Tag Archives: manager

Templeton Global Income Is On Sale

Summary Templeton Global Income trades at a -15.72% discount to NAV following last week’s market panic. This discount is historically large and most likely a limited time offer. Mr. Market seems to be rating the investment skill of Michael Hasenstab below average. I disagree. Background Templeton Global Income Fund (NYSE: GIM ) is a closed-end fund. Its investment objective in Templeton’s own words : The Fund seeks high, current income, with a secondary goal of capital appreciation. Under normal market conditions, the Fund invests at least 80% of its net assets in income-producing securities, including debt securities of U.S. and foreign issuers, including emerging markets. Discount To NAV Following last week’s market tantrum, GIM currently trades at a substantial -15.72% discount to net asset value. This discount is large historically speaking (albeit the rolling average discount has been increasing the past five years). Source: CEFconnect.com If we assume the following… NAV is fairly calculated (I do in GIM’s case). GIM’s investment mandate is sufficiently flexible (it is). … then the discount would appear to be Mr. Market’s judgment on the quality of GIM’s management skill. If management skill is well below average, the discount is warranted. If management skill is average or above, the discount represents a buying opportunity (and a margin of safety should our judgment of management skill prove incorrect). I believe management skill is above average. Michael Hasenstab Michael Hasenstab is the key man behind Templeton Global Income. (More specifically, he is the Chief Investment Officer, Global Bonds for Franklin Advisers, Inc, which manages the fund.) His long-term record speaks for itself… Source: Trustnet.com I’m a fan of the guy. He takes chances, which is to say he “actively” manages the portfolio. (Illustrating this point, GIM’s R-Squared is 0.17 vs. its benchmark over the past three years.) Unfortunately, this seems to be a novel approach in an industry where too many fund managers claim to be “active” (to justify higher fees) but in practice hug their benchmark, prioritizing career risk over the actual risks facing their investors. Sometimes Hasenstab’s chances pan out ( Ireland ). Other times they don’t ( Ukraine ). Over the last decade plus, he’s won more than he’s lost and produced solid risk-adjusted returns. I think the combination of his temperament and relatively young age makes it a decent bet GIM’s performance will remain solid. Here are his thoughts on the recent market volatility. For the record, I am far more bearish on China’s prospects than he appears to be from the video. I was short the Direxion Daily FTSE China Bull 3X ETF (NYSEARCA: YINN ) until last week and plan to short it again should government intervention artificially push it back up. That said, I have no qualms with GIM’s latest reported exposures (which do not include China)… (click to enlarge) Other Thoughts On The Merits Behind An Investment In GIM I believe the bulk of a decision to invest in GIM boils down to one’s appraisal of the manager’s skill (above average in my opinion) and the margin of safety should that appraisal be wrong (the CEF’s current -15.72% discount to NAV). Here are three more quick thoughts on the merits behind an investment in GIM though… Fees are reasonable at 0.73%. I believe it is well positioned risk-wise for the current market environment given its low duration (0.6438 years) and closed-end fund structure, which prevents forced selling from redemptions during a market panic. GIM is highly focused on emerging market bonds and currencies. I believe these are currently reasonably priced exposures relative to other asset classes. GMO’s “7‐Year Asset Class Real Return Forecasts” agrees… (click to enlarge) Conclusion The Templeton Global Income closed-end fund is trading at a huge discount following last week’s market panic. Mr. Market is suggesting Michael Hasenstab is a below average investor. I disagree. Long GIM. Disclosure: I am/we are long GIM. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Fund Manager Briefing: TwentyFour Corporate Bond

By Jake Moeller Lipper’s Jake Moeller reviews highlights of a meeting with Chris Bowie, Portfolio Manager, TwentyFour Corporate Bond Fund , on August 26, 2015. The new TwentyFour Corporate Bond Fund is the sister of the highly successful (and Lipper Award-winning ) TwentyFour Strategic Bond Fund . Launched only in January 2015, the fund is designed to perform against a relative benchmark (TwentyFour will shortly launch an absolute return bond fund) and is not slavishly devoted to maintaining a high yield. Mr. Bowie is a fund manager obsessed with liquidity. “You won’t find any private placements or unrated securities in this portfolio,” he stated. “I like quality and I want a small, compact portfolio.” Indeed, this fund is refreshingly compact. With only 70 securities, it is very small compared to some of the large corporate bond funds occupying the U.K. market, and Mr. Bowie doesn’t expect his fund will likely hold a significantly larger amount of holdings. In a credible move TwentyFour has recently stopped marketing its Strategic Bond Fund (at £750 million) to new clients in order to prevent pressure to increase the number of lines. TwentyFour has undertaken to similarly protect the Corporate Bond Fund from capacity constraints, should that need arise. The fund is designed along similar lines to Mr. Bowie’s previous Ignis Corporate Bond Fund , with an emphasis on delivering risk-adjusted returns across all sources of alpha, including duration and yield curve, stock selection and assets, country rating, and sector tilts. Mr. Bowie has an excellent pedigree in all aspects of corporate bond management and carries an enviable performance track record, once ranked by Citywire with the fourteenth best Sharpe ratio of all funds globally. Table 1. Composite Performance* of Chris Bowie from December 31, 2008 to Present within IA £Corporate Bond Sector Quartiles (click to enlarge) Source: Lipper for Investment Management. As a former computer programmer, Mr. Bowie has built his own system for examining risk/return that gives him some unique insights, particularly in constructing his credit buckets. “My system calculates a risk-adjusted return metric for every single bond,” he states. “This examines the last three-year cash price volatility for a bond and compares it to its current yield. If a bond is yielding 5%, but its three-year cash price volatility is 7%, that is quite a poor investment. If it is yielding 4% but has cash price volatility of 2%, this is much more attractive.” The fund has a very large position in BBB-rated securities at a whopping 44% (compared to the sector average of 38%) and a large component of BB-rated debt (16%), mainly around the five- to ten-year part of the curve. Mr. Bowie is also keen on corporate hybrids, with a 12% exposure there. “They’ve been good for us,” he states. “We have been selectively overweight for a while now.” Using his proprietary value system, Mr. Bowie cites the example of his preference for a Barclays Upper Tier 2 position that appears to have the wrong cash-price volatility for its rating. “It’s a no brainer!” he states. “If you buy the Barclays BBB on the same yield, you’ve increased your cash-price volatility three times for a single notch improvement in credit rating.” Table 2. Comparative Performance of Various Asset Class Proxies since 2000. (click to enlarge) Source: Lipper for Investment Management. Past performance does not guarantee future performance. For a fund manager whose week has just commenced with the “Black Monday” selloff in global markets, Mr. Bowie is strikingly calm and composed. “It’s not yet a solvency event,” he states. “This is a big question about growth.” While his tone is reassuring and his longer-term investment thesis is relatively intact, he does concede the crisis has warranted a few changes to his positions. He has just increased the duration of his portfolio from 7.1 years to 7.4 years (the sector average is 7.5 years) on the back of the selloff in Treasuries on Wednesday, August 26. This has created a partial hedge against the credit risk in some of his higher-beta names. He has also sold a small amount of his AT1 (additional Tier 1) bonds to further bring down his beta. “We expect further short-term volatility in equities markets,” he states, “and we don’t want to be selling bonds into the cash market. But we do want to mitigate some credit volatility.” While Black Monday hasn’t forced a redesign of Mr. Bowie’s overall strategy, it has placed emphasis on the outlook for inflation. “Until a week ago I thought the most likely thing was that the Fed would raise rates in September, the Bank of England following suit in Q1 next year, that we would have a normal recovery where inflation starts to gently rise, and we would see wage pressures elevate.” he states “But now, I’m wondering with what’s happened to oil and volatility and the noise out of China whether deflationary risk is more of a threat.” This concern comes despite Europe’s supportive quantitative-easing program and increasing business confidence and is also reflected in the fund’s duration increase outlined earlier. Table 3. Proportion of IA Sterling Corporate Bond Sector by Fund Size Ranking Source: TwentyFour AM. Data as at April 2015. The fund currently holds 14% exposure to gilts and supranationals. Mr. Bowie is well aware of outflows from competitors’ funds in the sector and the potential for investors to undertake a broader rotation out of corporate bonds. The gilt position and the high level of highly rated names is protection for him, should this occur. He argues, however, that corporate bonds should be an ongoing component of investors’ portfolios, with the long-term performance profile (even including 2008 – see Table 2, above) measured by the iBoxx Non Gilts BBB Index since 2000 offering considerably better performance with lower volatility than equities. He notes also that there are some headwinds for the asset class, but an active fund that examines the drivers of volatility is best placed to protect capital. There are many things going for this new launch. TwentyFour is a vibrant fixed income specialist that has made a canny hire in Mr. Bowie. His pedigree is strong, and-although he is running what is currently a defensive portfolio-his unique processes bring a fresh dynamic. Furthermore, the concentration of flows in the sector (see Table 3, above), with 70% of the entire sector contained in the ten top funds, should be of concern to all investors. A small and nimble fund has much to offer. * The composite is constructed in the private asset module of Lipper for Investment Management as follows: Ignis Corporate Bond Fund from 31/12/2008 – 30/6/2014, IA £Corporate Bond sector from 1/7/2014 to 13/1/2015 & TwentyFour Corporate Bond from 14/1/2015 onwards.

Shock And Horror: Passive Hedge Funds

An academic article entitled “Passive Hedge Funds” has recently attracted quite a lot of comment in the Financial Times, Bloomberg, and on a variety of websites. Those whose ambition in life seems to be to discredit hedge funds and their managers at every turn have, of course, latched onto it. But the paper’s title is tendentious, its argument familiar and in some places flawed, and its conclusions really quite anodyne. Investors seeking hedge fund-like exposure through liquid alternatives will find that some products are similar to those described in that article; they should examine them very carefully before investing. The purported humor of math jokes often depends on the technical use of a term that has other, more familiar meanings. Thus, my college roommate’s knee-slapper about how every integer is interesting relied on a definition of ‘interesting’ as ‘having a unique property.’ The joke took the form of a mathematical induction: 1 is the multiplicative identity, 2 is the only even prime, 3 is the lowest true prime, 4 is the lowest perfect square… so if there is an uninteresting integer, it is interesting, because it is the lowest one. Maybe you had to be there. I am reminded of this moment of boundless mirth by a paper entitled ” Passive Hedge Funds ,” by Mikhail Tupitsyn and Paul Lajbcygier. This title has, inevitably, attracted comment, including headlines such as “Study: Hedge Funds Don’t Do S**t, Suck” (gawker.com) or, with less sophistication and élan, “New Study Argues Hedge Funds are an Even Worse Scam than We Thought” (vox.com) and even more prosaically, “The Case Against Hedge Fund Managers” (ai-cio.com). With the apparent exception of the latter, these commentators were so enamored by their deeply considered wisdom that they clearly felt no need to read the paper. Because its authors are quite explicit about their idiosyncratic use of the term ‘passive.’ They even put scare-quotes around it. The commentators just missed the punchline. It is hard to dispute Humpty Dumpty: “When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean ─ neither more nor less.” Since they take pains to explain what they mean by it, I have no argument with the authors’ use of ‘passive.’ They might have used ‘hippopotamus,’ which is more euphonious, but lacking poetic souls, they chose ‘passive,’ and missed the opportunity for a great title. The sense in which the authors use ‘passive’ to describe hedge fund return patterns is that they have linear correlation to hedge fund β. The crux of their argument is that “A manager with genuine investment skill should not only have “passive” linear risk exposures to alternative risk factors ( i.e ., alternative beta) but should also produce enhanced returns through nonlinear ‘active risk exposures.'” This is contentious, as will be seen below, but it is simply posited as a truth rather than justified. Was their choice of ‘passive’ tendentious and self-promoting? Of course: how else would a postdoc and an associate prof at Melbourne’s #2 university get noticed in the Financial Times or Bloomberg, let alone a temple to the Muses such as gawker.com? Was it helpful? Our commentators’ complete failure to understand the authors’ intent makes it rather obvious that it was not. The Tupitsyn and Lajbcygier article is, as their review of the literature makes clear, one of a long line of academic studies that propose models for hedge fund returns. Even critics more competent than our commentators tend to latch onto these studies as “proof” that hedge funds offer little value-added. But anything can be modeled ─ conventional mutual funds, sunspot frequencies, even (allegedly) the earth’s climate. Problems arise when, as Emanuel Derman and others have noted, the models are mistaken for reality. And hedge fund β ─ against which the authors argue hedge fund managers fail to add value ─ is, at best, a very peculiar concept, and arguably a spurious one. On consideration, the authors’ argument begins to look strangely circular: hedge funds fail to add value relative to metrics that derive from their own returns. This is something like arguing that I am a lousy swimmer because I am unable to swim faster than myself. I may well be a lousy swimmer, but comparison with my own performance will not establish that. A good portion of Tupitsyn’s and Lajbcygier’s analysis is devoted to returns on hedge fund indices. In choosing these as a database, they, like many before them, commit the fallacy of composition. The fact that you can calculate a mean return from a pile of reports does not indicate that there is such a thing as an average hedge fund: it is not only possible, but likely that none of the funds analyzed exhibited the mean return. Further, there is no reason to expect continuity from one time period to another: a fund whose return was close to the center of the distribution in one period may be an outlier in the next. Hedge fund returns are widely dispersed both synchronically and over time, so that the value of hedge fund indices is pretty much restricted to service as performance metrics for specific time periods. The standard error of the mean = s/√n, where ‘s’ is the σ of the population and ‘n’ is its size. Obviously, the error is significantly higher and thus the epistemic value of the mean significantly less, the more dispersed the population is. Given the wide dispersion of hedge fund returns, the value of their average is largely restricted to the bragging rights it gives to marketers fortunate enough to work for funds that have outperformed it. The authors are aware of these limitations, and devote some analysis to the returns of individual, real world funds. They find that most funds have strong linear exposures to familiar factor influences on investment returns. They conclude that “The nonlinear risk is more pronounced in arbitrage styles and styles following multiple strategies, and it is weaker in directional styles.” This should hardly be surprising ─ arbitrage is inherently non-linear ─ and it is not at all clear why the presence of linear risk in other sorts of strategies should somehow suggest dereliction of duty on the part of their managers. If, for example, a dedicated short fund carried no (negative) equity exposure, its investors would certainly have reason to object! Admittedly, fewer long/short funds make use of their ability to add value by adjusting their net exposure than might be expected, and with relatively stable long/short ratios, their exposure to equity risk factors would, of course, be linear. The same would be true of any long-only equity fund, and would certainly not attract criticism. In fact, long/short funds have increasingly tended to pursue a trading-oriented (“risk on/risk off”) response to changes in their risk perceptions in place of making changes to their short positions. As a group, hedge funds provide us with ample reasons to criticize them. Despite declining over the last few years, fees are in most cases still too high for the service provided. Lack of transparency inhibits rational analysis and portfolio construction, while providing a breeding ground for a wide range of abuses and sharp practice. The artificial mystique that this opacity fosters is repulsively reminiscent of Ozma of Oz. However, neither an adolescent potty-mouth nor accusations of fraud are not needed to make these points forcefully and to draw the appropriate conclusions for investors. Nor are “discoveries” that hedge fund α is not a matter of otherworldly powers to bend the laws of economics to the manager’s will ─ that their skills might be very similar in both nature and quantity to the skills that conventional portfolio managers exhibit. Tupitsyn and Lajbcygier have made a small contribution to the growing literature on hedge fund replication ─ nothing less, but certainly nothing more. Theirs is only one approach to hedge fund replication, and to my mind a less than satisfactory one. Factor replication is an inherently backward-looking approach to modeling, and when applied to the return streams from hedge funds, likely to result in some rather peculiar portfolios. A technique that I suspect has much more promise is the creation of robo-managers ─ algorithmic trading techniques that mimic the trading strategies hedge funds are known to pursue. Many hedge funds, particularly CTAs, are already effectively automated. While it is illegal to steal their code, it is possible to imitate it based on an analysis of their returns. In considering an investment in liquid alternative funds, many of which are “quantitatively-driven” in ways that are rarely specified explicitly and require research to understand, the nature of the security selection technique should be given careful consideration. Approaches similar to that of Tupitsyn and Lajbcygier are worth a look, but may not deliver all that they promise; the source of the factor exposures they purport to imitate must be investigated. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.