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Our Investing Biases Are Particularly Dangerous Because They Are Time-Based Rather Than Phenomenon-Based

By Rob Bennett I read an article this week that explored the differences between how we have responded as a society to the pushes for limits on smoking and on guns. The push for limits on smoking has been highly successful. The push for limits on guns has not been terribly successful. Why? The article argued that the difference is that smoking is not an ideological or cultural issue; neither conservatives nor liberals see efforts to limit smoking as an attack on their world view. It’s different with guns. Most cities are heavily liberal and most rural areas are heavily conservative. As a result, there are strong ideological and cultural differences between those who own guns and those who do not. Those who have never been around guns have a hard time understanding why anyone would feel a need to own one. But those who have been around guns all their lives cannot understand why those favoring limits on ownership are so troubled by guns. So efforts to change the law in this area produce intense conflicts; the harder one side pushes for limits, the harder the other side opposes those limits and gridlock results. “Bias” is not one thing. There are many varieties of biases, some more problematic than others. In fact, an argument can be made that some biases are good. As a general rule, it is a bad thing to be biased because to possess a bias is to respond unthinkingly to a phenomenon. But acting on the basis of a bias speeds up one’s reaction time and that is not such a bad thing in some cases. I have a strong bias against disco. I have probably missed out on some disco songs from which I would have derived a pleasurable listening experience. But there aren’t many disco songs that fall into that category. And my bias helped me avoid a lot of painful listening experiences too. The biases that many of us hold about investing issues are extremely damaging, in my view. Most biases are phenomenon-based. We favor certain types of food over others. Or we favor certain ways of thinking about issues over others. Or we favor certain ways of doing things over others. These biases can hold us back. But the good thing about phenomenon-based biases is that we can limit the power of the bias by deliberately exposing ourselves to the opposite sort of phenomenon from time to time to check whether the bias is supported by the realities. Liberals are biased against conservative ideas and conservatives are biased against liberal ideas. Is that really such a bad thing? If we reconsidered our philosophical orientation each time a new issue was presented to us for our assessment, it would take much longer for us to figure out where we stand on issues. The reality is that once a person has thought about a few issues hard enough to know where his bias lies, he can save time when assessing new issues by jumping to a quick conclusion that his position will be ideologically consistent with his earlier positions. Being biased is a time-saver. But there are dangers, of course. There are always those few issues regarding which a liberal adopts the conservative take and those few issues regarding which a conservative adopts the liberal take. Those exceptions can achieve great significance over time. If you follow the story of how a liberal becomes a conservative over a number of years or of how a conservative becomes a liberal over a number of years, you will see that it is usually one important exception to a general bias that starts the ball rolling in a new direction. I often seek out views different than my own just to shake up my preconceptions a bit. It’s very very hard to do that in the investing realm. The most important investing biases are time-based rather than phenomenon-based. That means that for long periods of time certain ideas are forgotten by almost the entire population. To tap into the other side of the story, the investor would have to study historical data from a time period many years removed from the current time period. Who does that? Shiller showed that valuations affect long-term returns. What he really was doing when he did that was showing that the stock market is not efficient, that mis-pricing on either the high or low side is a significant reality rather than the illusion that Buy-and-Holders believe it to be. Even during the most out-of-control bull market, there are a small number of people questioning whether the insane prices achieved are real and lasting. But the percentage of the population holding that view can be very small indeed. The percentage of the population that is conservative rather than liberal doesn’t vary dramatically from time to time. The percentage of the population that believes that stocks are the perfect investment choice is dramatically higher when prices are high than it is when prices are low. For a good number of years following the great crash of 1929, investors didn’t expect to see any capital appreciation at all on their stocks. The conventional wisdom of the time was that stocks were worth buying only for their dividends; those that didn’t pay high dividends were not worth owning. In the late 1990s, dividends fell to tiny levels. The very thing that made stocks dangerous (their high price) changed the conventional wisdom on stock ownership to reflect a bias that stocks are always worth owning. Stocks for the Long Run was a popular book in the 1990s. It would not have sold many copies in the 1930s. The book reports on data, facts, objective stuff. The message of the data should not change from times like the 1930s to times like the 1990s. But the ways in which we arrange the data and interpret the data changes when we go from bull markets to bear markets. People will be looking at the same data that was employed in Stocks for the Long Run to sell stocks to make the case against stocks when we are on the other side of the next stock crash. Our stock biases hurt us. But they are hard to see through because just about everyone is on one side of the table for a long stretch of time and then just about everyone is on the other side of the table for the next long stretch of time. Bull markets turn us all into bulls and bear markets turn us all into bears. Investing biases come to be so widely shared for long stretches of time that it is hard for any of us to keep their other point of view even remotely in mind. Disclosure: None

My ‘Preferred’ Preferred Closed-End Funds

Summary Closed-end funds provide a great way to invest in preferred securities. FFC and PDT have beaten the S&P 500 over the past 10 years. The Preferred CEFs outperformed the lower cost ETF iShares US Preferred Stock Fund. Traditional preferred stocks provide a fixed dividend payment and generally do not mature but can be called on or after a specified call date. Some preferred stocks can adjust to floating rates (LIBOR plus a given percentage). It is possible to invest in individual preferred stock or select a fund that invests in preferred stocks. I invest in both individual preferred stocks and closed-end funds that focus on preferred stocks. The CEF approach will be more volatile but can provide diversification and higher income due to the leverage. iShares US Preferred Stock Fund (NYSEARCA: PFF ) provides a lower cost ETF alternative but it has lagged behind its closed-end fund cousins in performance. Over the last 5 years, the S&P 500 has outperformed my preferred closed-end funds, but if you look at the past 10 years, the picture looks quite different. Assuming that the stock prices are a bit toppy, the next 5 years maybe favorable for collecting the nice income from preferred stocks without missing out on a super-hot stock market appreciation. Fund 5 yr Month End average annual return 10 yr Month End average annual return John Hancock Premium Dividend Fund (NYSE: PDT ) 11.86% 10.87% Flaherty and Crumrine Preferred Securities Income Fund (NYSE: FFC ) 13.56% 10.49% SPDR S&P 500 (NYSEARCA: SPY ) 14.29% 7.40% iShares US Preferred Stock 6.49% n/a Below is the investment objective summary for the three preferred stock closed-end funds from Fidelity: John Hancock Premium Dividend Fund: The fund will invest in common stocks of issuers whose senior debt is rated investment grade or, in the case of issuers that have no rated senior debt is considered by the Adviser to be comparable quality. 80% of funds total assets consist of preferred stocks and debt obligations rated A or higher. Leverage ratio 34.1% Flaherty & Crumrine Preferred Securities Income Fund Inc: The fund invests normally at least 80% of its total assets in preferred securities that are mainly hybrid or taxable preferred securities. At least 80% of the preferred securities are investment grade quality. Up to 20% may be invested in securities rated below investment grade. It may also invest up to 20% of its assets in other debt securities and up to 15% in common stocks. Leverage ratio 34.65% First Trust Intermediate Duration Preferred and Income Fund (NYSE: FPF ): Under normal market conditions, the Fund will invest at least 80% of its Managed Assets in a portfolio of preferred and other income-producing securities issued by U.S. and non-U.S. companies, including traditional preferred securities, hybrid preferred securities that have investment and economic characteristics of both preferred securities and debt securities, floating rate and fixed-to-floating rate preferred securities, debt securities, convertible securities and contingent convertible securities. All three funds pay monthly distributions, have a positive NAV return, and a positive UNII Symbol 3 yr return on NAV 12 month return on NAV Distribution (Market) Discount Discount 52 wk average UNII Expense Ratio adjusted PDT 9.81% 3.42% 8.31% -9.95% -10.28% $0.0046 1.44% FFC 8.26% 3.13% 8.06% 8.35% 2.04% $0.0208 0.88% FPF n/a 6.00% 9.19% -9.32% -8.08% $0.1029 1.33% Year to Date, FPF’s NAV performance was quite a bit better than the S&P 500: Symbol YTD Price perf NAV perf PDT 5.25 2.86 FFC 14.21 3.95 FPF 2.41 6.21 SPY 3.02 2.95 Obviously, for long term investors a single year is not that meaningful. The table below shows the 5 yr and 10 yr returns of PDT and FFC compared to the S&P 500 index fund and the ETF preferred PFF. FPF does not have that much historic data available yet. Fund 5 yr Month End average annual return 10 yr Month End average annual return John Hancock Premium Dividend Fund 11.86% 10.87% Flaherty and Crumrine Preferred Securities Income Fund 13.56% 10.49% SPDR S&P 500 14.29% 7.40% iShares US Preferred Stock ( PFF ) 6.49% n/a Risks With Preferred Stock investments: Any investment carries risk and preferred stocks are interest rate sensitive. Preferred stocks are not appropriate if you believe that the rate increases by the Federal Reserve will continue or accelerate. Conclusion: The three preferred closed-end funds shown in this article may be a good addition to a diversified portfolio under the assumption that the interest rates will not rise drastically. They will not outperform the stock market in a bull market scenario but if the market drops or stays range-bound, the consistent income from the closed-end funds can then be channeled into other stock purchases or dividend reinvestments. FPF’s current discount is attractive. When looking at the 3 yr average discount, I would want to buy PDT at or below 13.44 and FFC at or below 18.97. FFC definitely has the best expense ratio of the three.

ETF Update: ETF Issuers Do Not Slow Down In December

Summary Every week, Seeking Alpha aggregates ETF updates in an effort to alert readers and contributors to changes in the market. There were 10 launches in the last 3 weeks. Have a view on something that’s coming up or a new fund? Submit an article. Welcome back to the SA ETF Update. My goal is to keep Seeking Alpha readers up to date on the ETF universe and to gain some visibility, both for the ETF community, and for me as its editor (so users know who to approach with issues, article ideas, to become a contributor, etc.) Every weekend, or every other weekend (depending on the reader response and submission volumes), we will highlight fund launches and closures for the week, as well as any news items that could impact ETF investors. December has been a busy month of the ETF industry, full of launches, company purchases and existing fund updates. On December 2nd, OppenheimerFunds (NYSE: OPY ) acquired 100% of the stock interests of VTL Associates, LLC, the owner of the RevenueShares brand of exchange traded funds. According to a press release from OppenheimerFunds, “VTL manages $1.7 billion for investors across eight ETFs and its separate accounts. Of the six ETFs that have sufficient track records to be rated by Morningstar, four are either four- or five-star rated.” The largest of these funds, the RevenueShares Large Cap ETF (NYSEARCA: RWL ), currently has $338.5 million in assets under management. It is unclear what direction OppenheimerFunds will take these ETFs in, but I hope to see further offerings from the company in 2016. Also shaking things up was First Trust, which on the 18th restructured two of its existing offerings. The First Trust ISE Global Copper Index Fund (NASDAQ: CU ) is now the First Trust Indxx Global Natural Resources Income ETF (FTRI), and the First Trust ISE Global Platinum Index Fund (NASDAQ: PLTM ) is the First Trust Indxx Global Agriculture ETF (FTAG). These are basically new ETFs when you consider the changes made. FTRI will cover the exploration and production side of the natural resources space, and FTAG offer investors coverage of all aspects of the farming industry. Clearly ETF issuers do not take the holidays off. With 2016 coming up, this is crunch time for filings and launches before end of year deadlines. Besides FTRI and FTAG there were 10 ETFs launched in the last three weeks. With tons to cover, let’s jump right in. Fund launches for the week of December 7th, 2015 Elkhorn launches its second ETF (12/10): After the success of the Elkhorn S&P 500 Capital Expenditures Portfolio (NASDAQ: CAPX ), Elkhorn has released its second exchange traded product. The Elkhorn FTSE RAFI U.S. Equity Income ETF (BATS: ELKU ) is designed to track the performance of domestic high yield stocks, focusing on sustainable income. Ben Fulton, Founder and CEO of Elkorn stated the following on the fund and its index in a press release : “Income remains an important area of need for investors and Research Affiliates brings a new and thoughtful approach to high yield equity investing.” iShares adds another emerging market fund to its lineup (12/10): The iShares FactorSelect MSCI Emerging ETF (BATS: EMGF ) seeks above-market returns over the long term from emerging market large- and mid-cap stocks. According to the ETF homepage, the fund features a “focus on drivers of emerging market equity performance: inexpensive stocks, financially healthy firms, trending stocks and relatively low market cap companies.” This is the 9th broad emerging market equity fund from iShares, all of which saw poor returns in 2015. Fund launches for the week of December 14th, 2015 Pacer rolls out 2 Europe focused ETFs (12/15): The Pacer Trendpilot European Index ETF (BATS: PTEU ) and the Pacer Autopilot Hedged European Index ETF (BATS: PAEU ) both track strategies that focus on the FTSE Eurobloc Index. PTEU is similar to previous Pacer funds, as it uses complex technical indicators to hedge its position when the market outlook is poor, and go all in when the outlook is strong. PAEU however is the first of Pacer’s Autopilot funds. Still alternating between a hedged or unhedged market position, PAEU instead hopes to take advantage of the fluctuation in exchange rates. Guggenheim launches a smart beta DJIA ETF (12/16): According to the funds homepage, the Guggenheim Dow Jones Industrial Average Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA: DJD ) “seeks investment results that correspond generally to the performance, before the fund’s fees and expenses, of the Dow Jones Industrial Average® Yield Weighted index.” Unlike other large indexes, the Dow is a price-weighted index, meaning the priciest of the 30 stocks in the index make up the largest positions. This dividend focus is a better fit for income seeking investors still looking to hold the DJIA in their portfolios. State Street Global Advisors (NYSE: STT ) launches a natural resources ETF (12/16): The SPDR S&P North American Natural Resources ETF (NYSEARCA: NANR ) tracks an index of “U.S. traded securities that are classified under the GICS energy and materials sector excluding the chemicals industry; and steel sub-industry” according to the fund homepage. The iShares North American Natural Resources ETF (NYSEARCA: IGE ), a very similar fund which has been trading since 2001, currently has a YTD of -25%. Hopefully the industry improves in 2016. Fund launches for the week of December 21st, 2015 JPMorgan (NYSE: JPM ) adds to its growing ETF lineup (12/21): – The JPMorgan Diversified Return Europe Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: JPEU ) is the 6th ETF from JPMorgan and its third launch of 2015. According to a press release from the issuer, “JPEU is designed to serve as the foundation of a developed Europe equity portfolio, combining portfolio construction with stock selection in an effort to produce higher returns with lower volatility than traditional market cap-weighted indices.” WisdomTree (NASDAQ: WETF ) launches 2 U.S. Equity funds (12/23): The WisdomTree Dynamic Long/Short U.S. Equity Fund (NYSEMKT: DYLS ) is primarily a long ETF strategy that adds short exposure when needed to act as a market risk hedge. According to the fund’s homepage, the WisdomTree Dynamic Bearish U.S. Equity Fund (NYSEMKT: DYB ) “is able to be net short or market neutral when the market environment is considered poor or mixed, and can have a small net long position when the environment is deemed more attractive.” Alpha Architect adds an international alternative to QMOM (12/23): The MomentumShares U.S. Quantitative Momentum ETF (BATS: QMOM ), launched earlier this month, now has an international twin. The MomentumShares International Quantitative Momentum ETF (NYSEMKT: IMOM ) is focused on high quality momentum companies based in developed international markets. Dr. Wesley Gray commented in a press release : “We seek to deliver a high-conviction momentum approach backed by extensive academic and market research and a substantive knowledge of the manner in which irrational investor behavior creates mispricing. With IMOM, we can now give our investors access to this strategy with an international lens.” There were no fund closures for the weeks of December 7th, 14th and 21st, 2015 Have any other questions on ETFs or ETNs? Please comment below and I will try to clear things up. As an author and editor I have found that constructive feedback is the best way to grow. What you would like to see discussed in the future? How can I improve this series to meet reader needs? Please share your thoughts on this first edition of the ETF Update series in the comments section below. Have a view on something that’s coming up or a new fund? Submit an article.