Tag Archives: ideas

A Walk In The Woods: Evaluating Investment Strategies For The Long Haul

A Walk in the Woods , the book by Bill Bryson and movie starring Robert Redford and Nick Nolte, is a humorous yet insightful account of two novice hikers who set out to through-hike the Appalachian Trail. The endeavor parallels that facing many investors: setting out on what seems an almost implausibly long adventure with very little first hand knowledge of the challenges they are likely to encounter along the way. The parallels between hiking and investing extend further. In both cases, the participants receive all kinds of advice and are sold all sorts of things that turn out being either of dubious value or entirely counterproductive. Two guidelines stand out that apply as much to investing as to hiking. One is that fees are like gear in your pack – too much stuff that isn’t very useful can really slow you down, but some of that gear is really useful. Another is that the environment changes over time – which implies that different gear is appropriate at different times. Investment strategy is an extremely important decision for investors. The three main approaches of active, passive, and smart beta (also known as factor investing) each has advantages and a deserved role for certain situations. Too often, however, the pros and cons of each are overly simplified and applied dogmatically with little consideration given how conditions might change over time. While active management as a whole has performed poorly, that poor performance has not been universal as many assume. Research over the last several years reveals that the underperformance is not so much a structural issue with active investing as it is an endemic problem with the industry. It shouldn’t be surprising that active portfolios that are fairly concentrated, that charge reasonable fees, and that focus on inefficiently priced asset classes tend to perform better. In other words, active management is far from a futile exercise, but it does depend on the judicious use of “gear”. Critics who are completely dismissive of active management miss the reality that there are a number of excellent managers. Indeed, it defies common sense that given examples of exceptionalism in every realm of human endeavor, that there would be none in the field of active management. It is right to be skeptical, but not to be dismissive. A big part of the challenge for active investing is the cost/benefit tradeoff of its fees and this is exactly why passive investing has been such an attractive alternative. Indeed, passive investing today provides a far better way for people to gain exposure to the market than the main option available thirty years ago of buying a couple of individual stocks. No doubt, passive investing has been a useful addition to the amalgam of investment offerings. That said, the lower fees of passive investing relative to active do not provide an apples to apples comparison and are understated in an important sense. More specifically, Research Affiliates notes that, “Collectively, an active manager’s very important role is to increase market efficiency by identifying mispricing.” In doing so, active management actually provides a socially useful service in the form of price discovery by effectively making sure that market prices are fairly accurate. Without the efforts of active investors, there would be no natural forces to prevent prices deviating wildly from intrinsic values. As things currently stand, the costs of the service of price discovery accrue solely to active management clients, but the benefits accrue to passive management clients. Kenneth French (2008) studied these costs and found, “From society’s perspective, the average annual cost of price discovery is .67% of the total value of domestic equity.” This non-trivial cost accounts for a big chunk of the difference between active and passive fees. Indeed, it’s been a great deal for passive investors: it has been like having your hiking companion carry the tent, all of the food, and any shared gear for both of you, with no reciprocity. In addition to the traditional approaches of active and passive investing, a “third way” approach, often referred to as smart beta (factor investing), has become increasingly popular. The smart beta approach attempts to capture the best of both the active and passive approaches by facilitating low costs through automated selection processes and excess returns by leveraging finance theory and research. One well known “factor”, for example, is “value” and a recent favorite is “high quality” (usually determined by gross profitability). Smart beta is a legitimate concept and there is good reason to expect future developments in this area. Two threads of theory are relevant here. One was developed over twenty years ago by Kenneth French and Eugene Fama. Their research showed that returns could largely be described by the three factors of beta, size, and value in what is commonly referred to as the ” three factor model “. The implication for investors is that higher returns can be realized by increasing exposure to smaller stocks and to cheaper stocks. The economics of this quantitative approach have improved substantially as the costs of commissions and computing power have fallen relative to the costs active managers incur for doing fundamental research. Another thread of research pioneered by Research Affiliates argues that many indexes can be improved by weighting their constituents by variables other than that of market capitalization. Cap weighted indexes (such as the S&P 500), the argument goes, overweight the most overpriced stocks and underweight the most underpriced stocks, and therefore make systematic valuation errors. Their research shows that simply making random errors, as opposed to systematic ones, improves performance by about 2% per year. While this body of research certainly provides a valid foundation for some kind of smart beta (factor investing) approach, the investment industry has outdone itself the last few years by unveiling an enormous array of factor investing approaches to an investment audience ravenous for low fees and better performance. The recent paper put out by Research Affiliates entitled, “How can ‘smart beta’ go horribly wrong?”, provides some excellent research to help evaluate the recent proliferation of factors. Perhaps the single most important message from the paper is that the impressive results attributed to many of the new factors reveals more about the industry’s willingness and ability to mine data than it does about important new factors. More specifically, the authors found that, “factor returns, net of changes in valuation levels, are much lower than recent performance suggests.” In the case of high-profit companies, for example, they found, “When we subtract the returns associated with the rising popularity, and therefore rising relative valuation… the gross profitability factor loses more than 90% of its historical efficacy, delivering 10-year performance net of valuation change of just 0.39%.” In other words, “Many of the most popular new factors and strategies have succeeded solely because they have become more and more expensive.” While evaluating the costs and benefits of the three main investment strategies is a formidable task in its own right, investors in it for the long haul shouldn’t stop there. As the factor evidence highlights, things change over time and this absolutely holds true for the relative merits of investment strategies. John Authers highlights this point well in the Financial Times : “Using data from the past 25 years, Mr. Jones found a strong positive correlation between recent performance and buying decisions, in equities and bonds, for all of the classes of asset owners he looked at.” In other words, at the group level, everyone is a trend follower! In an important sense, this insight is frightening, but it also provides a useful warning: investment strategies may be just as subject to “inefficient pricing” as their underlying assets. It’s worth considering how such inefficiencies might get resolved. In the case of passive strategies, investors have been enjoying the benefits of efficient price discovery without having to pay for it. Insofar as the free ride persists, there is every reason to believe that investors will continue to jump on the passive bandwagon. The consequence of such trends will be to erode, over time, the ability of active investors to keep market prices fairly efficient. As this continues to happen, it is fair to expect that pricing efficiency will decline to a point where sufficient opportunities emerge for a smaller group of active investors to earn attractive returns over their costs, and that such excess returns will come at the expense of passive investors. In short, the free ride for passive investors may well be a one time gig. Smart beta too has had a very good run over the last few years but much of that appears to be temporal as well. As Research Affiliates notes, “We find that the efficacy of a factor-based strategy or a factor tilt (included by many under the smart beta umbrella) is strongly linked to changes in relative valuation, that is, whether the strategy is in vogue (becoming more richly priced) or out of favor (becoming cheaper).” Thus, since “Value-add can be structural, and thus reliably repeatable, or situational – a product of rising valuations-likely neither sustainable nor repeatable,” for many recent factors, the evidence points to situational and unsustainable. As a result, the authors conclude that “it’s reasonably likely a smart beta crash will be a consequence of the soaring popularity of factor-tilt strategies.” The Research Affiliates authors don’t uniformly disparage factors, however. Rather, they recognize that, “For the past eight years, value investing has been a disaster with the Russell 1000 Value Index underperforming the S&P 500 by 1.6% a year, and the Fama-French value factor in large-cap stocks returning -4.8% annually over the same period.” Largely as a result of that poor past performance, they find that the old Fama-French factor of value is currently “in its cheapest decile in history,” and therefore an attractive factor. Finally, the prospects for active management are mixed. On one hand, there are far too many active managers and far too many that charge fees greater than the benefits received. As a result, it is reasonable to expect the numbers to shrink. It is distinctly possible, and perhaps even likely, that as the active herd gets culled, so too will ever increasing opportunities emerge for efficient and focused active managers that aren’t “carrying too much weight” to take advantage of the overshoot of passive and smart beta strategies. A general lesson from all of this is that since the relative attractiveness of different investment strategies changes over time, it doesn’t make sense to take a dogmatic view towards them. Combined with the reality that each strategy has its own particular strengths in certain situations, it also makes little sense to think of any one strategy as being mutually exclusive of the others. The bottom line is that it makes the most sense to remain flexible. Further, there are two more specific lessons to consider in selecting investment strategies. One is to make sure that you get a good return from the fees that you pay, i.e. that you get a good “bang for the buck”. The other is that it makes sense to monitor changes in the environment that may warrant a different approach. Some of what passes as an “advantage” to one investment strategy in one situation may very well end up being a transient factor that can hurt you in the future. Your journey will be easier if you have the right “gear” (in the form of the right investment strategy) for each environment. Click to enlarge Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

How To Best Gauge Your Risk Tolerance

By Larry Cao, CFA Understanding an investor’s risk tolerance is arguably the single most important issue for an investor and their financial adviser to consider. And yet it never seems to get the attention it deserves. The Definition Risk tolerance refers to your ability and willingness to take on investment risk. Specifically, it indicates how big of a loss you can take in the market without changing course. We are all human and abandon ship when things go wrong. (And that’s why we are not fully invested in equities even when it comes to our long-term investments.) Risk tolerance is the threshold at which you’ll head for the exits. It’s important to measure your risk tolerance accurately. Otherwise all your financial plans are just sand castles and won’t withstand the test of time and market volatility. “I did not really understand my true risk tolerance.” This is one of the painful facts many investors came to appreciate following the global financial crisis. Financial institutions often offer their wealth management clients a risk tolerance questionnaire as a way to gauge their risk appetite and capacity to withstand loss. Investors are typically asked anywhere from a few to multiple sets of questions on their investment horizon, their reaction to different levels of market volatility, and sometimes other factors, such as their education, that regulators or financial institutions may deem relevant. The Issue There are two problems with the current risk tolerance questionnaires and how they are administered. First, is the question of what motivates a financial institution to administer such a questionnaire. Far too often, the questionnaire is the product of internal (compliance) and regulatory considerations. Therefore, the questions may not have been designed to accurately measure your risk tolerance. Second, financial advisers, whether fee- or non-fee-based, are directly rewarded for persuading clients to trade or invest with them. Risk tolerance questionnaires are often treated as a hindrance to profit rather than a tool to gain a client’s trust. I think it’s for these reasons that the single most important question for accurately gauging investor’s risk tolerance often does not get asked. That question is: How often do you check your investment performance? The Solution How frequently you look at a Bloomberg Terminal, check your stock performance on a smartphone, or, in a more old fashioned way, call your broker actually matters quite a bit in understanding your risk tolerance. Run-of-the-mill questionnaires generally give ranges of upside and downside related to investment strategies, in dollar amounts or percentages, and ask which one you’d invest in. The horizon is generally assumed to be a year – that’s how often financial advisers typically meet with clients to discuss financial plans. And yet, what these ranges mean to an investor very much depends on how frequently they check the market. As a service to readers of CFA Institute Financial NewsBrief , we asked them that question. (To avoid ambiguity and guesswork, the question was phrased differently in the poll.) And below are their responses. When did you last check your investment performance? Click to enlarge About 41% of the 558 respondents actually checked their performance within 24 hours (including 7% who checked within the hour?!). Imagine the constant pounding they’ll get in a bear market. In fact, if you are part of this group, just think back to how you felt this January. Experience shows that this group is more likely to overstate their risk tolerance on questionnaires and, hence, are most vulnerable to market volatility when it actually hits. When I was a professional money manager, I belonged to this group. It’s kind of a responsibility that comes with the job. But it is just as hard for professional investors to stomach market turmoil as anyone else. As I recall, in the midst of the financial crisis in 2008, when I asked a portfolio manager from a different firm how morale was in the office, he said, “It is really quiet.” By the way, I am not saying all portfolio managers have to monitor their performance this closely. It depends on how your investment strategy works. For example, value strategies tend to require longer investment horizons, so it’s generally okay if a manager does not check portfolio performance every day. The largest group of our survey respondents (40%) check on their portfolios every month. For most investment strategies and most investors, I think that’s probably the optimum. Still, in terms of gauging one’s risk tolerance, that’s a frequency higher than implied in the risk tolerance questionnaire. So this group suffers from the same problem as those noted above. That adds up to about 80% of investors who are probably overestimating their risk tolerance. How frequently you make your investment decisions has direct impact on your risk tolerance. If you invest you own money, make sure you ask yourself that question. If you are a financial adviser, consider asking your clients that question today. Disclaimer: Please note that the content of this site should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute.

Explaining Blockchain To Traditional Investors Through Growth Capital

Note: This piece assumes some general familiarity with the blockchain technology space. If you would like an introduction to the technology that underpins Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, see this article on Re/code . Ever since launching CoinFund in July 2015, I’ve been viewing the blockchain technology space from the point of view of an engineer and a portfolio manager. I’ve been thinking, therefore, about how to explain the blockchain technology space to traditional investors in traditional terms. What makes blockchain companies unique and interesting opportunities in the investment landscape? To see the potential long-term implications of this fascinating space, one needs to take in a thirty minute primer of technical details: What is a blockchain? What’s interesting about decentralization and trustlessness? What’s the deal with smart contracts? In a semi-technical crowd, the audience is quickly lost in jargon and a technologist’s reasoning. Instead, I think the correct way to present the blockchain opportunity to traditional investors is through the lens of growth investments – yesterday, today, and tomorrow. It is a story of a technology that democratizes, opens, and optimizes a difficult investment environment. Where is the capital? For the last 15 to 20 years, startups have proliferated in the market across all verticals. You have ZocDoc (Private: ZDOC ) for doctors, UpCounsel for lawyers, Seamless for food delivery, Tinder for dating, and on and on. Just about every New York University junior one meets is trying to either be CEO to or a VC in the next “Uber (Private: UBER ) for X.” Take a look at this chart in which you can witness the staggering “unicorn density” of our time: Click to enlarge As more companies take up the startup model, there are more and more private companies and fewer and fewer public ones. Just a few metrics paint a clear picture. The number of firms on the U.S. stock market started declining in the mid-1990s from a high of about 7,300 listed companies. By 2015, after a lazy uptick, there were only 3,700 left. Startups, pumped by high valuations and VC capital and a tech entrepreneurial culture, stay private longer in a “psychological shift” which has been described as “Silicon Valley’s distaste for the IPO.” Between 1996 and 2014, the average time to IPO went up from 3.5 years to 6.9, according to the 2015 IPO report by WilmerHale . And most recently, the number of IPOs has been dropping globally, with the tech sector leading the way. A 58% drop in NYSE IPOs in 3Q15 YTD compared with the previous year was accompanied by a 77% drop in dollars raised, according to Ernst & Young . In short, there is a lot of capital moving from the public into the private markets for the world’s primary growth sector – technology. According to Rett Wallace’s assessment of the tech bubble , “27 times more primary capital has gone into U.S. technology companies privately than publicly. And if Box.com had actually gotten its IPO done on schedule last year, it would be 88 times more.” In such an environment, what does participating in the growth sector look like for investors? Growth investments, yesterday and today At the turn of this century, investing in growth would looked like this: Joe the Investor would identify tech as a growth sector. He would send some cash over to his Ameritrade account, and – this being 2004 – buy some Google (NASDAQ: GOOG ) (NASDAQ: GOOGL ) at the IPO. Then Joe would hold Google for 10 years. In the interim, Joe would know that he could dump some of his Google stock if technology took a downturn. Finally, Joe would sell Google in 2014 for a 12x return. And here is what growth investment looks like today: Spencer is a private investor. He has a top 1% salary and therefore qualifies as an accredited investor , which allows him to participate in private offerings. In 2009, Spencer would notice a company called Uber doing a funding round on AngelList. Spencer’s contacts on AngelList are investing, so he would follow suit. It’s not likely that these investors would be able to predict that Uber would take off, create a new industry, and become one of the greatest growth companies of all time. It’s not likely that Uber can predict that in 2009. Following his investment, Spencer would be stuck in Uber private equity for seven years with very limited options to take profits before a liquidity event. Perhaps next year Travis Kalanick will decide to take Uber public, but no one can be sure. If he does, Spencer will make a 12,700x return. When growth companies move into the private sector, traditional public investors are left with little access to growth and a precarious stock market. “Growth and value investing” seems now a fragment of the past. And even when startups do IPO, overvaluations often foil performance in the public markets. To cite some recent examples , Box (NYSE: BOX ) stock fell 30% shortly after trading. The beloved Etsy (NASDAQ: ETSY ) fell 70%. At the time of the IPO, it is simply too late for public investors to participate in the growth of startups. The chart below shows the returns that were left for public investors after the IPO of Etsy (source: Bloomberg). Click to enlarge It would appear that in this regime the privilege of private investments goes to affluent individuals. Yet, while accredited investors have much greater access to outsized returns, their investment landscape is far from rosy. First, there is little data, research, or transparency in the private markets. A hedge fund trader might receive an offer to buy Lyft (Private: LYFT ) stock, but how does he judge whether it is a good one? Virtually all ridesharing competitors today are in the private sector and are thus tight-lipped about basic metrics such as revenues and customer acquisition costs – basic parameters that have been traditionally used to price stocks. Once again, this kind of uncertainty contributes to overvaluation and only when the company eventually reaches the public market do valuations start to deflate back to reality. Finally, it goes without saying that the lack of liquidity for private investors is a long-standing issue. But with the advent of efficient new trading technologies and a global market, low liquidity might become a concern of the past. Blockchain companies are models for the growth investments of the future A blockchain company is a special species of technology startup, one where its business gives it a distinct advantage in its own business operations. It’s kind of meta, but consider that Apple’s (NASDAQ: AAPL ) expenditure on its internal hardware is probably much less than Google’s – Apple manufactures computers and has vast economies of scale on hardware; or consider that it costs Twilio (Private: TWILO ) much less to send a text message compared to a startup who has to use Twilio to do the same. Just like tech startups need computers, they also need funding. And blockchain technology companies happen to be in a unique position to fund themselves because their product is highly conducive to transferring currency-like and stock-like assets between investors, entrepreneurs, and even digital organizations . In practice, the prevalent method of funding blockchain companies in recent memory has been the “crowdsale” – a fundraising model where the company sells its own cryptocurrency, cryptoequity, or cryptotoken to the public before the system is built and then uses the funds as a seed investment. When the blockchain finally launches, the stake becomes tradable and liquid and early investors stand to make a good return – in effect, the blockchain company has done an IPO that lies outside the traditional financial system. The Ethereum crowdsale is today the fifth largest crowdfunding in the history of the planet, having raised $18M against a white paper written by a gifted 20-year-old college dropout. Having used the funds to build a complex organization with tens of employees and many more on distributed projects from all over the world, and working against non-trivial negative social pressure from the established cryptocurrency community, Ethereum was released as a public blockchain a year and a half later. In March of 2016, Ethereum grew in price by a factor of 10, and became the world’s second largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization at a $750M valuation . Such an “initial cryptocurrency offering,” or ICO, has a highly favorable character for investors: First, the ICO is available globally to all investors, and in most jurisdictions there are compatible regulations that allow participation. The disparity between Joe and Spencer investors that we see in private equity on the traditional markets has been reduced, if not eliminated. It is an equity crowdfunding, so the market can potentially accommodate large raises – a boon for companies. Even in traditional markets, we have begun to recognize the value of equity crowdfunding with the JOBS Act and the proliferation of platforms like Crowdfunder and CircleUp, with this high-growth market estimated to reach nearly $100 billion ten years from now . Unlike typical private companies, blockchain projects often adopt an open source or open community model, so development and performance metrics are available and transparent. Unlike in speculative cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, cryptoequity investments often lend themselves to straightforward modeling, as they are based on a well-defined business product proposals: if the platform acquires n customers, it will generate r returns. Liquidity is one of the foremost considerations in an investment. Most ICO investments become liquid at beta, and investors only have to wait out development time (compare with Uber, above). Not only is liquidity often available over the counter during this period, but the advent of smart contracts will send the wait period to zero: you will soon be able to trade cryptoequity immediately after purchasing it at crowdsale using a decentralized exchange . Blockchains facilitate the low-cost, fast and efficient transfer of equity between stakeholders. This is a vast improvement of the stagnating, expensive, and slow process of paper deals on the private markets. It’s easy to see that with these favorable properties, ICOs have the character of the kind of high-tech and low-friction applications that we’ve become accustomed to over the last 20 years. They stand as a open and efficient model of how growth investing could be in the future. Blockchain Technology Disclosure : I hold an economic interest in CoinFund, a portfolio which invests in cryptocurrency and blockchain technology companies by way of their cryptoequity and which has a long position in Bitcoin and the cryptocurrency of Ethereum. CoinFund’s portfolio is fully transparent at http://coinfund.io . I have no formal business relationship or affiliation with any blockchain technology company or project. Disclosure: I am/we are long GOOG, AMZN. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.