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PXE: An Outperforming Energy Exploration And Production ETF

Summary Energy, particular exploration and production stocks, have slid over the past year. PXE has thoroughly crushed its competitor XOP and has also outperformed XLE over the past five years. PXE contains a number of refining companies as top holdings which might help it weather this period of low oil prices. Introduction To state that energy-related sectors have done poorly recently would be an understatement. Since the recent high reached on Jun 23., 2014, the benchmark Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLE ) has fallen by a good -34.0%. The JPMorgan Alerian MLP Index ETN (NYSEARCA: AMJ ), a basket of midstream MLPs, has performed slightly worse, at -43.0%. However, the worst-performing energy-related stock class over this time period has undoubtedly been those whose main business is focused on the exploration and production (E&P) of oil and gas, with the SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production ETF (NYSEARCA: XOP ) falling by a whopping -58.0% since mid-June last year. This price action occurred over a time period in which the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) actually rose by 9.69%. Obviously, the woes in the energy sector have been due to the collapse in oil prices that transpired over the past year. Moreover, it is not difficult to understand why XOP has performed so much worse than the other two energy funds, XLE and AMLP. The two top holdings of XLE, Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM ) and Chevron (NYSE: CVX ), both have significant downstream businesses that could, in some circumstances, actually benefit from lower oil prices, and they also possess exceptional balance sheets that could aid them through this difficult time. Meanwhile, the midstream MLPs of AMJ, the largest of which are Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD ) and Energy Transfer Partners (NYSE: ETP ), are considered to be relatively less impacted by price of the commodity itself as their profit is mainly derived from the fee-based transport and distribution of fuels. On the other hand, the fortunes of the E&P, also known as upstream, companies in XOP are more or less directly tied to the price of crude oil. So is XOP a good buy right now? Clearly, if you believe that oil prices will remain low, then XOP would be an ETF to avoid. On the other hand, given that E&P companies have been among the most beaten-up stocks in the energy sector, any reversal in crude oil prices could send these XOP soaring like a compressed spring. What this article intends to do is actually to introduce an ETF that is related to XOP, but has historically performed much better. Introducing the PowerShares Dynamic Energy Exploration & Production Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PXE ) PXE does not appear to be a well-known ETF on Seeking Alpha. Only 784 Seeking Alpha users have PXE in their portfolio, compared to 5,597 for XOP. The last focus article on PXE was in Dec. 2014. However, the lack of following for PXE is undeserved. Despite the recent turmoil in the energy sector, the five-year total return performance for PXE is still positive at +23.47%, absolutely crushing XOP at -28.2%. Notably, PXE still returned significantly greater than XLE (+8.42%). PXE Total Return Price data by YCharts Some funds outperform in bull markets because they take greater amounts of risk, and thus these same funds will underperform on the downside as well. Is this true for PXE? As can be seen from the chart below, its total return since the XLE peak on Jun 23rd. 2014 (-35.8%), while negative, is still superior to that of XOP (-58.0%) and AMJ (-43.0%) and only slightly worse than that of XLE (-34.0%). The investment mandate of PXE is explained on the fund website : The PowerShares Dynamic Energy Exploration & Production Portfolio (NASDAQ: FUND ) is based on the Dynamic Energy Exploration & Production IntellidexSM Index (Intellidex Index). The Fund will normally invest at least 90% of its total assets in common stocks that comprise the Index. The Intellidex Index thoroughly evaluates companies based on a variety of investment merit criteria, including: price momentum, earnings momentum, quality, management action, and value. The Underlying Intellidex Index is composed of stocks of 30 U.S. companies involved in the exploration and production of natural resources used to produce energy. These companies are engaged principally in exploration, extraction and production of crude oil and natural gas from land-based or offshore wells. These companies include petroleum refineries that process the crude oil into finished products, such as gasoline and automotive lubricants, and companies involved in gathering and processing natural gas, and manufacturing natural gas liquid. The Fund is rebalanced and reconstituted quarterly in February, May, August and November. Further information regarding the proprietary Intellidex methodology can be found here . Fund statistics The following table shows some of the pertinent fund details for PXE, XOP and XLE. Data are from Morningstar unless otherwise noted. PXE XOP XLE Yield 1.95% 1.97% 2.92% Expense ratio 0.64% 0.35% 0.14% Inception Oct. 2005 Jun. 2006 Dec. 1998 AUM $106M $1.66B $11.73B Avg. Volume 36.5K 10.8M 19.7M Morningstar rating **** ** ***** No. holdings 30 63 40 Annual turnover 140% 44% 5% We can see from the table above that PXE is by far the smallest fund, with only $106M in assets. This makes is less than one-tenth of the size of XOP and less than one-hundredth of the size of XLE. It’s liquidity of 36.5K is also far less than XOP and XLE, although it should be still be sufficient for small or medium investors. The final statistic that sticks out is that PXE has a much higher annual turnover of stocks at 140% than XOP at 44%, which in turn has a much higher annual turnover compared to XLE at only 5%. Holdings So why do I consider XOP to be PXE’s closest benchmark? Notwithstanding the fact that both ETFs have “Exploration & Production” in their names, ETF Research Center indicates that the two funds have 42% of their holdings by weight in common. Notably, 25 out of 30 of PXE’s constituents are also found in XOP. In contrast, PXE and XLE have only 27% overlap by weight, while XOP and XLE have 31% overlap. Thus, PXE and XOP are more similar to each other than either of them are to XLE. The top 10 holdings of PXE are shown in the table below. Company Ticker % Assets EOG Resources Inc (NYSE: EOG ) 5.28 Valero Energy Corp (NYSE: VLO ) 5.27 Phillips 66 (NYSE: PSX ) 5.23 Occidental Petroleum Corp (NYSE: OXY ) 5.13 Marathon Petroleum Corp (NYSE: MPC ) 5.11 Hess Corp (NYSE: HES ) 5.00 Apache Corp (NYSE: APA ) 4.98 Devon Energy Corp (NYSE: DVN ) 4.86 CVR Refining LP (NYSE: CVRR ) 2.93 Northern Tier Energy LP (NYSE: NTI ) 2.87 46.66 As can be seen from the table above, PXE runs a relatively concentrated portfolio, with 46.66% of its holdings in the Top 10. This compares to 19.35% for XOP and 63.41% for XLE, as depicted graphically below. Notably, the three of the top five holdings of PXE, namely MPC, VLO and PSX, are all heavily involved in the downstream refining segment, and whose fortunes are more closely associated with the refining crack spread rather than the price of crude oil itself. As can be seen from the chart below, these three stocks have actually posted positive price returns since the Jun. 23, 2014 peak for XLE. On the other hand, EOG and OXY have been obvious detractors of the fund. EOG Total Return Price data by YCharts Valuation and growth The table below shows various value and growth metrics for PXE, XOP and XLE. Data for all funds are from Morningstar (value metrics including dividend yield are forward looking). PXE XOP XLE Price/Earnings 10.39 16.77 19.07 Price/Book 0.89 0.89 1.42 Price/Sales 0.43 0.48 0.80 Price/Cash Flow 2.54 2.36 5.09 Dividend Yield % 4.26% 2.32% 3.45% Projected Earnings Growth % 10.33 8.62 9.98 Historical Earnings Growth % 13.48 17.56 3.04 Sales Growth % 3.34 5.34 2.82 Cash-flow Growth % 6.60 11.50 7.44 Book-value Growth % 5.48 7.71 6.06 While aggregate metrics for ETFs sometimes have to be taken with a grain of salt (for example, aggregate P/E calculations usually ignore stocks with negative earnings), a first glance reveals that PXE scores highly on its valuation and growth metrics compared to peers XOP and XLE. It has the lowest P/E, P/B (tied), P/S and highest dividend yield compared to the other two funds, and its P/CF is only slightly higher than XOP’s. In terms of growth metrics, all three funds have had healthy growth numbers over the past year (although this is likely to change as lower oil prices begin to drag), and while PXE has lower CF% and BV% growth than the other two funds, its other three growth metrics are comparable. Size In terms of size distribution, PXE is quite similar to XOP except that it has more large-cap stocks and fewer stocks in the other four size categories. Both PXE and XOP contain smaller-capitalization stocks compared to XLE. PXE XOP XLE Giant (%) 0 3.52 38.32 Large (%) 34.99 17.02 42.95 Mid (%) 26.78 32.33 17.71 Small (%) 30.19 33.44 1.02 Micro (%) 8.04 13.68 0 This data is also shown graphically below. Discussion and conclusion The impressive total return performance of PXE relative to its peers suggests that the Intellidex methodology has worked very well for this ETF. Given the Intellidex’s focus on factors including price momentum, earnings momentum, quality, management action, and value, PXE could easily be considered to be a “smart beta” fund, although its inception (in 2005) took place long before this marketing label became popular. The outperformance of PXE over XOP could be potentially attributed to several factors. First, by running a concentrated portfolio of 30 stocks (compared to 63 for XOP), PXE could avoid exposure to stocks that score less highly in its ranking model. On the other hand, XOP applies no filters other than market capitalization and liquidity for inclusion into the fund. Secondly, PXE applies a two-tier weighting system whereby 8 “large” stocks each receive 5% of the total fund weight and 22 “small” stocks each receive 2.73% of the total fund weight. In contrast, XOP basically run an equally-weighted portfolio. This is reflected in XOP’s greater tilt towards smaller-cap stocks compared to PXE (see data above). Given that large-cap energy stocks have generally performed better than small-cap stocks during this energy bear market, it stands to reason that XOP would suffer more than PXE during this time period, all other things being equal. However, the use of factor screening in conjunction with quarterly rebalancing means that PXE has a much higher annual turnover (140%) compared to XOP (44%). So is PXE a good investment right now? Without a crystal ball able to tell the future price of oil and gas, I cannot say with certainty. However, what this analysis does suggest is that if one were to choose an E&P-focused energy ETF, then PXE would be a better bet than XOP. Moreover, with 5 of the fund’s top 10 holdings currently invested in refining stocks (VLO, PSX, MPC, CVRR, NTI), which are less directly affected by commodity prices compared to E&P companies, PXE might weather the storm better than expected.

4 Key Reasons To Consider Market Neutral Investing

Summary The Invesco Quantitative Strategies team believes one way to buffer the effects of market downturns, volatility and rising interest rates is to add market neutral equity strategies to traditional portfolios. The strategies may offer several potential benefits to investor portfolios, including diversification from traditional asset classes, ability to dampen volatility, cushion against equity market declines and boost from rising rates. We believe a market neutral equity strategy can be an excellent diversification tool that enables investors to pursue increased returns from assets that respond differently to changing markets. Low correlation, downside protection and rising rate performance among key benefits By Kenneth Masse, Client Portfolio Manager The market downturn and ensuing volatility in the third quarter of 2015 is a timely reminder about the benefits of diversifying your portfolio with investment strategies that are expected to exhibit little-to-no correlation with the broad equity and bond markets. Moreover, as the US enters the late innings of its current economic growth cycle, many professional and individual investors are expecting lower returns from equities going forward than they’ve enjoyed over the last few years. These lowered expectations are on top of concern about what will happen to investors’ bond holdings when today’s historically low interest rates eventually rise. The Invesco Quantitative Strategies team believes one potential way to buffer the effects of market downturns, volatility and rising interest rates is to add market neutral equity strategies to traditional portfolios, as they potentially offer a unique approach to generating return regardless of the general movements of the equity and bond markets. In this blog, I outline four of the top reasons to consider market neutral equity strategies: 1. They have very low levels of correlation to other asset classes One of the ways investors attempt to manage and mitigate risk is by combining strategies that differ within and across asset classes to help diversify their return pattern over time. Using this approach, investors’ wealth creation is not tied to the fortunes of just one or a few investment options. Since market neutral strategies typically seek to eliminate exposure to the broader market, these strategies have also delivered attractively low levels of correlation, not only to the equity markets, but to other broad asset classes as well. As shown in Figure 1, from January 1997 to August 2015, market neutral strategies had only a 0.18 correlation to equities and a 0.04 correlation to bonds. Market neutral also had low correlation to another popular asset class, commodities, as well as to other segments of the fixed income market, such as leveraged loans and high yield. As investors seek to diversify their holdings in order to lower overall volatility, we believe market neutral strategies should be considered as a way to achieve that goal. Sources: Invesco and StyleADVISOR. (January 1997 – August 2015) BarclayHedge Alternative Investment Database. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. Investments cannot be made directly into an index. 2. They may offer lower levels of total volatility Another way to potentially mitigate risk across an investment lineup is to include strategies that may offer lower levels of total volatility (variation in portfolio returns). Even if these strategies were perfectly correlated with other investments, their potentially lower total volatility profile could help lower the overall average volatility of the full lineup. Market neutral strategies also may be appealing to investors from this total volatility perspective, as their volatility has tended to be less than the broader equity markets, and in some cases, similar to broad fixed income indexes (see Figure 2). Furthermore, since market neutral returns are expected to be independent of the broader equity market, a spike in market-level volatility may not necessarily mean a spike in market neutral volatility. Sources: Invesco and StyleADVISOR. (January 1997 – August 2015). BarclayHedge Alternative Investment Database. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. Investments cannot be made directly into an index. 3. They have a history of attractive downside protection during extreme market stress Another often-cited potential benefit of market neutral is that the strategies may offer investors a way to mitigate severe losses during a sharp equity market sell-off. Because these strategies typically have beta exposure to the market that hovers around zero, a big drop (or surge) in equities should not influence the performance of the strategy. This contrasts sharply with traditional, benchmark-centric strategies, which typically have very high levels of market exposure and tend to vary similarly to the broader market. Sources: Invesco and StyleADVISOR. January 1997 – August 2015. BarclayHedge Alternative Investment Database. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. Investments cannot be made directly into an index. 4. They can provide an opportunity for higher returns in a rising interest rate environment. We believe an increase in the federal funds rate from the US Federal Reserve is inevitable; at this point it’s simply a matter of when and by how much. For market neutral equity strategies, a rise in interest rates – specifically short-term interest rates – can potentially provide a boost to returns. This occurs when market neutral equity strategies short a stock and receive proceeds from that sale. Those proceeds typically earn a rate of return tied to the prevailing short-term interest rate, such as the fed funds rate. When that rate increases, so does the interest earned by market neutral equity strategies on their short sale proceeds Key takeaway We believe a market neutral equity strategy is a valuable complement to a traditional portfolio of stocks and bonds, as well as an excellent diversification tool that enables investors to pursue increased returns from assets that respond differently to changing market conditions. Such characteristics may be important to today’s investors given the recent market downturn, volatility and expectation of rising interest rates. Important information Beta is a measure of risk representing how a security is expected to respond to general market movements. Correlation is the degree to which two investments have historically moved in relation to each other. Volatility measures the amount of fluctuation in the price of a security or portfolio over time. The S&P 500® Index is an unmanaged index considered representative of the US stock market. The S&P/LSTA US Leveraged Loan 100 Index is representative of the performance of the largest facilities in the leveraged loan market. The S&P GSCI Index is an unmanaged world production-weighted index composed of the principal physical commodities that are the subject of active, liquid futures markets. The BofA Merrill Lynch US High Yield Index tracks the performance of US dollar-denominated, below-investment-grade corporate debt publicly issued in the US domestic market. BarclayHedge Alternative Investment Database is a computerized database that tracks and analyzes the performance of approximately 6800 hedge fund and managed futures investment programs worldwide. BarclayHedge has created and regularly updates 18 proprietary hedge fund indices and 10 managed futures indices. BarclayHedge indexes reflect performance of hedge funds, not of retail investment strategies, and are used for illustrative purposes only solely as points of reference in evaluating alternative investment strategies. Please note: BarclayHedge is not affiliated with Barclays Bank or any of its affiliated entities. Performance for funds included in the BarclayHedge indices is reported underlying fees in net of fees. About risk Commodities may subject an investor to greater volatility than traditional securities such as stocks and bonds and can fluctuate significantly based on weather, political, tax, and other regulatory and market developments. Fixed-income investments are subject to credit risk of the issuer and the effects of changing interest rates. Interest rate risk refers to the risk that bond prices generally fall as interest rates rise and vice versa. An issuer may be unable to meet interest and/or principal payments, thereby causing its instruments to decrease in value and lowering the issuer’s credit rating. Most senior loans are made to corporations with below investment-grade credit ratings and are subject to significant credit, valuation and liquidity risk. The value of the collateral securing a loan may not be sufficient to cover the amount owed, may be found invalid or may be used to pay other outstanding obligations of the borrower under applicable law. There is also the risk that the collateral may be difficult to liquidate, or that a majority of the collateral may be illiquid. Junk bonds involve a greater risk of default or price changes due to changes in the issuer’s credit quality. The values of junk bonds fluctuate more than those of high quality bonds and can decline significantly over short time periods. Derivatives may be more volatile and less liquid than traditional investments and are subject to market, interest rate, credit, leverage, counterparty and management risks. An investment in a derivative could lose more than the cash amount invested. Short sales may cause the fund to repurchase a security at a higher price, causing a loss. As there is no limit on how much the price of the security can increase, the fund’s exposure is unlimited. The information provided is for educational purposes only and does not constitute a recommendation of the suitability of any investment strategy for a particular investor. Invesco does not provide tax advice. The tax information contained herein is general and is not exhaustive by nature. Federal and state tax laws are complex and constantly changing. Investors should always consult their own legal or tax professional for information concerning their individual situation. The opinions expressed are those of the authors, are based on current market conditions and are subject to change without notice. These opinions may differ from those of other Invesco investment professionals. NOT FDIC INSURED MAY LOSE VALUE NO BANK GUARANTEE All data provided by Invesco unless otherwise noted. Invesco Distributors, Inc. is the US distributor for Invesco Ltd.’s retail products and collective trust funds. Invesco Advisers, Inc. and other affiliated investment advisers mentioned provide investment advisory services and do not sell securities. Invesco Unit Investment Trusts are distributed by the sponsor, Invesco Capital Markets, Inc., and broker-dealers including Invesco Distributors, Inc. PowerShares® is a registered trademark of Invesco PowerShares Capital Management LLC (Invesco PowerShares). Each entity is an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Invesco Ltd. ©2015 Invesco Ltd. All rights reserved. Four key reasons to consider market neutral investing by Invesco Blog

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.