Positives:
1. U.S. industrial production rose 0.6%, above the 0.4% expected increase.
2. NFIB small business index rose to 95.4, up from 94.1.
3. Producer prices rose 0.2% vs the 0.1% expected increase.
4. Consumer sentiment came in at 92.9, slightly higher than the 92.8 expected.
Negatives:
What’s Your Investing Philosophy? | The Big Picture1. China Devalues the Yuan 1.8%, setting off another leg in a currency war;
2. Retail sales grew 0.6%, slightly lower than the 0.7% expected rise.
3. Weekly jobless claims rose to 274k, slightly higher than expected, but still a strong number.
4. Job openings fell to 5.2mm, down from 5.4mm previously.
5. Core retail sales rose 0.4% vs the 0.6% expected.
6. Second quarter productivity rose 1.3%, lower than the 1.6% expected rise.
The best investment strategy for you? It’s the one you’re likely to stick with.
“Where’s the
Dow going to be in a year?”
That’s often
asked of financial TV guests. From their responses, you’ll detect two distinct
investment philosophies emerge. Which answer resonates with you most strongly
probably determines the sort of investor you are. It also affects the odds of
how well your portfolio is likely to do.
Imagine it is a
random Wednesday, and despite my past warnings about noise, you have a
television tuned to a financial news station. That very question is posed to
two television guests; let’s call them “Alpha” and “Beta.” Their answers —
which are quite different — reflect their competing investment schools of
thought.
Guest Alpha’s
response is very specific. Yet it incorporates so many factors, it’s hard to
keep up with. Rather than fill this in with the news of the moment — Fed
raising rates! China devaluation! Greek bailouts! Gold collapse! — I have left
the details blank so this remains “evergreen.” This not only shows how many
variables are involved, but it avoids the emotional response you may have to
any of these specific issues.
[Most
financial forecasts and predictions online are junk. Intelligent investors,
ignore the noise.]
So Alpha is
asked where the Dow will be in a year, and he responds:
“Our view is
that the economy in the U.S. continues to _______, and we foresee _______
problems overseas ______. China is _______, and that has ramifications for the
Pacific Rim’s ______. Greece is ______ in Europe. The commodity complex is
causing _____ for emerging markets. But many sectors of the U.S. economy remain
_______, and some sectors overseas are still _______. The valuation issue
continues to be _____, and that means _____ for investors. That has
ramifications for corporate profits that will be ______. We think the economy
is going to do ______, and you know that means inflation will be _____, which
will force interest rates to ______. Under these conditions, the sectors most
likely to benefit from this are ______, ______ and ______. The companies best
positioned to take advantage of this are ____, ____ and ____. Based on all
that, we especially recommend an overweight allocation to ____, ____ and ____.
Thus, we believe the Dow will be at ______ next year.”
You can turn on
FinTV any day of the week and hear some variation of that discussion.
Want to know
what this means to an investor? We can dissect it together:
Let’s begin by
noting how many macro things that Alpha has to get right for his market
forecast to be accurate. First, he is making a valuation call on several
markets. That is often a challenge to do. Next, he is dissecting multiple
economies around the world, including the additional burden of anticipating a
variety of geopolitical events. This is complicated by the rate of inflation
and the direction and levels of interest rates. Once those economic issues are
determined, he must then apply that to various market sectors. From there, he
must figure out which companies are best positioned to benefit from the overall
analysis. All the while, he must get the timing just right — not too early or
too late.
Alpha is
looking to deploy capital by determining valuation/economic/geopolitics/sector
selection/stock picking/market timing analysis. Easy as pie! What I love about
this answer is how easily it will be derailed by just about anything. Short of
perfection in all of those unpredictable variables, it is destined to fail.
Thus, for Alpha
to express his views in a meaningful investment posture requires a degree of
accuracy and precision that nearly all investors lack. Of course, we know the
names of the greats who manage to accomplish this. But like white tigers,
albino whales and unicorns, their rarity is what makes them so notable.
Guest Beta
breathes a deep sigh, and says: “The future is inherently unknowable. A year is
a long time in the economy and the markets. We don’t know what is going to
happen in so many things. Start with jobs, and especially wages. We have no
idea if the present trend continues, accelerates or reverses. But each of those
outcomes will affect retail sales, but also home purchases and durable goods
like autos. We don’t know where inflation will be over the next 12 months, and
how the Fed is going to respond to that. We have no idea what earnings are
going to be (but we do know estimates tend to run higher most of the time than
actual earnings). So we do not know how expensive stocks will be over the four
quarters. In most years, markets are in between plus or minus 10 percent, but
even that range does not cover all the possible outcomes.”
The anchor is
often perplexed, or at least a little confused by now; some become annoyed when
a guest refuses to play the forecast game. Occasionally, a very good
interviewer will ask a question such as, “So given the future is unknowable,
what should investors do?”
A reasonable
answer is as follows:
“We don’t know
what the future holds, but we can make some reasonable assertions based on
long-term historical data. We know that holding non-correlated asset classes
provides diversification benefits, one of the few free lunches on Wall Street.
Large-cap and small-cap stocks in the United States, equities of emerging
markets and developed nations, Real Estate Investment Trusts, Corporate Bonds,
Treasury Inflation Protection Bonds, High Yield Bonds and, of course, old-fashioned
Treasuries.
“We hold these
in a proportion that matches your risk tolerances — more equities for those
with a reasonable appetite for growth, less for those who are less comfortable
with volatility. Assuming no major life event changes and your risk tolerance
(notice the direction of the market should not determine your true risk
tolerance), rebalance once or so a year in order to not stray too far from your
original allocation.”
The first
answer gives the anchor a lot to discuss. Any one of those blanks represents a
follow-up question. An hour can slip by before Alpha starts to run out of
things to chat about. If you are in the content creation business, Alpha gives
a terrific interview.
The
conversation with Beta is much shorter. It is more accurate. It better reflects
how most investors should be handling the bulk of their assets, but it’s too
short and too boring to make for good television.
In any given
year, a substantial portion of people who subscribe to the Alpha school will do
exceedingly well. It is rare for them to do this two years in a row, rarer
still to do it for any substantial length of time. Once costs, taxes, fees,
etc. are taken into account, the Alpha school of thought consists of a handful
of brilliant outliers and 90 percent or more of wannabes and total misses.
Best of luck with that.
The
philosophies of Alpha and Beta are often referred to as Active or Passive, but
that does not do justice to the differences.
Do not get me
wrong; I have nothing against people putting money with Alpha, so long as they
(a) understand the very long odds against achieving success, and (b) keep a
substantial percentage of their assets with Beta.
To be fair to
Alpha, we must also recognize that while Beta does well over the long term,
over the short term she careens between boring gains and frustrating drawdowns.
Nor does Beta give you much to talk about at cocktail parties. Beta is boring.
That’s the way investing should be.
Ritholtz is
chief executive of Ritholtz Wealth Management. He is the author of “Bailout Nation” and runs a finance blog, The Big Picture. On
Twitter:@Ritholtz.
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