|
This week I am in South Africa and am not as connected as I would
like to be due to meetings and slow Internet, so we are going to look
at some material from my book, Bull's Eye Investing, which I
think is more pertinent than ever. And since lately there has been
rather large growth in the readership, there are a significant number
of new readers for whom this material will be fresh. When I originally
wrote much of this, the markets were coming out of the bear phase of
2001-2. I am adding a few comments in [brackets]. I trust you will
find value as we look at the problems that investors face in the
struggle to maximize portfolio value. Like all the children from Lake Wobegon, I am sure all my readers
are above-average investors. But I am also sure you have friends who
are not, so in this chapter we will look at the reasons why they fail
at investing, and how they should analyze funds and determine risk.
Hopefully this will give you some ways to help them. I will show
you a simple way to put yourself in the top 20% of investors. This
should make it easier to go to family reunions and listen to your
brother-in-law's stories. A big part of successful Bull's Eye Investing is simply avoiding
the mistakes that the large majority of investors make. I can give you
all the techniques, trading tips, fund recommendations, forecasts, and
so on; but you must still keep away from the patterns which are
typical of failed investors. What I want to do in this section is give you an "aha!" moment:
that insight which helps you understand something about the mysteries
of the marketplace. We will look at a number of seemingly random ideas
and concepts, and then see what conclusions we can draw. Let's jump
in. Investors Behaving Badly The Financial Research Corporation released a study prior to the
[2001-02] bear market which showed that the average mutual fund's
three-year return was 10.92%, while the average investor in those same
periods gained only 8.7%. The reason was simple: investors were
chasing the hot sectors and funds. If you study just the last three years, my guess is those numbers
will be worse. "The study found that the current average holding
period was around 2.9 years for a typical investor, which is
significantly shorter than the 5.5-year holding period of just five
years ago. [While the research below is from a few years ago, recent studies
show exactly the same, if not worse, results. Investors in general are
not getting any better.] "Many investors are purchasing funds based on past performance,
usually when the fund is at or near its peak. For example, $91 billion
of new cash flowed into funds just after they experienced their "best
performing" quarter. In contrast, only $6.5 billion in new money
flowed into funds after their worst performing quarter." (from a
newsletter by Dunham and Associates) I have seen numerous studies similar to the one above. They all
show the same thing: that the average investor does not get average
performance. Many studies show statistics which are much worse. The study also showed something I had observed anecdotally, for
which there was no evidence. Past performance was a good predictor of
future relative performance in the fixed-income markets
and international equity (stock) funds, but there was no statistically
significant way to rely on past performance in the domestic (US) stock
equity mutual funds. I will comment on why I believe this is so later
on. "The oft-repeated legal disclosure that past performance is no
guarantee of future results is true at two levels: 1. Absolute returns cannot be guaranteed with any
confidence. There is too much variability for each broad asset class
over multiple time periods. Stocks in general may provide 5-10%
returns during one decade, 10-20% during the next decade, and then
return back to the 5-10% range. 2. Absolute rankings also cannot be predicted with any
certainty. This is caused by too much relative variability within
specific investment objectives. #1 funds can regress to the average or
fall far below the average over subsequent periods, replaced by funds
that may have had very low rankings at the start. The higher the
ranking and the more narrowly you define that ranking (i.e. #1 vs.
top-decile [top 10%] vs. top quartile [top 25%] vs. top half), the
more unlikely it is that a fund can repeat at that level. It is
extremely unlikely to repeat as #1 in an objective with more than a
few funds. It is very difficult to repeat in the top decile,
challenging to repeat in the top quartile, and roughly a coin toss to
repeat in the top half." (Financial Research Center) This is in line with a study from the National Bureau of Economic
Research. Only a very small percentage of companies can show merely
above-average earnings growth for 10 years in a row. The percentage is
not more than you would expect from simply random circumstances. The chances of you picking a stock today that will be in the top
25% of all companies every year for the next ten years are 1 in 50 or
worse. In fact, the longer a company shows positive earnings growth
and outstanding performance, the more likely it is to have an off
year. Being on top for an extended period of time is an extremely
difficult feat. Yet, what is the basis for most stock analysts' predictions? Past
performance and the optimistic projections of a management that gets
compensated with stock options. What CEO will tell you his stock is
overpriced? His staff and board will kill him, as their options will
be worthless. Analysts make the fatally flawed assumption that because
a company has grown 25% a year for five years that it will do so for
the next five. The actual results for the last 50 years show the
likelihood of that happening is very small. Tails You Lose, Heads I Win I cannot recommend highly enough a marvelous book by Nassim
Nicholas Taleb, called Fooled by Randomness. The sub-title is
"The Hidden Role of Chance in the Markets and in Life." I consider it
essential reading for all investors, and would go so far as to say
that you should not invest in anything without reading this book. He
looks at the role of chance in the marketplace. Taleb is a man who is
obsessed with the role of chance, and he gives us a very thorough
treatment. He also has a gift for expressing complex statistical
problems in a very understandable manner. I intend to read the last
half of this book at least once a year to remind me of some of these
principles. Let's look at just a few of his thoughts. Assume you have 10,000 people who flip a coin once a year. After
five years, you will have 313 people who have come up with heads five
times in a row. If you put suits on them and sit them in glass
offices, call them a mutual or a hedge fund, they will be managing a
billion dollars. They will absolutely believe they have figured out
the secret to investing that all the other losers haven't discerned.
Their seven-figure salaries prove it. The next year, 157 of them will blow up. With my power of analysis,
I can predict which one will blow up. It will be the one in which you
invest! Ergodicity In the mutual fund and hedge fund world, one of the continual
issues of reporting returns is something called "survivorship bias."
Let's say you start with a universe of 1,000 funds. After five years,
only 800 of those funds are still in business. The other 200 had
dismal results, were unable to attract money, and simply folded. If you look at the annual returns of the 800 funds, you get one
average number. But if you add in the returns of the 200 failures, the
average return is much lower. The databases most statistics are based
upon only look at the survivors. This sets up false expectations for
investors, as it raises the average. Taleb gave me an insight for which I will always be grateful. He
points out that because of chance and survivorship bias, investors are
only likely to find out about the winners. Indeed, who goes around
trying to sell you the losers? The likelihood of being shown an
investment or a stock which has flipped heads five times in a row are
very high. But chances are, that hot investment you are shown is a
result of randomness. You are much more likely to have success hunting
on your own. The exception, of course, would be my clients. (Note to
regulators: that last sentence is a literary device called a weak
attempt at humor. It is not meant to be taken literally.) That brings us to the principle of Ergodicity, "...namely, that
time will eliminate the annoying effects of randomness. Looking
forward, in spite of the fact that these managers were profitable in
the past five years, we expect them to break even in any future time
period. They will fare no better than those of the initial cohort who
failed earlier in the exercise. Ah, the long term." (Taleb) Why Investors Fail While the professionals typically explain their problems in very
creative ways, the mistakes that most of us make are much more
mundane. First and foremost is chasing performance. Study after study
shows the average investor does much worse than the average mutual
fund, as they switch from their poorly performing fund to the latest
hot fund, just as it turns down. Mark Finn of Vantage Consulting has spent years analyzing trading
systems. He is a consultant to large pension funds and Fortune 500
companies. He is one of the more astute analysts of trading systems,
managers, and funds that I know. He has put more start-up managers
into business than perhaps anyone in the fund management world. He has
a gift for finding new talent and deciding if their "ideas" have
investment merit. He has a team of certifiable mathematical geniuses working for him.
They have access to the best pattern-recognition software available.
They have run price data through every conceivable program, and come
away with this conclusion: Past performance is not indicative of future results. Actually, Mark says it more bluntly: Past performance is pretty
much worthless when it comes to trying to figure out the future. The
best use of past performance is to determine how a manager behaved in
a particular set of prior circumstances. Yet investors read that past performance is not indicative of
future results, and then promptly ignore it. It is like reading
statements at McDonalds that coffee is hot. We don't pay attention.
Chasing the latest hot fund usually means you are now in a fund
that is close to reaching its peak, and will soon top out. Generally
that is shortly after you invest. What do Finn and his team tell us does work? Fundamentals,
fundamentals, fundamentals. As they look at scores of managers each
year, the common thread for success is how they incorporate some set
of fundamental analysis patterns into their systems. This is consistent with work done by Dr. Gary Hirst, one of my
favorite analysts and fund managers. In 1991, he began to look at
technical analysis. He spent huge sums on computers and programming,
analyzing a variety of technical analysis systems. Let me quote him on
the results of his research: "I had heard about technical analysis and chart patterns, and
looking at this stuff I would say, what kind of voodoo is this? I was
very, very skeptical that technical analysis had value. So I used the
computers to check it out, and what I learned was that there was, in
fact, no useful reality there. Statistically and mathematically all
these tools -- stochastics, RSI, chart patterns, Elliot Wave, and so
on -- just don't work. If you code any of these rigorously into a
computer and test them they produce no statistical basis for making
money; they're just wishful thinking. But I did find one thing that
worked. In fact almost all technical analysis can be reduced to this
one thing, though most people don't realize it: the distributions of
returns are not normal; they are skewed and have "fat tails." In other
words, markets do produce profitable trends. Sure, I found things that
work over the short term, systems that work for five or ten years but
then fail miserably. Everything you made, you gave back. Over the long
term, trends are where the money is." Becoming a Top 20% Investor Over very long periods of time, the average stock will grow at
about 7% a year, which is GDP growth plus dividends plus inflation.
This is logical when you think about it. How could all the companies
in the country grow faster than the total economy? Some companies will
grow faster than others, of course, but the average will be the above.
There are numerous studies which demonstrate this. That means roughly
50% of the companies will outperform the average and 50% will lag. The
same is true for investors. By definition, 50% of you will not achieve the
average; 10% of you will do really well; and 1% will get rich through
investing. You will be the lucky ones who find Microsoft in 1982. You will tell
yourself it was your ability. Most of us assign our good fortune to native
skill and our losses to bad luck. But we all try to be in the top 10%. Oh, how we try. The FRC study
cited at the beginning shows how most of us look for success, and then
get in, only to have gotten in at the top. In fact, trying to be in
the top 10% or 20% is statistically one of the ways we find ourselves
getting below-average returns over time. We might be successful for a
while, but reversion to the mean will catch up. Here is the very sad truth. The majority of investors in the top
10-20% in any given period are simply lucky. They have come up with
heads five times in a row. Their ship came in. There are some good
investors who actually do it with sweat and work, but they are not the
majority. Want to make someone angry? Tell a manager that his (or her)
fabulous track record appears to be random luck or that they simply
caught a wave and rode it. Then duck. By the way, is it luck or skill when an individual goes to work for
a start-up company and is given stock in their 401k which grows at
10,000%? How many individuals work for companies where that didn't
happen, or their stock options blew up (Enron)? I happen to lean
toward Grace, rather than luck or skill, as an explanation; but this
is not a theological treatise. Read The Millionaire Next Door. Most millionaires make their
money in business and/or by saving lots of money and living frugally.
Very few make it simply by investing skill alone. Odds are that you
will not be that person. But I can tell you how to get in the top 20%. Or better, I will let
FRC tell you, because they do it so well: "For those who are not satisfied with simply beating the average
over any given period, consider this: if an investor can
consistently achieve slightly better than average returns each year
over a 10-15 year period, then cumulatively over the full period they
are likely to do better than roughly 80% or more of their peers.
They may never have discovered a fund that ranked #1 over a
subsequent one- or three-year period. That "failure," however, is more
than offset by their having avoided options that dramatically
underperformed. Avoiding short-term underperformance is the key to
long-term outperformance. "For those that are looking to find a new method of discerning the
top ten funds for 2002, this study will prove frustrating. There are
no magic short-cut solutions, and we urge our readers to abandon the
illusive and ultimately counterproductive search for them. For those
who are willing to restrain their short-term passions, embrace the
virtue of being only slightly better than average, and wait for the
benefits of this approach to compound into something much
better..." That's it. You simply have to be only slightly better than average
each year to be in the top 20% at the end of the race. It is a whole
lot easier to figure out how to do that than chase the top ten
funds. Of course, you could get lucky (or Blessed) and get one of the top
ten funds. But recognize it for what it is and thank God (or your luck
if you are agnostic) for His blessings. I should point out that it takes a lot of work to be in the top 50%
consistently. But it can be done. I don't see it as much as I would
like, but I do see it. Investing in a stock or a fund should not be like going to Vegas.
When you put money with a manager or a fund, you should think as if
you are investing in their management company. Ask yourself, "Is this
someone I want to be in business with? Do I want him running my
company? Does this company have a reasonable business objective? What
is their edge that makes me think they will be above average? What is
the reason I would think they could discern the difference between
randomness and good management?" When I meet a manager, and all he wants to do is talk about his
track record, I find a way to quickly close the conversation. When
they tell me they are trying to make the most they can, I head for the
door. Maybe they are the real deal, but my experience says the odds
are against it. It's about not settling for being mediocre. Statistics and
experience tell us that simply being consistently above average is
damn hard work. When a fund is the number one fund, that is random.
They had a good run or a good idea and it worked. Are they likely to
repeat? No. But being in the top 50% every year for ten years? That is NOT
random. That is skill. That type of consistent solid management is
what you should be looking for. By the way, I mentioned at the beginning that past performance was
statistically useful for ascertaining relative performance of certain
types of funds like bond funds and international funds. In the
fixed-income markets (bonds) everyone is dealing with the same
instruments. Funds with lower overhead and skilled traders who
aggressively watch their trading costs have an edge. That management
skill shows up in consistently above-average relative returns. Likewise, funds which do well in international investments tend to
stay in the top brackets. That is because the skill set for
international fund management is rare and the learning cost is high.
In that world, local knowledge of the markets clearly adds value. But in the US stock market, everybody knows everything everybody
else does. Past performance is a very bad predictor of future results.
If a fund does well in one year, it is possibly because they took some
extra risks to do so, and eventually those risks will bite them and
their investors. Maybe they were lucky and had two of their biggest
holdings really go through the roof. Finding those monster winners is
a hard thing to do for several years in a row. Plus, the US stock
market is very cyclical, so that what goes up one year or even longer
in a bubble market will not do well the next. Investors Behaving Badly Gavin McQuill of the Financial Research Center sent me his rather
brilliant $5,000 report called "Investors Behaving Badly." He was the
author and he did a great job. I read it over one weekend, and refer
to it again from time to time. Earlier we looked at a report which showed that over the last
decade investors chased the hot mutual funds. The higher the markets
went, the less likely it was that they would buy and hold. Investors
consistently bought high and sold low. Investors made significantly
less than the average mutual fund did. McQuill focused on six emotions that cause investors to make these
mistakes. You should read these and see whether some of them are
familiar. 1. "Fear of Regret - An inability to accept that you've made a
wrong decision, which leads to holding onto losers too long or selling
winners too soon." This is part of a whole cycle of denial, anxiety,
and depression. As with any difficult situation, we first deny there
is a problem, and then get anxious as the problem does not go away or
gets worse. Then we go into depression because we didn't take action
earlier, and hope that something will come along and rescue us from
the situation. 2. "Myopic loss aversion (a.k.a. as 'short-sightedness') - A fear
of losing money and the subsequent inability to withstand short-term
events and maintain a long-term perspective." Basically, this means we
attach too much importance to day-to-day events, rather than looking
at the big picture. Behavioral psychologists have determined that the
fear of loss is the most important emotional factor in investor
behavior. Like investors chasing the latest hot fund, a news story or a bad
day in the market becomes enough for the investor to extrapolate the
recent event as the new trend which will stretch far into the future.
In reality, most events are unimportant, and have little effect on the
overall economy. 3. "Cognitive dissonance - The inability to change your opinion
after new evidence contradicts your baseline assumption." Dissonance,
whether musical or emotional, is uncomfortable. It is often easier to
ignore the event or fact producing the dissonance rather than deal
with it. We tell ourselves it is not meaningful, and go on our way.
This is especially easy if our view is the accepted view. "Herd
mentality" is a big force in the market. 4. "Overconfidence - People's tendency to overestimate their
abilities relative to individuals possessing greater expertise."
Professionals beat amateurs 99% of the time. The other 1% is luck. The
famous Clint Eastwood line, "Do you feel lucky, punk? Well, do you?"
comes to mind. In sports, most of us know when we are outclassed. But as
investors, we somehow think we can beat the pros, will always be in
the top 10%, and any time we win it is because of our skills and good
judgement. It is bad luck when we lose. Commodity brokers know that the best customers are those who strike
it rich in their first few trades. They are now convinced they possess
the gift or the Holy Grail of trading systems. These are the people
who will spend all their money trying to duplicate their initial
success, in an effort to validate their obvious abilities. They also
generate large commissions for their brokers. 5. "Anchoring - People's tendency to give too much credence to
their most recent experience and to show reluctance to adjust their
current beliefs." If you believe that NASDAQ stocks are the place to
be, that becomes your anchor. No matter what new information comes
your way, you are anchored in your belief. Your experience in 1999
shows you were right. As Lord Keynes said so eloquently when forced to acknowledge a
shift in a previous position he had taken, "Sir, the fact have
changed, and when the facts change, I change. What do you do,
sir?" We expect the current trend to continue forever, and forget that
all trends eventually regress to the mean. That is why investors still
plunge into index funds, believing that stocks will go up over the
long term. They think long term is two years. They do not understand
that it will take years - maybe even a decade - for the process of
reversion to the mean to complete its work. 6. "Representativeness - The tendency of people to see patterns
within random events." Eric Frye did a great tongue-in-cheek article
in The Daily Reckoning, a daily investment letter
(www.dailyreckoning.com). He documented that each time Sports
Illustrated used a model for the cover of their swimsuit issue who
came from a new country that had never been represented on the cover
before, the stock market of that country had always risen over a
four-year period. This year, it is time to buy Argentinian stocks.
Frye evidently did not do a correlation study on the size of the
swimsuit against the eventual rise in the market. However, I am sure
some statistician with more time on his hands than I do will brave
that analysis. Investors assume that items with a few similar traits are likely to
be associated or identical, and start to see a pattern. McQuill gives
us an example. Suzy is an English and environmental studies major.
Most people, when asked if it is more likely that Suzy will become a
librarian or work in the financial services industry, will choose
librarian. They will be wrong. There are vastly more workers in the
financial industry than there are librarians. Statistically, the
probability is that she will work in the financial services industry,
even though librarians are likely to be English majors. South Africa, Laguna Beach, and Canada South Africa is still on the top of my list of places I enjoy.
Today I am speaking at a conference for 1,000 investment advisors at
Sun City. Sun City is one of the most amazing conference facilities
and hotel complexes I have ever been to. The vision to build this
fabulous resort in the middle of the South African bush and then
believe everyone would come is truly unique. The attention to detail
on the art, decoration, landscaping, and the numerous entertainments
is impressive. If you ever get the chance to come, you should take it.
And let me take this time to thank partners Prieur du Plessis and Paul
Stewart for being such good hosts, even if they do work me a little
hard trying to get all the value from the time I am here. At the end of the month, I will fly to Laguna Beach to spend a
weekend at good friend Rob Arnott's annual thinkfest at Research
Affiliates. That meeting is always one of the highlights of my year,
both from the perspective of meeting old friends around great food and
wine, and also for the sheer massive investment brainpower in the
room. And in June I'll make a quick trip to Montreal to speak for
Cannacord. I am getting ready to speak now, so it is time to hit the send
button. This afternoon we go on a game run in one of the better game
parks, so we should see a wide variety of animals in the wild. Then
Sunday we will be in Cape Town, and if the weather permits we will
take a helicopter tour of the wine country. So, it is not all hard
work. I am taking time to have some fun and smell some roses. And as I
go through the years (I don't like to use the word old!), I more and
more realize how important it is to enjoy where you are and not wait
until some time in the future to get the most out of life. And I hope you enjoy your week. Your hoping to see the Big Five game animals this afternoon analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
If you would like to reproduce any of John Mauldin's E-Letters you must include the source of your quote and an email address (John@FrontlineThoughts.com) Please write to info@FrontlineThoughts.com and inform us of any reproductions. Please include where and when the copy will be reproduced.
John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) an NASD registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.
Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the staffs at Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC may or may not have investments in any funds cited above.
Note: The generic Accredited Investor E-letters are not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and Millennium Wave Investments. It is intended solely for accredited investors who have registered with Millennium Wave Investments and Altegris Investments at www.accreditedinvestor.ws or directly related websites and have been so registered for no less than 30 days. The Accredited Investor E-Letter is provided on a confidential basis, and subscribers to the Accredited Investor E-Letter are not to send this letter to anyone other than their professional investment counselors. Investors should discuss any investment with their personal investment counsel. John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA), which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS), an FINRA
registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a
Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered
with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave
Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments
cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings
with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return
Partners, LLP; Fynn Capital; Nicola Wealth Management; and Plexus Asset Management. Funds recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. Before seeking any advisor's services or making an investment in a fund, investors must read and examine thoroughly the respective disclosure document or offering memorandum. Since these firms and Mauldin receive fees from the funds they recommend/market, they only recommend/market products with which they have been able to negotiate fee arrangements.
PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.
|