Tag Archives: events

The Best And Worst Of February: Market Neutral Funds

The 68 mutual funds and ETFs in the market neutral category averaged modest gains of 0.08% in February while flows to the category turned positive for the first time since September 2014. The Vanguard Market Neutral Fund (MUTF: VMNIX ) was February’s biggest recipient of inflows, at roughly $279 million, while the AQR Diversified Arbitrage Fund (MUTF: ADAIX ) suffered the month’s steepest outflows at $295 million. Neither of the funds, which posted respective February returns of 1.55% and 1.33%, ranked in the top or bottom three performers for the month, though. Best Performers in February The three best-performing market neutral funds in February were: The QuantShares US Market Neutral Value Fund was February’s top-performing fund, returning +3.83%. Unfortunately, for shareholders, the fund’s one-year performance through February 29 stood at -6.35%, ranking in the bottom 13% of the category. For the three years ending Leap Day 2015, CHEP returned an annualized -0.52%. Its February outperformance is evidence of its more-volatile-than-average nature, with a one-year standard deviation of 6.45% compared to the category average of 4.81%. On a three-year basis, CHEP looks even less predictable, with annualized volatility of 7.70% compared to the category average of 4.25%. The Cognios Market Neutral Large Cap Fund, by contrast, returned a solid +2.45% in February and had one-year returns of +11.07% through the end of the month. Those annual gains were good enough to rank in the top 7% of its peers, and its three-year annualized returns through February 29 stood at an impressive +9.57%, ranking in the top 4% of the category. For the past year, COGIX has been even more volatile than CHEP, with a standard deviation of 8.01%. But COGIX’s one- and three-year alphas of 7.60% and 9.62% – relative to the returns of the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Total Return Index – more than make up for its outsized volatility. Finally, the Causeway Global Absolute Return Value Fund) ranked third in February, with returns of +2.40%. Its annual returns through the end of the month stood at a less impressive -0.48%, ranking it near the middle of the category. Over the longer term, however, CGAIX’s three-year returns of +4.11% were good enough to rank in the top 11% of market neutral funds over that time span. Worst Performers in February The three worst performing market neutral funds in February were: Mother’s Day comes in May, but February was unkind to MOM. The QuantShares US Market Neutral Momentum Fund, which sports the “MOM” ticker symbol, was the worst performer of its kind last month, losing 6.14%. Nevertheless, the ultra-volatile MOM – with its annual standard deviation of 12.66% – was still up 10.68% for the year, as of February 29, and its three-year annualized returns through that date stood at +3.24%. The TFS Market Neutral and BlackRock Global Long/Short Equity funds tied as the second-worst market neutral performers in February, with one-month returns of -3.97%. The funds’ one-year returns were also uninspiring at -6.85% and -6.75%, respectively. But over the three-year period, the BlackRock fund’s annualized gains of 2.89% greatly outdid the TFS fund’s annualized losses of 0.84%. Past performance does not necessarily predict future results. Jason Seagraves contributed to this article.

3 Things I Think I Think – Financial Crisis Edition

Here are some things I think I am thinking about: Warren Buffett on the financial crisis, investing with a sound premise & silly Congressional ideas. 1 – What Caused the Financial Crisis according to Warren Buffett? The National Archives released documents related to the Financial Crisis late last week. Among them were some interviews with Warren Buffett on the crisis. I noticed that, aside from being nerdy white guys, the only thing I might have in common with Buffett is that we both believe the cause of the financial crisis was, well, just about everybody: I think the primary cause was an almost universal belief, among everybody ‑ and I don’t ascribe particular blame to any part of it – whether it’s Congress, media, regulators, homeowners, mortgage bankers, Wall Street ‑ everybody ‑ that houses prices would go up. ” I’ve described this several times over the last 7 years and every time I do it, I seem to catch a bunch of flak from people with a political bone to pick. And every time I see someone trying to place sole blame on “the government” or “Wall Street” or “house flippers” or whoever, I am reminded of how common fallacies of composition are in the financial world. We don’t see things in totality. We see what we want to see inside of the big picture so we can confirm what we already believe. This just leads to a lot of narrow-minded thinking that causes more arguments than objective analysis. 2 – Investing with a False Premise. One comment I disagreed with (at least partly) was Buffett quoting Ben Graham on investing with a false premise: ” You can get in a whole lot more trouble in investing with a sound premise than with a false premise .” I don’t know about that. If you’ve read my paper on the monetary system or portfolio construction , you’ve probably noticed that this is the primary thing I am trying to avoid when analyzing the economy – false premises. There are so many myths and misconceptions about money that you can get into a lot of trouble buying into these ideas. Whether it’s flawed concepts like the money multiplier, crowding out, being a permabull/bear, dividend investing for safe income, “beat the market” or whatever. Starting with a sound premise is an intelligent way to improve the odds that you’ll succeed going forward. Of course, you have to maintain some rationality within this context. Extremists get killed in the financial markets because they tend to go all in on what they believe. Believing that house prices never go down was obviously irrational (and I had that argument with a lot of people back in 2005/6), but the fact that asset prices usually go up is not an unsound premise from which to start because the economy usually expands and people tend to become more productive over time. So, in this example, being a rational optimist always beats being a perma pessimist AND a perma optimist. 3 – Let’s talk about that silly balanced budget idea. One myth that just never dies is this idea that the US government is going bankrupt and needs to tighten its belt so we avoid impending crisis. I’ve spent an inordinate amount of time debunking this myth over the last decade, but I wanted to congratulate a group of economists for fighting back against a truly stupid idea – a federal balanced budget amendment. Mark Thoma linked to this letter yesterday highlighting the dangers of a balanced budget amendment. I’ll just point out two facts: First, one of the most powerful economic policies we have in place is what’s called automatic stabilizers. This is the tendency for the budget deficit/surplus to expand and contract naturally to offset economic conditions. So, during a recession, government deficits rise because spending naturally increases due to things like unemployment benefits while tax receipts decline. This leads to more income to the private sector and a flow of net financial assets that helps offset the decline. And the exact opposite happens during booms thereby cushioning against the risk of booms. If we had a balanced budget amendment in place, the economy would likely be a lot more volatile because these stabilizers would be gone. Second, the federal government plays an important role in ensuring that our states don’t turn into Greece. As I’ve explained before , since the states have balanced budget amendments, they are constrained by a true solvency constraint. The states, like Greece, have real limits on how much debt they can issue. But since the US states run trade surpluses/deficits against one another with no foreign exchange rebalancing then the poor states are always exporting more dollars than they’re importing. They can borrow to offset this, but there’s a Congressionally mandated limit to this borrowing. So, where does the income come from that helps avoid inevitable insolvency and occasional financial crisis? You guessed it – it comes from the federal government who takes more from the rich states and redistributes it to the poor states. It sounds like socialism, but it’s actually saving capitalism from itself. And it works beautifully in the case of a single currency system by helping us avoid the debacle of a situation that is Europe….

BlackRock Seeks To Ride The Gold ETF Rally

Sluggish growth in China since the beginning of the year, the oil market turbulence and concerns over global growth slowdown have lifted the demand for safe-haven assets like gold. The weakness in the global financial markets has helped the precious metal to recover its sheen in 2016. Gold has gained more than 16% year to date. The jump in gold prices was also supported by plunging interest rates on a global scale. With the Fed not expected to raise interest rates in the near term, the rally is expected to continue. Given the tailwinds, it’s not surprising that BlackRock (NYSE: BLK ) has chosen to increase its stake in gold. But what’s surprising is that to do so, it has opted for a competitor’s ETF, the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: GLD ), instead of its own product, the iShares Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: IAU ). As per the SEC filing , BlackRock has increased its holding in GLD to 13%, worth almost $4 billion. This is a massive increase from a 5% stake disclosed in a regulatory filing last month. GLD is the largest and most popular ETF in the gold space, with AUM of $31.3 billion and average daily volume of about 8.1 million shares. The fund reflects the performance of the price of gold bullion. Its expense ratio comes in at 0.40%. The fund currently has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold) with a Medium risk outlook. In comparison, IAU has AUM of $7.7 billion and trades in solid volume of more than 7.5 million shares a day, on average. The ETF charges 25 bps in annual fees. Like GLD, this ETF offers exposure to the day-to-day movement of the price of gold bullion and carries a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold) with a Medium risk outlook. BlackRock’s gold ETF made headlines earlier this month when it had to temporarily suspend creations. As per a Reuters report, it sold $296 million in shares of the exchange-traded fund without properly registering them with the SEC. After recognizing the slip, BlackRock stopped selling new shares of the fund. Though this is not the first time an asset manager has invested in a competitor’s product and included it in the portfolio, BlackRock’s choice of increasing its holding in GLD emphasizes the craze for gold in the market. While IAU has a lower expense ratio as compared to GLD, GLD trades in much higher volumes, keeping the bid/ask spread low, and has a much larger asset base. Original Post