Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Stock Selection/Market Timing

It is axiomatic that many (probably most) investors believe in stock selection and market timing despite the dearth of evidence . In reality, substantial evidence exists that demonstrates the opposite but huge marketing (along with a good dash of human greed) keep the stock selection myth alive.

We often see individuals that have followed the selection/timing approach for many years before realizing its errancy. In periods like this investors have a tendency to spend inordinate amounts of time chasing performance . This is rarely productive.

We strive to render a couple of "simple" deliverables, diversification and consistency. That is the essence of our refreshing, independent perspective. Investment truths can be hard to find but we strive to communicate these to our clients every day.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

The Markets Work...Still

This is a great interview of Professor Gene Fama- (sometimes known as the father of modern asset pricing theory and more particularly the Efficient Market Hypothesis ) in The New Yorker. There have been a number of articles in the financial press of late questioning the veracity of EMH and Fama does a good job fending off the critics.
Dr. Fama discusses the issue (and overused term) of "bubbles" in the early portion of the interview and provides a very interesting perspective. His main point is this term is now thrown around, ex ante, but plenty of investment was being made in these "bubbles" by plenty of smart people.
The best parts of the interview may be towards the end (page 7 in particular) where he repeats the main thesis of EMH- that you can't beat the market (I might add except by chance/luck). The very best dialogue is just after that question where he states" the expected return on stocks is just a price-the price people require to bear the market risk. Like any price,it should vary from time to time. " Vintage Fama and precisely right. Enjoy!

Friday, January 15, 2010

Mutual Fund Inflows

According to industry data, December marked the 5th straight month that mutual fund investors caused net outflows from equity mutual funds. This is interesting since the stock market has been on a tear since early March . Typically, individual investors chase the market as it rises but that does not appear to have been true in 2009. Equity based Exchange Traded Funds (ETF's) also saw net declines in the past year.

There are several ways to interpret this information but it shows how nervous investors continue to be about the markets. Assuming some of the net outflows went into bonds or bond funds (under the illusion that these are "safer" investments) these investors could be very surprised if/when rates rise and the value of these bonds/funds decline. Of course it is possible that much of this money is laying fallow on the sidelines waiting for something to bring them back. Time will tell. It is unfortunate , however, that many investors have capitulated and missed the 65-70% upswing over the past 10 months.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

The Value of Perspective

In our work with individual clients we seek to render a "refreshing,independent perspective". It is far too easy today for investors to look at financial decisions in a vacuum without proper consideration of immediate and longer term often unintended consequences. Brokers push stocks, bonds and mutual funds while insurance salespeople peddle annuities . What is usually lacking is a holistic perspective along with a healthy dose of objectivity. That is what we do.

The trademarked consultive wealth management process that we engage clients in (Wealth Rx) is the result of over 28 years of experience . Real (meaning unbiased and holistic) financial planning changes lives . That is our value.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

USA,Inc.

The center of the financial universe is no longer New York or London but Washington, D.C. Unprecedented intervention, regulation, taxes and command/control combine to equal a huge amount of uncertainty for individual investors. The overarching assumption is only government can solve our ills. the U.S. government will issue about $2 trillion of new debt this year about 20 times the amount of anticipated aggregate corporate debt for this year. Several states are in very poor financial condition because of the huge mis-match between "fixed" expenses and revenues. Some estimate that the underfunded public pension liabilities could be 4 or 5 times the often cited figure of $400-500 billion. All of this portends difficult decisions ahead .