Category Archives: stocks
Are Alternative Mutual Funds Eating From The CTA Pie?
It seems like everywhere you look, you see a chart showing the upward AUM growth of liquid mutual funds, as well as the number of new funds. These charts left us with one main lingering question that we think is on the mind of many in the Managed Futures space. How big is the Liquid Mutual fund compared to the rest of the industry? And is that growth in addition to, or at the expense of, the rest of the industry? We explored this question in the latest article featured in CTA Intelligence , seen below. Are alt mutuals eating from the CTA pie? There’s no doubt that the packaging of managed futures into liquid mutual funds (’40 Acts’ as they’re called in the biz) has changed the managed futures space forever. It just depends which side of this particular aisle you’re on whether you view that as a good or bad change. On one hand, you can argue the $11bn AQR which has been brought into the space is good for the industry (in a sort of rising tide lifts all boats argument). On the other hand, there were the snickers and jeers in the audience at last year’s managed futures Pinnacle Awards when Cliff Asness won a lifetime achievement award. Many said he should have won the lifetime damage award for undercutting everyone on fees and essentially switching $11bn in money from 2/20 to 125bps). So which is it? Are managed futures mutual funds good for the industry as a whole? This may all seem like semantics, but it is surely important for those playing their particular brand of managed futures to investors. If mutuals are grabbing assets at the expense of others, then that’s surely not helpful to the grand majority of fund managers out there, not to mention the exchanges, brokerage firms, and the rest of the industry which need new money brought into the space to grow, not just the same money switching to mutual funds. Which brings us to the numbers. We gathered the data on the assets in managed futures mutual funds to trace the growth of the category since 2013. Then, we looked to compare that growth to the growth of managed futures as a whole from the BarclayHedge database. Now, a few details to consider: One, we made one big assumption, that all of the managed futures mutual fund AuM is included in the BarclayHedge CTA database, to make the math as simple as subtracting the ‘liquid AuM’ from the BarclayHedge AuM to arrive at the ‘non-liquid AuM’. Second, we subtracted Bridgewater’s AuM from the BarclayHedge numbers ( we don’t consider them to be managed futures ). And finally, we’re talking growth of assets here and sort of commingling that with inflows and outflows, as that term is known in the mutual fund world. Our methodology is considering the change in assets, so the growth or decline is both inflows/outflows and performance. As for what we would anticipate to see if there’s a rising tide effect, we would expect both curves to be up varying amounts. If there is ‘liquid’ growth at the expense of private funds, we would expect sort of mirror image curves, with private on the bottom and liquid on top. So what did we find – more of the mirrored look, albeit with private funds more mirrored than just mutual funds would explain – meaning they didn’t lose a dollar in assets for every one mutual funds brought in – they appear to have lost more. Going with BarclayHedge numbers, private funds lost around $40bn in assets through the middle of 2014 before pulling in around $20bn to end the period down roughly $19bn. Meanwhile, their liquid alt counterparts showed a slow but consistent growth of around $13bn over two years (amazingly, AQR was about $7.5bn of that amount according to Brightscope ). All in all, the managed futures mutual funds in the Morningstar managed futures mutual fund category outgrew private funds by $33bn. Click to enlarge This is interesting but it doesn’t completely answer the question we are after. Growth in assets are a good indicator of which vehicle investors are adding or subtracting from, but it doesn’t quite tell us how much of the industry is controlled by each type. Here’s a look at the percentage of managed futures assets controlled by mutual funds compared to the amount that is not. In 2013, our estimation of the total assets in managed futures through both private and liquid funds was about $206bn. The Morningstar category had around $9.6bn of that number, meaning 4.7% of the managed futures pie was controlled by mutual funds (cue pie chart): Click to enlarge Click to enlarge Fast forward to 2015, and we estimate managed futures overall actually went down in AuM by about $8.1bn to $198bn, while mutual funds grew by $13.9bn over the same time to a new high of $23.7bn, meaning managed futures mutual funds now represent 12% of the industry. The last two years have seen mutual funds share of the managed futures pie jump from 4.6% to 12%. That’s sort of impressive, but not as big of a jump as we might have thought before crunching the numbers. Perhaps, it’s important to apply context to what was going on during this growth. Managed futures was experiencing its worst drawdown in a generation throughout 2013 and the first half of 2014, then following it up by posting its best performance since 2008 in the second half of 2014.Grabbing a bigger slice of the pie with what’s generally considered ‘hotter’ money investing in mutual funds is certainly a feat. There’s no denying mutual funds are making up more of the managed futures space, but private funds still control There’s no denying mutual funds are making up more of the managed futures space, but private funds still control nine tenths of AuM – that’s a big number. The question is, what does the future trajectory look like? You would think mutual funds would continue making hay and taking a bigger and bigger slice of the pie, and indeed more and more managers we talk to are asking when, not if, they should consider switching to a mutual fund format. But then there are reports that institutional investors are looking to increase their exposure to private funds in 2016. And last but not least, it’s not a wide open road ahead for liquid alts products with new SEC derivatives rules on the horizon , potentially meaning you would need millions of dollars to trade a single Euro Dollar future, effectively putting the managed futures mutual fund complex out of business. Stay tuned…this is one battle definitely worth watching
Four Notable Tech Stocks With Earnings After Close Worth Watching
Earnings reports are on tap for Paycom Software ( PAYC ), Rubicon Project ( RUBI ), Zendesk ( ZEN ) and Zillow Group ( ZG ) after the market close Tuesday, and all sport long streaks of double-digit, or higher, sales growth. Earnings reports can often create big stock moves, up or down, depending on whether the company misses or beats Wall Street’s expectations, and whether its outlook for the upcoming quarter and year beat or miss expectations. Paycom is expected to report revenue of $83.4 million, up 51% year over year and maintaining a string of double-digit gains going back more than four years. The consensus on earnings per share minus items is 20 cents, up 67%. Paycom provides a cloud-based employment management platform with a software-as-a-service business model, with customers buying the software as needed. The company came public in April 2014. Paycom has a strong IBD Composite Rating (CR) of 96 and the highest-possible EPS Rating of 99. Credit Suisse analyst Michael Nemeroff has an outperform rating on Paycom stock, and price target of 43. “We believe that Paycom is well positioned to deliver strong revenue growth over the next two years,” Nemeroff wrote in an earnings preview report. Paycom stock was near 38, down 2.5%, in morning trading in the stock market today . Rubicon Revenue Could Cross At 60% Gain Rubicon Project is expected to report revenue of $59.4 million, up 60% and maintaining double- or triple-digit revenue growth going back more than four years. The EPS consensus minus items is 3 cents, vs. 2 cents last year. Rubicon made its IPO in April 2014. It provides an online platform that helps optimize digital ad buying, selling and placement. The stock has a strong 98 CR and an EPS Rating of 80. RBC Capital Markets analyst Andrew Bruckner rates Rubicon stock outperform, with a price target of 22. Rubicon stock was near 19.70, flat, Tuesday morning. Zendesk Also Growing By Double-Digit Percentages Zendesk is expected to report revenue of $63.9 million, up 51% and maintaining a string of double- and triple-digit revenue growth going back more than four years. The consensus on EPS minus earnings is a 10-cent loss. The company, which came public in May 2014, has yet to show a profit. On Monday, Zendesk announced it hired a new chief financial officer, Elena Gomez, who previously was senior vice president of finance and strategy for Salesforce.com ( CRM ). Zendesk is a cloud-based provider of customer service software. The stock has a CR of 64 and EPS Rating of 46. Rosenblatt Securities analyst Kirk Adams rates Zendesk stock a buy, with a price target of 25. “We anticipate a solid report and positive commentary on the recently completed quarter and their future prospects,” Adams wrote in an earnings preview. Zendesk stock was near 23, down 2%, Tuesday morning. Zillow Seen Swinging To A Loss Zillow Group is expected to report earnings of 176.6 million, up 39% and maintaining double or triple digit growth going back more than four years. The EPS consensus is a 9-cent loss, swinging from a 5-cent profit in the year-earlier quarter. Zillow, the leading real estate website, came public in July 2011. The stock has a CR of 54 and EPS Rating of 50. Cowen analyst Thomas Champion has an underperform rating on Zillow and a price target of 12. Zillow stock was near 25.50, down 2%, Tuesday morning.