Tag Archives: etfs

4 Signs Your Portfolio Isn’t Ready For A Bear Market

By Ronald Delegge In case you didn’t get the memo, global stocks are now in correction mode. And the velocity of the rout has been shocking to seasoned financial pros, not to mention the investing masses. For perspective, the three largest U.S. stock benchmarks – the Dow Industrials (NYSEARCA: DIA ), Nasdaq-100 (NASDAQ: QQQ ), and S&P 500 (NYSEARCA: VOO ) are up between 129% to 258% since hitting their 2009 market bottom. Over the past month, all three U.S. stock benchmarks have shed between 9% to 13% in value. In the context of triple digit gains over the past six years, the current selloff is still just a flesh wound. (See chart below) That, however, doesn’t necessarily mean your investment portfolio is bear market ready. How would your portfolio do in a bear market of -25% losses or worse? Here are four signs that could indicate you’re not ready. Sign #1: The risk character of your portfolio is out-of-whack with reality When the risk character of an investment portfolio is incompatible with your life circumstances, your age, and your ability to tolerate risk – bad things happen. I’ve seen this sad condition consistently with the portfolios that I’ve analyzed using my Portfolio Report Card grading system. Often, it’s only after portfolios have suffered significant losses do people begin to understand their investments are far too risky and not compatible with their situation or themselves. What about the big-mouths who brag they can tolerate a 50% loss or greater inside their portfolio? These types of crash dummies are typically the first ones to jump out of the window. Sign #2: Your portfolio is 100% fully invested Wall Street likes to recommend investment portfolios that are “100% fully invested” because it allows their fee sucking institutions to maximize profits. For the individual investor, however, a fully invested portfolio is bad because it allows zero financial flexibility. For example, when stock prices (NYSEARCA: VB ) are falling, the fully invested portfolio cannot buy stocks at lower prices because it’s fully invested and falling in value just like the rest of the market. On the other hand, a portfolio with cash isn’t forced to sell assets to raise cash in order to buy stocks or whatever else at bargain prices. Take a clue from the world’s greatest investors like Warren Buffett and a tiny minority who always keep cash inside their portfolio for big opportunities. (click to enlarge) Sign #3: Your portfolio lacks a margin of safety The financial advice to “do nothing” – which is now being spewed by a certain mutual fund giant and its famous founder – incorrectly assumes that Joe and Jane Investor have architecturally sound portfolios which are built to withstand not just a friendly market climate, but a nasty one. More pointedly, the dogmatic belief that long-term investing will magically fix a broken and misaligned portfolio is ignorant. All portfolios – large, small, old, and new – should have a margin of safety. Although Graham and Dodd – the founders of value investing – talked about margin of safety in the context of selecting individual securities, it also applies to how a person assembles their investment portfolio. An investor’s margin of safety represents the money they set aside from the two other containers within their portfolio (core and non-core portfolios) to be invested in fixed accounts with principal protection. The prudent investor doesn’t wait until the house has burned to the ground to install a margin of safety inside their portfolio. They do it before the fire. Sign #4: Your portfolio is one-dimensional Any investment portfolio that is built around one asset class, one stock, or one concentrated thing is one-dimensional. And the inherent problem with one-dimensional portfolios is they aren’t adaptable. This means they aren’t equipped to provide satisfactory performance when the market cycle where they once thrived in abruptly changes. One-dimensional portfolios always have higher volatility (NYSEARCA: VXX ), higher drawdowns, and lots of unnecessary risk. And the best way to avoid having this type of poorly built portfolio is to hedge by diversifying across multiple asset classes like bonds (NYSEARCA: AGG ), commodities (NYSEARCA: GCC ), real estate (NYSEARCA: RWO ) and collectibles. Summary Your investment portfolio doesn’t need to suffer catastrophic losses before you know whether it’s able to successfully withstand a bear market. How it behaves today during volatile markets, like we’ve experienced over the past week, is a good predictor of how it is likely to perform during a market environment that is the same or worse. Don’t just observe the warning signs that your portfolio might not be ready for a bear market – but prepare ahead by fixing the flaws inside your portfolio before the storm. Ultimately, well-built portfolios aren’t just multi-dimensional in nature, but they’re designed to perform in any kind of financial climate. Disclosure: No positions Original post

Shock And Horror: Passive Hedge Funds

An academic article entitled “Passive Hedge Funds” has recently attracted quite a lot of comment in the Financial Times, Bloomberg, and on a variety of websites. Those whose ambition in life seems to be to discredit hedge funds and their managers at every turn have, of course, latched onto it. But the paper’s title is tendentious, its argument familiar and in some places flawed, and its conclusions really quite anodyne. Investors seeking hedge fund-like exposure through liquid alternatives will find that some products are similar to those described in that article; they should examine them very carefully before investing. The purported humor of math jokes often depends on the technical use of a term that has other, more familiar meanings. Thus, my college roommate’s knee-slapper about how every integer is interesting relied on a definition of ‘interesting’ as ‘having a unique property.’ The joke took the form of a mathematical induction: 1 is the multiplicative identity, 2 is the only even prime, 3 is the lowest true prime, 4 is the lowest perfect square… so if there is an uninteresting integer, it is interesting, because it is the lowest one. Maybe you had to be there. I am reminded of this moment of boundless mirth by a paper entitled ” Passive Hedge Funds ,” by Mikhail Tupitsyn and Paul Lajbcygier. This title has, inevitably, attracted comment, including headlines such as “Study: Hedge Funds Don’t Do S**t, Suck” (gawker.com) or, with less sophistication and élan, “New Study Argues Hedge Funds are an Even Worse Scam than We Thought” (vox.com) and even more prosaically, “The Case Against Hedge Fund Managers” (ai-cio.com). With the apparent exception of the latter, these commentators were so enamored by their deeply considered wisdom that they clearly felt no need to read the paper. Because its authors are quite explicit about their idiosyncratic use of the term ‘passive.’ They even put scare-quotes around it. The commentators just missed the punchline. It is hard to dispute Humpty Dumpty: “When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean ─ neither more nor less.” Since they take pains to explain what they mean by it, I have no argument with the authors’ use of ‘passive.’ They might have used ‘hippopotamus,’ which is more euphonious, but lacking poetic souls, they chose ‘passive,’ and missed the opportunity for a great title. The sense in which the authors use ‘passive’ to describe hedge fund return patterns is that they have linear correlation to hedge fund β. The crux of their argument is that “A manager with genuine investment skill should not only have “passive” linear risk exposures to alternative risk factors ( i.e ., alternative beta) but should also produce enhanced returns through nonlinear ‘active risk exposures.'” This is contentious, as will be seen below, but it is simply posited as a truth rather than justified. Was their choice of ‘passive’ tendentious and self-promoting? Of course: how else would a postdoc and an associate prof at Melbourne’s #2 university get noticed in the Financial Times or Bloomberg, let alone a temple to the Muses such as gawker.com? Was it helpful? Our commentators’ complete failure to understand the authors’ intent makes it rather obvious that it was not. The Tupitsyn and Lajbcygier article is, as their review of the literature makes clear, one of a long line of academic studies that propose models for hedge fund returns. Even critics more competent than our commentators tend to latch onto these studies as “proof” that hedge funds offer little value-added. But anything can be modeled ─ conventional mutual funds, sunspot frequencies, even (allegedly) the earth’s climate. Problems arise when, as Emanuel Derman and others have noted, the models are mistaken for reality. And hedge fund β ─ against which the authors argue hedge fund managers fail to add value ─ is, at best, a very peculiar concept, and arguably a spurious one. On consideration, the authors’ argument begins to look strangely circular: hedge funds fail to add value relative to metrics that derive from their own returns. This is something like arguing that I am a lousy swimmer because I am unable to swim faster than myself. I may well be a lousy swimmer, but comparison with my own performance will not establish that. A good portion of Tupitsyn’s and Lajbcygier’s analysis is devoted to returns on hedge fund indices. In choosing these as a database, they, like many before them, commit the fallacy of composition. The fact that you can calculate a mean return from a pile of reports does not indicate that there is such a thing as an average hedge fund: it is not only possible, but likely that none of the funds analyzed exhibited the mean return. Further, there is no reason to expect continuity from one time period to another: a fund whose return was close to the center of the distribution in one period may be an outlier in the next. Hedge fund returns are widely dispersed both synchronically and over time, so that the value of hedge fund indices is pretty much restricted to service as performance metrics for specific time periods. The standard error of the mean = s/√n, where ‘s’ is the σ of the population and ‘n’ is its size. Obviously, the error is significantly higher and thus the epistemic value of the mean significantly less, the more dispersed the population is. Given the wide dispersion of hedge fund returns, the value of their average is largely restricted to the bragging rights it gives to marketers fortunate enough to work for funds that have outperformed it. The authors are aware of these limitations, and devote some analysis to the returns of individual, real world funds. They find that most funds have strong linear exposures to familiar factor influences on investment returns. They conclude that “The nonlinear risk is more pronounced in arbitrage styles and styles following multiple strategies, and it is weaker in directional styles.” This should hardly be surprising ─ arbitrage is inherently non-linear ─ and it is not at all clear why the presence of linear risk in other sorts of strategies should somehow suggest dereliction of duty on the part of their managers. If, for example, a dedicated short fund carried no (negative) equity exposure, its investors would certainly have reason to object! Admittedly, fewer long/short funds make use of their ability to add value by adjusting their net exposure than might be expected, and with relatively stable long/short ratios, their exposure to equity risk factors would, of course, be linear. The same would be true of any long-only equity fund, and would certainly not attract criticism. In fact, long/short funds have increasingly tended to pursue a trading-oriented (“risk on/risk off”) response to changes in their risk perceptions in place of making changes to their short positions. As a group, hedge funds provide us with ample reasons to criticize them. Despite declining over the last few years, fees are in most cases still too high for the service provided. Lack of transparency inhibits rational analysis and portfolio construction, while providing a breeding ground for a wide range of abuses and sharp practice. The artificial mystique that this opacity fosters is repulsively reminiscent of Ozma of Oz. However, neither an adolescent potty-mouth nor accusations of fraud are not needed to make these points forcefully and to draw the appropriate conclusions for investors. Nor are “discoveries” that hedge fund α is not a matter of otherworldly powers to bend the laws of economics to the manager’s will ─ that their skills might be very similar in both nature and quantity to the skills that conventional portfolio managers exhibit. Tupitsyn and Lajbcygier have made a small contribution to the growing literature on hedge fund replication ─ nothing less, but certainly nothing more. Theirs is only one approach to hedge fund replication, and to my mind a less than satisfactory one. Factor replication is an inherently backward-looking approach to modeling, and when applied to the return streams from hedge funds, likely to result in some rather peculiar portfolios. A technique that I suspect has much more promise is the creation of robo-managers ─ algorithmic trading techniques that mimic the trading strategies hedge funds are known to pursue. Many hedge funds, particularly CTAs, are already effectively automated. While it is illegal to steal their code, it is possible to imitate it based on an analysis of their returns. In considering an investment in liquid alternative funds, many of which are “quantitatively-driven” in ways that are rarely specified explicitly and require research to understand, the nature of the security selection technique should be given careful consideration. Approaches similar to that of Tupitsyn and Lajbcygier are worth a look, but may not deliver all that they promise; the source of the factor exposures they purport to imitate must be investigated. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Shorting Volatility Has Never Looked This Good

I wrote an article last week about shorting VXX but that turned out to be a bad idea. But given what has transpired in the markets since then, shorting volatility has never looked this favorable. An oversold market and historically strong VIX and VVIX rallies means volatility is extremely overbought and due for a move down. Last Friday I wrote an article about one of my favorite trading vehicles, the short term VIX ETF VXX (NYSEARCA: VXX ). I said at the time that with volatility spiking on the short end that history suggested that it was a good time to short VXX. When short volatility spikes VXX outperforms but that condition is always temporary. I also warned against further moves higher in VXX as it is a high risk/high reward strategy that can be gut-wrenching to endure. Well, we all know what has happened in the last couple of days and shorting VXX was a big mistake. But since the situation has materially changed since Friday’s pre-market, I feel a new look at the trade is warranted because there are now more compelling reasons to stick with the short and/or add to the position. My original idea was based solely on the fact that the VIX had spiked on the front end late last week as China began to dominate the headlines. The US market (NYSEARCA: SPY ) hadn’t yet seriously deteriorated and I incorrectly thought we had another run-of-the-mill mid-20s spike in the VIX on our hands, setting up a great short for VXX. Obviously, I was wrong and my short position on VXX has lost roughly 25% of its value in the last two days. So what has changed? The first and most obvious answer to that question is that VIX (and VXX) has continued to spike. The VIX has put on an impressive and in fact, historic rally in the last few trading days. Here’s a five year chart of the VIX; you can really appreciate the magnitude of the rally we’ve seen in the past few days when viewing it in historical context. (click to enlarge) One of the things that has changed since my original trade idea is that the VIX is heavily overbought. The VIX rarely reaches overbought on the 14 day RSI because it tends to spike and fall instead of rally. We’ve seen a rally in the last few days and that has sent VIX’ 14 day RSI to 89. That’s an extremely overbought level and that is one reason I think the short VXX trade is still a good idea. As VIX moderates we’ll see VXX move down. Whenever we’ve seen this kind of overbought condition in the VIX in the past five years we’ve seen it move sharply down over the ensuing days and weeks so there is no reason to think that won’t happen this time. The second condition that has changed since my last article is that the broader market is now oversold as well. Here is a similar five year chart of the SPY to show what I mean. (click to enlarge) We can see that the MACD and RSI are showing extreme oversold conditions that mirror only those of the late 2011 tantrum the market threw. Of course, after that subsided, we moved substantially higher. I don’t know that we’ll move substantially higher in the SPY but we don’t need that to happen for the short VXX trade to work out; we just need it to stop going down. Given the condition the market is in right now we are certainly due for a bounce. Third, the volatility of the VIX index, or VVIX, has also spiked to historical highs. Consider the events that have occurred in the past 10 years with the financial crisis being one of them and then ask yourself if today’s events are more concerning; I think the answer to that is a resounding ‘no’ so that makes the action in the VVIX even more perplexing. Here’s a five year chart of the VVIX to illustrate my point. The VVIX actually exceeded 200 during yesterday’s action, a number that has never been reached before. Even recent panics in the market have caused VVIX to spike to the 120 or 130 area so cresting 200 is quite extraordinary. That tells me there is excessive panic in the market and that condition cannot persist. By definition, panic is temporary. Given all of this and the original trade idea that VXX cannot stay elevated forever, I think the evidence that VXX should fall in the coming days or weeks is quite compelling. We have a VIX and VVIX that are both extremely overbought after historical rallies and a broader market that is begging to rally. I don’t know if we’ll retake the highs on the SPY this year but as I said, we don’t need that to happen for short VXX to work. The panic will subside at some point and VXX will tank again; it always does. The ride to get there is bumpy and stomach-churning but the rewards can be great. Please understand that despite how good the setup looks a short VXX can still go wrong in a hurry – as we’ve seen since I recommended it on Friday – but the odds of a favorable result are exponentially higher now than they were on Friday. I just wish I had waited. Disclosure: I am/we are short VXX. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.