Tag Archives: investing

I Know It Was You, Fredo

If you want to read more about the Epsilon Theory perspective on polarized politics and the use of game theory to understand this dynamic, read “ Inherent Vice ”, “ 1914 Is the New Black ”, and “ The New TVA ”. Hollow Markets Whatever shocks emanate from polarized politics, their market impact today is significantly greater than even 10 years ago. That’s because we have evolved a profoundly non-robust liquidity provision system, where trading volumes look fine on the surface and appear to function perfectly well in ordinary times, but collapse utterly under duress. Even in the ordinary times, healthy trading volumes are more appearance than reality, as once you strip out all of the faux trades (HFT machines trading with other HFT machines for rebates, ETF arbitrage, etc.) and positioning trades (algo-driven rebalancing of systematic strategies and portfolio overlays), there’s precious little investment happening today. Here’s how I think we got into this difficult state of affairs. First, Dodd-Frank regulation makes it prohibitively expensive for bulge bracket bank trading desks to maintain a trading “inventory” of stocks and bonds and directional exposures of any sort for any length of time. Just as Amazon measures itself on the basis of how little inventory it has to maintain for how little a span of time, so do modern trading desks. There is soooo little risk-taking or prop desk trading at the big banks these days, which of course was an explicit goal of Dodd-Frank, but the unintended consequence is that a major trading counterparty and liquidity provider when markets get squirrelly has been taken out into the street and shot. Second, the deregulation and privatization of market exchanges, combined with modern networking technologies, has created an opportunity for technology companies to provide trading liquidity on a purely voluntary basis. To be clear, I’m not suggesting that liquidity was provided on an involuntary basis in the past or that the old-fashioned humans manning the old-fashioned order book at the old-fashioned exchanges were motivated by anything other than greed. As Don Barzini would say, “after all, we are not Communists”. But there is a massive and systemically vital difference between the business model and liquidity provision regime (to use a good political science word) of humans operating within a narrowly defined, publicly repeatable game with forced participation and of machines operating within a broadly defined, privately unrepeatable game with unforced participation. Whatever the root causes, modern market liquidity (like beauty) is only skin deep. And because liquidity is only skin deep, whenever a policy shock hits (say, the Swiss National Bank unpegs the Swiss franc from the euro) or whenever there’s a technology “glitch” (say, when a new Sungard program misfires and the VIX can’t be priced for 10 minutes) everything falls apart, particularly the models that we commonly use to calculate portfolio risk. For example, here’s a compilation of recent impossible market events across different asset classes and geographies (hat tip to the Barclays derivatives team) … impossible in the sense that, per the Central Tendency on which standard deviation risk modeling is based, these events shouldn’t occur together over a million years of market activity, much less the past 4 years. Source: Barclays, November 2015. So just to recap … these market dislocations DID occur, and yet we continue to use the risk models that say these dislocations cannot possibly occur. Huh? And before you say, “well, I’m a long term investor, not a trader, so these temporary market liquidity failures don’t really affect me”, ask yourself this: do you use a trader’s tools, like stop-loss orders? do you use a trader’s securities, like ETFs? If you answered yes to either question, then you can call yourself a long term investor all you like, but you’ve got more than a little trader in you. And a trader who doesn’t pay attention to the modern realities of market structure and liquidity provision is not long for this world. If you want to read more about the Epsilon Theory perspective on hollow markets and the use of game theory to understand this dynamic, read “ Season of the Glitch ”, “ Ghost in the Machine ”, and “ Hollow Men, Hollow Markets, Hollow World ”. Adaptive Investing and Aware Investing Okay, now for the big finish. What does one DO about this? How does one invest in a world of bimodal uncertainty and a market of skin-deep liquidity? Both of these investment goblins – Political Polarization and the Hollow Market – are so thoroughly problematic because our perceptions of both long-term investment outcomes and short-term trading outcomes are so thoroughly infected by The Central Tendency and a quasi-religious faith in econometric modeling. But while their problematic root cause may be the same, their Epsilon Theory solutions are different. I call the former Adaptive Investing, and I call the latter Aware Investing. Adaptive Investing focuses on portfolio construction and the failure of The Central Tendency to predict long(ish)-term investment returns. Aware Investing focuses on portfolio trading and the failure of The Central Tendency to predict short(ish)-term investment returns. Each is a crucial concept. Each deserves its own book, much less its own Epsilon Theory note. But this note is going to focus on Adaptive Investing. Adaptive Investing tries to construct a portfolio that does as well when The Central Tendency fails as when it succeeds. Adaptive Investing expects historical correlations to shift dramatically as a matter of course, usually in a market-jarring way. But this is NOT a tail-risk portfolio or a sky-is-falling perspective. I really, really, really don’t believe in either. What it IS – and the stronger your internal Fredo the harder this concept will be to wrap your head around – is a profoundly agnostic investing approach that treats probabilities and models and predictions as secondary considerations. I’ll use two words to describe the Adaptive Investing perspective, one that’s a technical term and one that’s an analogy. The technical term is “convexity”. The analogy is “barbell”. In truth, both are metaphors. Both are Narratives. As such, they are applicable across almost every dimension of investing or portfolio allocation, and at almost every scale. Everyone knows what a barbell is. Convexity, on the other hand, is a daunting term. Let’s un-daunt it. The basic idea of convexity is that rather than have Portfolio A, where your returns go up and down with a market or a benchmark’s returns in a linear manner, you’d rather have Portfolio B, where there’s a pleasant upward curve to your returns if the market or benchmark does really well or really poorly. The convex Portfolio B performs pretty much the same as the linear Portfolio A during “meh” markets (maybe a tiny bit worse depending on how you’re funding the convexity benefits), but outperforms when markets are surprisingly good or surprisingly bad. A convex portfolio is essentially long some sort of optionality, such that a market surprising event pays off unusually well, which is why convexity is typically injected into a portfolio through the use of out-of-the-money options and other derivative securities. Another way of saying that you’re long optionality is to say that you’re long gamma. If that term is unfamiliar, check out the Epsilon Theory note “ Invisible Threads ”. All other things being equal, few people wouldn’t prefer Portfolio B to Portfolio A, particularly if you thought that markets are likely to be surprisingly good or surprisingly bad in the near future. But of course, all other things are never equal, and there are (at least) three big caveats you need to be aware of before you belly up to the portfolio management bar and order a big cool glass of convexity. Caveat 1: A convex portfolio based on optionality must be an actively managed portfolio, not a buy-and-hold portfolio. There’s no such thing as a permanent option … they all have a time limit, and the longer the time limit the more expensive the option. The clock works in your favor with a buy-and-hold portfolio (or it should), but the clock always works against you with a convex portfolio constructed by purchasing options. That means it needs to be actively traded, both in rolling forward the option if you get the timing wrong, as well as in exercising the option if you get the timing right. Doing this effectively over a long period of time is exactly as impossible difficult and expensive as it sounds. Caveat 2: A convex portfolio fights the Fed, at least on the left-hand part of the curve where you’re making money (or losing less money) as the market gets scorched. Yes, there are going to be more and more political shocks hitting markets over the next few years, and yes, those shocks are going to be exacerbated by the hollow market and its structurally non-robust liquidity provision. But in reaction to each of these market-wrenching policy and liquidity shocks, you can bet your bottom dollar that every central bank in the world will stop at nothing to support asset price levels and reduce market volatility. Make no mistake – if you’re long down-side protection optionality in your portfolio, you’re also long volatility. That puts you on the other side of the trade from the Fed and the ECB and the PBOC and every other central bank, and that’s not a particularly comfortable place to be. Certainly it’s not a comfortable (or profitable) place to be without a keen sense of timing, which is why, again, a convex portfolio expressed through options and derivatives needs to be actively managed and can’t be a passive buy-and-hold strategy. Caveat 3: Top-down portfolio risk adjustments like convexity injection through index options or risk premia derivatives are *always* going to disappoint bottom-up stock-picking investors. I’ve written a lot about this phenomenon, from one of the first Epsilon Theory notes, “ The Tao of Portfolio Management ”, to the more recent “ Season of the Glitch ”, so I won’t repeat all that here. The basic idea is that it’s a classic logical fallacy to infer characteristics of the whole (in this case the portfolio) from characteristics of the component pieces (in this case the individual securities selected via a bottom-up process), and vice versa. What that means in more or less plain English is that risk-managing individual positions in an effort to achieve a risk-managed overall portfolio is inherently an exercise in frustration and almost always ends in unanticipated underperformance for stock pickers. Okay, Ben, those are three big problems with implementing convexity in a portfolio. I thought you said this was a good thing. You’ll notice that each of these three caveats pertain most directly to the largest population of investors in the world – non-institutional investors who create an equity-heavy buy-and-hold portfolio by applying a bottom-up, fundamental, stock-picking perspective. The caveats don’t apply nearly so much to institutional allocators who apply a systematic, top-down perspective to a portfolio that’s typically too large to engage in anything so time-consuming as direct stock-picking. They have no problem employing a staff to manage these portfolio overlays (or hiring external managers who do), and they’re not terrified by the mere notion of negative carry, derivatives, and leverage. These institutional allocators may not be large in numbers, but they are enormous in terms of AUM. I spend a lot of time meeting with these allocators, and I can tell you this – implementing convexity into a portfolio in one way or another is the single most common topic of conversation I’ve had over the past year. Every single one of these allocators is thinking in terms of portfolio convexity, even if most are still in the exploration phase, and you’re going to be hearing more and more about this concept in the coming months. So that’s all well and good for the CIO of a forward thinking multi-billion dollar pension fund, but what if it’s a non-starter to have a conversation about the pros and cons of a long gamma portfolio overlay with your client or your investment committee? What if you’re a stock picker at heart and you’d have to change your investment stripes (something no one should ever do!) and reconceive your entire portfolio to adopt a top-down convexity approach using derivatives and risk premia and the like? This is where the barbell comes in. The basic concepts of Adaptive Investing can be described as placing modest portfolio “weights” or exposures on either side of an investment dimension. This is in sharp contrast to what Johnny Ola has convinced most of us to do, which is to place lots and lots of portfolio weight right in the middle of the bar, with normally distributed tails on either end of the massive weight in the center (i.e., a whopping 5% allocation to “alternatives”). What are these investment dimensions? They are the Big Questions of investing in a world of massive debt maintenace (and are actually very similar to the Big Questions of the 1930s), questions like … will central banks succeed in preventing a global deflationary equilibrium? … is there still a viable growth story in China and in Emerging Markets more broadly, or was it all just a mirage built on post-war US monetary policy? … is there a self-sustaining economic recovery in the US? Here’s an example of what I’m talking about, a barbell portfolio around the Biggest of the Big Questions in the Golden Age of the Central Banker: will extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy everywhere in the world spur inflationary expectations and growth-supporting economic behaviors? Like all barbell dimensions, there’s really no middle ground on this. In 2016, either the market will be surprised by resurgent global growth / inflation, or the market will be surprised by anemic growth / deflation despite extraordinary monetary policy accommodation. I want to “be there” in my portfolio with modest exposures positioned to succeed in each potential outcome, as opposed to having a big exposure somewhere in the middle that I have to drag in one direction or another when I end up being “surprised” just like the rest of the market. Specifically, what might those positions look like? Everyone will have a different answer, but here’s mine: • If deflation and low global growth carry the day, then I want to be in yield-oriented securities where the cash flows are tied to real economic activity in geographies with real growth prospects, and where company management is really distributing those cash flows to shareholders directly. • If inflation and resurgent growth carry the day, then I want to be in growth-oriented securities linked to commodities. • And yes, there are companies that can thrive in both environments. Now of course you’ll get push-back to the notion of a barbell portfolio from your client or investment committee (maybe the investment committee inside your own head), most likely in the form of some variation on these three natural questions: Q: Wouldn’t you be be better off predicting the winning side of any of these Big Questions and putting all your weight there? A: Yes, if I had a valid econometric model that could predict whether central banks will fail or succeed at spurring inflationary expectations in the hearts and minds of global investors, then I would definitely put all my portfolio weight on that answer. But I don’t have that model, and neither do you, and neither does the Fed or anyone else. So let’s not pretend that we do. Q: But if one side of your portfolio barbell ends up being right, that must mean that the other side is wrong. Wouldn’t we be just as well off putting all the weight somewhere in the middle like we usually do? A: No, that’s not how these politically-polarized investment dimensions play out, with one side clearly winning and one side clearly losing. The underlying dynamics of the Big Questions in investing today are governed by the multi-year spiraling back-and-forth of multiple equilibria games like Chicken, not The Central Tendency (read “ Inherent Vice ” for some examples). Not only is it far more capital efficient to use a barbell approach, but both sides will do relatively better than the middle. That is, in fact, the entire point of using an allocation approach that creates optionality and effective convexity in a portfolio without forcing the top-down imposition of option and derivative overlays. Q: But how do we know that you’ve identified the right positions to take on either side of these Big Questions? A: Well, that’s what you hire me for: to identify the right investments to execute our portfolio strategy effectively. But if we’re not comfortable with selecting specific assets and companies, then we might consider a trend-following strategy. Trend-following is profoundly agnostic. Unlike almost any other strategy you can imagine, trend-following doesn’t embody an opinion on whether something is cheap or expensive, overlooked or underappreciated, poised to grow or doomed to failure. All it knows is whether something is working or not, and it is as happy to be short something as it is to be long something, maybe that same thing under different circumstances. As such, a pure trend-following strategy will automatically move on its own accord from weighting one end of a barbell to the other, spending as little time as possible in the middle, depending on which side is working better. That is an incredibly powerful tool for this investment perspective. A barbell portfolio captures the essence or underlying meaning of portfolio convexity without requiring top-down portfolio overlays that are either impractical or impossible for many investors. The investments described here have a positive carry, meaning that the clock works in your favor, meaning that – unlike convex strategies that are actively trading options and volatility – these strategies fit well in a buy-and-hold, non-Fed fighting, stock-picking portfolio. I think it’s a novel way of rethinking the powerful notions of convexity and uncertainty so that they fit the real world of most investors, and whether these ideas are implemented or not I’m certain that it’s a healthy exercise for all of us to question the conceptual dominance of The Central Tendency. You know, Michael Corleone has a great line after he wised up to Fredo’s betrayal and the true designs of Johnny Ola and Hyman Roth: “I don’t feel I have to wipe everybody out … just my enemies.” It’s the same with our portfolios. We don’t have to completely reinvent our investment process to incorporate the valuable notion of convexity into our portfolios. We don’t have to sell out of everything and start fresh in order to adopt an Adaptive Investing perspective. Our investment enemies live inside our own heads. They are the ideas and concepts that we have allowed to hold too great a sway over our internal Fredo, and they can be put in their proper place with a fresh perspective and a questioning mind. Econometric modeling and The Central Tendency don’t need to be eliminated; they need to be demoted from a position of unwarranted trust to a position of respectful but arms-length business relationship. After all, let’s remember the secret of Hyman Roth’s success: he always made money for his partners. I’m happy to be partners with modeling because I think it’s a concept that can make me a lot of money. But I’m never going to trust my portfolio to it.

Equity CEFs: Buy What’s Working At A Discount

Summary The market cannot be any more clear. If you want to make money in this market, buy what has been working and ignore everything else. Indeed, every rotation head fake that seemed to finally benefit the “have not” sectors has only been an opportunity to sell and add more to the “have” sectors. Perhaps we’ll see another rotation at the beginning of 2016 but if history is any guide, the last few years has shown that trying to play a rotation is futile. Has anyone seen such a vast difference in sector performance than what we are seeing today? Just a month ago, I wrote this article, The Chasm Between What Works And What Doesn’t , and since that time not only has it gotten worse, its gotten a lot worse. In fact, it’s gotten to a point where if you want to play CEFs, which generally have not kept up with their ETF benchmarks, at least at the market price level, you have to play what’s working. And what’s working are funds which invest primarily in the large-cap technology sector. Yes, healthcare, banking and a few other sectors also are working but if you really want to follow what every institution is throwing all their weight behind here at year-end 2015, it’s large cap information technology. And what CEFs are best positioned for that? Well, let’s go to the scoreboard and see which equity CEFs have had the best YTD NAV total return performance. The following 35 funds represent the best NAV performances compared to the S&P 500 (which I use as a general benchmark for all equity CEFs). Funds in green in the YTD NAV Tot Ret column have seen their NAVs outperform the S&P 500, as represented by the SPDR S&P 500 Trust (NYSEARCA: SPY ), which is up 3.4% YTD through December 4th, 2015, including dividends. NOTE: The S&P 500 is generally quoted without dividends and is up 1.6%. (click to enlarge) Buying What’s Working At A Discount No other fund family has more equity CEFs working than from Eaton Vance , though I think you have to be selective at this point. My No. 1 pick is the Eaton Vance Enhanced Equity Income II fund (NYSE: EOS ) , $13.60 market price, $14.75 NAV, -7.8% discount, 7.8% current market yield . EOS has been a favorite of mine since 2011 and I have always maintained a position in it though I have added and reduced over the years depending on its valuation. And if you want to go on its current valuation, EOS is a buy again. This is reflected in EOS’ YTD Premium/Discount chart in which EOS has moved back down to almost an -8% discount, its widest all year and even wider than when I first wrote about EOS all the way back in February of 2011, EOS: A Compelling Valuation After A 2-Year Wait . (click to enlarge) Back in early 2011, EOS was trading at a -6.8% discount, which seemed wide at the time considering EOS often traded at a premium of 5% to 10% since its inception in early 2005. But a series of distribution cuts for all of the Eaton Vance option income CEFs beginning in 2010 and continuing through 2011 dropped their valuations to double-digit discounts of up to -16% in the fall of 2011 despite their NAVs beginning to show a turnaround. I wrote many articles during this time frame arguing that the distribution cuts were necessarily and would ultimately benefit the funds in the long run. So despite most investors giving up on the Eaton Vance option-income funds during this time and driving them down to valuations not seen since 2009, anyone who took my advice and bought these funds during this period has enjoyed one of the great runs of any family of CEFs. Today, the Eaton Vance option-income CEFs are probably the most popular equity CEFs to get exposure in the large cap information technology sector since virtually all of them own Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ) , Alphabet/Google (NASDAQ: GOOG ) (NASDAQ: GOOGL ) , Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ) , Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ) and other strong performers in their top 10 holdings. In fact, they have become so popular that a couple, like the Eaton Vance Tax-Managed Buy/Write Opportunities fund (NYSE: ETV ) and the Eaton Vance Tax-Advantaged Buy/Write Income fund (NYSE: ETB ), now trade at the high end of their valuations with ETV at a 3.1% market price premium while ETB trades at a 5.4% market price premium. ETB, in particular, has gotten significantly ahead of itself based on its NAV performance and I would be swapping out of ETB and into EOS or really any other Eaton Vance option-income CEF at this point. ETB got a bump after a positive Barron’s article two weekends ago in which a money manager brought up its long-term outperformance over the S&P 500. That’s true, and I had been pointing out ETB’s outperformance at the NAV level for years, but ETB and indeed, ETV, are very defensive option-income CEFs and just because their NAVs have outperformed since inception, i.e. throwing in the 2008 financial crisis, does not mean that they are the best funds to own in a strong information technology stock-driven market. This is shown in the following table in which I re-sorted all of the equity CEFs by their NAV total return performance since 2012 when the ramp up Nasdaq-100 stock boom really got started. (click to enlarge) And if I just include the Eaton Vance option-income CEFs from the above table, this is how they have performed since 2012. (click to enlarge) As you can see, the lower the option % under Income Strategy , the more upside capture the fund generally offers. So in a continued up market, particularly if information technology continues to lead, you’re going to want to own EOS first over any of these funds. And at a -7.8% discount compared to ETB’s 5.4% premium despite both funds having similar 7.7% market yields, it’s not even a question. In fact, at a 7.1% NAV yield, EOS will probably be the first Eaton Vance option-income CEF to be in a position to raise its distribution if this technology rally continues. On the other hand, if you believe the markets are topping out and you want to consider a more defensive option-income CEF, I would swap out of ETB again at a premium and go into ETJ at an -11.7% discount and a much higher 11.0% current market yield. ETJ is the most defensive of all the Eaton Vance option-income funds due to its 95% put option collar in addition to writing 95% call options on its US-based stock portfolio. That uber defensive option positioning is why ETJ has the lowest total return of the group since 2012, both in NAV and market price but it also means ETJ will hold up dramatically better at the NAV level should the markets and primarily the S&P 500 weaken. But what I find surprising so far in 2015 is that despite ETJ’s extremely defensive risk-adjusted strategy, its NAV performance has significantly improved over years past and not only is it beating the S&P 500 by being up 3.5% YTD, it’s not that far behind ETB’s total return NAV performance of 4.6% YTD. I hadn’t always endorsed ETJ because historically its added put collar expense had been a major drag on performance. But obviously, Eaton Vance has found a way for the fund to load up on outperforming stocks while keeping its S&P 500 index option writing and put collar strategy in place at a reasonable expense. The bottom line is that the Eaton Vance option-income CEFs are a great way to get exposure to the large-cap information technology sector at a discount. All you have to do is choose which defensive option strategy suits your needs. Conclusion The Eaton Vance option-income CEFs certainly represent what is working in this market though you have to be selective during this period. Year end is one of the volatile times for equity CEFs as many investors use these funds for tax-loss selling and institutions often make big changes either due to forced selling/buying (hedge fund redemptions) or for re-balancing. Just last week, one of the other popular Eaton Vance option funds, the Eaton Vance Tax-Managed Global Buy/Write Opportunities fund (NYSE: ETW ) , $11.33 market price, $11.92 NAV, -5.0% discount, 10.3% current market yield , dropped on huge volume from some institutional investor who was probably just liquidating after seeing such a large run in the fund since 2012. ETW, which I also had reduced significantly before last week, had risen to almost a par valuation just two weeks ago, something the fund hasn’t seen for years. Here is ETW’s five-year Premium/Discount chart. (click to enlarge) This is what is going on in this market for the “what’s working” stocks and funds, though how long this can last while the “have not” crowd continues to plummet is the question. Though I never thought I would recommend investors swap out of a “what’s working” fund like ETB, I don’t get married to any CEF forever either. Just so you know, I wrote more positive pieces on ETB than any other CEF during 2011 and 2012. So how long can this go on for? Well, if you use 1999 as a template in which the Nasdaq rose something like 86% in the span of six months from September of 1999 to March of 2000 while the breadth of the overall market continued to narrow, I guess we have a little ways longer to go. Of course, back in 1999 the Nasdaq traded in fractions of 1/2 point, 3/4 point up to 1 point or even 2 point spreads. That means most technology stocks on the Nasdaq traded with $0.50 to up to $2 spreads between bid and ask. Today, the Nasdaq uses decimals in which spreads, even for the high flying Nasdaq stocks, are often quoted in just pennies. You don’t have to be a genius to figure out that its a lot easier to move stocks up or down with very wide spreads than very narrow spreads so even though it has taken a few years this go around to move the Nasdaq back up to all time highs, thanks to Quantitative Easing and buybacks, I think the end result will be the same, particularly in a rising interest rate environment. As such, I think the Nasdaq peaks sometime before February of next year.

Google Aiming To Be 100 Percent Green By 2025

By Andy Tully Almost any family can make itself entirely reliant on clean, renewable energy using such simple steps as powering its home with solar panels and relying on an electric car for transportation. But things can be more complicated for a business, especially one as big as Google. Yet Google ( GOOG ) says