options sentiment, and, according to those metrics, didn’t consider the stocks we entered “A+”. If you disagree with the site’s potential returns for these stocks, you can enter your own estimates for them. Alternatively, you could decide not to enter any ticker symbols, and let the site pick its own securities. If you had done that on Wednesday using the same dollar amount ($500,000) and decline threshold (14%), the hedged portfolio generated would have had a net potential return (best case scenario) of 16%, and an expected return (more likely scenario) of 4.8%. Each Security Is Hedged Note that each of the above securities is hedged. Facebook, the cash substitute, is hedged with an optimal collar with its cap set at 1%, and the remaining securities are hedged with optimal collars with their caps set at each underlying security’s potential return. Here is a closer look at the hedge for UnitedHealth: UnitedHealth is capped here at 4.62%, because that’s the potential return Portfolio Armor calculated for it over the next several months. As you can at the bottom of the image above, the cost of the put protection in this collar is $1,600, or 2.6% of position value. But if you look at the image below, you’ll see the income generated from selling the calls is $2,700, or 4.38% of position value. So, the net cost of this optimal collar is negative.[i] Possibly More Protection Than Promised In some cases, hedges such as the ones in the portfolio above can provide more protection than promised. For an example of that, see this instablog post on hedging the iPath S&P 500 VIX ST Futures ETN (NYSEARCA: VXX ). [i]To be conservative, this optimal collar shows the puts being purchased at their ask price, and the calls being sold at their bid price. In practice, an investor can often buy the puts for less (i.e., at some point between the bid and ask prices) and sell the calls for more (again, at some point between the bid and ask). So the actual cost of opening this collar would have likely been less (i.e., an investor would have likely collected more than $1,100 when opening this hedge).