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Sam Ro, via Business Insider, wrote a very interesting piece last week discussing the ” roller-coaster ride stock market investors must be willing to endure.” To wit: “Historically, the stock market has been able to deliver around 10% annual returns on average. The key word when thinking about that, however, is ‘average.’ Rarely will you ever see the S&P 500 climb an even 10% in a given year. This 10% is determined by averaging years that have experienced returns much better than 10% as well as years that are much worse or even negative. Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s Savita Subramanian shared a chart that does a pretty nice job of illustrating the roller-coaster ride that stock market investors actually experience. She reviewed 12 major S&P 500 peaks since 1930 and averaged the price performance during the months leading into the peak and the months after.” (click to enlarge) While Sam is absolutely correct in his article, there are a few very important things that must be considered by individual investors before “jumping off this particular cliff.” Most importantly, the analysis above fails to consider the impact of inflation, fees, and expenses on returns over time. This is something I will discuss more in a moment. Most importantly, what is also not addressed is the effect of “TIME.” While 10% annualized returns sound fantastic, that was over the course of more than 100 years and included an average dividend yield of almost 4%. Unfortunately, you will not live long enough to realize those “average rates of return.” I want to specifically address the fallacy of chasing a benchmark index (i.e. the S&P 500.) The continual chase to “beat the benchmark” leads individuals to make emotional decisions to buy and sell at the wrong times; jump from one investment strategy to another, or from one advisor to the next. But why wouldn’t they? This mantra that has been drilled into all of us by Wall Street over the last 30 years. While the chase to “beat the index” is great for Wall Street, as money in motion creates fees and commissions, most individuals have done far worse. The annual studies from Dalbar show the dismal truth, individuals consistently underperform the benchmark index over ‘every’ time frame. (click to enlarge) The reason this underperformance consistently occurs is due to emotional mistakes and the many factors that affect a “market capitalization weighted index” far differently than a “dollar invested portfolio.” Let’s set aside the emotional mistakes for today and focus on the differences between a benchmark index and your portfolio. Building The Sample Index Before I can build a sample index, it is critical that you understand how the S&P 500 index is constructed. The following explanation is from Investopedia : “The S&P 500 is a U.S. market index that is computed by a weighted average market capitalization. The first step in this methodology is to compute the market capitalization of each component in the index. This is done by taking the number of outstanding shares of each company and multiplying that number by the company’s current share price, or market value. For example, if Apple Computer has roughly 830 million shares outstanding and its current market price is $53.55, the market capitalization for the company is $44.45 billion (830 million x $53.55). Next, the market capitalizations for all 500 component stocks are summed to obtain the total market capitalization of the S&P 500, as illustrated in the table below. This market capitalization number will fluctuate as the underlying share prices and outstanding share numbers change. In order to understand how the underlying stocks affect the index, the market weight (index weight) needs to be calculated. This is done by dividing the market capitalization of a company on the index by the total market capitalization of the index. For example, if Exxon Mobil’s market cap is $367.05 billion and the S&P 500 market cap is $10.64 trillion, this gives Exxon a market weight of roughly 3.45% ($367.05 billion / $10.64 trillion). The larger the market weight of a company, the more impact each 1% change will have on the index. For example, if Exxon Mobil were to rise by 20% while all other companies remained unchanged, the S&P 500 would increase in value by 0.6899% (3.45% x 20%). If a similar situation were to happen to The New York Times, it would cause a much smaller, 0.0076% change to the index because of the company’s smaller market weight.” Okay, with that baseline understanding let’s create a very simplistic index called the Sample Index which is comprised of 5 fictional companies. For simplicity purposes, each company has 1000 shares of stock outstanding and all trade at $10 per share. The table on the next page shows the index versus “Your Portfolio” which is a $50,000 investment weighted equivalently. I have also labeled each of the six following examples as year 1, 2, etc. so that I can give you a performance chart at the end of this missive. In Year 1, our starting point, we divide a $50,000 investment into exactly the same weights and stocks as the Sample Index as follows: (click to enlarge) There are a couple of caveats here. The first is that by using so few stocks the percentage changes to the index, and subsequently the portfolio, are going to be amplified. However, this only for informational and learning purposes – it is the concept we are after. Secondly, there are many other factors, outside of the examples that I will cover today, that have major impacts on performance. Events such as mergers, buyouts, and acquisitions affect the index. Your portfolio is impacted by withdrawals and contributions. Also, the example assumes no dividends which would change portfolio performance. Lastly, and most importantly , none of the examples today include the significant impacts to portfolio performance over time which comes from taxes, fees, commissions and other expenses. These factors alone can account for a bulk of the underperformance over the long term but are often ignored by investors trying to chase some random benchmark index. The Status Quo In the second year of our example – we assume that nothing exceptional, other than just normal price appreciation or depreciation. The table below shows the impact of price changes on both the Sample Index and Your Portfolio. (click to enlarge) Not surprisingly, since both the index and the portfolio are directly affected by price changes – the performance between the two is identical. However, in the real world such a “stagnant” situation rarely exists over a twelve month period. Share Buybacks and Bankruptcy Since the end of the last recession, corporations have become major buyers of their own stock pushing such actions to record levels. Stock buybacks are typically viewed as a good thing by Wall Street analysts supposedly because it is a sign that the “company believes” in itself, however, nothing could be further from the truth. The reality is that stock buy backs are a tool used to artificially inflate bottom line earnings per share which, ultimately, drives share prices higher. As John Hussman recently noted: “The preferred object of debt-financed speculation this time around is the equity market. The recent level of stock margin debt is equivalent to 25% of all commercial and industrial loans in the U.S. banking system. Meanwhile, hundreds of billions more in low-quality covenant-lite debt have been issued in recent years. As a ratio of corporate gross value added, both corporate debt and the market value of corporate equities have climbed to the highest levels in history . Our friend Albert Edwards shares another interesting observation: the surge in corporate debt maps closely to the volume of net corporate equity buybacks.” (click to enlarge) The importance of buybacks cannot be overlooked. The dollar amount of sales, or topline revenue, is extremely difficult to fudge or manipulate. However, bottom line earnings are regularly manipulated by accounting gimmickry, cost cutting, and share buybacks to enhance results in order to boost share prices and meet “Wall Street Expectations.” Let me show you a simple mathematical example. The first table and chart below show sales for a hypothetical company over a 5 year period. The sales are stagnant at $10,000 a year. Look at what happens to Sales/Share and Earnings/Share as the amount of outstanding stock is reduced. (click to enlarge) If you were only looking at the two charts, you would assume that this stock was growing strongly. In reality, it did not grow AT ALL over a 5-year period. Let’s look at the same example but this time let’s reduce sales and earnings for the company at the same time we are buying back stock. (click to enlarge) As you can see – once again if you only looked at the charts of Sales/Share and Earnings/Share, the latter being the main focus of Wall Street, you would have been lured into thinking this was a strongly growing company. However, in reality, sales and earnings were deteriorating but masked by the reduction in outstanding shares. Stock buybacks ‘do not’ show faith in the company by the executives but rather a ‘lack’ of better ideas for which to use capital for. Importantly, for our overall example, the reduction in outstanding shares ‘also’ reduces market capitalization. Let’s go back to our original index and portfolio example. In year 3, there are ‘three’ events that occur which impact both the index and our portfolio. Company DEF buys back 50% of their outstanding shares Company MNO files for bankruptcy. Each company experiences a change in share price. The table below shows the impact of these three events on the index and the portfolio. (click to enlarge) Notice that the share buyback and the bankruptcy combined cause market capitalization of the index to collapse by almost 18%. However, the dollar loss to your portfolio is roughly only 9%. This reduction in market capitalization of Company DEF did nothing to change the price or number of shares owned on a dollar basis in your portfolio. However, the collapse in the stock of Company MNO as it filed for bankruptcy resulted in a significant loss of investor principal. Substitution Effect This brings us to the “substitution effect.” This is something that is rarely talked about to investors, who are chided to chase the financial markets at their own peril. When a company such as GM, AIG, Enron, Worldcom, and a host of others in history, goes bankrupt they are swapped out of the index for another company. The index is then reweighted for the “substitution.” The table below shows the impact of the substitution on the index and your portfolio. (click to enlarge) The substitution immediately provides a positive push to the index due to the boost in market capitalization. However, your personal investment portfolio does not see such a positive effect. On a dollar-weighted basis, the bankrupt company still weighs on the value of the total portfolio. In order for you to get your portfolio back into alignment with the Sample Index, the stock of MNO Company must be sold and then replaced with PQR. The Replacement Effect The replacement of a stock in your actual portfolio is confronted by a problem. Since there is no cash in the portfolio, other than what was raised by the sell of MNO – only 100 shares of PQR can be purchased as shown in the table below. As with each year previously I have also included changes in price for each individual company other than PQR, so that the substitution and replacement were done at the same price for example purposes. (click to enlarge) Note: Yes, I could have rebalanced the portfolio to raise cash to purchase more shares of PQR, however, we have ‘not’ rebalanced the index. Therefore, using just available cash is the appropriate measure. If you take a look at the Year 4 table above you will see that both the index and your portfolio declined by $1000 in total between year 4 and 5. However, the decline of the index was -2.7% versus only -1.96% for your portfolio. This is specifically due to the fact that your portfolio is $4000 less than the index at this point. What About Performance? Comparison in the financial arena is the main reason clients have trouble patiently sitting on their hands, letting whatever process they are comfortable with work for them. They get waylaid by some comparison along the way and lose their focus. If you tell a client that they made 12% on their account, they are very pleased. If you subsequently inform them that ‘everyone else’ made 14%, you have made them upset. The whole financial services industry, as it is constructed now, is predicated on making people upset so they will move their money around in a frenzy. Money in motion creates fees and commissions. The creation of more and more benchmarks and style boxes is nothing more than the creation of more things to ‘compare’ to, allowing clients to stay in a perpetual state of outrage.” This could not be more to the point than anything that we have discussed today. Comparison of your performance to an index is the most useless, and potentially dangerous, thing that you can do as an investor. The issues of stock buybacks, the “substitution effect” , taxes, expenses and fees all lead to underperformance of the index. Repeated studies have shown that roughly only 1 in 4 mutual fund managers outperform the market index over long periods of time. Of those that outperformed, the average outperformance was just .12% before fees and expenses. However, the fees and expenses were larger than the level of outperformance. This, of course, does not also include the tax impact on gains and income. The problem with chasing performance, of course, is that once you fall behind you take on MORE risk to try and make up the difference. This leads, ultimately, to bigger mistakes that cost investors dearly. The major learning points regarding the fallacy of chasing a “benchmark index” are: 1) The index contains no cash 2) It has no life expectancy requirements – but you do. 3) It does not have to compensate for distributions to meet living requirements – but you do. 4) It requires you to take on excess risk (potential for loss) in order to obtain equivalent performance – this is fine on the way up, but not on the way down. 5) It has no taxes, costs or other expenses associated with it – but you do. 6) It has the ability to substitute at no penalty – but you don’t. 7) It benefits from share buybacks – but you don’t . In order to win the long-term investing game, your portfolio should be built around the things that matter most to you. Capital preservation A rate of return sufficient to keep pace with the rate of inflation. Expectations based on realistic objectives. (The market does not compound at 8%, 6% or 4%) Higher rates of return require an exponential increase in the underlying risk profile. This tends to not work out well. You can replace lost capital – but you can’t replace lost time. Time is a precious commodity that you cannot afford to waste. Portfolios are time-frame specific. If you have a 5-years to retirement but build a portfolio with a 20-year time horizon (taking on more risk) the results will likely be disastrous . The index is a mythical creature, like the Unicorn, and chasing it takes your focus off of what is most important – your money and your specific goals. Investing is not a competition and there are horrid consequences for treating it as such. Scalper1 News
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