Investing

Leave it alone!

Some things just ought to be left alone. My son and I have often disagreed on this point. "Leave it alone!" "Why are you touching that?" "Stop rolling the window up and down." "Would you please stop pushing that button?" "Don't bother your sister." "Turn the windshield wipers off." "DO NOT PLUG THAT SCREWDRIVER INTO THE POWER OUTLET!"

Many investors to share his tendencies.

Meb Faber wrote a great study on various asset models called Global Asset Allocation. The book is a detailed performance analysis of eight "reasonable" but very different allocation strategies over the most recent forty year period.

These portfolios had stock allocations as low as 25% and as high as 90% (Warren Buffet's famous 90/10 allocation). They included a bond allocation from 10% on the low end to 55% on the high end. Real assets (commodities, real estate, natural resource equities) ranged from 0% in, two of the eight portfolios, all the way up to 50%.

While the reading is admittedly a bit dry, the conclusion is remarkable. Over the forty year period, these eight very different strategies all produced annual returns within 2% of each other (8.5% to 10.4%)!

On the surface this might not seem all that amazing, after all it matches what we've all been told about investing for the long run, right? However, consider that for "shorter" periods of seven to ten years (that surely must have felt like an eternity to under-performing investors) it wasn't uncommon for a given allocation strategy to have been outperformed by up to 100% by other strategies. That brings a whole new meaning to patience, doesn't it?

But the penalty for lacking patience can be harsh. The often quoted and annually updated DALBAR study shows that actual composite mutual fund investors returns have averaged only 2-3% over a thirty year period in which stocks returned better than 11% per year and bonds returned more than 7%. The only possible explanation for this huge performance discrepancy is investors buying after period of price appreciation and selling after periods of losses.

The last few weeks have been an excellent example of the temptation to "touch things" as investors have bid up industrial stocks (e.g. the Dow Jones Industrial Average or DJIA) and sold off gold mining stocks (the Philadelphia Gold and Silver Index or XAU). As often happens when prices change, sentiment (mood) indicators are now depressed for the mining shares and ebullient for industrial stocks. Does this make sense? Thirty years from now, we can be fairly confident that industrial companies will still be doing industrial things, and miners will still be mining gold. Trees won't grow to the sky, and gold won't become worthless. On the contrary, over many years, economic expansions, and recessions, it is quite likely that both US industrial companies and gold will maintain substantial value. However if you had to take either a share of General Electric or a gold coin, and then play Rip Van Winkle for a century, I bet you'd take the coin!

Understanding all of that, why wouldn't a rationale long term investor be more inclined to buy a little bit more of what is on sale and a little bit less of what has been marked up? First of all, my son would tell you it's because sitting still is tough sometime. Secondly, our human brains have learned that doing more of what feels good is fun. But following those normal psychological instincts flat out doesn't work for investing. Prices go up and down as a normal part of markets and the best way to lock in poor long term investment performance is to change strategy when it doesn't "feel good". Fortunately, good habits can eventually be learned with enough reinforcement...my son no longer tries to plug things into power outlets!


SVANE CAPITAL, LLC IS A REGISTERED INVESTMENT ADVISOR.  INFORMATION PRESENTED IS FOR INFORMATIONAL AND EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND DOES NOT INTEND TO MAKE AN OFFER OR SOLICITATION FOR THE SALE OR PURCHASE OF ANY SPECIFIC SECURITIES, INVESTMENTS, OR INVESTMENT STRATEGIES. INVESTMENTS INVOLVE RISK AND UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED, ARE NOT GUARANTEED. INTERNATIONAL INVESTING INVOLVES SPECIAL RISKS INCLUDING THE POSSIBILITY OF SUBSTANTIAL VOLATILITY DUE TO CURRENCY FLUCTUATIONS AND POLITICAL UNCERTAINTIES. AN INVESTMENT CONCENTRATED IN SECTORS AND INDUSTRIES MAY INVOLVE GREATER RISK THAN A MORE DIVERSIFIED INVESTMENT. THERE IS NO ASSURANCE THAT A DIVERSIFIED PORTFOLIO WILL PRODUCE BETTER RETURNS THAN AN UNDIVERSIFIED PORTFOLIO, NOR DOES DIVERSIFICATION ASSURE AGAINST MARKET LOSS.  ANY GRAPH PRESENTED CANNOT IN AND OF ITSELF BE USED AS THE SOLE DETERMINANT IN MAKING AN INVESTMENT DECISION. GRAPHS ARE HISTORICAL DEPICTIONS AND HAVE INHERENT LIMITATIONS IN MAKING INVESTMENT DECISIONS AND CANNOT PREDICT THE FUTURE RESULTS OF ANY INVESTMENT. PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT AN INDICATION OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE. BE SURE TO FIRST CONSULT WITH A QUALIFIED FINANCIAL ADVISER AND/OR TAX PROFESSIONAL BEFORE IMPLEMENTING ANY STRATEGY DISCUSSED HEREIN.

Investing Superheroes: John Bogle

John Bogle has been a financial industry pioneer and respected spokesman for over fifty years. As the founder of The Vanguard Group, which specializes in low-cost index funds, he’s had tremendous impact in driving down the costs and complexities of market participation for millions of investors. Many of the standard components of sound investment advice weren’t standard before John Bogle.

Bogle’s Key Strategic Concepts:

  • Bogle starts with the importance of long-term thinking to investment success. “The historical data support one conclusion with unusual force: To invest with success, you must be a long-term investor”. This advice is so commonly heard, that it is easy to overlook the meaning. He continues this thought saying that “In the long run, investing is not about markets at all. Investing is about enjoying the returns earned by businesses.” The long-term investor should be chiefly concerned being invested and earning the cash flow and growth generated by the businesses that he or she owns. The price of this growth and cash flow (to Bogle, “the markets”) will fluctuate and these fluctuations become meaningless over a longer time-frame.

  • “Time is your friend; impulse is your enemy” Bogle urges investors to be patient and to avoid hasty decisions. His advice is similar to the old saw “measure twice, cut once”. In other words, once we’ve started on a solid long-term investment strategy, the best thing we can do as investors is to let time and compounding work for us. Getting impulsive and changing strategies (“the enemy”) can do huge damage to our returns. 

  • John Bogle began thinking about index investing back in 1951 hinting at the idea in his Princeton thesis. The basic concept of index investing is to ignore trying to sort out “good stocks” from “bad stocks” and simply buy a diversified group of stocks as inexpensively as possible. In other words, “Don’t look for the needle in the haystack. Just buy the haystack!” It often sounds promising to try to find the best stocks, and many investors do exactly that. However, this means that the best companies often have the highest stock prices, making them not necessarily the best investments. 

  • Our favorite Bogle quote gets straight to the heart of our investing philosophy at Svane Capital. “Your success in investing will depend in part on your character and guts, and in part on your ability to realize at the height of ebullience and the depth of despair alike that this too shall pass”. Of course we must understand and focus on the long term characteristics of markets and use appropriate investing strategy. But we must also understand the normal short term behavior of markets, and use this to our advantage when possible. Day to day, and even month to month price action in markets, can be thought of as mostly random with inevitable swings from extreme optimism to extreme pessimism. It is at these extremes where the greatest opportunities are found. At these points the right decisions can feel scary or even wrong. Using these times to our advantage depends mainly on our courage, discipline, and understanding that they don’t last forever.

John Bogle had been thinking about the concept of index investing since writing his thesis in 1951. But he credits support received from Nobel prize winner Paul Samuelson, Charles D. Ellis, and Princeton Professor Burton G. Malkiel in creating a business to capitalize on the idea. 

Bogle founded The Vanguard Group in 1975 launching its first index fund in 1976. In 1996 he retired as CEO, but the company he started continued to grow into one of the largest mutual fund companies in the world today.  Two of his most popular books are “Common Sense on Mutual Funds”, and “The Clash of the Cultures: Investment vs. Speculation”.

Sources: www.johncbogle.com, www.vanguard.com, www.investopedia.com

SVANE CAPITAL, LLC IS A REGISTERED INVESTMENT ADVISER. INFORMATION PRESENTED IS FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND DOES NOT INTEND TO MAKE AN OFFER OR SOLICITATION FOR THE SALE OR PURCHASE OF ANY SPECIFIC SECURITIES, INVESTMENTS, OR INVESTMENT STRATEGIES. PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT AN INDICATION OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE. INVESTMENTS INVOLVE RISK AND UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED, ARE NOT GUARANTEED. BE SURE TO FIRST CONSULT WITH A QUALIFIED FINANCIAL ADVISER AND/OR TAX PROFESSIONAL BEFORE IMPLEMENTING ANY STRATEGY DISCUSSED HEREIN.