Category: Your Money

Overcoming the 5 common mistakes that investors make

We are big fans of emotion control when it comes to investing. Most of us know this famous Jesse Livermore quote: “Money is made by sitting, not trading.” And yet, we can’t help ourselves.

Michael J. Mauboussin of Credit Suisse has an interesting report out on how to make better decisions:

improve-1

Know the outside view

The outside view imposes a fundamental question: “What happened when others were in this position before?” Research shows that the inside view often yields predictions that are too optimistic, revealing a form of overconfidence. The outside view generally tempers that overconfidence and provides a much stronger foundation for thinking about how the future might unfold.

Conduct a pre-mortem

Rather than using the past as a guide for the present, the pr-emortem goes from the future to the present. Before you actually make a decision, launch yourself into the future, say one year from now, and pretend that you made the decision. Now assume the decision turned out poorly, and you must document the reasons for the failure.

Seek out naysayers

It is common for investment firms to position their portfolios to reflect a particular point of view or theme. Mind-sets can be good, of course, when they get everyone on the same page. But mind-sets are a problem if the world changes. So seek out naysayers, or “red-teams.” Red-teaming is a technique to offset the rigidity of mind-sets.

A red team attacks and a blue team defends. In this case, the blue team would be assigned to defend the mind-set that underpins the portfolio. The red team would be a small number of people who would be charged with contesting the mind-set. Red-teaming allows for an explicit challenge to the prevailing mind-set, and at a minimum forces the team members to seriously consider an alternative point of view.

Maintain a decision-making journal

Sometimes good decisions turn out poorly and bad decisions turn out well. Since our minds are biased to assume that the outcome reflects the level of skill, keeping track of the quality of our decisions is difficult. The primary way to focus attention on the decision-making process is to keep a journal that documents your thinking. This is how you impose accountability on yourself.

Be mindful of your surroundings and work to improve them

When we observe the behavior of others, we attribute that behavior to the individual’s disposition and not to the situation. But there is substantial evidence that shows that the situation exerts a very powerful influence on the decisions that people make.

For example, some investors that claim to have a long-term orientation focus disproportionately on the short term following a spell of poor results. Others claim to use a fundamental approach yet use charts to time trades. The divergence between what you say and what you do might be result of the environmental cues around you.

And remember this awesome quote from Phil Birnbaum:

“You gain more by not being stupid than you do by being smart. Smart gets neutralized by other smart people. Stupid does not.”

Source: Methods to Improve Decisions

The Inflation Targeting Trojan Horse

Raghuram Rajan, after having said “If you do a Volcker, you kill the supply side, and then you are in a bad situation,” seems to be itching to do a mini-Volcker.

On his arrival at the RBI, Rajan established a Trojan horse in the shape of an expert committee tasked to advise whether the central bank’s somewhat elastic growth-inflation mandate should be changed to a narrow inflation target.

The Urjit Committee came back with a recommendation that the RBI should aim to reduce headline consumer price inflation to 8% within a year, 6% within two years and 4% (+/- 2pp) thereafter.

This chart from a recent Credit Suisse report show how ridiculously difficult this is going to be:

growth vs inflation

The problem is that India is a convoluted policy mess. Food & energy account for 57% of the total CPI. We have a Minimum Support Prices (MSP) for food that have a greater impact on food & energy inflation than repo rates.

msp vs inflation

More from the Credit Suisse report:

Supply-side shocks (e.g. unusual weather patterns) and government policies are often more important drivers to the extent they impact food prices in particular. According to our analysis, if, for example, the government were to lift minimum support prices for key foodstuffs by an average of 20% at the beginning of the 2014/15 fiscal year, rather than another 6% as in 2013/14, this would more than offset the disinflationary effect of a 100bp repo rate hike.

The brain-trust at Credit Suisse expect three more 25bps repo rate hikes by the end of the 2014/15 fiscal year. If this were to occur, what would become of the banks? From FT:

If one makes sane assumptions regarding what % of the currently stressed assets of the banking system will have to written off and if one factors in incremental Basel III capital requirements over and above that, Indian banks need around US$40bn to regain Balance Sheet strength. That amounts to 2% of GDP.

Inflation targeting, without fiscal reform, and without considering the fate of banks and lacking any progress on labor reforms will brew a potentially toxic stew. Good luck to whoever wins the elections.

Monthly Recap: The Devil Always Wins

Feb world equity markets

Nifty erased most of the loses from the previous month, clocking in +3.08% (+3.75% in USD terms) for February.

Major
DAX(DEU) +6.37%
CAC(FRA) +7.29%
NKY(JPN) +5.94%
MINTs
JCI(IDN) +6.16%
INMEX(MEX) -4.95%
NGSEINDX(NGA) -4.29%
XU030(TUR) +1.04%
BRICS
IBOV(BRA) +2.05%
INDEXCF(RUS) +0.46%
TOP40(ZAF) +6.99%

Nifty Heatmap

monthly nifty heatmap

Index Performance

monthly index performance

Top winners and losers

TATAMOTORS +19.28%
INDHOTEL +19.41%
PFC +20.90%
SAIL -13.17%
NMDC -12.07%
NTPC -11.11%
The month was marked by some pretty wild swings.

ETFs

BANKBEES +4.57%
GOLDBEES +3.06%
NIFTYBEES +2.78%
JUNIORBEES +1.11%
PSUBNKBEES -0.38%
INFRABEES -1.24%
Banks and gold led the ETF pack.

Advancers and Decliners

Green shoots? Brown shoots?

advancers and decliners

Investment Theme Performance

Balance-sheet strength is +43.64% since inception. But that’s not the winningest strategy. Read our roundup to get a sense of what quantitative strategies combined with a structure that enforces discipline can do for you.

Sector Performance

monthly sector performance

Yield Curve

What do the short-term rates portend?

yield curve monthly move

Thought to sum up the month

Howard Marks, chairman of the U.S. investment firm Oaktree Capital:

There actually are two risks in investing: One is to lose money and the other is to miss opportunity. You can eliminate either one, but you can’t eliminate both at the same time.

I think of it like a comedy movie where a guy is considering some activity. On his right shoulder is sitting an angel in a white robe. He says: «No, don’t do it! It’s not prudent, it’s not a good idea, it’s not proper and you’ll get in trouble». On the other shoulder is the devil in a red robe with his pitchfork. He whispers: «Do it, you’ll get rich». In the end, the devil usually wins. Caution, maturity and doing the right thing are old-fashioned ideas.

Source: In the end, the devil usually wins

Weekly Recap: Lean vs. Fat Worlds

world equity markets weekly map

The Nifty clocked in a respectable +1.97% (+2.12% in USD terms) this week.

Major
DAX(DEU) +0.36%
CAC(FRA) +0.62%
UKX(GBR) -0.41%
NKY(JPN) -0.17%
SPX(USA) +0.84%
MINTs
JCI(IDN) -0.56%
INMEX(MEX) -2.47%
NGSEINDX(NGA) +3.30%
XU030(TUR) -2.15%
BRICS
IBOV(BRA) -0.60%
SHCOMP(CHN) -2.72%
NIFTY(IND) +1.97%
INDEXCF(RUS) -2.89%
TOP40(ZAF) -0.42%

Nifty Heatmap

nifty weekly performance heatmap

Index Performance

IT and Autos led the pack…

weekly index performance

Top winners and losers

HINDALCO +7.89%
CUMMINSIND +8.62%
BHEL +11.39%
NTPC -15.14%
TATASTEEL -8.17%
NMDC -7.04%
Heavy industries did the heavy lifting. NTPC got smacked by the new power pricing scheme.

ETFs

PSUBNKBEES +2.72%
BANKBEES +1.99%
NIFTYBEES +1.79%
GOLDBEES +0.22%
JUNIORBEES -0.30%
INFRABEES -1.50%
Have banks found a bottom? Infrastructure continued to get pulverized.

Advancers and decliners

Brown shoots?

advance decline line

Investment Theme Performance

Look at the performance roundup of all our Themes here.

Sector Performance

weekly sector performance

Yield curve

What the hell happened here?

weekly moves in the yield curve

Thought for the weekend

It’s time that we start describing the world as “fat” or “lean.” “Lean” societies approach consumption and production with scarcity in mind. And what makes an economy “fat”? Plenty is normal. Fat economies must stop assuming that poor countries should mimic them and instead embrace their models for social innovation and efficiency.

Source: The End of The ‘Developing World’

Investment Theme Performance Roundup

What is a “Theme”?

A StockViz Investment Theme is a portfolio of stocks that follows a particular strategy. It is a convenient way for you to:

  1. stick to a strategy
  2. follow a preset rebalancing schedule
  3. think in terms of your portfolio strategy rather than individual stocks
  4. avoid common behavioral pitfalls
  5. systematically track your P&L and strategy performance

What is an investment strategy?

An investment strategy is a specific way of going about the process of investing. It identifies specific variables that define a stock. Variables can be anything: risk, style, sector, balance-sheet items, etc..

By mapping specific Themes to your account, you ensure that you stay pure to your strategy allocation. And that there is no “flying by the seat of your pants” investing.

How have Investment Themes performed?

Splendidly. Here’s a roundup:

Theme Inception Date Returns (%) Annualized Returns(%)
Quality to Price 2013-08-28 57.99 116.31
Balance-sheet Strength 2013-09-11 41.75 90.7
Growth with Moat 2013-08-05 22.2 39.54
Financial Strength Value 2013-09-13 21.72 47.76
IT 3rd Benchers 2013-11-06 18.95 61.77
Velocity 2013-11-12 18.21 62.73
Momentum 200 2013-08-19 17.39 33.23
Market Elephants 2013-09-02 15.32 31.61
Magic Formula Investing 2013-08-19 15.06 28.78
Efficient Growth 2013-08-05 11.19 19.93
Enterprise Yield 2013-09-16 10.27 23.01
Consistent10 2013-11-18 9.82 35.87
Long Term Equity 2013-11-18 7.81 28.5
ADAG Mania 2013-07-25 4.44 7.51
Market Fliers 2013-10-28 -6.67 -20.12

What should I do next?

You should open a demat account with StockViz and invest through our Themes.