Tag: theme

CNX 100 50-Day Tactical Theme

Escaping the worst days

We had discussed how, by escaping the worst days, even if it means missing out on the best days, you can protect your portfolio from drawdowns and get superior results compared to a naive buy-and-hold strategy. See: The SMA Risk On/Off Switch

We ran the same filter on the CNX 100 index.

CNX 100 between 2005 and 2010

Naive Buy and Hold

buy-and-hold-returns-2005

Cumulative Return: 1.92

DrawDowns

bh-2005-2010

50-day SMA On/Off

CNX 100-50-day-sma-returns-2005

Cumulative Return: 13.12

DrawDowns

50SMA-2005-2010

CNX 100 from 2010 to now

Naive Buy and Hold

buy-and-hold-returns-2010

Cumulative Return: 0.473696

DrawDowns

bh-2010-now

50-day SMA On/Off

CNX 100-50-day-sma-returns-2010

Cumulative Return: 2.270039

DrawDowns

50SMA-2010-now

The CNX 100 50-Day Tactical Theme

The 50-day signal can be used to go “risk on” and “risk off” between the NIFTYBEES and JUNIORBEES ETFs. When “risk on”, the Theme allocates equally between NIFTYBEES and JUNIORBEES and when “risk off”, moves to LIQUIDBEES.

You can follow the theme here.

Alpha Warriors vs. Beta Pickers

How do successful investors find alpha? Is it possible to consistently beat the market? Does stock picking work?

Here are some excerpts and links to original articles that should get you thinking.

Leon Cooperman

CNBC’s intro to the legendary hedge fund manager, Leon Cooperman:

The hedge fund manager’s stock-junkie lifestyle starts at 5:15 a.m. on weekdays, when he wakes up in the Short Hills, New Jersey, house he’s lived in for 36 years. He then drives to the Manhattan offices of his $10.7 billion Omega Advisors, getting in by 6:30 a.m. (he took the ferry for 30 years before the firm recently moved from Wall Street to midtown). Cooperman then digs in to investing for 12 hours—including a working lunch in the office—bouncing between grilling corporate executives in person or on the phone, consulting with his 18-person research team and reading company reports. By 6:30 p.m., it’s off to a business dinner with more CEOs or fellow investors like Mario Gabelli of Gamco Investors and Bill Priest of Epoch Investment Partners. Then it’s a quick post-dinner shower and more time in front of a Bloomberg terminal checking international markets before bed at 11 p.m.

Source: Alpha addict: The amazing career of Leon Cooperman

Cooperman’s hedge fund, Omega Advisors, has posted average annual returns of 14.6% net of fees versus the S&P 500’s 9.3% between January 1992 through June 2014. Almost no one else has been that good for that long.

  1. Omega’s secret seems to be betting big on recoveries after sell-offs. Cooperman clearly has a bullish bias and during the opening stages of market recoveries he tends to crush the indices and his fellow hedge fund peers who are typically more encumbered by short bets and hedges that drag.
  2. This outperformance has come with a cost – Omega has not been immune to market downturns.
  3. There are only two up-years for the S&P 500 during this 20-year span in which the market had beaten Omega to the upside.

Source: Omega Advisors vs the S&P 500

Out of 2,862 mutual funds, only 2 beat the market

The S.&P. Dow Jones team looked at 2,862 mutual funds that had been operating for at least 12 months as of March 2010. Those funds were all broad, actively managed domestic stock funds. Key finding:

Very few funds achieved consistent and persistent out-performance. Sustained out-performance declined rapidly over time.

Source: Who Routinely Trounces the Stock Market? Try 2 Out of 2,862 Funds

The dark side of passive investing

Active management is a zero-sum game before costs and a negative sum game after costs, the long-term expected return of low-cost passive investing is higher than that of the average, more expensive active manager. In addition, passive investing offers a high transparency, high liquidity and low risk of regret.

However, passive investors are ignoring compelling academic evidence that the market portfolio includes large groups of stocks with very poor expected performance characteristics. If these considerations are also taken into account, passive investing loses a lot of its initial appeal. As an alternative, we propose a factor investing approach, which avoids going against proven factors such as value, momentum and low-volatility, and actively seeks to benefit from these factors instead.

Source: The dark side of passive investing

Conclusion

You have the Alpha-Warriors on one side and the Beta-Pickers on the other. Right in the middle are the factor investing (a.k.a. smart beta) guys. But the market, being a complex adaptive system, is not going to allow either extremes to win this argument. Finding Alpha is hard. Picking up Beta is easy. May I humbly suggest factor investing through our Themes? Sounds like a good compromise, no?

Refracting Fund Portfolios: PPFAS

  1. Where does alpha come from?
  2. How much should you pay for alpha?
  3. If a fund manager claims that his portfolio is a “long-term” bet, then does it make sense to just buy all the stocks in his portfolio rather than pay him an asset management fee for the privilege?
  4. How much do “other” investments add to returns?
  5. Will an equally weighted portfolio out-perform a hand-crafted weighting?

To answer these questions, we have started an experiment. We have created an equally weighted portfolio of NSE listed stocks in the PPFAS Long Term Value Fund (Factsheet.) The Theme will be re-balanced once a month, as soon as the PPFAS portfolio disclosure becomes public. As of the latest information available, 72% of the fund’s portfolio was invested in Indian equities & 21% is invested in foreign equities with the balance amount in Cash Equivalents.

Over a period of time, we hope to answer the questions we have raised above.

You can follow the Theme here: Refract: PPFAS Long Term Value Fund

Refract: (of water, air, or glass) make (a ray of light) change direction when it enters at an angle. From Latin refract- ‘broken up’, from the verb refringere, from re- ‘back’ + frangere ‘to break’.

Broker’s Call: Lucky 16 for 100%

DOOD…

MoneyControl combined the calls of different brokers who recommended them for 100% returns in a slideshow.

… YA PAANI?

We have created a Theme containing an equally weighted portfolio of stocks contained in this report: Lucky 13: Brokerages betting on these stocks for 100% returns

You can now follow the Theme, keep track of its performance, risk metrics etc. and answer the question yourself: Dood, ya Paani?

Broker’s Call: Top 10 Agri Stocks

Dood…

Microsec Capital identified 10 agricultural companies which, they believe, will outperform in the medium-to-long term. (ET)

… Ya Paani?

We have created a Theme containing an equally weighted portfolio of stocks contained in this report: Microsec’s Top 10 Agri Stocks

You can now follow the Theme, keep track of its performance, risk metrics etc. and answer the question yourself: Dood, ya Paani?