Tag Archives: investing

Robo-Advisors Are Desperately Clinging To A Dangerous Dogma

I’ve recently argued that the success of passive investing potentially sows the seeds of its own demise . Patrick O’Shaughnessy also made a similar point recently and probably a bit more eloquently. But, to dig deeper into the push towards passive, there’s one big problem I have with virtually every one of the major robo-advisors that very few folks seem to be talking about. That is they all seem to advocate a heavily overweight position in equities, and for the most part, this is skewed towards U.S. equities. For example, below is the allocation Wealthfront would put me in. It’s 91% in stocks, 49% U.S. stocks and 42% foreign, and 9% muni bonds (This is its taxable allocation, but the retirement allocation is very, very similar). Click to enlarge I assume this massive equity overweight is simply based on the, “stocks for the long run,” dogma that everyone has bought into in recent years. The trouble with this is that it fails to take into account the simple fact that, in recent years and across a wide variety of time frames, bonds have outperformed stocks and with far less volatility, or what some might call, “risk.” As The Economist points out , “there was a point in 2011 when equities had lagged Treasury bonds over the previous 30 years.” 30 years! Intrigued, I decided to run some of the numbers myself. The chart below tracks the difference in performance between Vanguard’s S&P 500 index fund versus its long-term treasury fund. It dates back to the start of 1999; that’s as far as StockCharts.com will let me go. Notice that since then, bonds have nearly doubled up on the performance of stocks, and this includes some of the greatest years in stock market history! This time frame is especially compelling to me because stocks are currently valued, according to the Buffett yardstick and a few other valuable measures, just as highly today as they were back in 1999-2000 . Click to enlarge We can also just look at the past 10 years. Stocks have had an incredible run recently; surely they’ve outperformed bonds over the past decade. Nope. Bonds win again and, if you owned them instead of stocks, you felt much better about your investments during the financial crisis and were thus much more likely to stick with your investment strategy through that difficult period. Click to enlarge So it’s fascinating for me to see so many hang on so fiercely to the idea that buying and holding U.S. stocks over any and all time frames is the way to go despite their much greater volatility and lagging performance in recent years. And to see this dogma take form across every robo-advisor I’ve found just validates how deeply ingrained this dogma has now become. In fact, Wealthfront is so in love with the idea it wouldn’t put any of my money at all into long-term treasuries. Why not? Because it’s clinging to a dogma that perhaps worked at one point a long time ago, when stocks were more consistently fairly valued. But this dogma hasn’t worked for quite a long time now. Maybe this is why Ray Dalio’s firm, which has adopted just the opposite dogma – overweight bonds versus stocks because they offer better risk-adjusted returns over the long term – has become the largest hedge fund firm by assets in the world. Now I’m not saying you should forget stocks and put all your money in bonds. But there is a wonderful case to be made for diversifying across a variety of asset classes. Wealthfront makes it appear as if it’s doing so. It’s not. In fact, it would just put all my money in the stock market and say, “good luck!” True diversification is something very, very different and also something far more valuable. Sadly, it may take another painful bear market in equities before the robos learn this important lesson.

FXF Hedge To Assuage ‘Brexit’ Fears

By Max Chen and Todd Lydon Market observers are growing anxious as the United Kingdom contemplates breaking away from the European Union. However, traders may hedge the so-called Brexit risk through the Swiss franc and currency-related exchange traded fund, according to industry analyst ETF Trends . The CurrencyShares Swiss Franc Trust (NYSEArca: FXF ) , which tracks the currency movement of the Swiss franc against the U.S. dollar, has been a traditional safe-haven play in times of volatility. FXF has gained 1.3% year-to-date as global volatility pressured riskier assets. On the backdrop of greater uncertainty down the road, HSBC argues that the Swiss currency could strongly rally on the a Brexit but would not weaken if the U.K. decided to remain in the 28-country bloc, reports Katy Barnato for CNBC . The U.K. is set to hold a referendum on June 23 where the electorate will vote on whether the country should remain with the European Union. “The CHF would likely rally on Brexit, given the political and European-centric nature of the crisis ,” HSBC currency strategists, David Bloom, Daragh Maher and Mark McDonald, said in a report. “The Swiss National Bank may intervene, but we believe it would only, at best, be able to slow the move rather than reverse it.” The HSBC strategists argue that while Brexit fears have been gaining momentum, there has been little evidence that the franc has priced in Brexit risks. “This asymmetry makes the CHF the best choice as a hedge,” HSBC Strategists added. Unlike the U.K., Switzerland has never been a part of the European Union. During times of duress among Eurozone members, the Swiss franc has acted as a safe-haven hedge. For instance, during the height of the Eurozone financial crisis, the franc currency rallied against the euro. The U.S. dollar weakened against the franc currency Wednesday, trading around CHF0.9765 Wednesday. The Swiss franc appreciated against the USD Wednesday after the Federal Reserve held interest rates steady while lowering expectation for the number of hikes this year to two from a planned four rate hike. CurrencyShares Swiss Franc Trust 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.

The Best And Worst Of February: Nontraditional Bond Funds

Nontraditional bond funds lost an average of 0.47% in February, bringing the category’s one-year returns through the end of the month to -4.06% versus 1.50% for the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index. As a result, investors pulled a total of $21.7 billion out of the category for the year ending February 29, bringing total category assets down to $125 billion. Despite this, there have been some stellar performers in the category: Six funds generated one-year returns in excess of +2%, but this represented just a small fraction of the 129 funds in the category with track records of at least a year. Meanwhile, 84 funds in the category suffered one-year losses of at least 2%, with 13 of those posting double-digit losses. Best Performers in February The three best-performing nontraditional bond funds in February were: The BTS Tactical Fixed Income Fund was the only mutual fund in February’s top three, edging out a pair of ETFs to rank as the month’s top performer. BTFAX returned +3.30% in the shortest month of the year, bringing its one-year returns to +1.37% for the year ending February 29. This was good enough for it to rank in the top 6% of its category, which may be why the fund received more than $84.7 million in inflows for the year. The fund’s one-year beta of 1.49 is high, but with its bullish returns, investors don’t seem to mind. ETFs from ProShares and Deutsche X-trackers took the second and third spots for February, returning +1.89% and +1.51%, respectively. Only the former has been around long enough to have a one-year track record, and it returned +0.86% for the year ending February 29, ranking in the top 1% of all nontraditional bond ETFs. It suffered $3.95 million in net outflows for the year, though, compared to the Deutsche fund, which received $6.25 million in inflows. Worst Performers in February The three worst-performing nontraditional bond funds in February were: Highland’s Opportunistic Credit Fund was February’s worst-performing nontraditional bond fund, and it was very near the bottom of the category for its one-year returns. HNRZX lost 4.86% in February, bringing its one-year losses through February 29 to a painful 32.16%. The fund’s beta of -1.02 indicates nearly perfect inverse correlation to the Barclays US Aggregate Bond Index, but its -36.09% one-year alpha better explains its woeful returns. Over the three-year period, the fund lost an annualized 7.70%, ranking at the very bottom of the category. Thus, it’s more than a little surprising that it enjoyed more than $5.9 million in inflows for the one-year period ending February 29. PIMCO’s Capital Securities and Financials Fund only launched on April 13, 2015. It lost 3.83% for the month. Coming in as the third-worst performing nontraditional bond fund is the Putnam Premier Income Fund, which returned -3.68%. Its one-year return through February 29 stood at -10.04%. Past performance does not necessarily predict future results. Jason Seagraves contributed to this article. Note: MPT statistics (alpha and beta) are calculated relative to the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index.