Tag Archives: ideas

Why US Investing Differs A Lot From Europe Investing…

Summary US is definitely not a market for traditional stock-pickers, as this market is a flow-driven market. In Europe, the economic knowledge of the population is very low. Stock-pickers should focus on Europe, and systematic or factor-based investors on the US. Smart risk management is as important as finding equity ideas to generate alpha. The whole study with all the statistics and charts may be found on SSRN at http://ssrn.com/abstract=2701901 .Or just ask the author. We compare European Indices (DJ Stoxx 600, Eurostoxx 50, FTSE 100) to US Indices (Russell 2000, S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite, Nasdaq 100) and Japanese Indices (Topix, Nikkei225). First, from 2014, December 31st to 2015, November 11th. Using a longer period could lead to wrong conclusions given the important turnover of the components within each index (roughly 5% per year), and the death-survivo r ship bias. Therefore, in a second attempt, we compare the behavior of the large indices such as Topix, Nasdaq Composite and Russell 2000, year after year, from 1999 to 2015. We do the same analysis for DJ Stoxx 600, even if the sample seems tight. Why year after year and not the 16 years in a row? Because turnover is huge on US indices, and the Russell 2000 or Nasdaq Composite composition as of 2015 is very different from the one as of 1999… RUSSELL 2000 Beta per couple (capitalization; volatility) (click to enlarge) · First of all, turnover is huge. Therefore, it is important to stress again that a study over a long period of this index versus its components is not relevant. · Second, looking at the performance vs (capitalization; volatilities) we can notice that although over the period, the performance of the index is largely positive (+249% total return between Dec, 31st 1998 and Nov, 11th 2015) – meaning it was a bull market with on average 7.7% per year, the red cells are much more represented on the right column of the table. This happens when the index performance is negative of course (2002, 2008), but it happens as well when the index performance is flat or mildly positive (2000, 2001, 2004, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015). On the other hand, these high volatility stocks strongly outperform the universe in two periods out of seventeen: 1999 and 2003, with respective total return performance of the Russell2000 of +21%, +47%. This means that the outperformance of volatile small caps is very hard to capture because over the long run it may be easy to experience huge drawdowns with difficulties to recover. Keep in mind that when a stock drops by 50%, it needs to increase by 100% to come back to the initial level. Regarding capitalization effect, things seem to be more difficult to explain. As a summary for this part, should you want a smooth pattern, focusing on the low-volatility stocks in N-1 is worth in order to succeed in such a challenge, whereas dealing with historically high-volatility stocks may suffer from huge drawdowns (2002, 2008), and only rare astonishing performances, which may struggle in erasing the previous underperformance. The issue is always the same: what is your investment timeframe? And it has to deal with the way performance fees are calculated and rewarded. If the latter depend on High-WaterMark (HWM), then low-volatility should be chosen. If it does not, then the performance fees may be perceived as a yearly call on performance…And when you are long a call, it depends positively on volatility, and do not suffer if the market is negative end of year, as its value is null. Therefore, the asset manager is likely to choose the riskier stocks as he may – even if it is only 2 years among 17 – sharply outperforms the index punctually and underperform most of the time. HWM is strongly needed in order to protect investors from these type of greedy and unconscious asset managers. This phenomenon is likely to persist and be amplified by the emergence of smart-beta, risk premia, through the ETF market which is huge in the US and tends to offset the traditional Mutual and Hedge Funds: flows focus on ETF, and the latter focus on low-volatility stocks creating and feeding the famous “low-volatility puzzle”, challenging the well-known Markowitz theory. In this puzzle, the lower the volatility, the higher the expected return, whereas Markowitz used to state the opposite… · Regarding the persistence of the winners and losers, this relationship is quite volatile. According to the numerous papers by Bouchaud (“Two centuries of Trend-Following”), most of the time the market is trend-followers, but when the regime changes, it hurts a lot (examining the performance of CTAs may help to understand – CTAs being by construction trend-followers). 2009 is a very good example (with the red circle): the losers of 2008 were the winners of 2009, within a strong rebound of the market. It looks as if after a huge drop, the rule is to buy the worst performers. · Looking at the beta per volatility quartile, the higher the historical volatility, the higher the beta, whereas there is no clear pattern with respect to capitalization. This can be explained by the fact that small capitalizations are perceived to be more volatile than large, but in practice this is not the case. Do not forget that beta is the ratio of covariance over the product of standard deviations, therefore the surprising “in-range” beta is much more explained by the low numerator (covariance): small caps are volatile but not correlated with the benchmark, whereas large caps are less volatile but much more correlated with the benchmark. · Regarding stock-picking, stock-pickers are likely to pick their stocks in the upper right hand side of the table: low capitalization, high volatility. Low capitalization, because they aims at being anti-benchmark, and high volatility because their way of choosing relies on fundamental analysis and upsides – the higher the volatility, the higher the upside. · The Russell 2000 is definitely not a territory for stock-pickers, with 2% of the stocks exhibiting more than 100% YtD performance in 2015, and more than 55% doing worse than the index. · Should you want to post performance by picking up small caps and high volatility stocks within the Russell 2000 universe, then you have to be very sharp in terms of choosing the right ones, and avoiding all the underperformers (which are numerous – “Many are called, but few are chosen”), and be very sharp in terms of market-timing, given the number of years small caps largely underperform. NASDAQ COMPOSITE Beta per couple (capitalization; volatility) (click to enlarge) · Turnover is huge with less than 5% of the components remaining after 16 years. · The “capitalization effect” is more important on Nasdaq Composite than it is on Russell 2000. Russell 2000 only refers to small capitalization (less than 10BlnUSD), whereas Nasdaq Composite gathers stocks whose capitalization lays between 2MlnUSD and 700BlnUSD in 2015. The beta is decreasing with respect to capitalization, and is increasing with respect to historical volatility, with a beta close to 2 for the couple (1st capitalization; 4th historical volatility). · As for Russell 2000, the red part of the table is concentrated on the right hand side, with scarce very high outperformances. Same explanation about the smoothness profile required, and the performance fees policy needed. · Regarding the persistence of the winners and losers, this relationship is quite volatile, as for Russell2000. Most of the time (and easy to see in 2002 and 2015), the winners of N-1 remain the winners of N (momentum effect), whereas in a year such 2009, the breach is very sudden and the relationship no longer holds. · Looking again at the couple (1st capitalization; 4th historical volatility), which we use as a proxy for stock-picking here the ranking of this couple among the other couple per year. The ranking goes from 1 to 16. We could say that the higher the index performance, the higher the ranking of this “stock-picking couple proxy” (“SP”). Before 2012 it works. But since 2012, we can notice that in spite of the huge performance of the index (respectively +17.8% and +40.2% in 2012 and 2013), this stock-picking proxy lags a lot . We compare the stock-picking proxy to its opposite, the “benchmark proxy” which is the couple (4th capitalization; 1st historical volatility) (“B”). In 2012 and 2013, the respective median performance (in absolute value) of “SP” and “B” were The impact of ETF and “low-volatility” Smart Beta (“Minimum Variance” products, “Equal Risk Contribution” products) dramatically changed the market, developing thanks to the high risk-aversion of customers (still traumatized by the 2008 drop in equities). The flows are huge and totally offset any fundamental reasoning since 2010. At this date, 2 years after the big krach, investors are eager to take some equity risk again, but with strong risk management. This is the promise of these ETF. On the other hand, one can notice the difference of magnitude between the performance boundaries over the years: It is interesting to look at this table as of logarithmic return, as this type of returns keeps the symmetry. Therefore, we can notice that “B” suffer less from asymmetry than “SP”. The same reasoning we already made on Russell 2000 holds here again about huge drawdowns for “SP”, and the smooth pattern for “B”, with less difficulty to recover. Once again, the performance fees policy is the key to secure the shareholder, and prevent him from any rogue asset manager. · As for the Russell 2000, the Nasdaq Composite is definitely not a territory for stock-pickers, with 2.5% of the stocks exhibiting more than 100% YtD performance in 2015, almost 2/3 doing worse than the index, and a random stock picking underperforming the index by almost 10%. · The market evolution and the emergence of ETF does not allow any stock-picker to outperform the index. DJ STOXX 600 Beta per couple (capitalization; volatility) (click to enlarge) · Turnover is pretty low compared to US Indices. · Beta depends as on capitalization (negative relationship), and historical volatility (positive relationship). The difference between stock-picker (“SP”) as explained for the Nasdaq Composite and benchmark investors (“B”) is pretty clear on the table, with a beta of 0.66 for “B” in the lower left, and a beta of 1.57 in the upper right. · Red and green colors seem a lot more balanced than in the US, either among columns or among rows. No pattern with respect to capitalization or to historical volatility may be exhibited. ETF did not modified significantly the European equity market (yet?). · We can notice that during years with very positive return (2005, 2006, 2009, 2013), high historical volatility stocks tend to outperform significantly, so do small caps. But the difference between “SP” and “B” performances remains very low compared to US extremes. · Regarding the “momentum effect” and the persistence of winners and losers, we find the same pattern as in the US, meaning a quite strong trend-following process, except during big breaches such as what happened in 2008-2009. Therefore, we can suggest to separate the ETF impact and the “low-volatility” puzzle their flows create in the US, and the trend-following process of the market. The latter does not rely on ETF flows, but on the behavioral and cognitive biases of investors. · Europe equity market remain a territory for stock-pickers. Definitely. The ETF impact remain very contained. The only major pattern that can be exhibited is a trend-following aspect of the returns over the years, but nothing relative to capitalization nor historical volatility. TOPIX · First of all, looking at the beta per couple, we can notice, that the higher the capitalization the higher the beta. This means that lower capitalizations post very dispersed returns with very low correlated returns among a given class, whereas the big caps exhibit very close behaviors among themselves. · Performances are well balanced between columns (volatilities) and rows (capitalizations). Using our former notations (“SP”) and (“B”), let’s have a look at the rankings over the years. · On the table, we can notice a change of pattern since 2014 (included), with a more European look-like pattern before and a US look-like pattern since then. · If we add the latter characteristic to the fact that beta depends positively on the capitalization, Topix seems to be at the middle of the road between US and Europe in terms of investment philosophy, US being the “new-way” of investing, flow-driven, and Europe being the “old-way” of investing, fundamental-driven. · “Momentumwise”, except in 2009, where the worst performers of 2008 posted the best performance of years, it is difficult to sort the Japanese market either on the “trend-following” side or on the “mean-reverting”. · The Topix remains quite difficult to understand, as it is a mix between European patterns and US ones. We can notice that there is no clear “trend-following” or “mean-reverting” process. Large capitalizations seems to be riskier, due to their high-intra correlated pattern, posting a higher beta than small caps, which suffer from highly dispersed returns. GLOBAL CONCLUSION First of all, we noticed over the past 15 years that US stocks returns are much more dispersed than Europe or Japanese. We have much more positive and negative extreme outliers in the US. US is definitely not a market for traditional stock-pickers, as this market is a flow-driven market. This relies on a structural fact: US people are all interested in stock exchange performances as their retirement relies on the latter. Therefore, the level of knowledge in the US is by far higher than the one in Europe, meaning that all the Americans are stock-exchange investors, providing huge flows, and expecting the same commitment from their financial advisors in term of risk exposure. People are still scared by the 2008 crisis and their come-back in the equity markets relies on a strict risk-management rule. Today, smart-beta ETFs provide solution, mainly known as “Minimum Variance” or “Equal Risk Contribution”. This is the reason why last years rally in US equities is often described as a “defensive” rally. Therefore, flows concentrate on these products encouraging the pattern to pursue. In Europe, the economic knowledge of the population is very low. In addition to that, financial practitioners and financial related topics are hated. There is no pension funds in Continental Europe. Therefore the equity market does not depend on huge flows as in the US, and remains the stronghold of some “happy-fews” whose way of thinking relies on fundamentals. Thus, European equity market still reacts on fundamental data and news, as flows are almost insignificant. The question is: until when these patterns may last? Why they may be threatened? In the US, we have been waiting for 6 years an “aggressive” rally. It will happen when the couple (“small caps”, “high vol”) will dramatically outperform the couple (“large caps”, “low vol”). It happened in 2009, after the 2008 krach, but this can be analyzed as a kind of “mean-reverting” process on very low levels of valuation. But, today in the US, valuation standards do not exist anymore. An investor just have to think as follows: Where do the flows go? What are the main drivers of the market with metrics such as capitalizations and historical volatilities? We could challenge this vision: how can a low volatility stock perform a high volatility stock? Because low volatility stocks exhibits positive volatility (volatility on upside moves) and a smooth pattern, whereas high volatility stocks exhibit negative volatility (volatility on downside moves) and jumpy charts. Thus the question is: given such matter of fact, is the stock exchange the best place for a start-up to raise money? Isn’t Private Equity a better shelter, and just wait to get a decent size or a decent brand-famousness (as Alibaba or Uber) to go listed? In Europe, while the money is still in the hands of the 50+ old generations, we will keep this fundamental-driven market. Recently, we noticed the emergence of Fintech actors in Europe, with 40- founders. This 40- generation is interested in stock exchange and portfolio management. When these guys will take the money of the elders, and given the difficulty of savings system in Europe, pension funds are likely to develop dramatically. Therefore, we can assume that today’s US pattern will cross the Atlantic. Thus, when this happens, it will be time to focus on large caps, low volatility names such as the Swiss. Japan is very difficult to understand. It seems to be a merge of Europe and US, but the trend tends towards a more US look-like market, with stock-picking that is likely to become more and more difficult. In addition to these area, type of investors – related pattern, there is a “momentum effect” that tends to be persistent. “Winners remains the winners, losers the losers”, same as for good and bad pupils. This stresses the “trend-following” pattern of the equity market, whatever be US, European or Japanese, with a kind of performance clustering over the years, as we can notice about volatility: period of good performance tends to be followed by good performance again. Stock-pickers should focus on Europe, and systematic or factor-based investors on the US. Should you want to pick-up stocks in the US, first select quantitatively a universe with capitalization and historical volatility factors. It is likely to enhance significantly the performance of this “conditional” stock-picking, and avoid large losses. Moreover, keep in mind that today, fundholders have access to financial information instantaneously, so do have the asset managers. There is no more information asymmetry. Information is now the same for everybody, professional and not professional. This means that finance has changed a lot: 30 years ago, the fundholder used to receive informations about his funds two times per year . Now it happens everyday. Therefore, his psychological risk-budget -which has not increased – is filled by far more quickly. The consequence? Implicitly, unconsciously, this phenomenon has dramatically reduced the holding period of the fund by the fund holder. Therefore, risk-management has – now more than ever – to be taken into account ex ante in the asset management process – and not ex post, as it can be seen too often in the French AM industry. Smart risk management is as important as finding equity ideas to generate alpha. It is a way to avoid negative alpha and then create added value for the fundholder. The other requirement is to know and understand the market you invest in. This is the aim of this article: it is not the same to know the companies you invest in (analyst), and to know the market you invest in (asset manager).

Dual ETF Momentum December Update

Scott’s Investments provides a free “Dual ETF Momentum” spreadsheet which was originally created in February 2013. The strategy was inspired by a paper written by Gary Antonacci and available on Optimal Momentum . Antonacci’s book, Dual Momentum Investing: An Innovative Strategy for Higher Returns with Lower Risk, also details Dual Momentum as a total portfolio strategy. My Dual ETF Momentum spreadsheet is available here and the objective is to track four pairs of ETFs and provide an “Invested” signal for the ETF in each pair with the highest relative momentum. Invested signals also require positive absolute momentum, hence the term “Dual Momentum”. Relative momentum is gauged by the 12-month total returns of each ETF. The 12-month total returns of each ETF is also compared to a short-term Treasury ETF (a “cash” filter) in the form of iShares Barclays 1-3 Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: SHY ). In order to have an “Invested” signal the ETF with the highest relative strength must also have 12-month total returns greater than the 12-month total returns of SHY. This is the absolute momentum filter which is detailed in depth by Antonacci, and has historically helped increase risk-adjusted returns. An “average” return signal for each ETF is also available on the spreadsheet. The concept is the same as the 12-month relative momentum. However, the “average” return signal uses the average of the past 3, 6, and 12 (“3/6/12″) month total returns for each ETF. The “invested” signal is based on the ETF with the highest relative momentum for the past 3, 6 and 12 months. The ETF with the highest average relative strength must also have an average 3/6/12 total returns greater than the 3/6/12 total returns of the cash ETF. Portfolio123 was used to test a similar strategy using the same portfolios and combined momentum score (“3/6/12″). The test results were posted in the 2013 Year in Review and the January 2015 Update . Below are the four portfolios along with current signals: (click to enlarge) As an added bonus, the spreadsheet also has four additional sheets using a dual momentum strategy with broker specific commission-free ETFs for TD Ameritrade, Charles Schwab, Fidelity, and Vanguard. It is important to note that each broker may have additional trade restrictions and the terms of their commission-free ETFs could change in the future. Disclosure: None.

4 Country ETFs To Shun If Oil Hits $20

Now that OPEC has announced that it will continue to pump out more oil despite piling-up supplies and falling demand, traders have set a new bottom for the long-exhausted commodity oil of $20 which is way below the psychologically resistant level of $40. OPEC terminated the production limit after the December 4 meeting. Though the investing was expecting in the same line as the OPEC top brass Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries are more concerned about market share, per CNBC , rather than falling oil prices. Goldman Sachs viewed the outcome of this meeting as a serious threat to future oil prices and commented that this ‘leaves risks to their forecast as skewed to the downside in coming months, with cash costs near $20/bbl ‘. However, all are not as bearish as Goldman since HSBC expect non-OPEC supply growth to decrease from 2.3 mbd in 2014 to 0.9 mbd in 2015, before turning negative in 2016. HSBC also projects Brent crude to average $60 per barrel in 2016, $70/bbl in 2017 and $80/bbl in 2018. While nobody knows where the bottom is, one thing for sure is that oil is due for a wilder or a rather sluggish run in the coming days. At the time of writing, oil prices are hovering around the $40 level and are giving no signs of a near-term recovery. While a WTI crude oil ETF like United States Oil Fund (NYSEARCA: USO ) lost over 9.8% in the last five trading sessions, there are other corners as well which are linked to the commodity oil and are equally at risk if black gold slips to $20 or remains stressed. Those corners are key oil producing and exporting countries which have been exhibiting a downtrend, as revenues earned from this commodity account for a major share of their GDP. We have seen this trend in a number of countries so far this year. Market Vectors Russia ETF (NYSEARCA: RSX ) The Russian economy contracted 4.1% year over year in Q3. The economy shrunk for the third successive quarter with stubbornly low oil prices being mainly responsible. Among the other reasons for the deterioration are the ban on Russia by the West on the Ukraine issue and sky-high inflation. Oil – seemingly the main commodity of the nation – posed huge risks to the nation. The plunge in oil prices forced investors to think twice before investing in Russia even at bargain prices. In fact subdued oil prices and a stronger U.S. dollar on the Fed lift-off bet put pressure on the Russian currency ruble which lost about 17.2% in the last one year against the greenback (as of December 4, 2015). RSX is the most popular and liquid option in the space with an asset base of $1.83 billion and average trading volume of more than 8 million shares a day. The energy sector accounts for about 43% of RSX, which charges 61 basis points as expenses. The Zacks ETF #4 (Sell) fund advanced 5.9% but lost 6.5% in the last five trading sessions (as of December 7, 2015). Global X FTSE Norway 30 ETF (NYSEARCA: NORW ) Norway is among the top 10 nations famous for oil exports and with its comparatively low population, oil forms the key part of the country’s GDP. As per U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), Norway is the biggest oil driller in Europe. The most popular way to play the country is with Global X ETF NORW. The product tracks the FTSE Norway 30 Index, a benchmark of 30 companies that focus on Norway, charging investors 50 basis points a year in fees. The ETF is heavily concentrated on energy stocks, as these make up for nearly 45% of the portfolio. In fact, Norwegian oil giant Statoil accounts for one-fifth of the portfolio alone, suggesting a heavy concentration. Thanks to a slump in oil prices, NORW has lost about 11.3% in the year-to-date frame and was down 2.9% in the last five trading sessions. iShares MSCI Canada ETF (NYSEARCA: EWC ) Canada is also among the world’s top 10 oil producers. The oil, gas and mining sector make up about over a quarter of the Canada’s economy. Its currency plummeted to an 11-year low level after the disappointing outcome of the OPEC meeting. Canadian currency lost about 15% year over year while jobless data spiked last month. The best way to invest in Canada is the iShares MSCI Canada ETF, a product that has nearly $1.89 billion in assets. The fund tracks the MSCI Canada Index, which holds just under 100 stocks in its basket. Energy makes up a huge chunk of assets accounting for one-fifth of the total. The fund was off about 19% in the last one year. The fund has lost 22.7% this year and has a Zacks ETF Rank #4. The fund lost over 4.4% in the last five trading sessions. Global X Nigeria Index ETF (NYSEARCA: NGE ) Nigeria – an OPEC member – is one of the biggest net crude exporters in the world. An option to invest in Nigeria is a Global X ETF, NGE. This new product follows the Solactive Nigeria Index, giving exposure to about 25 companies and charging investors 68 basis points a year in fees. Though financials actually take the top spot in the ETF, making up about 45% of the holdings, energy has about 10% exposure. That is why, it is important to see how the fund fared during the recent oil price downturn. NGE shed about 31.1% during the last one year and is down 30.8% so far this year. NGE retreated 1.4% in the last five trading sessions. The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #4. Original Post