Tag Archives: government

The Dead Model

Click to enlarge How Lucky Do You Feel? Nine years ago, I wrote about the so-called “Fed Model.” The insights there are still true, though the model has yielded no useful signals over that time. It would have told you to remain in stocks, which given the way many panic, would not have been a bad decision. I’m here to write about a related issue this evening. To a first approximation, most investment judgments are a comparison between two figures, whether most people want to admit it or not. Take the “Fed Model” as an example . You decide to invest in stocks or not based on the difference between Treasury yields and the earnings yield of stocks as a whole. Now with interest rates so low, belief in the Fed Model is tantamount to saying “there is no alternative to stocks.” [TINA] That should make everyone take a step back and say, “Wait. You mean that stocks can’t do badly when Treasury yields are low, even if it is due to deflationary conditions?” Well, if there were only two assets to choose from, a S&P 500 index fund and 10-year Treasuries, and that might be the case, especially if the government were borrowing on behalf of the corporations. Here’s why: in my prior piece on the Fed Model, I showed how the Fed Model was basically an implication of the Dividend Discount Model. With a few simplifying assumptions, the model collapses to the differences between the earnings yield of the corporation/index and its cost of capital. Now that’s a basic idea that makes sense, particularly when consider how corporations work. If a corporation can issue cheap debt capital to retire stock with a higher yield on earnings, in the short-run it is a plus for the stock. After all, if the markets have priced the debt so richly, the trade of expensive debt for cheap equity makes sense in foresight, even if a bad scenario comes along afterwards. If true for corporations, it should be true for the market as a whole. The means the “Fed Model” is a good concept, but not as commonly practiced, using Treasuries – rather, the firm’s cost of capital is the tradeoff. My proxy for the cost of capital for the market as a whole is the long-term Moody’s Baa bond index, for which we have about 100 years of yield data. It’s not perfect, but here are some reasons why it is a reasonable proxy: Like equity, which is a long duration asset, these bonds in the index are noncallable with 25-30 years of maturity. The Baa bonds are on the cusp of investment grade. The equity of the S&P 500 is not investment grade in the same sense as a bond, but its cash flows are very reliable on average. You could tranche off a pseudo-debt interest in a way akin to the old Americus Trusts , and the cash flows would price out much like corporate debt or a preferred stock interest. The debt ratings of most of the S&P 500 would be strong investment grade. Mixing in equity and extending to a bond of 25-30 years throws on enough yield that it is going to be comparable to the cost of capital, with perhaps a spread to compensate for the difference. As such, I think a better comparison is the earnings yield on the S&P 500 vs the yield on the Moody’s BAA index if you’re going to do something like the Fed Model. That’s a better pair to compare against one another. Click to enlarge A new take on the Equity Premium! That brings up another bad binary comparison that is common – the equity premium. What do stock returns have to with the returns on T-bills? Directly, they have nothing to do with one another. Indirectly, as in the above slide from a recent presentation that I gave, the spread between the two of them can be broken into the sum of three spreads that are more commonly analyzed – those of maturity risk, credit risk and business risk. (And the last of those should be split into an economic earnings factor and a valuation change factor.) This is why I’m not a fan of the concept of the equity premium . The concept relies on the idea that equities and T-bills are a binary choice within the beta calculation, as if only the risky returns trade against one another. The returns of equities can be explained in a simpler non-binary way, one that a businessman or bond manager could appreciate. At certain points lending long is attractive, or taking credit risk, or raising capital to start a business. Together these form an explanation for equity returns more robust than the non-informative academic view of the equity premium, which mysteriously appears out of nowhere. Summary When looking at investment analyses, ask “What’s the comparison here?” By doing that, you will make more intelligent investment decisions. Even a simple purchase or sale of stock makes a statement about the relative desirability of cash versus the stock. ( That’s why I prefer swap transactions .) People aren’t always good at knowing what they are comparing, so pay attention, and you may find that the comparison doesn’t make much sense, leading you to ask different questions as a result. Disclosure: None

Catch These Poland ETFs On The Upswing

Poland’s currency zloty, bonds and stocks gained on Monday (May 16, 2016) as Moody’s reaffirmed its long-term credit rating for the country at A2. And unsurprisingly two ETFs tracking the country – the iShares MSCI Poland Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: EPOL ) and the VanEck Vectors Poland ETF (NYSEARCA: PLND ) – jumped 3.4% and 3%, respectively. Poland, one of the outperformers in the EU, has been lagging in recent months thanks to growth slowdown in the emerging markets. Eurozone troubles also continue to weigh on the country. Still, as per IMF forecasts, the country’s GDP growth rate is expected to touch 4% in 2016 as compared to 3.6% in 2015 building investors’ confidence in the country. Headwinds Remain Although Poland did not get a downgrade from Moody’s, the rating agency revised its outlook for the country to negative from stable. The agency cited several reasons for the change in outlook including fiscal risks arising from a substantial increase in current expenditures, uncertainty as to offsetting revenue measures and the government’s intention to lower the retirement age. Another factor affecting the outlook was the risk of deterioration in the investment climate thanks to unpredictable policies and legislations. The President’s office has recently presented a proposal to implement a law converting Swiss franc mortgages into zlotys. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has criticized this proposal and stated that the country’s financial system along with credit and economic growth will stand to suffer if the country goes ahead with its plan to convert foreign-currency denominated mortgages. The IMF has also warned that the increase in government expenditure would lead to a rise in budget deficit to 2.8% in 2016. The rising budget deficit could even cross 3% in 2017, breaching the European Union’s budgetary rules. Instead, the IMF has encouraged the Polish government to follow policies that are market friendly. Despite these concerns, investors who believe that Poland is poised for a turnaround could catch the Poland-focused ETFs. Both the ETFs carry a favorable Zacks ETF Rank of 3 or ‘Hold’ rating, suggesting room for upside. EPOL in Focus EPOL has about $173.4 million in AUM and an average daily volume of 274,000 shares. The product tracks the MSCI Poland IMI 25/50, charging 63 basis points a year from investors. With 40 stocks in its basket, this fund puts as much as 46.1% of its total assets in the top five holdings, suggesting high concentration risk. Financials actually makes up roughly half of the portfolio with 44.7% exposure. Energy and materials round off the top three sectors with exposure of 17.3% and 9.6% respectively. Shares of EPOL fell roughly 5.4% in the last one-month period ended May 16, 2016. PLND in Focus The fund looks to track the VanEck Vectors Poland Index and has 26 securities in its basket, charging investors 60 basis points a year in fees. The fund has 36.4% of its total assets in the top five holdings. PLND also puts heavy focus on financials, with as much as 37.1% exposure, followed by a 14.1% allocation to energy, 12.7% coverage in utilities and 11.4% in consumer discretionary. PLND sees a paltry volume of around 13,000 daily, while the ETF lost more than 5.8% in the last 30 days. Original Post