Tag Archives: history
3 Of Seeking Alpha’s Best, Part II
Summary As a hedge fund manager, who do I think is worth following on SA? 3 (more) writers I take seriously and think you should too. This is the second in a continuing series. In Part I , I looked at three of Seeking Alpha’s best contributors. In this sequel, I offer three more worth following. They all happen to be hedge fund managers and friends of mine. Whitney Tilson Whitney Tilson founded and manages Kase Capital and he wrote The Art of Value Investing and More Mortgage Meltdown . He has been a valuable contributor to Seeking Alpha, especially on the short side. I want to highlight some of his short ideas that I found most compelling at the time. He has been one of the most consistent voices on the issue of World Acceptance (NASDAQ: WRLD ) since publishing his compelling investment thesis, World Acceptance: A Battleground Stock I’m Short . One of the next up was K12 (NYSE: LRN ). Shorting can be a painful waiting game, but he did not have to wait long on An Analysis Of K12 And Why It Is My Largest Short Position . For more on LRN, he also published this slide presentation. Whitney is probably best known on Seeking Alpha for the quality (and quantity) of his devastating work on Lumber Liquidators (NYSE: LL ), starting with My Analysis Of Lumber Liquidators’ Updated Guidance . Here was my reaction to the 60 Minutes episode on LL: Whitney, Well done and congratulations! It was a terrific and compelling piece. The LL founder was evasive and deceptive. I replayed his comments several times. He knew . This is an important and favorable development for short sellers. Shorting and exposing truth is not a conflict of interest – it is a confluence of interest. Ethics involves not lying/cheating/stealing; we cannot rely on the cheap substitute of listening only to people with nothing at stake. Modern investment management has often tried to rely on both thinking substitutes and ethics substitutes. Thinking substitutes such as diversification and volatility minimizing have fared poorly but have not yet been abandoned. Ethics substitutes (“listen to me because I promise that I have at no time and in no place ever even thought about doing with my own money what I now tell you to do with yours”) have fared just as badly but are still in daily use. Your 60 Minutes segment is a big step towards real morality in business and investing. Sure, you are invested in the outcome, but you are invested because your view – and the evidence you lay out – supports that outcome. That is a bigger deal than whatever ultimately happens to LL. Finally, it serves the interest of free enterprise and free trade to have markets self-policed. Pieces such as this can protect markets from inevitable calls to have endless central planning and control. The best way to counteract the self-interest of cheaters is with the interest of short-sellers. While the government may have the resources, it never seems to have the speed to act when it counts. You have both and did something about it. Chris DeMuth Jr. InterOil (NYSE: IOC ) is one that we have both followed for a long time. I wrote about our IOC short on my blog and in InterOil Increases Production… Whitney’s thinking was helpful to the short thesis, including his article Why There’s More Downside To Come For InterOil . When he wrote The Beginning Of The End Of The 3D Printing Bubble… …it was, in fact, the beginning of the end of the 3D printing bubble. Unilife (NASDAQ: UNIS ) has been a favorite topic of mine on my blog here and here , as well as in an article on my favorite pairs trade. While I do my own work, Whitney’s contribution to the topic further solidified my thinking on this company. Ben Axler Ben Axler founded Spruce Point Capital, a long/short hedge fund. He has exposed over $1.0 billion of alleged listed frauds on NASDAQ and the NYSE. Want a great short idea? Read about Caesarstone Sdot-Yam (NASDAQ: CSTE ) in Ben’s article: Caesarstone: A Counter To The Bull Thesis On Quartz Countertops Suggests 40-75% Downside . It has declined by over 20% since publication, but remains expensive and risky. Value investors, skeptics, and debunkers should follow him here on Seeking Alpha and here on Twitter. You can also learn more about his hedge fund and other investment ideas on Spruce Point’s site . He was kind enough to join us for our last biannual ideas dinner in New York City last month where he gave us a devastating preview of what would happen to CSTE. His update is available here: Downgrading Caesarstone On Concerns About Its Capital Expenditure Accounting And Management’s History At Tefron . Andrew Walker A portfolio manager at Rangeley Capital, Andrew is a long-time friend. We have collaborated on investment ideas that we’ve posted on Seeking Alpha as far back as our early work on ALJ Regional Holdings ( OTCPK:ALJJ ), which I wrote about here . If you have an hour to learn about investing in small caps, you should listen to this interview. Additionally, I describe our work together here . Next year, we will launch our new Special Opportunities strategy that will focus on small-cap equity opportunities including special situations. Andrew has been chosen as the portfolio manager to run that new endeavor. He is exactly who I always wanted to run such a strategy. I will follow the example of Charlie Munger, who says that: Berkshire (NYSE: BRK.A ) (NYSE: BRK.B ) is run with decentralization almost to the point of abdication. While I plan to do the same at Rangeley, this requires the perfect people to manage specific businesses. Happily, I have the right people. Meanwhile, if you would like to hear more of Andrew’s investment ideas, he and I will both be speaking at an upcoming conference focusing on microcap investing. Conclusion These are the types of people I rely upon. Charlie Munger said that: The highest form that civilization can reach is a seamless web of deserved trust – not much procedure, just totally reliable people correctly trusting one another. This is what my web of deserved trust looks like. Who is in yours? Who should I add to mine? I intend to keep this series going, so please let me know if there is anyone who writes on Seeking Alpha who should be included in a future edition. I am always in search for idea candidates for Rangeley Capital as well as candidates for both new submissions and new members for Sifting the World . Editor’s Note: This article covers one or more stocks trading at less than $1 per share and/or with less than a $100 million market cap. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.
Target Date Funds As Aid In Retirement Portfolio Design
Summary Investors in or near retirement should be aware of portfolio design that leading fund sponsors suggest as appropriate. Leading target date funds appear to generally have less severe drawdowns than a US 60/40 balanced fund. The funds have slightly higher yields than a US 60/40 balanced fund. Target date funds have underperformed a US 60/40 balanced fund in part due to a cash reserve component and non-US stocks. Non-US stocks drag on historical performance could become future boost to performance. INTENDED AUDIENCE This article is suitable for investors who are in retirement or nearly so, and who are or will rely heavily on their portfolio to support lifestyle. It is not suitable for those with many years to retirement, or those with a lot more money in their portfolio than they will need to support their lifestyle. SHORT-TERM and LONG-TERM We have been writing about the short-term recently ( here and here and here ), because we are in a Correction, that may become a severe Correction, and possibly a Bear. For our clients who fit the profile of being in or near retirement and heavily dependent of their portfolio to support lifestyle in retirement, we have tactically increased cash in the build-up to and within this Correction, as breadth and other technical have deteriorated. However, we don’t want to lose sight of long-term strategic investment. This article is about asset allocation for investors that fit that retirement, pre-retirement, portfolio dependence profile. WHERE TO BEGIN ALLOCATION THINKING We think it is a good idea to begin thinking about allocation by: reviewing the history of simple risk levels ( see our homepage ) from very conservative to very aggressive to get a sense of where you would have been comfortable reviewing what respected teams of professionals at leading fund families believe is appropriate based on years to retirement (they assume generic investor without differentiated circumstances). This article is about the second of those two important review – basically looking at what are called “target date” funds. Generally, portfolios should have a long-term strategic core, and may have an additional tactical component. We think some combination of risk level portfolio selection and/or target date portfolio selection can make a suitable portfolio for many investors. You may or may not want to follow target date allocations, but you would be well advised to be aware of the portfolio models as you develop your own. In effect, we would suggest using risk level models and target date models as a starting point from which you may decide to build and deviate according to your needs and preferences, but with the assumption that the target date models are based on informed attempts at long-term balance of return and risk appropriate for each stage of financial life. For example, an investor might deviate one way or the other from more aggressive to less aggressive based on the size of their portfolio relative to what they need to support their lifestyle, and the size of non-portfolio related income sources; or merely their emotional comfort level with portfolio volatility. There no precise allocation that is certain to be best, which is revealed by the variation in models among leading target date fund sponsors. Their allocations are different, but similar in most respects. FUND FAMILY SELECTION For this article, we identified the 7 fund families with high Morningstar analyst ratings for future performance (those ranked Gold and Silver, excluding those ranked Bronze, Neutral or Not Rated). Those 7 families are: Fidelity Vanguard T. Rowe Price American Funds Black Rock JP Morgan MFS Fidelity, Vanguard and T. Rowe Price have about 75% of the assets in all target date funds from all sponsoring families combined. ASSET CATEGORIES CONSIDERED We then used Morningstar’s consolidated summary of their detailed holdings to present and compare the target date funds from each family. The holdings were summarized into: Net Cash Net US Stocks Net Non-US Stocks Net Bonds Other While we have gathered that data for retirement target dates out 30 years. This article is just about target date funds for those now in retirement or within 5 years of retirement. PROXY INVESTMENT FUNDS USED We simulated the hypothetical past performance of those target date funds using these Vanguard funds: Admittedly, this is a gross proxy summary of the holdings of the subject target date funds The funds may hold individual stocks or bonds, may hold international bonds, may use some derivatives, and may have some short cash or short equities. Nonetheless, we think these Vanguard funds are good enough to serve as a proxy for the average target date funds, and as a baseline model for you to examine target date funds and to plan your own allocation. THE BENCHMARK As a benchmark for each allocation, we chose the Vanguard Balanced fund (MUTF: VBIAX ) nwhich is 60% US stocks/40% US bonds index fund. Figure 1 shows the best and worst periods over the last 10 years for that fund, as well as its current trailing yield. FIGURE 1: So, let’s keep the 2.10% yield in mind as we look at the models, and also the 19.7% 3-month worst drawdown, the 27.6% worst annual drawdown, and 7.3% worst 3-year drawdown. FOR THOSE CURRENTLY RETIRED Figure 2 shows the allocation from each of the fund families for those currently in retirement. It also averages their allocations for all 7 and for the top three (Fidelity, Vanguard, T. Rowe Price). ( click image to enlarge ) (click to enlarge) You will note substantial ranges for allocations from fund family to fund family. For example, MFS using about 19% US stocks while Fidelity uses about 38%; and MFS uses about 64% bonds and Fidelity uses about 36%. The average bond allocation for the 7 families is about 54%, but the top three by assets average about 42%; and their average cash allocation is about 9% versus the top 3 average of 5%. Figure 3 shows how a portfolio using Vanguard index funds would have performed over the past 10 years with monthly rebalancing if it was based on the average of the top 3 families. We recalculated the allocations to exclude “Other” which is undefined, but which is relatively minor in size in each fund. We also note that the Vanguard index funds have a small cash component, so that the effective cash allocation is higher than the model. FIGURE 3 – Backtest Performance: (retired now: average of top 3 families) Observations: Yield is somewhat higher (2.28% versus 2.10%). Worst 3 months were somewhat better (-18.4% versus – 19.7%) Worst 1 year was somewhat better (-26.2% versus -27.6%) Worst 3 year drawdown was better (-5.7% versus -7.3%) Underperformed benchmark over 10, 5, 3 and 1 year and 3 months (10 years underperformed by annualized 1.05%). Reasons For Underperformance: Inclusion of non-US equities may be the biggest contributor to underperformance versus the balanced fund with 100% US securities. Another part of the underperformance is maintenance of a cash reserve position that is over and above any cash position within the benchmark balanced fund. Part is also due to a higher bond allocation. Those factors probably account most of the performance difference. We did not try to determine the exact contributions of each attribute to performance differences. The historical underperformance due to non-US stocks could possibly turn out to be a long-term reason for future outperformance. FIGURE 4 – Backtest Performance: (retired now: average of top 7 families) Observations: Yield is somewhat higher (2.19% versus 2.10%). Worst 3 months were significantly better (-12.6% versus – 19.7%) Worst 1 year was somewhat better (-17.7% versus -27.6%) Worst 3 year drawdown was a lot better (-2.3% versus -7.3%) Underperformed benchmark over 10, 5, 3 and 1 year & outperformed over the last 3 months (10 years underperformed by annualized 1.32%). Incurred less drawdown in exchange for lower cumulative return. FOR THOSE EXPECTING TO RETIRE WITHIN 5 YEARS FIGURE 5 – Allocation: (expected retirement within 5 years) ( click image to enlarge ) (click to enlarge) Again, we see substantial variation between fund families, and also between the averages for the top 3 by assets and for all 7 of the Gold or Silver rated target date families. The average bond allocation for the 7 families is about 44%, but for the top 3 it is only about 34%. For the 7 families the average non-US stocks are about 15%, but for the top 3 families it is about 21%. FIGURE 6 – Backtest Performance: (up to 5 years to retirement: average of top 3 families) Observations: Yield is higher (2.30% versus 2.10%). Worst 3 months were somewhat worse (-21.1% versus – 19.7%) Worst 1 year was somewhat worse (-30.1% versus -27.6%) Worst 3 year drawdown was the same (-7.3% versus -7.3%) Underperformed benchmark over 10, 5, 3 and 1 year and 3 months (10 years underperformed by annualized 0.95%). FIGURE 7 – BacktestPerformance: (up to 5 years to retirement: average of top 7 families) Observations: Yield is somewhat higher (2.19% versus 2.10%). Worst 3 months were better (-16.2% versus – 19.7%) Worst 1 year was better (-22.9% versus -27.6%) Worst 3 year drawdown was better (-4.4% versus -7.3%) Underperformed benchmark over 10, 5, 3 and 1 year & slightly outperformed over the last 3 months (10 years underperformed by annualized 1.19%). PERFORMANCE OF INDIVIDUAL PROXY FUNDS Figure 8 presents the current yield and rolling returns of the five individual proxy funds used in this review. FIGURE 8: (click image to enlarge) (click to enlarge) PERFORMANCE OF THE TARGET DATE FUNDS FIGURE 9: (click image to enlarge) (click to enlarge) Symbols for funds mentioned in this article are: VMMXX, VTSAX, VGTSX, VBTLX, VBIAX, TRRGX , AABTX , JSFSX , LFTDX , VTXVX , FLIFX, BAPBX , TRRUX , AACFX , JTTAX , MFLAX, VTWNX , FPIFX , BAPCX Disclosure: QVM has no positions in any mentioned fund as of the creation date of this article (October 4, 2015). We certify that except as cited herein, this is our work product. We received no compensation or other inducement from any party to produce this article, and are not compensated by Seeking Alpha in any way relating to this article. General Disclaimer: This article provides opinions and information, but does not contain recommendations or personal investment advice to any specific person for any particular purpose. Do your own research or obtain suitable personal advice. You are responsible for your own investment decisions. This article is presented subject to our full disclaimer found on the QVM site available here .