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Tuesday, October 20 2009

Since the beginning of the new financial year work loads have been strong particularly with the introduction of a number of new clients.

I am starting to get on top of this work load and have caught up posting Scott's 3 latest Eureka Report articles.

The first of these was published back on the 14th of September and looked at the issue of preferential treatment to institutional investors as opposed to retail investors in relation to rights issues implemented by companies.

Scott takes aim at this practice and identifies the best and worst approach that has been adopted - What about me? I want my share.

Posted by: Scott Keefer AT 06:05 pm   |  Permalink   |  Email
Friday, October 16 2009

The following is a great piece of commentary by Weston Wellington from Dimensional in the US.  Please note that the references are to US data but the results have been translated into the Australian context through a recent report prepared by Standard & Poors.

Enjoy the read.

Report Card for Active Managers

Morningstar recently announced the introduction of a new "Box Score" report analyzing the performance of actively managed US equity mutual fund managers. Morningstar's analysis starts with a universe of 22,000 US equity funds and prunes the list by aggregating multiple share classes and eliminating exchange-traded funds, sector funds, bear market funds, long/short funds, and lifecycle funds. They also exclude funds deemed to have a "passive-like" investment approach, specifically citing Dimensional strategies. All funds available for purchase at the beginning of any particular time period under review are included, so the results are free of survivor bias. Morningstar compares results to their own stock indexes, which seek to capture the returns of the nine distinct Morningstar style boxes (large cap growth, mid cap value, etc.), and evaluates performance by calculating both Jensen's alpha and a more comprehensive Fama/French alpha.

The report is similar to the SPIVA report (Standard & Poor's Indices versus Active Funds Scorecard), which compares actively managed funds to various S&P and Barclays indices in US equity, international equity, and fixed income markets. S&P uses the CRSP Survivor-Bias-Free US Mutual Fund Database, and, like the Box Score report, is published semiannually.

Although we found the Morningstar report rather light on documentation, both reports are useful in providing a regularly updated analysis that quantifies the challenge facing investors seeking to identify winning money managers.

A few nuggets from recent reports:

  • Morningstar finds that 41% of actively managed funds outperformed their respective indexes for the three-year period ending June 30, 2009, using a measure of Jensen's alpha. But Morningstar notes that "once the Fama/French factors are taken into account, active managers' outperformance relative to the indexes falls materially." By the latter measure, only 37% of managers outperformed, and average alpha was negative in all nine style categories.
  • S&P reports that only 31% of large cap core funds for the five-year period ending June 30, 2009 outperformed the S&P 500 Index. Results were even less favorable for non-US markets, where 13% of international funds and 10% of emerging markets funds outperformed their respective benchmarks. We often hear that non-US stock markets exhibit greater pricing errors than the US, supposedly offering a target-rich environment for clever stock pickers. The numbers suggest this is wishful thinking.
  • Fixed income markets were no less challenging: for the same five-year period, Standard & Poor's found that 22% of intermediate government funds were outperformers, and the number dropped to 11% for high-yield bond funds and only 2% for mortgage-backed securities funds.
  • The fund attrition rate is significant: S&P reports that 27% of the 2,154 US equity funds in existence five years ago have merged or liquidated as of June 30, 2009. For reasons unclear to us, the number jumps to 39% for large cap blend funds, the worst among all style categories. Morningstar reports that 10% of small growth funds have disappeared in just the first six months of 2009.

Both reports can be downloaded from their respective publishers at no charge:

The Morningstar Box Score Report: Alpha Seekers, Caveat Emptor, First Half 2009.

Standard & Poor's Indices versus Active Funds Scorecard: Midyear 2009.

Posted by: AT 03:29 am   |  Permalink   |  Email
Friday, October 09 2009

Users of our website, through our User Voice feedback forum, have requested that we regularly update the graphs outlining the performance of the Dimensional trusts that we use in building portfolios for clients.  In response to this feedback we have updated these graphs to reflect performance up to the end of June 2009.

 

Commentary:

 

The graphs show strong monthly returns over the month for the Australian share asset classes with international share investments relatively flat for the month mainly due to the impact of currency movements.

 

Over the long run, the graphs continue to clearly show the existence of the risk premiums (small, value and emerging markets) that the research tells us should exist:

 

Australian Share Trusts - 7 Year returns

 

 

7 Yr Return

to Sept  2009

Premium over ASX 200

Accumulation Index

ASX 200 Accumulation Index

13.46%

-

Dimensional Australian Value Trust

16.17%

2.71%

Dimensional Australian Small Company Trust

16.65%

3.19%

 

International Share Trusts - 7 Year returns

 

 

7 Yr Return

to Sept 2009

Premium over MSCI World (ex Australia) Index

MSCI World (ex Australia) Index

1.96%

-

Dimensional Global Value Trust

4.16%

2.20%

Dimensional Global Small Company Trust

5.14%

3.18%

Dimensional Emerging Markets Trust

15.26%

13.30%

 

NB - These numbers are average annual returns for the 7 year period which are slightly higher than the annualised returns.

 

Please click on the following link to be taken to the graphs - Dimensional Fund Performance Graphs.

 

For anyone new to our website, it is important to point out that we build investment portfolios for clients based on the best available academic research.  Take a look at our Building Portfolios and Our Research Based Approach pages for more details.  In our view, this research compels us to use the three factor model developed by Fama and French.  In Australia, the most effective method of investing using this model is through trusts implemented by Dimensional Fund Advisors (www.dfaau.com).  We do not receive any form of commission or payment from Dimensional for using their trusts.  We use them because they provide the returns clients are entitled to from share markets.

 

However, academic theory is nothing if it can not be implemented and provide the returns that are promised by the research.  Therefore, we like to provide the historical returns of the funds that we use to build investment portfolios.

Posted by: Scott Keefer AT 10:48 pm   |  Permalink   |  Email
Friday, October 09 2009

I subscribe to reports and analysis produced by McKinsey and Company.  The purpose of which is not to try to picj and time investment decisions but to get an understanding on what is happenning in the global economy for my own personal interest and as a point of discussion with clients.

McKinsey publish a regular report based on results from surveys conducted by company executives.  What stood out in the latest report was a graph looking at the profit expectations, changes in the workforce and expected demand.

The results showed that more company executives thought that company profits would increase going forward, the first time since September 2008.  Expected demand for company priducts was also rising over the past 4 months of surveys (June to September)  and there is now an equal balance between those that expect workforce levels to rise compared to those that think they will fall.

It seems to me that this is further evidence that business sentiment is on the improve worldwide.  Similar conclusions have been coming through business sentiment surveys here in Australia and in the US.

The report concluded with the following points looking forward:

? Most companies are not in crisis: they're managing in a new normal, with an enlarged role for government and lower long-term growth expectations.

? Innovation is more important than ever; the companies that have the highest hopes for their own futures are likeliest to be focusing on it.

? January was the month when executives expressed the direst views about the economy. They now look forward to economic growth, but few expect a quick, full recovery.

The report does nothing to change my view that although things are much improved from the dark days of late 2008 and early 2009, the road back is a long one.

Regards,
Scott Keefer

Posted by: Scott Keefer AT 05:30 pm   |  Permalink   |  Email
Thursday, October 08 2009

My last two blogs, any many before, have made reference to thoughts from Dimensional and Vanguard representatives.  Today, in the interest of balance, I want to provide thoughts from a more active style approach to investing in fixed interest put together by AMP Capital.

The following link is to an article published by Professional Planner which discusses the topic of investing in fixed interest.

Special Report - Fixed Interest

The article is useful because it simply explains the basics when considering fixed interest alternatives, and in particular 2 major risks - credit default & liquidity risks:

"Thee former is the risk that the bond issuer defaults on its repayments; the latter is the risk that you can't buy or sell the volume of bonds you need to, at the price you need to."

A major part of the liquidity risk is the risk that interest rates are higher in the economy than when the initial bond was issued and therefore you are unlikely to be able to "get back" what you paid for the bond should you need the money before the bond matures.

This firm's approach is to be very targeted in what style of fixed interest clients have in their portfolio, in particular focussing on high quality offerings (rated AA or AAA) and keeping time to maturity of the underlying bonds less than 5 years which keeps a lid on liquidity risk including the impact of interest rate rises and inflation increases.

Our objective is for this investment to provide a few percentage points better return than cash over the long term.

How do we do this?

A good investment to consider is Dimensional's Five Year Diversified Fixed interest Trust.

We consider it probably the best put together fund by Dimensional as it strategically targets the sweet spot in the yield curve for fixed interest investments within the 5 years to maturity window.  Returns from this trust continue to show it is meeting its target:

1 month - 1.05%
3 months - 3.31%
6 months - 4.51%
1 year - 8.51%
3 years - 6.78%
5 years - 6.19%

For more information please take a look at the Product Fact Sheet on Dimensional's website.  As always, before investing in any investment it is important to consider your own individual needs and circumstances.

In concluding, as reported in AMP Capital's article, the key with fixed interest is to have broad diversification and be careful with credit and liquidity risk.

Regards,
Scott Keefer

Posted by: Scott Keefer AT 10:33 pm   |  Permalink   |  Email
Wednesday, October 07 2009

Robin Bowerman from Vanguard has written a piece on the Money Blogs for News Ltd considering the topic or market timing.  It is worth a look and due consideration:

Market timing: an investor's game of chance

On the blog he provides a link to Vanguard's updated Index Charts through to the end of June 2009.  This chart provides further support to the argument Bowerman proposes.

Vanguard Index Chart - 2009


The charts provide a great insight into longer term returns for Australian investors in a range of asset classes.  The 31 year returns have been:

Australian Shares - 15%
International Shares - 12.7%
International Shares (hedged) - 10.0%
Australian Bonds - 9.8%
Cash - 9.7%

The premiums from investing in the more volatile growth assets have definitely shortened over the course of the past 12 months but even after one of the worst years of investment performance in these asset classes the benefits are still evident.

We could spend hours contemplating the numbers thrown up the charts but the general reminder to me is the importance of good diversification across all asset classes including cash & fixed interest.

Regards,
Scott

 

Posted by: Scott Keefer AT 09:55 pm   |  Permalink   |  Email
Wednesday, October 07 2009

Indonesia has a special place in my extended family and my life.  i therefore am very interested in the plight of their economy and their share market.  Indonesia is a part of what the investing world will define as Emerging Markets.  The exact description of this term will differ from investment house to house but for economists it is generally speaking the "developing" economies of the world including Asia (ex Japan), South America, Eastern Europe and Africa.

A lot of analysis over the past year has focussed on how these economies have fared better and might be the key to a strong global economy into the future.  No surprises then to see Emerging Market indices rise much stronger and faster compared to the more developed (rich) economies.  Indonesia for instance has risen 123% for the year to date to the end of September as measured by Standard & Poors.  Their Emerging Markets Index has risen 64.5%.  Developed World markets have risen less so - 25.3% according to S&P (All in US dollar terms).

Most investment analysts would suggest their clients have some exposure to Emerging Markets, as does our firm, however the question becomes how to get that exposure?

A recent article written by Dimensional's Jim Parker provides an insight into how Dimensional Fund Advisors see this decision with particular reference to China.  The full text is repeated below:

October 2009
Chinese Walls
 

Investors confronted by the recent less than stellar performance of the US economy, traditionally the world's powerhouse, are being urged to increase their exposure to China and other emerging markets. But how?

A traditional response to that question is that the best way of "buying the China story" is to re-weight one's global portfolio away from the developed economies of North America and Europe to high-growth Asia.

It sounds like a tempting strategy, particularly given the change in focus in global policy-making away from the Group of Eight rich western economies to the Group of 20 that also embraces China and other emerging economies.

Rightly or wrongly, the origins of the global financial crisis in the US and Europe are seen as shifting the balance of world economic power, a tilt that was evident recently as G20 leaders gathered in Pittsburgh.

The so-called 'BRIC' emerging economies ? Brazil, Russia, India and China ? were among those leading calls at the G20 summit for what they perceive as the need for a fairer and more inclusive set of global economic structures.

Partly in response to this apparent rebalancing of economic power, much of the investment industry is aggressively marketing strategies that seek to provide investors with greater exposure to the BRIC powerhouses.

So how should individual investors respond to this pitch?

Firstly, it is certainly true that emerging markets can play an important role in a portfolio. They provide great benefits in terms of diversification and offer higher expected returns than developed markets as compensation for the higher degree of risk of investing in emerging markets.

But investors should also keep in mind that the size of the market opportunity is not necessarily the same as the size of the economic opportunity.

The table below, from the World Bank1, ranks the top 20 countries of the world by gross domestic product and adjusted for purchasing power parities. This is a way of taking account of the relative prices of goods and services in each country and provides a better measure of the real value of output.

As you can see, the BRIC economies are well represented in this list, taking up the second, fourth, sixth and ninth positions on the table. Australia is relatively low in this ranking, in 18th position between Iran and Poland.

Now, take a look at the country weights of the MSCI World All Countries Investable Market index2. This takes into account the actual opportunities in these countries for global investors, after adjusting for local market restrictions on foreign share ownership.

In this list, China is in ninth position with a weighting of just over 2 per cent of global market capitalisation, Brazil is in 11th place, India is in 18th position and Russia is at the bottom of this abbreviated list.

Australia ranks at number six in terms of market capitalisation, just below Canada and ahead of Germany. And the US, as well as the biggest economy, is also the most heavily weighted market, with a country weight of a little more than 40 per cent.

What this tells us is that in developing economies, the real economy tends to mature faster than the financial market that supports it. Weighting an investment strategy around the gross domestic product of each country will tend to result in an overweight towards emerging markets. Of course, this may be a legitimate choice for some people, but bear in mind it would also be a riskier strategy.

The second consideration is that emerging markets should be treated not as an alternative to developed markets but as a distinct asset class. While they offer higher expected returns, they often also tend to be more volatile. These distinct risk-return characteristics mean they require careful management.

As an investment manager, Dimensional considers a number of practical issues when deciding whether to enter a particular emerging market. These include the particular country's respect for property rights; its fair treatment of foreign investors; quantitative measures such as liquidity, market cap and stock concentration; agency risk and trading mechanisms.3

Even when a country meets strict criteria around these specific issues, there are still risks for investors in having too much exposure to a single market. Dimensional deals with this by weighting countries by market cap, but with a buy cap of 12.5 per cent for any one country.

In some cases, when foreign participation in a local equity market is severely restricted, Dimensional will seek exposure to the companies of that market through their listings in more developed markets via depositary receipts and other alternative vehicles. For instance, it accesses the returns of Chinese companies by buying their 'H' shares listed on the Hong Kong market.

Against that background, it seems clear that building an emerging markets strategy around just the BRIC economies means taking on diversifiable risk. Apart from the fact that they are big and they are growing rapidly, these four economies have little in common. Brazil and Russia, for instance, are commodity producers, while India and China are commodity importers.

Another consideration for investors is that getting greater exposure to say the Chinese or Indian growth stories can be achieved in ways other than investing only in Chinese or Indian companies.

BHP Billiton, for instance, is the world's largest mining company and the biggest company on the Australian market. With its voracious appetite for raw commodities, China represented 20 per cent of BHP's global revenues4 in fiscal 2009, with India also an increasingly significant contributor. Obviously, then, owning BHP stock provides indirect exposure to those economies.

BHP's experience is true for the Australian economy more broadly. According to the Reserve Bank of Australia, 23 per cent of Australia's total exports went to China in the June quarter of 2009, up from about 4 per cent a decade ago.5

Australia's close linkages with China, through commodity exports, partly explain its extraordinary resilience throughout the recession that has hit developed economies in the past year. So an Australian investor who bemoans his lack of exposure to China needs to look first in his own backyard. He has a degree of exposure just by investing locally!

And this is not just true for Australia. In the US market, an increasing proportion of the sales of listed American companies are sourced offshore. Indeed, Standard & Poor's estimates6 that of the reporting companies in the S&P 500, just under 48 per cent of all sales last year were produced and sold outside of the US, up from 45.8 per cent in 2007 and 43.6 per cent in 2006.

Among the major US multi-nationals, Alcoa and Motorola earned significant sales in Brazil, while Citigroup and Intel had a big exposure to the Asian economies, according to the S&P data analysis.

This means that investing a significant proportion of one's global assets in the United States equity market does not necessarily equate to taking a taking a similar sized bet on the US economy. The US market plays host both to American multi-national corporations with significant overseas revenues and to leading companies from economies around the world ? both developed and emerging ? that are seeking to tap the most liquid market on the planet.

So in summary, it is true that emerging market economies are representing an increasing share of world economic output and that the investment returns of companies in these markets deserve a place in a diversified portfolio.

But in assessing their exposure to emerging markets, investors need to distinguish between the economic opportunity and the market opportunity.

While countries like Brazil, Russia, India and China take up a greater share of world GDP, their listed equity markets are relatively undeveloped and still represent a relatively small slice of global market capitalisation. Basing an investment strategy purely on size of each country's economic output may be a legitimate choice, but it is a riskier one.

What is more, emerging markets have different characteristics to developed markets and should be seen as a separate asset class. While they offer higher expected returns, they also are more volatile. The best approach to this asset class is to employ strict controls to ensure adequate diversification and to protect the interests of investors.

Lastly, in a globalised world, investors need also remember that they can get exposure to the economic successes of these new markets both through the offshore listings of their native companies and through companies in developed markets with significant revenue in developing economies.


1Quick Reference Tables, The World Bank, September 2009

2MSCI Barra

3Emerging Markets: Practical Considerations, Karen Umland, Dimensional, 2003

4BHP Billiton preliminary results, June 30, 2009

5Parliamentary testimony, Reserve Bank of Australia, Aug 14, 2009, Hansard

6S&P-500 Global Sales, July 14, 2009

Posted by: Scott Keefer AT 09:27 pm   |  Permalink   |  Email
Tuesday, September 08 2009

Since our last edition we have updated the Dimensional Fund Performance Graphs page on our website.  The graphs show the performance of the Dimensional funds that we use to build investment portfolios for our clients.  They have been updated to contain data up until the end of July 2009.
 
Commentary:
 

The graphs show strong monthly returns over the month for the Australian share asset classes and Emerging Markets with international share investments relatively flat.
 
Over the long run, the graphs continue to clearly show the existence of the risk premiums (small, value and emerging markets) that the research tells us should exist.
 
Australian Share Trusts - 7 Year returns:

 

7 Yr Return

to July 2009

Premium over ASX 200

Accumulation Index

ASX 200 Accumulation Index

10.61%

-

Dimensional Australian Value Trust

13.50%

2.89%

Dimensional Australian Small Company Trust

15.06%

4.45%


International Share Trusts - 7 Year returns:

 

7 Yr Return

to July 2009

Premium over MSCI World (ex Australia) Index

MSCI World (ex Australia) Index

0.01%

-

Dimensional Global Value Trust

1.92%

1.91%

Dimensional Global Small Company Trust

3.46%

3.45%

Dimensional Emerging Markets Trust

13.04%

13.03%


NB - These premiums are higher than what we would expect going forward.
 
Please click on the following link to be taken to the graphs - Dimensional Fund Performance Graphs.
 
For anyone new to our website, it is important to point out that we build investment portfolios for clients based on the best available academic research.  Take a look at our Building Portfolios and Our Research Based Approach pages for more details.  In our view, this research compels us to use the three factor model developed by Fama and French.  In Australia, the most effective method of investing using this model is through trusts implemented by Dimensional Fund Advisors (www.dfaau.com).  We do not receive any form of commission or payment from Dimensional for using their trusts.  We use them because they provide the returns clients are entitled to from share markets.
 
However, academic theory is nothing if it can not be implemented and provide the returns that are promised by the research.  Therefore, we like to provide the historical returns of the funds that we use to build investment portfolios.

Please let us know if you have any feedback regarding these graphs by using the Request for More Information form to the right or via our User Voice feedback forum.

Posted by: AT 09:15 am   |  Permalink   |  Email
Monday, September 07 2009

Recently a number of younger clients have held appointments with part of the discussion evolving around how well they were positioned to meet their future financial goals.

The difficulty at earlier stages of wealth accumulation is that you tend to be on lower levels of income compared to latter years of life and you therefore tend to have very luttle if any ability to save and build wealth.  Therefore it is difficult to know whether you will be able to reach long term goals such as retirement and the like.

A simple tool we use is Benchmarking your financial position in terms of stages of life.

One formula set out in Stanley and Danko's "The Millionaire Next Door" is Age multiplied by Pre Tax Household Income divided by 10.

By this formula, a 30 year old person with an income of $30,000, would have a target wealth of (30 × $30,000) / 10 which equals $90,000. 
 
This is a useful start, but we decided that a model more suited to the Australian context, and the realities of life, and could be developed.  Importantly, we think that the formula proposed by Stanley and Danko is unrealistic for people just starting work, and for those at the point of retirement.


Our approach is slightly more complex and rather than replicate the entire analysis here, for those interested please click on the following link to be taken to the article on our website -

Benchmarking Your Financial Position

Posted by: AT 09:13 am   |  Permalink   |  Email
Monday, September 07 2009
The latest edition of our email newsletter has been sent to subscribers last week.

Since that last edition, equity markets have continued to provide solid gains and many Australian and global economic indicators have improved.  We provide the updated data in our market news section.

When might we get back to the levels of late 2007?  Vanguard's updated volatility chart provides some insights in our Fascinating Financial Facts section.

We have also added a new section - From the Archives - which looks at previous articles that have pertinence to current events.  The first article looks at Inflation Linked Bonds which have come back on the agenda thanks to an announcement that the federal government will commence re-issuing these bonds.

 

Also in this edition we:

  • discuss the issue of index hugging by major Australian share funds,
  • look at investment strategies for a delayed retirement,
  • provide a link to Scott Francis' latest Eureka Report articles,
  • link to Russell Investments Investor Toolkit,
  • discuss benchmarking your financial progress, and
  • provide evidence of the three factor model in action.

Click on the following link to have a look at the full newsletter - Financial Fortnight That Was - 2nd September 2009.

Regards,
Scott Keefer

Posted by: AT 08:40 am   |  Permalink   |  Email

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