Tag Archives: biotechnology

EFA: How Do You Make A Mediocre ETF Sound Exciting?

Summary EFA is a mediocre ETF. The sector allocation is mediocre, the geographic diversification is mediocre and the expense ratio is mediocre. The top holdings make sense, but they don’t reflect the total portfolio. Despite having a heavy portfolio weight towards financials, there is only one in the top ten. There is nothing bad about the ETF to warrant taking a capital gains tax on sale, but if a loss could be taken with proceeds reallocated… that would be nice. There isn’t much to say to make this ETF sound exciting. There are so many international ETFs it can be difficult for investors to choose one. Hopefully I can help with that problem by highlighting some of them and shining a light inside their portfolio. One of the funds that I’m considering is the iShares MSCI EAFE ETF (NYSEARCA: EFA ). I’ll be performing a substantial portion of my analysis along the lines of modern portfolio theory, so my goal is to find ways to minimize costs while achieving diversification to reduce my risk level. Expense Ratio The expense ratio on the iShares MSCI EAFE ETF is .33%. I’d really prefer to see lower, but that isn’t high enough to remove the ETF from being worthy of further consideration. Geography The map above shows the top 10 countries by the market value of their allocations. This is certainly an international ETF, but the holdings seem more diversified from the list on the left side than from the list on the right side. I’d like to see even more diversification, but at least they have not assigned any single country a weighting higher than 25%. Sector Looking at the sector allocation is fairly interesting. Fortunately this is a fairly diversified group of sectors, but I think I would prefer a smaller allocation to financials. Perhaps I’m being too picky, but I’d rather see more consumer staples and foreign utilities mixed into the portfolio. I’d like to have the benefits of international diversification while overweighting the sectors that I expect to be less volatile. Largest Holdings (click to enlarge) Looking at the individual holdings, you wouldn’t expect that “Financials” would be so overweight. Only one financial company is in the top 10. The concern for me is that a heavy focus on financials in the lower parts of the portfolio suggests to me that the ETF may have a heavier weight on the companies that are easier to research or buy if markets are not sufficiently liquid in some countries. Building the Portfolio The sample portfolio I ran for this assessment is one that came out feeling a bit awkward. I’ve had some requests to include biotechnology ETFs and I decided it would be wise to also include a the related field of health care for a comparison. Since I wanted to create quite a bit of diversification, I put in 9 ETFs plus the S&P 500. The resulting portfolio is one that I think turned out to be too risky for most investors and certainly too risky for older investors. Despite that weakness, I opted to go with highlighting these ETFs in this manner because I think it is useful to show investors what it looks like when the allocations result in a suboptimal allocation. The weightings for each ETF in the portfolio are a simple 10% which results in 20% of the portfolio going to the combined Health Care and Biotechnology sectors. Outside of that we have one spot each for REITs, high yield bonds, TIPS, emerging market consumer staples, domestic consumer staples, foreign large capitalization firms, and long term bonds. The first thing I want to point out about these allocations are that for any older investor, running only 30% in bonds with 10% of that being high yield bonds is putting yourself in a fairly dangerous position. I will be highlighting the individual ETFs, but I would not endorse this portfolio as a whole. The portfolio assumes frequent rebalancing which would be a problem for short term trading outside of tax advantaged accounts unless the investor was going to rebalance by adding to their positions on a regular basis and allocating the majority of the capital towards whichever portions of the portfolio had been underperforming recently. Because a substantial portion of the yield from this portfolio comes from REITs and interest, I would favor this portfolio as a tax exempt strategy even if the investor was frequently rebalancing by adding new capital. The portfolio allocations can be seen below along with the dividend yields from each investment. Name Ticker Portfolio Weight Yield SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF SPY 10.00% 2.11% Health Care Select Sect SPDR ETF XLV 10.00% 1.40% SPDR Biotech ETF XBI 10.00% 1.54% iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF IYR 10.00% 3.83% PowerShares Fundamental High Yield Corporate Bond Portfolio ETF PHB 10.00% 4.51% FlexShares iBoxx 3-Year Target Duration TIPS Index ETF TDTT 10.00% 0.16% EGShares Emerging Markets Consumer ETF ECON 10.00% 1.34% Fidelity MSCI Consumer Staples Index ETF FSTA 10.00% 2.99% iShares MSCI EAFE ETF EFA 10.00% 2.89% Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF BLV 10.00% 4.02% Portfolio 100.00% 2.48% The next chart shows the annualized volatility and beta of the portfolio since October of 2013. (click to enlarge) Risk Contribution The risk contribution category demonstrates the amount of the portfolio’s volatility that can be attributed to that position. You can see immediately since this is a simple “equal weight” portfolio that XBI is by far the most risky ETF from the perspective of what it does to the portfolio’s volatility. You can also see that BLV has a negative total risk impact on the portfolio. When you see negative risk contributions in this kind of assessment it generally means that there will be significantly negative correlations with other asset classes in the portfolio. The position in TDTT is also unique for having a risk contribution of almost nothing. Unfortunately, it also provides a weak yield and weak return with little opportunity for that to change unless yields on TIPS improve substantially. If that happened, it would create a significant loss before the position would start generating meaningful levels of income. A quick rundown of the portfolio I put together the following chart that really simplifies the role of each investment: Name Ticker Role in Portfolio SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF SPY Core of Portfolio Health Care Select Sect SPDR ETF XLV Hedge Risk of Higher Costs SPDR Biotech ETF XBI Increase Expected Return iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF IYR Diversify Domestic Risk PowerShares Fundamental High Yield Corporate Bond Portfolio ETF PHB Strong Yields on Bond Investments FlexShares iBoxx 3-Year Target Duration TIPS Index ETF TDTT Very Low Volatility EGShares Emerging Markets Consumer ETF ECON Enhance Foreign Exposure Fidelity MSCI Consumer Staples Index ETF FSTA Reduce Portfolio Risk iShares MSCI EAFE ETF EFA Enhance Foreign Exposure Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF BLV Negative Correlation, Strong Yield Correlation The chart below shows the correlation of each ETF with each other ETF in the portfolio. Blue boxes indicate positive correlations and tan box indicate negative correlations. Generally speaking lower levels of correlation are highly desirable and high levels of correlation substantially reduce the benefits from diversification. (click to enlarge) Conclusion EFA certainly has some volatility, but the correlation over longer time periods has been significantly lower than the correlation levels created by measuring on a daily basis. All around, this is a decent but not spectacular ETF. The ETF has a respectable but not incredible diversification among countries. The holdings are concentrated on the financial sector, but only one financial firm was able to warrant a large enough allocation to end up in the top 10. When it comes down to the sheer volume of holdings, there are 934 companies in the portfolio. Of course, that could change at any point. I love having extreme levels of diversification like that in international equity allocations, but such high diversification indicates a passive indexing strategy. As you might imagine, I’d rather not pay the .33% expense ratio for a passive index fund. The problems within the ETF aren’t bad enough for investors to have any cause to sell it and incur a capital gains tax, but I’d rather place international equity allocations in other ETFs. If an investor is able to harvest a tax loss on selling, that would be a very solid reason to reallocate to a more appealing ETF. If you’re looking for more appealing options, I put together an article with three of them .

This Is One Heck Of A Great Bond ETF

Summary The Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF does everything right. If investors could only hold one bond ETF, this one would be a very strong contender for that spot. The fund offers solid income, a low expense ratio, and negative correlation to most major equity classes. If you don’t like this ETF, tell me why, because I do not see a single weakness here. This is a great ETF. There are only a few ETFs that really catch my eye as I’m researching them. This is one that immediately stands out for being absolutely exceptional. It has pretty much everything an investor could want for a bond ETF. I’ve shown a strong preference for funds that I can trade without commissions from my Schwab account because it makes frequent rebalancing more appealing. I would love to see this fund show up on there, but I don’t expect Vanguard funds to show up on the Schwab list at any point. For investors that have access to free trading on Vanguard ETFs, look into using the Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: BLV ). This ETF comes with everything I want (except free trading) and nothing I don’t want. Let’s go through the fund. Expense Ratio The expense ratio is only .10%. That is beautiful. Just try to find a way to complain about a long term bond fund with over 2000 different holdings and an expense ratio of .10%. This is ideal. Characteristics The fund is offering a fairly respectable yield to maturity of 4.2%. In the last decade investors may have scoffed at the idea of 4.2%, but in the new normal this is great. Some investors may expect yields to increase, but I doubt the Federal Reserve can pull that rabbit out of the hat when other countries have lower rates. An increase in domestic rates would result in a surge of cash inflows to the U.S. as foreign investors would seek dollars to buy up the higher yielding treasury securities. The resulting appreciation of the dollar would slam domestic employment and contradict one of the two dual mandates of the Federal Reserve. Until we see some major changes in the world economy, 4.2% is a fairly reasonable yield. Types of Bonds The Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF is structured precisely how I would want it to be structured. The holdings include some foreign exposure without a very large allocation and a mix between industrial bonds and treasury bonds. Despite a strong allocation to treasury securities, there are no Agency MBS or Commercial MBS. Investors wanting access to those securities can acquire them on leveraged basis at a substantial discount to book value by buying mREITs. I see no reason to pay book value, but I would like a long term bond ETF with a heavy emphasis on high quality debts. Credit Quality The holdings are all solid. This is investment grade debt with a significant portion being treasury debt. This is a very solid ETF to have in your portfolio if the market starts tanking. I put together a demonstration of the role BLV plays in a sample portfolio. Building the Portfolio The sample portfolio I ran for this assessment is one that came out feeling a bit awkward. I’ve had some requests to include biotechnology ETFs and I decided it would be wise to also include a the related field of health care for a comparison. Since I wanted to create quite a bit of diversification, I put in 9 ETFs plus the S&P 500. The resulting portfolio is one that I think turned out to be too risky for most investors and certainly too risky for older investors. Despite that weakness, I opted to go with highlighting these ETFs in this manner because I think it is useful to show investors what it looks like when the allocations result in a suboptimal allocation. The weightings for each ETF in the portfolio are a simple 10% which results in 20% of the portfolio going to the combined Health Care and Biotechnology sectors. Outside of that we have one spot each for REITs, high yield bonds, TIPS, emerging market consumer staples, domestic consumer staples, foreign large capitalization firms, and long term bonds. The first thing I want to point out about these allocations are that for any older investor, running only 30% in bonds with 10% of that being high yield bonds is putting yourself in a fairly dangerous position. I will be highlighting the individual ETFs, but I would not endorse this portfolio as a whole. The portfolio assumes frequent rebalancing which would be a problem for short term trading outside of tax advantaged accounts unless the investor was going to rebalance by adding to their positions on a regular basis and allocating the majority of the capital towards whichever portions of the portfolio had been underperforming recently. Because a substantial portion of the yield from this portfolio comes from REITs and interest, I would favor this portfolio as a tax exempt strategy even if the investor was frequently rebalancing by adding new capital. The portfolio allocations can be seen below along with the dividend yields from each investment. Name Ticker Portfolio Weight Yield SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF SPY 10.00% 2.11% Health Care Select Sect SPDR ETF XLV 10.00% 1.40% SPDR Biotech ETF XBI 10.00% 1.54% iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF IYR 10.00% 3.83% PowerShares Fundamental High Yield Corporate Bond Portfolio ETF PHB 10.00% 4.51% FlexShares iBoxx 3-Year Target Duration TIPS Index ETF TDTT 10.00% 0.16% EGShares Emerging Markets Consumer ETF ECON 10.00% 1.34% Fidelity MSCI Consumer Staples Index ETF FSTA 10.00% 2.99% iShares MSCI EAFE ETF EFA 10.00% 2.89% Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF BLV 10.00% 4.02% Portfolio 100.00% 2.48% The next chart shows the annualized volatility and beta of the portfolio since October of 2013. (click to enlarge) Risk Contribution The risk contribution category demonstrates the amount of the portfolio’s volatility that can be attributed to that position. You can see immediately since this is a simple “equal weight” portfolio that XBI is by far the most risky ETF from the perspective of what it does to the portfolio’s volatility. You can also see that BLV has a negative total risk impact on the portfolio. When you see negative risk contributions in this kind of assessment it generally means that there will be significantly negative correlations with other asset classes in the portfolio. The position in TDTT is also unique for having a risk contribution of almost nothing. Unfortunately, it also provides a weak yield and weak return with little opportunity for that to change unless yields on TIPS improve substantially. If that happened, it would create a significant loss before the position would start generating meaningful levels of income. A quick rundown of the portfolio I put together the following chart that really simplifies the role of each investment: Name Ticker Role in Portfolio SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF SPY Core of Portfolio Health Care Select Sect SPDR ETF XLV Hedge Risk of Higher Costs SPDR Biotech ETF XBI Increase Expected Return iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF IYR Diversify Domestic Risk PowerShares Fundamental High Yield Corporate Bond Portfolio ETF PHB Strong Yields on Bond Investments FlexShares iBoxx 3-Year Target Duration TIPS Index ETF TDTT Very Low Volatility EGShares Emerging Markets Consumer ETF ECON Enhance Foreign Exposure Fidelity MSCI Consumer Staples Index ETF FSTA Reduce Portfolio Risk iShares MSCI EAFE ETF EFA Enhance Foreign Exposure Vanguard Long-Term Bond ETF BLV Negative Correlation, Strong Yield Correlation The chart below shows the correlation of each ETF with each other ETF in the portfolio. Blue boxes indicate positive correlations and tan box indicate negative correlations. Generally speaking lower levels of correlation are highly desirable and high levels of correlation substantially reduce the benefits from diversification. (click to enlarge) Conclusion BLV offers a clear negative correlation with each asset except for short term TIPS (no surprise, high credit quality) and equity REITs. The equity REITs in IYR have a slight positive correlation with BLV which is caused at least in part by the fact that BLV is holding some high credit quality non-Agency debt. Since a substantial portion of the debt is still corporate in origin, it has a higher correlation with equity REITs than it would if it were pure treasuries. Despite that, the ETF still has a very clear negative correlation with other equity assets classes. Normally that kind of negative correlation requires midterm or longer treasury securities, but most of those funds have very limited yields. That isn’t any surprise either since the demand for extremely high quality debt (treasury securities) has pushed the yields to extremely low levels. By incorporating investment grade corporate debt the total portfolio for BLV is able to offer a respectable return so that the fund offers investors a material amount of income along with a negative correlation that results in total portfolio risk being materially reduced. This is what a bond fund should look like. Vanguard is known for high quality and low cost funds, but this fund is downright exceptional.

Which Way Are Stock Prices Headed? And When? Who Can Tell?

Summary There are folks who know, but they don’t talk. There are lots of other folks who talk, but they don’t know. When spokespeople for the ones that do know do talk, they say it can’t be done. The talkers try to ignore them. Many of the listeners believe the spokesfolk while the non-talkers continue to capture obscene annual payoffs, and retire luxuriously in their 30s. Right! It’s Market-Makers [MMs] who are the subject of attention here How do we know? We have been monitoring how they play the game, daily for the last 15+ years, and a lot earlier. We learned that they have to put their own (the firm’s) money at risk temporarily, and they know how to hedge (transfer) that risk to other MM speculators willing to fade the bet – for a price. And then the MMs get their clients to pay for the risk protection. Sweet deal, huh? If you had it, would you talk? Or be generous with the clients you are “helping”? So what does our “monitoring” tell us? It tells, on a stock-by-stock (or ETF) basis, just how far up in price and how far down in price they think the subject security is likely to travel over the next few weeks or months. And how do they know? By the “order flow” in volume transactions (blocks) from their big-$ clients. Clients they talk to (over dedicated phone lines) dozens of times a day. Like they have for years. In that time, they come to know how the client thinks, and how he tries to hide what he really intends to do, and then does it. The perspective MMs have, of who’s buying and who’s selling, by how much, and how urgently, is augmented by the MMs’ own decades-old, world-wide, 24×7 information-gathering systems and communications networks. Fed into their analytical and evaluative staffs, where every street newbie MBA grad wants to get a job. Like it or not, the MMs are among the best-informed players in the game. They have to be. If they weren’t, their clients would rape them in any transaction they could. (It’s an earned response). Can we prove it? Years ago, we determined how to translate MMs’ hedging actions into explicit forecast price ranges. Then, we created a simplistic measure, the Range Index, whose numeric value is the percentage of the whole forecast range that is between the bottom of the forecast range and the then current market quote. To prove the RI’s usefulness, we looked at over 2,000 stocks and ETFs during the prior 4-5 years daily and measured how much each one’s price had changed from the date of the forecast week by week cumulatively over the next 16 weeks. Figure 1 shows the result, with changes measured in CAGRs: Figure 1 (click to enlarge) The average of these 2,959,450 individual measurements is shown in the blue mid-row. Stepping away from that overall average row progressively to the cheaper side in the row above are the 1.7 million instances of all RIs less than 33, where at least twice as much upside RWD is indicated than is expected in downside RSK. Got the picture? The cheapest opportunities in the top 100: 1 row are paralleled by the most hazardous forecasts of the bottom 1 :100 row. The data speaks for itself. In the aggregate of individual instances, MMs have a compelling understanding of when there is trouble ahead, and instead, when near-term an opportunity calls. Trouble seems to last longer for stocks than opportunity. Well, if they can do so well pervasively for that many stocks, shouldn’t they be able to tell where and when the whole market is headed? They could if stocks were lemmings and they all ran in the same herd at all times. But they only do that at infrequent times. That’s when market moves become apparent. To illustrate the problem, Figure 2 uses the Figure 1 analysis on the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) by itself as the subject in the same period. (A period “chosen” by happenstance because Figure 1’s large amount of work was already “on the shelf” and was recent). Figure 2 (click to enlarge) Interestingly, SPY’s average (blue row) annual growth in price during these 4-5 years was double that of the larger population, which contains other-than big-cap institutional favorites. The small sample sizes of above-average SPY RIs (the lower #BUYS column) severely penalize their reliability or usefulness. But little divergence from SPY’s average CAGR is seen in its below-average, more attractive Range Indexes. While 2% to 4% gains above market averages seem to titillate academics, most real motivated investors tend to aim considerably higher before putting personal capital at risk. When is price volatility not risk? Answer: When it is opportunity. When what is coming is a big price move to the upside in something you own or could own. When not a big move to the downside. Knowing “when” is what makes the difference. Since the prevailing investment mythology propounded by those spokesfolk is that it can’t be done, and since much of the investing public and most of the media has neither the time, experience, nor the inclination to figure out how to do otherwise, it gets believed. That way the public doesn’t get in the way of the market pros. Obviously, stocks or ETFs with big price volatility from time to time offer big payoffs. That makes them attractive targets to identify their good “whens” from the bad ones. The trick is to find those subject securities that have the combination of big positive payoffs identified in advance frequently. And identified successfully far more often than being deceived; more and bigger winners than losers. We can use the kind of comparisons between MM Range Index forecasts and subsequent market price changes of Figures 1 and 2 to screen candidates for this approach. Three prospects present themselves quickly out of over a hundred eligibles. Here are their price performance comparison credentials: Figure 3 (click to enlarge) Figure 4 (click to enlarge) Figure 5 (click to enlarge) All three of these securities have price trend growth rates of +30% annually. But more importantly, the way the MM community hedges when they are being actively traded in volume tells of likely upcoming price moves at past average rates more than double their admirable trend growth. The magenta numbers in the #BUYS column identify the current level of Range Index for each. The bold white data signify result cells of the table that are significantly different from the value in that column of the blue average row. These are not all exotic operations. Indeed, Tempur Sealy International, Inc. (NYSE: TPX ) is a sleeper: Tempur Sealy International, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, develops, manufactures, markets, and distributes bedding products worldwide. It operates through two segments, North America and International. The company provides mattresses, foundations, and adjustable bases, as well as other products comprising pillows and other accessories. It offers its products under the TEMPUR, Tempur-Pedic, Sealy, Sealy Posturepedic, Optimum, and Stearns & Foster brand names. The company sells its products through furniture and bedding retailers, department stores, specialty retailers, and warehouse clubs; e-commerce platforms, company-owned stores, and call centers; and other third party distributors, and hospitality and healthcare customers. It is also involved in licensing its Sealy, and Stearns & Foster brands, technology, and trademarks to other manufacturers. Tempur Sealy International, Inc. was founded in 1989 and is based in Lexington, Kentucky. – Source: finance.yahoo.com Granted, Alkermes (NASDAQ: ALKS ) has more evident scientific content: Alkermes Public Limited Company, an integrated biopharmaceutical company, engages in the research, development, and commercialization of pharmaceutical products to address unmet medical needs of patients in various therapeutic areas. The company offers RISPERDAL CONSTA for the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar I disorder; INVEGA SUSTENNA to treat schizophrenia schizoaffective disorder; AMPYRA/FAMPYRA to treat multiple sclerosis; BYDUREON to treat type II diabetes; and VIVITROL for alcohol and opioid dependence. It is also developing Aripiprazole Lauroxil for the treatment of schizophrenia; ALKS 5461 that is under Phase III study for the treatment of depressive disorder; ALKS 3831, a Phase II study medicine to treat schizophrenia; ALKS 8700, a monomethyl fumarate molecule, which is under Phase I study to treat multiple sclerosis; ALKS 7106, a drug candidate to treat pain with intrinsically low potential for abuse and overdose death; and RDB 1419, a proprietary investigational biologic cancer immunotherapy product that is under pre-clinical stage. The company serves pharmaceutical wholesalers, specialty pharmacies, and specialty distributors directly through its sales force. It has collaboration agreements with Janssen Pharmaceutica, NV (NYSE: JNJ ); AstraZeneca plc (NYSE: AZN ); Acorda Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: ACOR ); and other collaboration partners. Alkermes Public Limited Company was founded in 1987 and is headquartered in Dublin, Ireland. – Source: finance.yahoo.com The SPDR Biotech ETF (NYSEARCA: XBI ) is a non-leveraged exchange-traded fund of stocks active in the research and development of medicines and therapeutics. The investment seeks to provide investment results that, before fees and expenses, correspond generally to the total return performance of an index derived from the biotechnology segment of a U.S. total market composite index. In seeking to track the performance of the S&P Biotechnology Select Industry Index (the “index”), the fund employs a sampling strategy. It generally invests substantially all, but at least 80%, of its total assets in the securities comprising the index. The index represents the biotechnology industry group of the S&P Total Market Index (“S&P TMI”). The fund is non-diversified. – Source: finance.yahoo.com There are many other stocks with price volatility that offer gain prospects on average, but few have as competitive odds for profit as the records of these three at this point in time. Here are relevant market capitalization and trading considerations: (click to enlarge) But what next? So far, we have just looked at things that have already happened. Our interest should be in what may come next. That centers around the MMs’ current forecasts of likely coming price ranges, and what has happened in the past when similar forecasts were made. Figure 6 pictures the evolution of such forecasts for TPX, daily over the past 6 months. Figure 6 (used with permission) The vertical lines in Figure 6 are forecasts of price ranges yet to come rather than the traditional plots of actual past prices in those days. The forecast ranges surround the market quote ending the day, which separates the range into prospective upside and downside segments. It is this balance that the forecast Range Indexes measure. The lower thumbnail picture shows the distribution of Range Indexes for the subject over the past 3 years, with the current RI highlighted. The row of data between the two pictures tells what the subsequent price action has been when our standard portfolio management discipline was applied to all 37 of the past 3 years’ RIs like today’s. They averaged +15.1% net gains, in typical holdings of 34 market days, about 7 weeks. Compounded, 7+ times a year the annual rate of gain is +180%. During the typical 34-day holding periods, the average worst-case price drawdowns were -3.6%. Only one of the 37 failed to recover in the 3-month holding limit, a win rate of 97 of 100. Figure 7 provides a two-year picture of once-a-week looks at the past daily forecasts for TPX: Figure 7 (used with permission) There is no guarantee that future price behavior will duplicate these experiences, but when something good happens a dozen times a year over a three-year period, it is more reassuring than an observer’s unsupported assertion that “the stock’s price now looks attractive”. Our second illustration, Alkermes, is in the opportunistically fertile field of healthcare technology. Its prior experiences following MM implied forecasts like today’s have been quite competitive among over 100 such competitors. Figure 8 gives the same look at its current situation as did Figure 6. Figure 8 (used with permission) ALKS currently is benefiting from a recent passing political suggestion that put down the prices of most stocks in the medical care field, particularly those active in the development of new therapeutics. Figure 8 illustrates ALKS’s price volatility potential and its recovery prospects now seen by the MM community. In every prior case of two dozen such forecasts in the last four years, ALKS has gained an average of +16% in 8+ weeks of disciplined holdings management, recovering from average worst-case price drawdowns of -5%. Figure 9 provides a two-year perspective of once-a-week forecasts for ALKS. It illustrates the uptrend underlying the stock’s price volatility that creates the recurring opportunities that are so appealing to active investors. Figure 9 (used with permission) But does greed justify undertaking all this? ALKS is a good illustration of the power of active investment management as opposed to conventional, passive buy&hold, index-oriented risk (and opportunity) – avoiding investment practice. Where the investor has sufficient capital at work to achieve his/her investment objectives from returns in single digits, conventional passive investing may do the job with a minimum of emotional cost. It frees the investors’ time and energy to be applied to other life objectives. Lucky them. But, for many who once saw financial goals within reach of low-double-digit investing returns, the failure of achieving those returns by conventional “growth and income” gains puts them now in a position of considerable discomfort. The passage of inadequate productive years, which cannot be retrieved, makes continuation of leisurely investing practices incapable of reaching prior objectives. A different approach is now required. Active, time-disciplined investing can help at least ease the problem, and in many cases, may retrieve earlier hopes. But active investing takes time, attention, and a different attitude of personal operation. The active investor is taking on a “second job”. It involves repeated decisions that test the personal limits of discomfort that must be set by the investor. That makes the investor an unattractive client for independent wealth managers. The outside investment manager has to live in a competitive world hemmed in by market uncertainty and threat of legal action by clients who have lost money by the advisor’s actions or guidance. He far prefers clients who will be content with conventional passive buy&hold&don’t-worry management. Which is what most are prepared to provide. The individual investor whose situation urges active management typically finds that his/her position is best served by a do-it-yourself (DIY) approach. The quandary is that it is next to impossible to do the necessary job “from scratch”. That requires developing a general market perspective, and then fitting into that, continuing selections from careful research of the prospects of hundreds, even thousands, of alternative choices. An overwhelming prospect. What may be most helpful is a source of information that draws on the required actions of experienced professionals whose everyday activities accomplish and maintain that market perspective. Activities that also provide appraisals of the price prospects of hundreds (or more) of potential portfolio candidates. When the prospects for those candidates can be described in terms of odds and payoffs, ones that the individual investor can tailor to his/her own tradeoff preferences, then we are closer to helpful guidance. The essentials here are issue comparability, and individual investor preferences and self-imposed limits. What of the third illustration? The SPDR Biotech ETF is, in a way, an extension of the ALKS situation. It is helpful in that it shows that some ETFs can develop attractive price velocity without the engineering present in leveraged ETFs. The problem with leveraged ETFs is two-fold. First, the mechanics of those that are structured to provide positive payoffs when the securities involved are declining (the “short” ETFs) have an unavoidable bias over time that causes their price decay. They should not be held “long” except at irregular, intermittent, very brief (days) periods. They typically cannot be borrowed by brokers so these “short” ETFs are usually not available at other times to be sold short. The levered long ETFs do provide ongoing price volatility, which can cut both ways. They often encounter “ordinary” double-digit worst-case price declines during 2-3 month holding periods that can be well beyond most DIY investors’ tolerance limits. Check Figure 10 for the present RI record for XBI and see what it has been: Figure 10 (used with permission) The worst-case price drawdowns following 28 prior RIs for XBI of 21 at -4.4% were about half of the 8.2% gains that were ultimately produced. Since prices of 27 of the 28 forecasts ultimately recovered and reached their top-of-forecast range sell targets, the drawdowns needed to be tolerable. The benefit of the ETF’s diversification among many biotech holdings contributed to the smaller drawdowns. Another aspect of XBI’s appeal to the active investor is the typically short (5+ weeks) holding periods required to reach position closeouts following forecasts at this RI level. Compounding of 8+% gains ten times a year generates returns at a triple-digit rate. Short holding periods not only generate high rates of return, but also provide opportunities to keep capital, liberated by reaching targets, fairly fully employed in other attractive opportune positions. That is an advantage in active investing that provides the compounding of single-digit gains into double- and even triple-digit rates of return for the portfolio as a whole. The repetition of such opportunities is illustrated in the 2-year weekly review of MM forecasts for XBI in Figure 11: Figure 11 (used with permission) Conclusion There are resources available to DIY investors that can help them return the progress of lagging investment programs to (or better than) original visions. But they require both a shift in mindset of how that is to be accomplished, and the time, energy, and conviction that will be required to bring it about. Where the remaining years are few before scheduled financial requirements arrive, such advanced performance may be the only means of accomplishment. But you should know what risks and rewards are likely before venturing into new investing approaches. Seeking Alpha provides a “crowd-source” reservoir of other active investors collectively looking for investing opportunities and drawing on their life experiences in many and varied occupations. Continuing selective reference to SA can help build market and investing perspective, although with the caveat that many contributors who are eager to write and to comment may be little more than beginners at the adventure. So check contributor and commenter profiles. A variety of specialized research product services by SA contributors are available through the site’s PRO program, and others, like the illustrations above, are available at Internet site addresses.