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The Importance Of Multi-Asset Investing

Originally published on March 28, 2016 By Nathan Jaye, CFA Everyone knows that multi-asset investing is on the upswing. “Assets managed in such strategies are growing at one of the fastest paces in the industry worldwide,” says Pranay Gupta, CFA, formerly chief investment officer for Asia at ING Investment Management and manager of a global multi-strategy fund for Dutch pension plan APG. In their new book Multi-Asset Investing: A Practitioner’s Framework , Gupta and co-authors Sven Skallsjö and Bing Li, CFA, set out to answer questions about which practices and ideas actually work. In this interview, Gupta explains how the relentless quest for alpha has made allocation an under-appreciated and “under-innovated” skill, shares insights into replacing asset allocation with what he calls “exposure allocation,” and discusses why the standard model for making investment decisions has “exactly the wrong emphasis from a portfolio risk and return standpoint.” Nathan Jaye, CFA: Why is multi-asset investing so popular now? Pranay Gupta, CFA: If you look at investment management today, all plan sponsors, consultants, and asset managers – and even individual portfolio managers and analysts – are all structured with an asset class demarcation of equities or fixed income. We have equity portfolio managers and fixed-income portfolio managers. We have equity analysts and credit analysts, and we have equity products and fixed-income products. This industry structure worked well historically, as equity and fixed income were not highly correlated and allocation to these two asset classes could result in a diversified portfolio and you could earn risk premiums. It made sense. But over the past 10 years, the correlation between asset classes has increased. Financial engineering has created products which are in the middle of the traditional asset classes – hybrid products across equity, fixed income, and alternatives. So a clear distinction doesn’t hold true anymore. The rising thesis is that we should be looking at our portfolios as multi-asset-class portfolios. That’s caught on over the past few years. Assets managed in such strategies are growing at one of the fastest paces in the industry worldwide. What’s covered in your book? The field of multi-asset investing is just beginning its journey of innovation. This book is meant for the professional investor, and every chapter in the book has a number of ideas which are different from what I’ve seen across the industry. In the first chapter, we cover the traditional model – the way the world has performed with traditional asset allocation in the past five or six decades. In the remainder of the book, we examine individual components of the traditional allocation process and show how each facet of the allocation structure can be improved. These techniques are applicable at multiple levels – from a plan sponsor portfolio, sovereign fund, or pension plan making a strategic asset allocation decision to a hedge fund managing a macro strategy. They are all multi-asset investment decisions. Even individual retirement accounts are multi-asset portfolios, where allocation is done across asset classes. There are two types of innovations in this book. One is at the conceptual level, where we discuss the broad concepts of how we should structure multi-asset portfolios. The second is at the implementation level, where we detail innovative techniques, such as allocation forecasting processes and managing tail risk and designing stop losses. Some of the chapters are intensely quantitative and others are conceptual and qualitative. Does asset allocation get enough respect? We’ve all known for a long time that asset allocation is responsible for the majority of portfolio return and risk. It’s well accepted that, say, 80% of the risk and return of the portfolio comes from allocation and only 20% comes from security selection. But when you look at the structure of the industry, the resource deployment is exactly the reverse – that is, 80% of industry professionals are stock selectors and bond selectors. Less than 20% are involved in allocation. The whole of the industry’s focus has been the search for alpha. It seems quite odd, given that alpha only drives 10% to 20% of the return and risk of an asset owner’s portfolio. As I started managing various kinds of multi-asset portfolios, it led me to question the traditional process of asset allocation, and I began exploring methods to try and improve what is conventionally done in a 60/40 balanced portfolio or a strategic or tactical allocation decision. The importance of allocation has been grossly underestimated, and allocation is an under-innovated skill. In our book, we detail a number of innovations we have created and tried, but there are probably a lot more that can be made. Unlike security selection, where there’s been a lot of innovation and progress made as a result of the number of people focusing on the skill. But not many people are focusing on allocation skill. Are organizations misdirecting their resources? If you look at any plan sponsor, you normally have a very small team which does the asset allocation and puts it into asset classes. Then you have an army of people who go and hire and fire dozens of managers and perform due diligence on them. This is exactly the wrong emphasis from a portfolio risk and return standpoint. We take great pains in selecting multiple managers for diversifying alpha, but the asset allocation in the plan sponsor is done by a single group (i.e., a single strategy done at a single time horizon). We don’t diversify our allocation methodology. We don’t harness time diversification. What if we did exactly the opposite? Suppose we took 80% of the resources in the plan sponsor and dedicated them to multiple ways of doing allocation and manager selection was just effectively a side effect? In the book, we demonstrate how creating a multi-strategy structure for the allocation process and not focusing on the implementation as much can lead to a better portfolio. Discussions such as active versus passive strategies or the usefulness of fundamental indexation and smart beta then become somewhat obsolete. What’s your experience in managing multi-asset funds? I managed a global multi-strategy fund for APG, the Dutch pension plan, from 2002 to 2006. We grew the fund from a very small base to a multi-billion-dollar fund. Over this period, we experimented with many different techniques of how to manage large, multi-strategy, multi-asset funds. Subsequently, when I was chief investment officer for Asia at ING Investment Management and Lombard Odier, we implemented a lot of these techniques in managing an asset base of about US$85 billion across all asset classes. The traditional way one arrives into an allocation function is as a macroeconomist or strategist. But I happened to stumble into allocation after managing each asset class separately from a bottom-up perspective. Having gathered the real ground experience in managing every single liquid asset class, as the team size and asset size became larger, I got thrust into managing the allocation, risk, and portfolio construction of these multiple strategies in a combination. This was the perfect breeding ground for innovation. What’s your definition of commoditized beta and non-commoditized beta? We have been guided repeatedly to separate alpha and beta in our strategies, and told that we should strive for alpha. Actually, alpha and beta are very alike; they are both return distribution of assets. The only difference is that beta can be gathered by inexpensive derivatives which provide exposure to specified factors (such as market cap, value, etc.), while alpha as a collection of exposures is not available with such instruments. This distinction keeps evolving as more and more alpha exposures today become available as beta exposures in a liquid, inexpensive form. I call what is hedgeable “commoditized beta.” Equity market risk is completely commoditized by an equity future. As more and more betas are available in a cheap, liquid, derivative form, they become commoditized. The remainder are non-commoditized and are classified as alpha. So in managing portfolios, we propose that, instead of doing asset allocation, what if we do exposure allocation, where exposures are in multiple dimensions, not just equity beta and credit beta? If you allocate to this richer set of exposures to construct a portfolio, you enhance diversification where it is required most. You argue that the definition of equity risk premium should be adjusted for allocation purposes. Why? The academic way of justifying investing in equities is by the concept of the equity risk premium, which is the long return on equities above a risk-free rate. But if you have a portfolio which includes both equities and fixed income, the actual reason you would invest in equities is not the return on equities above cash but the return on equities above bonds. Look at this from a company’s perspective. A company has the option of raising capital through debt or equity. When a corporate treasurer looks at how he should raise capital, he evaluates whether it is cheaper for them to take on debt or to raise more equity. Our proposal for portfolio management is exactly within the same context, except that we are maximizing return, not minimizing cost. How do you apply this in practice? From an allocation standpoint, we want to have mutually exclusive and ideally uncorrelated buckets. So we separated equity risk premium from credit risk premium and from country risk premium and cash. It is a laddered structure for defining what risk premium is – in order to build better silos for allocation. Then we innovated the allocation process itself. There’s lots of debate about whether risk parity is better or fundamental allocation is better. People have these philosophical debates because they have only one allocation process. In the structure we’re proposing, this question is obsolete because all of these allocation methods will have value at certain points in time. Because they would be uncorrelated with each other, a framework where we use all of them – in a multi-strategy allocation structure – will give the benefit of strategy diversification and time diversification. Risk parity will work at some point in time, and so will fundamental allocation and long-term risk-premium allocation. Let’s use all of them as different buckets, because you can do allocation in many different ways. Debating which allocation strategy is better is a misplaced discussion. What is your idea for composing consensus estimates for allocation recommendations? If you want to know the consensus expectations or rating for any stock in the world, there are plenty of databases out there which will give you that information. Similarly, for economic numbers, there are databases which collate all the forecasts from economists on, say, the US Federal Reserve’s rate hike and how many people are saying the Fed will hike and how many are saying it won’t. You have a range of views, but you also know the consensus. But there is no database available today which collates the views of different sell-side strategists on recommended allocation stances. Every sell-side house has a strategy team which allocates across countries and sectors and currencies, just like they have corporate research analysts for earnings, but no one collects their views and puts them in an organized manner. If allocation is important, then why don’t we do that? These strategists are putting out reports, but there’s no database which collects all this information and uses it to say, “Here’s what the consensus allocation to this kind of sector or country is.” Surely that would have value, just like company earnings estimates have value. How should firms structure a multi-asset approach? As multi-asset investing is becoming more important, every asset management firm has gone on a rapid increase to bolster its capabilities in this area. But everyone has done it very differently. Everyone has a different take on what multi-asset means. In the book, we highlight the different approaches that “multi-asset” can mean. Firms should be clear about how they are positioning their multi-asset business. What are the capabilities that you need to have? And what is beyond your capability? You can’t be all things to all people. Why do active managers investing in Asian equities underperform relative to active managers investing in US equities? We compared active managers in Asia against active managers in the US. The data suggest that in the US, roughly half the managers underperform and half the managers outperform their benchmark. In Asia, more than three-quarters of active managers underperform and only about a quarter outperform. And of that quarter, less than 10% outperform on a three-year basis. So the quality of active management in Asia is very poor compared with the US. To understand why, we analyzed possible sources of returns for active management to exploit in both markets, and we found that approximately 82% of returns in US equities come from security selection – only 18% of returns can come from allocation decisions. In Asia, 66% of returns can be attributed to the allocation decision, not from stock selection. Yet if you talk to most active managers in Asia, most of them will tell you, “I’m a stock selector. I go and pound the pavement and pick stocks in each of these different countries.” Our hypothesis is that active managers in Asia are focusing on the security-selection decision, which is a smaller source of returns in Asia, and ignoring allocation decisions, which is the bigger source. If two-thirds of the returns in Asian equity markets are coming from allocation and active managers there are largely ignoring this decision, then maybe that’s the reason why the majority of active managers in Asia underperform. When you analyzed manager skill versus luck, what did you find? In 2007, when the quant crisis happened, there were managers who were on the ball and decreased risk on the day when the meltdown happened in August. But because they decreased risk (which was the right decision), they didn’t participate in the rebound the next day and ended up with a negative August 2007 performance number. Managers who were on the beach and didn’t know what was happening – and didn’t actually do anything to their portfolios – rode through the week and had a positive return. But that was return purely by luck. Differentiating skill from luck is the most important part of judging the value added by an active manager. In the book, we propose a framework for how active managers can analyze their own portfolio decisions and examine which of their decisions are skilled and which ones [are the result of] luck (which may not repeat itself). How important is the management of tail risk in multi-asset investing? If you look at most of the risk parameters we use in modern portfolio theory, they are based on the concept of end-of-horizon risk – that is, if you hold an asset for x months or x years. When we calculate the volatility of that asset, it’s based not on what that risk would be across the period but on what it would be at the end of the period. The practical reality – for both individuals and institutions – is that the intra-horizon risk is a much greater determinant of investment decisions while you are invested in any asset. The current portfolio management framework largely ignores that. Suppose you buy something and it goes down 50%. There is a real impact on how you will behave towards that investment, and that impact is a real risk which needs to be accounted for. In fact, in many countries, the regulator will come and tell you to de-risk the portfolio and sell that asset if you go beyond a specified asset liability gap at any point in time. But none of our risk parameters actually capture (or account for) intra-horizon risk. So we went about creating a new risk measure, which is a composite of intra-horizon and end-of-horizon risk. We did this for each asset in our portfolio. That changes the way one looks at the risk of any asset, or the risk of the overall portfolio. Then we applied it to defining custom stop-loss levels for decisions at every level – at the asset level, sector level, and asset class level. We found we were able to manage portfolio drawdown much more effectively, and it helped us a great deal practically in managing with real intra-horizon risk. You’ve found that manager compensation can incentivize portfolio blow-ups. How? The conventional wisdom is that a hedge fund compensation structure (where the asset management company gets 20% of the upside) aligns the interests of the asset manager and the asset owner. It seems logical that they say, “I don’t make money unless you make money.” That’s how it’s sold – the performance fee creates the alignment. But when we looked at how performance-fee incentive structures change the behavior of portfolio managers, we were surprised. We found that there is a greater propensity for the manager to take excessive risk when the portfolio starts to underperform. When we played this behavior out over time and examined what happens to the portfolio return distribution, we found a scenario with outperforming funds at one end and funds which blow up at the other end of the spectrum. The performance fee incentivizes these blow-ups. Our hypothesis is that while performance fees can incentivize alignment of the upside, they’re also a significant determinant of why hedge funds blow up. How has your approach to multi-asset investing evolved? I didn’t set out to write a book. All of these chapters have been written over the past 10-12 years. As I managed portfolios, I started coming across problems where the traditional solution seemed inadequate, and I thought there was room for innovation. My co-authors and I started experimenting and tried to find novel solutions. The book came about over the past six to nine months as we finally set about collating everything we have done over the past decade and making a cohesive argument. Everything in the book is actual solutions we implemented to practical issues we faced in managing portfolios. Disclaimer: Please note that the content of this site should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute.

The One Way To Stay ‘Long’ In A Down Market – Un-Beta Part III

No one knows if this market will continue to move ahead or stall out. But I think it bears considering a bit of perspective on what we mean when we discuss “this market.” With a capitalization-weighted index like the S&P 500, the market can consist of deceptively few issues and provide a poor benchmark against which to measure your own results. In 2015, for instance, four S&P tech stocks – Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ), Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ), Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX ), and Google (NASDAQ: GOOG ) (NASDAQ: GOOGL ) (the “FANGs”) were responsible for $450 billion of growth in market cap. Pretty wonderful! You don’t remember that? You thought 2015 was a wasted year in terms of gains, with the S&P 500 finishing almost flat? You’re correct. But the four stocks above did contribute $450 billion in market cap growth. That’s because, as a group, the other 496 stocks in the S&P collectively lost even more in capitalization. If you owned just the four FANGs, you had a mighty fine year. If you owned none of them, but all the others – not so much. Let’s use AMZN as an example. Amazon’s market capitalization today is over $325 billion, larger than the combined market values of Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT ), Target (NYSE: TGT ), and Costco (NASDAQ: COST ). These three “old economy” firms reported trailing twelve-month GAAP net income of just under $17 billion, while Amazon’s net income was… an underwhelming $328 million. Of course, I think we can all agree that we buy stocks for what we believe they will be worth in the future, and I imagine Amazon the company will show increasing revenue in the future! However… As of today, Amazon trades at 501 times earnings per share. While I believe AMZN will continue to earn more revenue every year and may translate that into earnings, if the P/E it is rewarded with for that future growth slips to only, say, 400 times earnings per share without any increase or decrease in actual earnings, that would mean a 20% drop in stock price from 626 to 501. Heaven forbid if, in a down market, it would slip to only 300 times earnings; that would take the share price in this example to 375. It gets worse. As of April 1, 2016, the aggregate price/earnings ratio for stocks in the small cap Russell 2000 index is zero; those 2000 stocks (taken as a group) effectively had no earnings over the past 12 months. On the off chance that current valuations, combined with current revenues and real earnings, might not end well, we placed roughly half our assets into the above-mentioned yield and fixed income alternatives. But of course, there is a sucker born every minute and we’ve seen greater fool markets before that lasted beyond any reasonable connection to reality. (It seems the supply of Greater Fools is bigger than anyone imagined back in, say, 1998.) So in the event this one does continue, roughly half our asset base is still long – sort of. Just as for Mr. Clinton, for whom it depended on what your definition of “is” is, our portfolio is long, depending on what your definition of “long” is. My definition consists of the following: “Flexible funds:” These are long-only funds with excellent flexibility to go to cash, select different sectors or asset classes, or choose different capitalization sizes, world markets, or cash while awaiting reasonable entry points. “Long / short funds:” These are funds whose charter allows them to go long the issues they believe offer the greatest return or defensive characteristics and simultaneously short those they believe are most vulnerable to a decline. “Liquid Alternative funds:” Liquid alternative funds come in all sizes and flavors but their basic premise and promise is that they don’t limit themselves to buying common stocks, so they are an “alternative” to the benchmark investing so in vogue these days (as it always has been after a few years of good general market appreciation.) They might invest in or short currencies, commodities, bonds, stocks, options, futures or any of a half dozen other offerings. Our favorite flexible funds are those offered by Leuthold Weeden Capital Management. These are all no-load funds, have good track records, and are helmed by managers that are both transparent and humble. By “humble” I mean lacking in hubris and quite candid about their mistakes as well as their successes. Fortunately for us, the latter have outnumbered the former. The two we have in our portfolios are Leuthold Core Investment (MUTF: LCORX ) and Leuthold Global (MUTF: GLBLX ). Here’s LCORX, in their own words, from the Leuthold Funds website: The Leuthold Core Investment Fund differs from most other mutual funds by investing in stocks, bonds, money market instruments and certain foreign securities. When appropriate, as disciplines dictate, the Core Fund may also hedge its market exposure. We adjust the proportion of each asset class to reflect our view of the potential opportunity and value offered within that sector, as well as the potential risk. Although there are no guarantees, it is our belief that successful investing demands skill both in making money and attempting to preserve any gains. Flexibility is central to the creation of a core portfolio that you can depend on in a variety of market conditions. We possess the flexibility and discipline to invest where we see value and to sell when we believe there is undue risk.” Most recently, LCORX has been 18% in various bonds, 52% in select sectors, and 17% hedged, with the rest in cash and smaller positions. In a rip-snorting bull market, I’d go more for aggressive funds like former holding Akre Fund (MUTF: AKREX ). For this market, nothing beats LCORX. Leuthold’s sister fund for global investing, GLBLX, is invested in a similar ratio, but with a global bent, holding a little less cash and a few more longs. I consider these two funds as fine bookends for a conservative defensive portfolio. Then there are funds that are long-only and equities pretty-much-only that simply refuse to buy anything unless they have great faith in the future of a particular company and can buy it at a reasonable valuation. If they can’t, they stick to cash and cash equivalents. The best example of such a fund today is the Intrepid Endurance Fund (MUTF: ICMAX ) which is currently holding a whopping 67% in cash. They’ve experienced significant outflows, of course, because too many investors who claim they are in it for the long haul really aren’t. Indeed, today’s typical investor, institutional and individual alike, just want to beat the S&P – basically every month and certainly every quarter. The best way to do that is to not beat the S&P at all, but to at least equal it. That’s why so many gurus advise that you just buy an index fund and never sell it until you retire, at which time you can sell part of it to buy bonds. I say phooey to that hooey. Cap-weighted index funds like the S&P 500 are, by their very nature and composition, avenues to buy a chunk of whatever’s been working most recently, regardless of valuation or quality. The highest-capitalization stocks get the most money newly devoted to purchases and lower capitalization stocks, regardless of their investment value, get the least. Then we have most “professional” investors, a term that merely means that they do it from 9 to 5 every day, not necessarily that they do it more professionally or better. Their livelihood, vacations, mortgage, and children’s higher education depends on them never under-performing the index their mutual fund, pension fund or whatever is benchmarked to. See even most allegedly “active” managers never stray too far from the benchmark. As we get closer to a real bear market bottom, I’m guessing it is the managers of funds like ICMAX that we’ll be suggesting for your due diligence – because that’s when they will be buying at (finally!) reasonable valuations. Moving on to long/short funds, let me remind you about Boston Partners (Robeco) Global Long-Short ( BGLSX Institutional/ BGRSX Retail.) Since the fund publishes its largest holdings monthly (in an age of advanced information technology, why don’t more funds do this???), I can see that as of 31 March, their biggest longs were GOOG, BRK.B , AAPL , OTCQX:IMBBY and PHG . Their biggest shorts were on TSLA , CAT , BLL , OTCPK:GEAGY and NFLX . In uncertain times, I like this kind of flexibility. We also own the Boston Partners Long/Short Research fund ( BPRRX Investor class/ BPIRX Institutional class.) As of 31 March, their biggest long holdings are PE , ORCL , MSFT , XOM and JPM . The largest short positions? ITRI , NATI , TXRH , EQIX and WIT . And finally, we own another long/short fund, the AQR Long/Short Equity (MUTF: QLEIX ) This one has beaten all the benchmarks this year so far but be aware (!) of this caveat about this fund family: all classes of all their funds I own have a $1 million or $5 million minimum purchase, depending upon class of issue, unless you buy through an RIA or financial advisor with an agreement with the fund company. Fortunately, our firm has such an agreement so we can buy in quantities as low as $10,000. See if your broker or advisor can do the same. It’s important to gain this edge because my best choice in the liquid alternatives area is the “managed futures” fund called AQR Managed Futures Fund ( AQMIX institutional/ AQMNX investor.) This fund provides a liquid alternative to solely relying on US stocks for your returns. It does so by investing in a combination of stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies across a spectrum of different time frames. It provides virtually zero correlation with the S&P 500, yet it gives us the ability to profit from global macro investing trends in over 100 markets. (Indeed, this fund alone has proven so popular to our readers that we recently lowered our assets under management minimum from our standard $500,000 to $100,000, as long as we manage only mutual funds and ETFs!) Finally, we can offer, for those who prefer ETFs to funds, one long we own, the QuantShares US Market Neutral Anti-Beta ETF (NYSEARCA: BTAL ). It is basically a hedge fund, packaged as an ETF, that places the bet that boring predictable value will outperform the S&P in any down market. BTAL shorts the highest-Beta stocks (those that move in concert with or at a greater rate than the benchmark) and buys the stocks least sensitive to the benchmark move (the lowest-Beta stocks.) BTAL’s aim is to mute market moves over time and protect capital far better than simply buying an index fund. BTAL actually has a lower correlation to the S&P 500 than other typical hedges than either gold or utility stocks. You can see why I placed the word “Long” in my headline in parentheses. We’re still long. We are long some things and short others but on balance long. And we may not be in equities, but we’re still long other assets. Finally, we’re long – but not too much! And we are invested with managers we know and trust and have given them free rein to rebalance the percentage long and percentage short. This may give them some sleepless nights. Us? Between our munis, preferreds, REITs, flexible funds, long/short funds and liquid alternatives, we sleep very soundly, thank you! Disclaimer: As ​ a ​ Registered Investment Advisor, ​ I believe it is essential to advise that ​ I do not know your personal financial situation, so the information contained in this communiqué represents the opinions of the staff of Stanford Wealth Management, and should not be construed as “personalized” investment advice . Past performance is no guarantee of future results, rather an obvious statement but clearly too often unheeded judging by the number of investors who buy the current #1 mutual fund one year only to watch it plummet the following year. I encourage you to do your own due diligence on issues I discuss to see if they might be of value in your own investing. I take my responsibility to offer intelligent commentary seriously, but it should not be assumed that investing in any securities my clients or family are investing in will always be profitable. I do our best to get it right, and our firm “eats our own cooking,” but I could be wrong, hence my full disclosure as to whether we or our clients own or are buying the investments we write about. ​

Clips From Abdulaziz Alnaim’s Interview With The Manual Of Ideas (Video)

Originally Published on March 21, 2016 I was recently interviewed by the wonderful publication, The Manual of Ideas , where we discussed various issues related to our strategy and to investing in general. I would like to share the following three clips from that interview with you. I hope you enjoy them. Abdulaziz Alnaim on Market Efficiency and Why Value Investing Works Abdulaziz Alnaim: We Begin by Looking for a Reason to Say ‘No’ Abdulaziz Alnaim on the Importance of Robustness