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The Fat Pitch Lurking In Frontier Markets

The Fat Pitch Lurking in Frontier Markets 2015 was a challenging year for most investors as global growth concerns reduced risk appetites globally. Frontier Markets were no exception with all major Frontier Market indices posting double-digit negative returns. That said, I have not been this excited about opportunities within Frontier Markets since 2008 and the work recently completed confirms my enthusiasm. To borrow a phrase used by my former boss and mentor at GMO, Jeremy Grantham, there is a “fat pitch” lurking in Frontier Markets – a baseball reference to game situations when odds of getting an easy pitch to hit are high. This fat pitch is in value stocks in Frontier Markets. Relative valuations of Frontier Markets value stocks are near their 2008 low relative to Frontier Market growth stocks. We define “value” as the bottom two quintiles of our investible Frontier Market universe based on price-to-book and “growth” as the top two price-to-book quintiles. By creating “value” and “growth” indices, we analyzed the yearly returns of each subset of stocks. The value and growth indices were rebalanced each quarter and were calculated both by equal weighting and market capitalization weighting the constituents. The results are as follows: For the period of 2007 to the end of 2015, the value index had an average price-to-book discount to growth stocks of approximately 70% ranging +/- 10% over the nine-year period. Not surprising, value does not do well during periods of heightened market risk. Regardless of whether the indices are weighted equally or by market capitalization, value massively underperformed during 2008 and 2015 relative to growth stocks. In fact, value stocks performed abysmally, underperforming by 1,600 basis points versus growth stocks in both years. The performance of value versus growth when market risk abates and valuations mean revert is powerful. During 2009, value stocks trounced Frontier Market growth stocks by a whopping 4,200 basis points. This is remarkable and highlights the low intra-correlation among Frontier Market stocks given that the two indices are created from the same Frontier Market universe and are not separate asset classes such as stocks and bonds. In addition, by comparing the difference in performance between the market cap weighted value index and the equal weighted value index, it is clearly evident that large cap value does much better than small cap value during subsequent rebound periods. Admittedly, this is a small sample size, but it is hard to make an argument why today value should be permanently impaired. Some investors may find it psychologically easier to allocate to an asset class as it is rising. However, the recent sell-off has provided a plethora of undervalued Frontier Market stocks that are less exposed to global uncertainties. For long-term investors, the recent market rout may prove to be an excellent entry point for those who have been contemplating an allocation to Frontier Markets.

Simple Investing Strategies Cannot Remain Entirely Simple For Long

By Rob Bennett Simple investing strategies are sound investing strategies. The key to success is sticking with a strategy long enough for it to pay off. Complex strategies cause investors to lose focus. Unfocused investors have a hard time sticking with their strategies through dramatic changes in circumstances. The greatest virtue of Buy-and-Hold is its simplicity. However, Buy-and-Hold purists take the desire for simplicity too far. Buy-and-Holders have told me that one big reason why the strategy was not changed following Robert Shiller’s “revolutionary” (his word) finding that valuations affect long-term returns is that it would complicate it to add a requirement that investors adjust their stock allocations in response to big valuation shifts in an effort to keep their risk profiles roughly constant. If that’s so, they made a terrible mistake. Buy-and-Hold does not call for allocation adjustments to be made in response to valuation shifts because the research showing the need for them did not exist at the time the Buy-and-Hiold strategy was being developed. Once the strategy was set up in the way that it was, changing allocations came to be seen as a complication. Isn’t it more simple to stick with one allocation at all times? I don’t think so. Buy-and-Hold seemed simple in the days when we did not realize how much the long-term value proposition of stocks is altered by the valuation level that applies at the time the purchase is made. We now know that the investor who fails to make allocation adjustments is thereby permitting his risk profile to swing wildly about as valuations move from low levels to moderate levels to high levels. In the long term, there is more complexity in a strategy that calls for wild risk profile shifts than in one that requires the investor to check valuation levels once per year and to change his stock allocation once every ten years or so. That’s all that is required for investors seeking to keep their risk profiles roughly stable. That extra one hour or so of work performed every decade reduces the risk of stock investing by 70 percent and saves the investor a lot of emotional angst during price crashes. It is the losses suffered in price crashes that cause investors to abandon Buy-and-Hold strategies (at the worst possible time!). Devoting an additional one hour of work to the investing project renders price crashes virtually painless for investors following the updated Buy-and-Hold approach (Valuation-Informed Indexing). It’s not only engaging in transactions that adds complexity. Figuring out how to respond when large losses of accumulated wealth are experienced is a huge complication, one that Buy-and-Holders did not consider when devising the first-draft version of the strategy. There are other ways in which Buy-and-Hold has become more complicated over the years. In the early days, there were few types of index funds available. Investors were generally advised to go with a Total Stock Market Index Fund. That’s still a good choice. But today’s investor has dozens of options available to him. He can invest only in small caps or only in mid caps or only in large caps or can mix or match in all sorts of ways. Traditionalist Buy-and-Holders often express dismay at the number of choices available, bemoaning the added complexity that comes with added options. I am sympathetic to those feelings. The core Buy-and-Hold idea – that it is by keeping it simple that investors avoid falling into emotional traps and confusions – is an idea of great power. Purchasing a Total Stock Market Index Fund still makes a great deal of sense for the typical, average investor. But I don’t believe that dogmatism on this question is justified. It adds only a limited amount of complexity for an investor to focus on small caps or large caps or mid caps. And some investors find appeal in focusing their investing dollars in the ways that new types of index funds permit. Some investors don’t feel safe investing in anything other than large caps. Some like the excitement of small caps and would be inclined to try to pick individual stocks rather than to index if investing in a Total Stock Market Index Fund were the only available option. In relative terms, an investor who purchases a large cap index fund or a small cap index fund or a mid cap index fund might thereby be avoiding more complex options that would draw him in if he were to try to follow a purist path. And of course many investors like to invest in different segments of the market. Investing in a high-tech index fund is riskier than investing in a broad index fund. But it is less risky than investing in any one high-tech company. Buy-and-Hold dogmatics would argue that only the investor who chooses a broad index fund is a true Buy-and-Holder. My take is that the success of the Buy-and-Hold strategy inevitably created demand for a greater variety of investing options and that there is no way to keep the Buy-and-Hold concept from becoming a bit more complicated over time. Another big change since the early days of Buy-and-Hold is that many investors no longer limit themselves to broad U.S. indexes but seek participation in the global marketplace. That makes sense, doesn’t it? Our economy is gradually becoming a global economy. There are numerous complexities that come into play as the transition proceeds. The U.S. has long had a stable economic system. So going global adds risk. However, that might be true only historically and not on a going-forward basis. It might be that the risky thing on a going-forward basis is to continue to invest solely in the U.S. market. The Buy-and-Hold Pioneers did not anticipate having to make decisions re such questions. They thought they had solved the complexity problems once and for all. These questions just turned up as time passed. The full reality is that they always do! Simple investing strategies cannot remain entirely simple for long. Valuation-Informed Indexing will become more complex over time too. We have 145 years of U.S. stock market data available to us today to determine when valuations have changed enough to require an allocation adjustment and how big a allocation adjustment is required. As more years of data are recorded, our understanding of what sorts of allocation adjustments are either needed or desired will become sharpened and refined. That’s good. We want to have as much historical data available to us for guiding our allocation shifts as possible. But it cannot be denied that the decision-making process will become somewhat more complex as more considerations are taken into account. That’s just the way of the world. Humankind’s understanding of the world about it improves over time and those improvements undermine our ability to keep things simple. Simple is good. But a purist stance is not realistic in the fast-changing (because it is fast improving!) world in which we live today.

ECB To Be More Dovish? Watch These ETFs

The European Central Bank (ECB) president Mario Draghi surprised the global market yesterday by giving cues of further policy easing in its March meeting. This came on the heels of Draghi’s repeated assurance of a more intensified and protracted policy easing, if need be. With the Euro zone growth picture still dull and the inflationary environment slackening considerably, prospects of further rate cuts and a likely raise in ECB’s ongoing QE measure have high chances of manifestation. Draghi reaffirmed that the ECB will evaluate and ‘possibly reconsider’ the monetary policy in the March meeting. The reason behind this dovish stance was a 12-year low Brent crude which ruined the possibility of any improvement in inflation in 2016. The ECB economists had projected the annual inflation rate to inch up ‘from 0.2% recorded in December 2015 and average 1% this year, rising further in 2017’. But with oil prices sliding 40% more than the time when the projections were made, Draghi is now skeptical of inflation in 2016, as per the Wall Street Journal. At present, ECB expects 2016 inflation to be 0.7% (down from 1% projected earlier) while inflation for 2017 is expected to be 1.4% (down from 1.5% guided previously) (read: Dovish Draghi Drives Up These European ETFs ). The ECB took several meaningful steps in last two years to bolster the common currency bloc. It launched an asset buying program at the start of 2015 and extended the program by six more months to March 2017 at the end of the year. The bank also cut its deposit rate by 10 bps, shoving it deeper into the negative territory to -0.3% (read: 4 European ETFs to Buy on Cheaper Valuations, QE Launch ). While the markets did not appreciate ECB’s year-end stimulus measure as they expected an outsized expansion in the QE policy and steeper cuts in interest rates, global stocks liked ECB’s statement this time around. Market Impact Several Euro zone ETFs rallied on January 21 post Draghi’s comment. Among the toppers were the iShares MSCI Italy Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: EWI ) , the Barclays ETN + FI Enhanced Europe 50 ETN (NYSEARCA: FEEU ) , the Credit Suisse FI Enhanced Europe 50 ETN (NYSEARCA: FIEU ) , the iShares MSCI United Kingdom ETF (NYSEARCA: EWU ) and the iShares Currency Hedged MSCI EMU ETF (NYSEARCA: HEZU ) with gains of about 2.9%, 1.8%, 1.5%, 1.4% and 1.3%, respectively. Euro also shed gains as evident by 0.03% losses incurred by the CurrencyShares Euro Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: FXE ) . The fund shed more gains of about 0.1% after hours. ETFs to Play Investors may take advantage of this euphoria in the European market. The first option is to bet on our top-ranked European ETFs. Below we highlight two options. Deutsche X-trackers MSCI Germany Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: DBGR ) DBGR is a hedged German equity ETF providing exposure to 56 firms. The fund focuses on Consumer Discretionary, Financials and Health Care sectors. Expense ratio comes in at 0.45%. DBGR has a Zacks ETF Rank #1 (Strong Buy) with a Medium risk outlook. DRGR was up 1.3% on January 21, 2016. Deutsche X-trackers MSCI United Kingdom Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: DBUK ) This hedged UK ETF has amassed about $4 million in assets. The fund holds114 stocks presently and charges 45 bps in fees. Financials, Consumer Staples, Energy, Consumer Discretionary and Health Care have a double-digit weight in the fund. The fund was up 1.4% on January 21 and carries a Zacks ETF Rank #2 (Buy). Investors can also play this move by shorting the euro ETFs. Below, we highlight a few choices in the inverse euro ETF space. These ETFs profit when the euro declines and may be suitable for hedging purposes against the fall in the currency. ProShares Ultra Short Euro ETF (NYSEARCA: EUO ) This leveraged ETF looks to provide twice the inverse exposure to the performance of euro versus the U.S. dollar on a daily basis. The ETF charges a hefty annual expense ratio of 95 basis points. The product was up 0.04% on January 21. Investors could book more profits off this fund, should the euro continue to struggle. Market Vectors Double Short Euro ETN (NYSEARCA: DRR ) This is an exchange-traded note issued by Morgan Stanley. The product seeks to track the performance of the Double Short Euro Index. For every 1% weakening of the euro relative to the greenback, the index normally gains 2%. The product charges an expense ratio of 0.65% a year and advanced about 1% (as of January 21, 2016). Link to the original on Zacks.com