Tag Archives: premium-authors

When To Deploy Capital

One of my clients asked me what I think is a hard question: When should I deploy capital? I’ll try to answer that here. There are three main things to consider in using cash to buy or sell assets: What is your time horizon? When will you likely need the money for spending purposes? How promising is the asset in question? What do you think it might return versus alternatives, including holding cash? How safe is the asset in question? Will it survive to the end of your time horizon under almost all circumstances, and at least preserve value while you wait? Other questions like “Should I dollar cost average, or invest the lump?” are lesser questions, because what will make the most difference in ultimate returns comes from the above three questions. Putting it another way, the results of dollar cost averaging depend on returns after you put in the last dollar of the lump, as does investing the lump sum all at once. Thinking about price momentum and mean reversion are also lesser matters, because if your time horizon is a long one, the initial results will have a modest effect on the ultimate results. Now, if you care about price momentum, you may as well ignore the rest of the piece and start trading in and out with the waves of the market – assuming you can do it. If you care about mean reversion, you can wait in cash until we get “the mother of all sell-offs” and then invest. That has its problems as well: What’s a big enough sell-off? There are a lot of bears waiting for rock-bottom valuations, but the promised bargain valuations don’t materialize, because others invest at higher prices than you would, and the prices never get as low as you would like. Ask John Hussman . Investing has to be done on a “good enough” basis. The optimal return in hindsight is never achieved. Thus, at least for value investors like me, we focus on what we can figure out: How long can I set aside this capital? Is this a promising investment at a relatively attractive price? Do I have a margin of safety buying this? Those are the same questions as the first three, just phrased differently. Now, I’m not saying that there is never a time to sit on cash, but decisions like that are typically limited to times where valuations are utterly nuts, like 1964-65, 1968, 1972, 1999-2000 – basically, parts of the go-go years and the dot-com bubble. Those situations don’t last more than a decade, and are typically much shorter. Beyond that, if you have the capital to spare, and the opportunity is safe and cheap, then deploy the capital. You’ll never get it perfect. The price may fall after you buy. Those are the breaks. If that really bothers you, then maybe do half of what you would ultimately do, but set a time limit for investment of the other half. Remember, the opposite can happen, and the price could run away from you. A better idea might show up later. If there is enough liquidity, trade into the new idea. Since perfection is not achievable, if you have something good enough, I recommend that you execute and deploy the capital. Over the long haul, given relative peace, the advantage belongs to the one who is invested. If you still wonder about this question you can read the following two articles: In the end, there is no perfect answer, so if the situation is good enough, give it your best shot. Disclosure: None.

4 Signs Your Portfolio Isn’t Ready For A Bear Market

By Ronald Delegge In case you didn’t get the memo, global stocks are now in correction mode. And the velocity of the rout has been shocking to seasoned financial pros, not to mention the investing masses. For perspective, the three largest U.S. stock benchmarks – the Dow Industrials (NYSEARCA: DIA ), Nasdaq-100 (NASDAQ: QQQ ), and S&P 500 (NYSEARCA: VOO ) are up between 129% to 258% since hitting their 2009 market bottom. Over the past month, all three U.S. stock benchmarks have shed between 9% to 13% in value. In the context of triple digit gains over the past six years, the current selloff is still just a flesh wound. (See chart below) That, however, doesn’t necessarily mean your investment portfolio is bear market ready. How would your portfolio do in a bear market of -25% losses or worse? Here are four signs that could indicate you’re not ready. Sign #1: The risk character of your portfolio is out-of-whack with reality When the risk character of an investment portfolio is incompatible with your life circumstances, your age, and your ability to tolerate risk – bad things happen. I’ve seen this sad condition consistently with the portfolios that I’ve analyzed using my Portfolio Report Card grading system. Often, it’s only after portfolios have suffered significant losses do people begin to understand their investments are far too risky and not compatible with their situation or themselves. What about the big-mouths who brag they can tolerate a 50% loss or greater inside their portfolio? These types of crash dummies are typically the first ones to jump out of the window. Sign #2: Your portfolio is 100% fully invested Wall Street likes to recommend investment portfolios that are “100% fully invested” because it allows their fee sucking institutions to maximize profits. For the individual investor, however, a fully invested portfolio is bad because it allows zero financial flexibility. For example, when stock prices (NYSEARCA: VB ) are falling, the fully invested portfolio cannot buy stocks at lower prices because it’s fully invested and falling in value just like the rest of the market. On the other hand, a portfolio with cash isn’t forced to sell assets to raise cash in order to buy stocks or whatever else at bargain prices. Take a clue from the world’s greatest investors like Warren Buffett and a tiny minority who always keep cash inside their portfolio for big opportunities. (click to enlarge) Sign #3: Your portfolio lacks a margin of safety The financial advice to “do nothing” – which is now being spewed by a certain mutual fund giant and its famous founder – incorrectly assumes that Joe and Jane Investor have architecturally sound portfolios which are built to withstand not just a friendly market climate, but a nasty one. More pointedly, the dogmatic belief that long-term investing will magically fix a broken and misaligned portfolio is ignorant. All portfolios – large, small, old, and new – should have a margin of safety. Although Graham and Dodd – the founders of value investing – talked about margin of safety in the context of selecting individual securities, it also applies to how a person assembles their investment portfolio. An investor’s margin of safety represents the money they set aside from the two other containers within their portfolio (core and non-core portfolios) to be invested in fixed accounts with principal protection. The prudent investor doesn’t wait until the house has burned to the ground to install a margin of safety inside their portfolio. They do it before the fire. Sign #4: Your portfolio is one-dimensional Any investment portfolio that is built around one asset class, one stock, or one concentrated thing is one-dimensional. And the inherent problem with one-dimensional portfolios is they aren’t adaptable. This means they aren’t equipped to provide satisfactory performance when the market cycle where they once thrived in abruptly changes. One-dimensional portfolios always have higher volatility (NYSEARCA: VXX ), higher drawdowns, and lots of unnecessary risk. And the best way to avoid having this type of poorly built portfolio is to hedge by diversifying across multiple asset classes like bonds (NYSEARCA: AGG ), commodities (NYSEARCA: GCC ), real estate (NYSEARCA: RWO ) and collectibles. Summary Your investment portfolio doesn’t need to suffer catastrophic losses before you know whether it’s able to successfully withstand a bear market. How it behaves today during volatile markets, like we’ve experienced over the past week, is a good predictor of how it is likely to perform during a market environment that is the same or worse. Don’t just observe the warning signs that your portfolio might not be ready for a bear market – but prepare ahead by fixing the flaws inside your portfolio before the storm. Ultimately, well-built portfolios aren’t just multi-dimensional in nature, but they’re designed to perform in any kind of financial climate. Disclosure: No positions Original post

Vanguard Launches Its Second Alternative Mutual Fund

By DailyAlts Staff Vanguard, the globally recognized pioneer in low-cost index funds, took another step into the world of alternative investments earlier this year, when it filed a Form N-1A with the SEC for the launch of the Vanguard Alternative Strategies Fund. That filing took effect on May 28, and on August 11, exactly 75 days later, the fund’s investor-class shares began trading under the ticker symbol “VASFX.” The company’s launched its first alternative mutual fund, the Vanguard Market Neutral Fund (MUTF: VMNIX ), back in 1998. That fund is managed by the firm’s Quantitative Equity Group and has generated a 3.80% return over the past five years with a 3.98% annualized standard deviation. Objective & Approach The fund’s investment objective is to generate returns that have low correlation to the stock and bond markets, and also have less volatility than the overall U.S. stock market. These goals are pursued by means of a multi-strategy approach, which include the following: Long/short equity Event driven Fixed-income relative value Currencies Commodity-linked investments The fund may hold long or short positions within each strategy, and may also use options, forward contracts, futures, and swaps in pursuit of its investment objectives. The fund’s long/short equity and event-driven investments may include U.S. and non-U.S. equities, while its fixed-income relative value strategy involves mostly U.S. Treasuries. The fund’s currency strategy involves selling currencies of countries with poor fundamentals and buying the currencies of countries with strong fundamentals. Its commodities strategy seeks exposure through ETFs, commodity-linked swaps, and futures contracts on agricultural products, livestock, precious and industrial metals, and energy products. This combination of equity, fixed-income, currency, and commodity investments is intended to provide real diversification benefits, thereby dampening portfolio volatility. Management & Share Information While most multi-strategy funds feature a variety of sub-advisors, each specializing in one or two specific strategies, the Vanguard Alternative Strategies Fund is a single-manager fund* headed by Michael Roach, CFA. Based upon Mr. Roach’s LinkedIn profile, he is a portfolio manager in Vanguard’s Quantitative Equity Group and a specialist in portfolio construction and optimization techniques. He also serves as a portfolio manager to 14 other vanguard mutual funds, including the Market Neutral Fund. The Vanguard Alternative Strategies Fund’s investor-class shares are available with a minimum initial investment of $250,000. The management fee on the fund is 0.18% (yes, 0.18% – that’s not a typo) and the net-expense ratio is 1.10%. For more information, read a copy of the fund’s prospectus . * The fund does have the ability to appoint external managers as sub-advisors.