Tag Archives: investment

How To Get Statistically Significant Alpha In A Hurry: Financial Advisors’ Daily Digest

MFS Investment Management argues active management can consistently deliver alpha; Mark Hebner says investors would be better off seeking beta. Ronald Surz says investors need not wait decades to determine statistically significant alpha; he offers “microwave alpha,” a quick way to measure manager skill. Jack Waymire gives five reasons why mobile-optimized websites are no longer a luxury for financial advisors. To frightened investors who sense something bad is due after a seven-year bull market and amidst a wobbly economy, MFS Investment Management’s commercials touting a “significant advantage to active management” may be striking just the right chord. These investment pros are working to reduce “downside volatility” and to “consistently deliver alpha,” says the investment firm’s one-and-a-half-minute commercial on the power of active management. But of course, not everybody’s having it. RIA Mark Hebner, a proponent of indexing, applies statistical tests to MFS’ fund lineup and suggests just one out of 87 funds has any alpha to offer (and even that one could be a fluke, Hebner further argues). He concludes that investors would be better served seeking beta. Hebner has previously argued that it could take something like a century to evaluate investment skill in a statistically significant way. Comes along SA contributor Ronald Surz, an innovative thinker, and proposes a method to deliver statistical significance in years rather than decades: “microwave alpha,” he calls it . This quick-cooking alpha is achieved through portfolio simulations: “The breakthrough determines statistically significant success in the cross-section rather than across time… A portfolio simulator creates all the portfolios the manager might have held, selecting stocks from a custom benchmark – thousands of portfolios… To state an extreme example, a return of, say, 1000% is significant, and you don’t have to wait 50 years to declare it significant.” With no further ado, we’ve got many other advisor-relevant stories to start your week with: Your comments on any of the above are, as always, most welcome below.

‘Winter Is Coming’ (To Winterfell, Certainly, To The Market, More And More Likely.)

I predict that Game of Thrones, adapted from the books in the series A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin, will most certainly outlive the current bull. Having been told repeatedly by scores of analysts that “winter is coming” to this particular market and that the White Walkers will surely destroy the market, we can be forgiven if we have tired of their bearish chatter. So like most residents of the lands south of The Wall, many investors have decided White Walkers (and bear markets) are only myth and we should go on about our business of seeking wealth and the power wealth brings. (Game of Thrones haters, you may read on; I promise to stop making references to the TV serialization or the books…) The point is that bear markets may still occur in our lifetime. At some point it behooves us to perhaps take some profits off the table, accepting the “possibility” that as much money might be made, going forward, in solid income-producing securities, as might be gained by buying index funds and such. Indeed, if the bear is more than a correction and truly awakens from hibernation, such an approach might not only provide reasonable returns in times of turmoil but may actually protect capital so as to provide truly exceptional entry prices at some point a bit down the road. I place myself squarely in this camp. Regular readers have seen a trend since we began to see our trailing stops execute at an accelerating rate in January and February. It seems ever clearer to me that mid-2016 is not likely to be a good time for “risk-on” investing. Why not? There are many reasons, but for this issue let me elaborate on two I have not discussed in as much depth in my previous articles on this subject. Both are strategic issues that must be addressed if the markets are to be trusted and the economy is ever to get out of the current government-induced doldrums. I’ll then provide some ideas for how to protect your capital in this environment. Reason #1: Companies have for years been able to use pro forma rather than GAAP accounting, merrily buying their own shares back to goose the earnings “per share” figure and therefore give their managers massive bonuses. Some analysts think this is a good idea – after all, it’s only stock, not dollars, and the number of shares is diluted over so many shareholders that the dilution isn’t as evident. But just as water flowing over a rock will not visibly alter it, over many years that rock will become “river rock,” not only rounded but smaller. It is the same with individual shareholders’ holdings. Drip by drip, hired administrators and their favored cronies are making as much or more than those few with real talent. The dizzying escalation in executive pay, and worse, stock options, has made a mockery of corporate “governance,” with a few at the top of public companies making hundreds or thousands of times as much as the workers in those companies. This practice is beginning to catch up to these firms as their boards of directors begin to realize their erstwhile golden boys, now retired with a similar-colored parachute, have left the companies far behind in research and development and far behind in capital expenditures. They have paid massive capital-draining salaries and bonuses and are now left behind the curve. Now the current crop of administrators must now make hard decisions. Having paid up to and including top dollar for shares selling at new highs, they need to conserve funds for R&D and CapEx or they will lose market share to those who spent their money more wisely. As this quarter’s results so painfully show, for many large and once-successful companies, their top-line revenues are down, their earnings are down and, for those realizing they can’t keep playing funny-money games, even their earnings per share are down. This leaves just one final illusion to perform. As quarter end approaches, they flurry to the Wall Street analysts who tout their shares and suggest the analysts (who want to look good to get their own bonuses) lower their quarterly earnings “estimates.” This incestuous relationship ensures that the analyst looks good and both Wall Street and the reporting company can trumpet that while revenues may have been down they once again beat the earnings estimates . You ask, they can’t really believe we’re so stupid we don’t notice the sleight-of-hand, can they? I respond: I assume your question is rhetorical. Not only do they believe it, but enough market players (I can’t bring myself to call them “investors”) swallow it hook, line, and sinker, that the game can go on. But by now, it is going on with decreasing volume. As more catch on, I fear for the aging bull. Reason #2: Regulations and red tape are strangling American entrepreneurs. Are we becoming just another tired and bloated European-style social welfare republic? The facts would support this argument. The American Dream of prior years is further and further out of reach of the average American. Red tape is now strangling the entire nation. Do you wonder why the elites in the boardrooms and corporate corner offices, the White House, Congress, the Fed, the SES’s (“Senior Executive Service”) administrators, etc. all tout how wonderfully the economy is doing while any cross-country road or rail trip will show just how poorly “the rest of us” beyond the Beltway are doing? It’s because “their” economy is doing fine. With what they make and who they associate with all doing exceedingly well, they just don’t understand why the rest of the nation doesn’t get it. We do. They don’t. They aren’t trying to start or run private or growing businesses, or earn an honest day’s wage for an honest day’s work at such a company. In many cases, they aren’t even subject to the onerous regulations they have imposed! They have their own “special” plans for special people. I am indebted to a new study by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, whose authors (Patrick McLaughlin, Bentley Coffey, and Pietro Peretto) have put in dollar terms what those of us running a business or working for a living know: even Nazi Germany or Communist Russia never had this many regulations to run afoul of and, consequently, keep voracious government gorging itself on new fees, fines, licenses, lawsuits and taxes. The Mercatus Center paper looked at regulations imposed since 1977 on 22 different industries, those industries’ real growth rate, and what might have happened if all those regulations had not been imposed. Of course there have been benefits to some of these regulations, fines, fees, and so on. We have cleaner air, safer workplaces, more (though perhaps increasingly difficult to obtain) health care, etc. And I’m sure we’d all be happy to pay an extra, oh, call it a trillion dollars, for those benefits. But $4 trillion, including only federal regulations, not even counting the additional burdens imposed by states, counties, and cities? 4 trillion dollars. That’s how much we taxpayers have given up since 1977 to support the imperious and bloated federal bureaucracy. Click to enlarge The chart above shows that, if the economic growth lost to regulation in the U.S. were its own economy, it would be the fourth largest in the world! That’s not our GDP, it’s not our debt, it’s just our regulatory burden . Are we descending to the third-world model of central planning and economic misery? If ever there was a self-inflicted wound, this is it! Our Code of Federal Regulations is now more than 81,000 pages long! It wasn’t always this way. To cite just one example, in 1939, even after 6 years of the New Deal, our tax code consumed just 504 pages. Today that has mushroomed to 74,608 pages! Who can understand all of this? No one. Who gets to interpret little bits and pieces of it? Clerks within the bureaucracy and lawyers within and outside. The problem has hugely accelerated since 2008. The George Mason study notes that President Obama has imposed 85 more “economically significant” regulations than did President Clinton and 100 more than President Bush. (A total of 372 new pieces of suffocating red tape, 172 during his first term and now, with the finish line of his vision in sight and an acquiescent Congress, 200 more since then.) The cumulative effect of all these diktats are appalling. Not only have they hemmed in our freedom to move, to act, and to live, they have cost each of us financially. The Center’s findings include that if the regulatory regime in place in 1980 was still in evidence today, the US economy in study year 2012 would have been $4 trillion bigger. That would be equal to almost $13,000 per person in that one year alone. Lop off a trillion for the truly worthwhile regulations and it still comes to nearly $10,000 per person. Could you have used an extra $10,000 a year for the past 4 years? Would the country be growing jobs and wages better with an extra $3 trillion in the real world of workers, innovators and businesses than in salaries for lawyers and administrators in federal agencies where more regulations mean more power and money for them? The Tax Code alone directs pork subsidies to allow the already-rich to buy Tesla “Electric Vehicles” (which, by the way, run on electricity produced by — coal, gas, oil etc.) and to buy insurance from a select list, to turn good food corn into more expensive gasoline, to replace our windows, adopt kids, pay for daycare, go to college…and the beat goes on. The latest stifling new batch of regulations include picking favorites from the health care industry, ensuring the survival of the banking and financial services industry, and making sure utilities (read: consumers) pay through the nose for natural gas if they don’t immediately switch to far less efficient wind or solar. We need a complete zero-based review of the cost and benefit of these mandates and dictates. It could happen with the sweep of a new broom in November. Until there is greater clarity there, however, I’ll take the “risk-off” approach that allows our clients to sleep well with fine income holdings. Here are a couple we are currently buying. A Fine Income Holding Starwood Property Trust (NYSE: STWD ) is a commercial real estate lending, servicing and investing company. It is the largest commercial mortgage REIT in the U.S. and one of the biggest and most successful in the world, yet its price has been under pressure lately. This may be because most people don’t believe rates will rise again (ever?). For whatever reason, I believe the current price of STWD offers us a unique opportunity to own a great company at a great price. Formed as the 2007-09 recession ended, and taking full advantage of the decimated commercial lending landscape, the company has yet to lose a dollar, yen or pound in commercial lending, which comprises 61.3% of its total assets. Being formed when it was, the assumption must always be that rates will (someday) rise. That’s why 82% of their loans are indexed to LIBOR; the interest charged will rise as LIBOR rises. Because of its current low valuation (the share price has fluctuated between about 16 1/2 and 24 1/2 the past 52 weeks,) STWD currently yields an excellent 9.9% yield. That’s not unusual for mortgage REITs but it is unusual for one of this heritage and quality. Despite the rebound as a result of somewhat improved investor sentiment toward high-yield stocks, Starwood Property is still down so far this year. It sells for just above 10x earnings, a hair above book value, enjoyed a return on equity (ROE) of just under 13% in the last reported quarter, and sells at a stellar 7.4x operating cash flow. I need to remind readers that what you are buying with a mortgage REIT is cash flow. Unlike equity REITs, 100% mortgage REITs have no opportunity for capital appreciation. Their stock may appreciate based on under-valuation, increased cash flow, or a favorable change in investor sentiment, but the company basically makes lending decisions and collects payments on the money they have lent out. Of course, how smart a company is in assessing and assigning risk is key. In Starwood’s case, their “loan to value” hovers right around 63% and consists primarily of first mortgages. In other words, if they believe a purchase, renovation, or other activity will create an asset value of a billion dollars, they might loan $630 million. Here is one example of the kind of upscale property they have financed: I think Starwood may benefit from all 3 possibilities I cite above for their stock to appreciate. Now the kicker: while STWD has 61% of its assets in commercial mortgage lending, the other 39% is in small equity positions and servicing fees for other lenders. They have the scale to service loans cheaper than many originators do. All this leads me to believe there is an additional possible wind at Starwood Property’s back and that is a dividend increase. With cash flow numbers like these and the likelihood that, in Europe, rates will not go further negative but begin to come back above zero, I think increased cash flow from all segments will mean an increase in the dividend. The company can afford it now and, as a REIT, it must pay at least 90% of its earnings as dividends. Finally, because of Dodd-Frank induced “risk-retention” rules, which force more firms to keep a portion of whatever they package as mortgage-backed securities, I see the number of competitors falling off over the next year or so. This places Starwood Property Trust in a great position. It has the experience, the head start and the right management team to be able to capitalize on the shrinking number of packaging sponsors. A Fine Income Holding, Part II Preferred shares might well lose value in a protracted bear market. In which case, we would simply add more. As long as they are bought at or below par and they are issued by companies with a future we believe to be secure, we’ll always get that nice, steady return. Bought below par, the return is better, of course. Every now and again the market will seriously over-react, as it did in late 2008 and early 2009, and provide us with a cornucopia of delightful offerings. I purchased one such one-time good deal on March 6, 2009 (by chance, not prescience, the absolute lowest day of the entire decline.) I purchased, to provide some ballast for the Aggressive Portfolio, 500 shares of Silicon Valley Bancshares 7% preferred (SIVBO), $25 par value for $10 a share. At the time, the prevailing panic was that all banks would go belly up. I figured if any survived it would be a bank that catered to the best innovators. It worked out. I list SIVBO’s current yield as 6.9% since it sells for a little above par now. But on a “yield-to-cost” basis, we are getting 20% a year in interest on this preferred. If it never moves a penny in capital appreciation, and there is little reason it should, over the past 7 years we have received $4900 in interest on our $5000 investment and now own something worth an additional $12,850. These opportunities don’t come along often but when they do, when the markets look bleak, hearken back to this article and take the plunge. Regrettably, I find no such bargains in preferreds today. It seems everyone has caught on to their benefits. But I have been buying a speculative preferred that is, at least, slightly below par. It is the Qwest Corp (CTY) 6.125% Notes due 2053 a synthetic preferred in that it is really a piece of a bond. It is callable at par (in this case, $25) anytime after June 1, 2018 by the parent company. Because it is part of a bond offering, the income is classified as “interest” and not as a “dividend.” These notes are unsecured and unsubordinated obligations of the company and will rank equally with all existing and future unsecured and unsubordinated indebtedness of the company. Qwest doesn’t exist as an independent company any more. It was purchased 100% by CenturyLink (NYSE: CTL ). The CenturyLink website refers to itself as “a global communications, hosting, cloud and IT services company enabling millions of customers to transform their businesses and their lives through innovative technology solutions. CenturyLink offers network and data systems management, Big Data analytics and IT consulting, and operates more than 55 data centers in North America, Europe and Asia. The company provides broadband, voice, video, data and managed services over a robust 250,000-route-mile U.S. fiber network and a 300,000-route-mile international transport network.” So it isn’t AT&T or Verizon, but neither is it a small fry. It operates in a tough neighborhood but, so far, seems to be holding its own. I think the company is a fair bet to last in its various niches. It has assumed the responsibility to repay the “preferred” shareholders of CTY at maturity. Currently selling for 24.70, we buy when we can. Of course, that goes for all preferreds we favor – below par, we’ll nibble, well below par we’ll back the truck up! Basic, Boring, Dull and Profitable Owning a merger and arbitrage mutual fund or ETF is every bit as exciting as watching paint dry on a too-cool day. But they do reward us with small but steady profits in most market environments. And they tend to be almost completely uncorrelated to what happens in the general markets, while still allowing us to benefit from extraordinary events in the markets. Among the funds I have researched, Vivaldi Merger Arbitrage (MUTF: VARAX ) has been rising to the top. My first caveat is that this is a load fund. It is waived for those broker-dealers and others who have an agreement with Vivaldi to waive the load for (among others?) Registered Investment Advisors, the theory being that we will, for our clients, quickly reach the zero-fee breakpoint anyway. So for our clients, and maybe your advisor, there is no fee. VARAX provides a dose of what we want for the immediate future: low to no correlation with the market and low volatility during what I believe will be volatile times. Merger and arbitrage (M&A) funds don’t buy companies they think “might” be taken over or “hope” will be acquired. Instead, they purchase the stock of a company which has already announced it is being acquired (the “target” company) while at the same time shorting the stock of the company acquiring the target’s stock. The fund profits from the difference in price between the current trading price of the target company following the announcement of the merger (which is usually “close” to the acquisition price), and the acquisition price to be paid for the target company at that future point when the acquisition is consummated. In other words, VARAX is betting that the spread between the price the target jumps to on the news and the price ultimately paid for it justifies their time and attention. Often, of course, even if the deal falls through, there is a contractual fee paid to the target if the acquiring firm is forbidden by the regulators or finds it really wanted a different company or can’t get financing or whatever. In this case, I particularly like the experience level of the principals in knowing “when to hold ’em and when to fold ’em.” And I like what the following two charts so clearly show… It’s always, always about risk and reward. You can’t really compare an M&A fund to the S&P when it comes to performance in a bull market. But performance over time is another matter! As you can see VARAX compares, quite favorably, to both bonds and the S&P. More importantly, given my concerns for the next few months, is where it falls on the risk continuum, which is to say, it barely registers. We are buyers. I also see opportunity for income investors from the exodus of smart money from China and other less-stable, over-regulated regimes in Asia. That will be the subject of my next article… Disclaimer: As ​a ​Registered Investment Advisor, ​I believe it is essential to advise that ​I do not know your personal financial situation, so the information contained in this communiqué represents the opinions of the staff of Stanford Wealth Management, and should not be construed as “personalized” investment advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results, rather an obvious statement but clearly too often unheeded judging by the number of investors who buy the current #1 mutual fund one year only to watch it plummet the following year. I encourage you to do your own due diligence on issues I discuss to see if they might be of value in your own investing. I take my responsibility to offer intelligent commentary seriously, but it should not be assumed that investing in any securities my clients or family are investing in will always be profitable. I do our best to get it right, and our firm “eats our own cooking,” but I could be wrong, hence my full disclosure as to whether we or our clients own or are buying the investments we write about. ​ Disclosure: I am/we are long STWD CTY VARAX. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

What Makes A Stock Go Up (Or Down)?

When it comes to the stock market, one thing is for certain: stocks go up and stocks go down. The question is: what makes a stock go up or down? What makes a stock go up or down is determined by the recent operating results of a business and its future expectations. This means stock prices reflect both fundamentals (operating results) and emotions (future expectations). When either one or both of these change for a particular stock, its price will be affected. What Makes A Stock Go Up (Or Down)? It’s impossible to pinpoint exactly what makes a stock go up or down on a daily basis. To borrow a phrase from The Princess Bride , “Anyone who says differently is selling something.” On the other hand, it’s quite simple to see what makes a stock go up or down over time. Stock prices are based on how investors think a company will perform in the future compared to how the company is performing now. In any investment, investors are betting on the future. Because the future is uncertain, stocks cannot be priced based on a business’s current operating results alone. They must be valued by predicting future performance. Price Ratios In order to quantify these predictions, investors use price ratios. Price ratios are simple tools which show how a stock is priced compared to its recent operating results. For example, a Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio of 10 says that a stock is valued 10 times higher than its current earnings. This does not mean that investors expect the company’s earning to increase by a multiple of 10 in the near future. It merely means that if the earnings were to stay constant, investors would break even on their initial investment after 10 years. In other words, the earnings yield on the principal is 10% (10/100 = 0.1). Say a stock has a P/E of 50 and investors still expect to receive an earnings yield of 10%. Paying 50 times earnings only makes sense if the company’s earnings are expected to increase substantially over time. Multiple Futures No matter how badly stock analysts pretend to be fortune tellers, no one can accurately forecast a company’s future performance (especially on a consistent basis). Charles Duhigg, in his book Smarter, Faster, Better: The Secrets of Being Productive in Life and Business , summarizes the reality of what the future is. Duhigg says, “The future isn’t one thing. Rather, it is a multitude of possibilities that often contradict one another until one of them comes true.” These multitude of possibilities are what cause price ratios to fluctuate so often for any one stock. Although there are countless numbers of possible futures when considering a stock investment, there are really only three general scenarios. Scenario #1: A company’s operating results will increase. Scenario #2: A company’s operating results will remain constant. Scenario #3: A company’s operating results will decrease. The level of a stock’s price ratios is determined based on which scenario investors anticipate will come true for that particular stock. Scenario #1: High price ratios. Scenario #2: Average price ratios. Scenario #3: Low price ratios. Operating Results Before getting too focused on price ratios, it’s important to remember that change in operating results is the second half to determining what makes a stock go up or down. Say a stock is reporting earnings per share (EPS) of $5 and has a P/E of 10. The stock would be valued at $50 per share ($5 x 10 = $50). Then, the company unexpectedly reports EPS of $5.50. If the P/E stays at 10, the stock is now valued at $55 per share. To summarize, stock prices go up or down depending on changes in operating results and the levels of its price ratios. The interesting thing is that changes in operating results most often trigger changes in price ratios. Because the future is hard to predict, operating results often differ (sometimes greatly) from what investors expect them to be. When a surprise like this happens, future expectations are reconsidered and price ratios are modified. Impact of Surprises In David Dreman’s book, Contrarian Investment Strategies: The Psychological Edge , he notes the impact of such surprises. Here is Dreman discussing the market’s reaction to unexpected results: Several researchers have found that when a company reports an earnings surprise (that is, a figure above or below the consensus of analysts’ forecasts), prices move up when the surprise is positive and down when it is negative.” It makes intuitive sense that stock price adjustments correlate with positive or negative surprises. Not only do the surprises reveal a change in operating results, but the change in operating results affect the future expectations of the company. This explains why value stocks (low price ratios) outperform growth stocks (high price ratios) over time. Value Goes Up, Growth Goes Down Low price ratios anticipate negative futures (decreased profits) and high price ratios anticipate positive futures (increased profits). Therefore, stocks with low price ratios have more upside potential. On the flip side, stocks with high price ratios have nowhere to go but down. In Contrarian Investment Strategies , Dreman references several studies which show that positive surprises impact value stocks greatly but only minimally affect growth stocks. The studies similarly show that negative surprises impact growth stocks greatly but only minimally affect value stocks. Here’s Dreman explaining the impact that both positive and negative surprises have on growth stocks: Growth Stocks: Positive Surprises Since analysts and investors alike believe that they can judge precisely which stocks will be the real winners in the years ahead, a positive surprise does little more than confirm their expectations.” Growth Stocks: Negative Surprises Investors expect only glowingly results for these stocks. After all, they confidently – overconfidently – believe that they can divine the future of a ‘good’ stock with precision. Those stocks are not supposed to disappoint. People pay top dollar for them for exactly this reason. So when a negative surprise arrives, the results are devastating.” And here’s Dreman explaining the impact that both positive and negative surprises have on value stocks: Value Stocks: Positive Surprises Those stock moved into the lowest category precisely because they were expected to continue to be dullards. They are the dogs of the investment world and investors believe they deserve minimal valuations. A positive earnings surprise for a stock in this group is an event. Investors sit up and take notice. Maybe, they think, these stocks are not as bad as analysts and investors believed.” Value Stocks: Negative Surprises Investors have low expectations for what they believe to be lackluster or bad stocks, and when these stocks do disappoint, few eyebrows are raised. The bottom line is that a negative surprise is not much of an event.” Fundamentals Change Expectations These scenarios explain why value stocks have nowhere to go but up, and growth stocks can only go down. If a value stock’s fundamentals unexpectedly increase, not only will its operating results improve, but investors’ future expectations will be raised as a result. Contrarily, a growth stock’s fundamentals are already expected to increase. Any improvement in operating results is already priced into the stock. Decreased operating results are already priced into value stocks but not growth stocks. Unexpected poor performances wreak havoc on growth stocks, but not value stocks. Buy Value Stocks Because human emotion plays a critical role in what makes a stock go up or down during the short term, investors are wise to invest where expectations are low and positive surprises are likely. To paraphrase a line from The Wolf of Wall Street, “It doesn’t matter if you’re Warren Buffett or Jimmy Buffett, no one knows if a stock will go up, down, or sideways.” We can know, however, which stocks are more likely to go up. Buying stocks with low price ratios is a time-tested approach to achieving superior investment returns.