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Weekend reading: The agony of alpha

Weekend reading logo

What caught my eye this week.

I always stress to friends who know of my investing obsession that – from the position of pure cost-benefit analysis – my stockpicking has been an unproductive waste of time.

Me and The Accumulator thrashed this out in debate years ago. I invest actively for the fun and challenge, I said. He wasn’t convinced.

And it’s true, I probably wouldn’t do it if I didn’t – naughtily, preposterously – think I had a chance of beating the market.

Luckily, I have done, the way I measure it, over the medium to long-term. (Unitised and against a few 100% equity benchmarks, but I don’t adjust for risk, which could make things look better or worse, depending on the year).

2020 has been particularly ridiculous. Everything has worked! It usually doesn’t. Luck has loomed large, too. It doesn’t always, either! It went against me in late 2018 / early 2019, for example, and I spent the year trying to claw back and making things worse.

Swings and roundabouts.

The point is I always caution my friends it’s only in recent years (especially this year) that earning an extra 1%, 5% or for much of the time even 10% has compared at all favourably to trying to earn more money from a traditional route.

Focusing on a career and boosting my salary would have paid far better, if I was wired that way. (I’m not!)

I started with mid five-figures in savings less than two decades ago. I’ve never earned a lot, by the standards of my peers. Compound interest takes time. The metaphor is a slow rolling snowball for a reason.

Even putting more effort into monetizing that perennial underachiever, Monevator, might have been more profitable.

The irony of alpha

Nick Maggiulli did his usual brilliant job tackling all this in a post this week. Explaining why You Don’t Need Alpha, Nick writes:

How many people have earned alpha (net of fees) consistently for multiple decades?

Conservatively, I would say there have been a couple hundred throughout history.

Being one of those people (or trying to select them ahead of time) is near impossible.

More importantly, how much will that alpha change your financial life even if you do happen to acquire it?

For a little bit of annual alpha, the answer is very little.

For example, let’s assume that the market will return 4% a year (after-inflation) going forward and you can earn 1% above this (net of fees) over the next 10 years.  How much more money would you have 10 years from now?

About 10% more.

Pfft!

Obviously you can play with these figures. You can model higher (and even more unlikely) alpha.

More – cough – realistically you can run the experiment for 30 years. It does add up.

But then you spent 30 years trying to beat the market when you might have been doing something else instead.

Where’s my novel, eh? That’s what the teenage me would want to know.

The irrelevance of alpha

I should mention my friends have typically needed little persuasion that I’ve wasted my time obsessing over the stock market.

I was living like a graduate student well into my 40s. My friends didn’t see the sports cars they expected from an obsession with the stock market. (Because they didn’t understand that compounding your own modest wealth sensibly takes time. If you need a sports car in a hurry, get hold of other people’s money and take a cut…)

There was a particularly delusional air about proceedings as my last rental place was run down before I finally bought my flat.

“Where did it all go wrong?” they gently wondered.

The other reason they need little persuasion I’ve been a dud is I try to mostly talk about my mistakes and bad calls.

Superstitious! It’s grounding.

And… luck, luck, luck.

But despite all this I don’t feel I’ve wasted my time pursuing alpha. While I didn’t end up trying to launch/run a fund (another story) it’s led me in interesting directions, career-wise.

It also resulted in this blog, which judging by the generous feedback is my best contribution to the world so far.

Finally, shepherding my nest egg so closely has really made me care about my nest. I’ve added more eggs over time than perhaps I would have, too, and I’ve been careful – big picture – not to break them.

“It is the time you have wasted for your rose that makes your rose so important.”

The Little Prince

Have a great weekend.

[continue reading…]

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Freetrade: how to build your portfolio

Freetrade enables you to trade on your mobile.

Sign-up to Freetrade via this link and we can both get a free share worth between £3 and £200.

Whether you’re one of the nearly 200,000 people who’ve signed up to Freetrade’s commission free trading app and are excited about the money making possibilities ahead – or you’re looking for an online trading alternative to Robin Hood after the US giant scrapped its UK launch plans – now is a good time to think about your Freetrade* investment strategy.

  • One option is to dive in at the deep end, watch a lot of sketchy YouTube videos, and get burned punting stocks based on internet rumours and tips.

Passive investing works. It keeps your costs low, helps prevent you being wiped out by a bad run, and harnesses the best evidence for long-term success in the markets.

You can put together a passive investing strategy on Freetrade using its commission-free Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs).

ETFs are low-cost investment funds that enable you to quickly diversify across global markets, because each ETF can combine thousands of shares (or other assets) into a single vehicle.

By using ETFs as your building blocks, you can put together a strong, diversified portfolio with a handful of trades that’ll set you off on the right foot.

You just need to know where to start.

Freetrade ETF model portfolios, made by Monevator

Model portfolios offer a customisable framework that investors can use to sense-check their ideas.

Model portfolios can also be used off-the-shelf to get you going. You can refine your positions later, once you’ve had a chance to do more research.

The type of portfolio you build depends on your personal circumstances:

The right approach for you depends on how those factors mesh with your financial situation. There is no universal answer. But different model portfolios enables us to illustrate useful rules-of-thumb.

The ETF components of each of the portfolios below are chosen from the Freetrade Investment Universe.

These ETFs are commission-free with Freetrade and traded on the London Stock Exchange.

Freetrade’s minimum trade value is £2. In reality, the minimum trade size when creating these model portfolios is likely to be determined by the ETF’s share price. This is because you can’t trade a fraction of an ETF share on most UK platforms, including Freetrade.

Freetrade’s ISA costs £36 a year, which is very reasonable. There’s no charge for holding your ETFs in a taxable1 account, but we’d urge you to open an ISA for the long-term benefits.

Here’s a couple of quick notes on the tables below to help you read them:

  • Asset class – Assume the asset class is equities unless otherwise noted. For example, ‘Global’ means ‘Global equities’ unless we refer to specific asset classes such as bonds, property, or gold. The bold figure is the percentage of your portfolio’s value to be held in that asset class.
  • ETF name – You can quickly identify each ETF by using its ticker – the four letter identifier in brackets.
  • OCF – The Ongoing Charge Figure (OCF) is the main annual cost levied by the ETF’s provider for management services. The OCF is the simplest way to compare ETF costs. The OCF is expressed as a percentage of your holding, although there are other costs of ownership.

Let’s get on to the portfolios!

The KISS (Keep It Simple Stupid) portfolio

Asset class ETF name OCF
70% Global Vanguard FTSE All World (VWRL) 0.22%
30% UK government bonds* Vanguard UK Gilt (VGOV) 0.07%

*Alternatively: £-hedged global bonds = iShares Global Government Bond ETF (IGLH) OCF 0.25%.

Investing does not have to be complicated. Most investors eventually conclude that complexity only offers the illusion of sophistication and they’re actually better off keeping things straightforward.

This two ETF portfolio ensures that you’re diversified across the two main asset classes that will drive the bulk of your investing results. The global equities ETF offers maximum stock market diversification and growth potential in a single fund, while the gilt ETF is the most important defensive asset for UK investors.

A more cautious, older, or inexperienced investor could place more weight on bonds and less on equities.

The High Risk portfolio

Asset class ETF name OCF
50% Global Vanguard FTSE Developed World (VEVE) 0.12%
15% Emerging markets iShares Core MSCI Emerging Markets IMI (EMIM) 0.18%
15% World small cap iShares MSCI World Small Cap (WLDS) 0.35%
20% Total global bonds Vanguard Global Aggregate Bond (VAGP) 0.1%

Younger or more risk tolerant investors may wish to concentrate more of their portfolio in equity sub-asset classes like small cap and emerging markets that have historically outperformed the wider stock market at times. Your hope is you catch a big wave of out-performance. The trade-off is that risky sub-asset classes can trail the wider market for a decade or more, and expose you to bigger losses during downturns.

Similarly, the Global Aggregate Bond ETF is more aggressive than the gilt ETF.

VAGP includes corporate bonds, which can offer greater returns during growth periods but are also riskier.

All-Weather portfolio

Asset class* ETF name OCF
50% Global Vanguard FTSE All World (VWRL) 0.22%
10% World** property iShares Developed Markets Property Yield (IWDP) 0.59%
10% Gold HANetf The Royal Mint Physical Gold ETC (RMAP) 0.22%
15% UK government bonds Vanguard UK Gilt (VGOV) 0.07%
15% Inflation-resistant government bonds iShares £ Index-Linked Gilts (INXG) 0.1%

* Gain extra protection against deflation and fair-to-middling inflation by allocating 10% of your portfolio to cash. Hold the cash in a bank account rather than on a trading platform.

**The term ‘World’ typically denotes developed world markets whereas ‘Global’ incorporates emerging markets, too.

The All-Weather concept diversifies your portfolio across every worthwhile main asset class. The idea is that you’ll always have at least one asset that performs in every economic environment short of the Apocalypse:

  • Equities and property for growth.
  • Government bonds (and cash) for recessions.
  • Inflation-resistant bonds for high inflation conditions. (Note, that the index-linked gilt market is widely thought to be subject to structural distortion at present.)
  • Gold for when nothing else works.

Middle-of-the-Road portfolio

Asset class ETF name OCF
50% Global Vanguard FTSE All World (VWRL) 0.22%
10% UK*

SPDR FTSE UK All Share (FTAL)

0.2%
40% UK government bonds

Vanguard UK gilts (VGOV)

0.07%

*Alternatively: iShares Core FTSE 100 ETF (ISF) OCF 0.07% is less diversified than FTAL but considerably cheaper.

The 60:40 equities:bond portfolio is the happy medium of investing portfolios. Its tilt towards equities makes it pro-growth, but the significant slug in bonds provides welcome relief during stock market crashes when investors flee to safer assets.

Note, that a dedicated UK equities ETF isn’t necessary – nor necessarily best practice – but many investors feel more comfortable holding a generous allocation in their home market. VWRL also contains a small slice of UK plc.

The Withdrawal portfolio

Asset class ETF name OCF
35% Global Vanguard FTSE All World (VWRL) 0.22%
15% UK

SPDR FTSE UK All Share (FTAL)

0.2%
5% Global property iShares Developed Markets Property Yield (IWDP) 0.59%
5% Gold HANetf The Royal Mint Physical Gold ETC (RMAP) 0.22%
20% UK government bonds Vanguard UK gilts (VGOV) 0.07%
20% Short-term UK government bonds and/or cash iShares UK Gilts 0-5yr UCITS ETF (IGLS) 0.07%

Investing is much trickier for retirees who need their wealth to last them the rest of their days:

  • Equity holdings are required for long-term growth but are typically pared back at the beginning of retirement to reduce early exposure to market crashes.
  • Strong UK equity holdings can make sense for retirees to help manage currency risk.
  • Short-term gilts or cash pay near-term expenses.
  • Global index-linked bonds are a good defence against inflation but aren’t available through Freetrade.

Income portfolio

Asset class ETF name OCF
50% Global high yield*

Vanguard FTSE All World High Dividend (VHYL)

0.29%
20% UK high yield

SPDR S&P UK Dividend Aristocrats (UKDV)

0.3%
30% Total global bonds

Vanguard Global Aggregate Bond (VAGP)

0.1%

*Alternatively: SPDR S&P Global Dividend Aristocrats ETF (GBDV) OCF 0.45%. GBDV has a higher dividend yield than VHYL but a worse total return over the lifetime of the two funds.

Income investing is a popular strategy for managing wealth. The idea is to live on your dividends and interest while leaving your principal untouched. Advocates of this strategy favour high-yielding stocks to amp up their income payouts. The equity ETFs in the table aim to aggregate firms with strong dividend track records.

Socially Responsible Investing (SRI)

Freetrade does not yet have extensive SRI/ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) ETF options. You’re limited to replacing your global equities and UK equities ETFs with:

  • MSCI World Socially Responsible ETF (UC44) OCF 0.22%
  • MSCI United Kingdom IMI Socially Responsible ETF (UKSR) OCF 0.28%

Investing for children

Newborns and very young children probably aren’t going to need the money anytime soon – even in an unforeseen emergency (it’s your job to deal with those).

They also aren’t prone to the performance pressure inherent in checking the stock market every five minutes on a trading app.

Therefore, the best bet for the kids is to go all out for growth – as long as you promise not to freak out when a stock market slump hits town. If you keep your head then it will probably have blown over by the time the kids tap into their portfolio. That means:

  • 100% Vanguard FTSE All World (VWRL)
  • Then start putting the brakes on by proportionally adding bonds 10 years before the money is needed.

Not worth it

There are large and well resourced marketing departments that earn their keep by pandering to investors eager to cash in on the latest trends: think funds dedicated to AI, cyber security, robotics, ageing populations, or the rise of China.

Typically this kind of diversification isn’t worthwhile – and at best a total crapshoot – because you know nothing that the rest of the world doesn’t already know.

The big money is big because it sees the trends before you can. They have swooped in and bid up the prices of the best firms long before Reddit got a sniff of it.

Still, if you must put 5% of your money into big tech then there’s an ETF for that:

  • Invesco NASDAQ 100 ETF (EQQQ) OCF 0.3%

The reason you don’t have to worry about the smart money when you’re investing across the wider global market is because you’re not betting on the trend.

You’re creaming off the profits made by the entire market – the sum of human productivity.

FCA regulation

Freetrade is regulated by the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority. Here’s why that matters.

Investing essentials

There’s much more to learn about investing than we’ve been able to cover in this linkfest. Here’s some cornerstones to look up just as soon as you can:

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

*Sign-up to Freetrade via our link and we can both get a free share worth between £3 and £200. Monevator editor The Investor is a shareholder in Freetrade.

  1. Non-ISA. []
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Weekend reading: Just the links, ma’am

Weekend reading logo

What caught my eye this week.

Sorry guys, I am up against it this evening so no devastating hot take preamble from me today.

As ever though, thoughtful responses on the articles featured this week are more than welcome in the comments.

Have a great weekend!

[continue reading…]

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Should you hold cash instead of bonds?

Some Monevator readers question why they should bother owning bonds in their portfolio when they can earn higher yields with cash. They make a good point.

A competitive three-year fixed rate savings account bags you a 1.3% interest rate right now. Whup-whup!

Think that’s overenthusiastic? Well, a rate of 1.3% is positively Epicurean compared to the shoeing you can expect for offering your money to the bond market:

  • The yield on a three-year gilt is currently -0.1% according to the FT’s Bond Yields table. Robber barons!
  • The equivalent short-term gilt ETF will also steal your cash like an identity thief in the night. The SPDR 1-5 Year Gilt ETF is currently tempting punters with a -0.1% yield to maturity (YTM). They might as well offer to set your wallet on fire. Or send you on holiday to a wet market.
  • It’s no coincidence that this duration 3 gilt ETF has the same YTM as a three-year individual gilt.

If you compare the duration of any gilt ETF against the same length maturity on the FT’s Bond Yields table, you’ll see that the ETF’s YTM approximately matches the yield shown on the table.

Capiche? A gilt ETF is no more than the sum of its underlying gilts, after all.

That leaves our three-year cash option 1.4% ahead of its gilt equivalents. In cash terms, you’ll earn an extra £1,400 in interest per year for every £100,000 you have tucked away at that interest rate.

Meanwhile, taking on more interest rate risk does not look worth it – even 30-year gilts yield only 0.68%. As carrots go that reward is shaped like a particularly hideous load of old genitals.

And if you’re worried about inflation then the market is saying: “Don’t bother your head.”

What happens if interest rates rise?

Let’s say interest rates rise by 1%. That doesn’t seem likely any decade soon but bear with me.

Your old gilts immediately drop in price. That’s because their scrawny interest rates are forced to compete with the pumped-up coupons of shiny new bonds, which parade around the market like bodybuilders on Venice beach.

Our three-year gilt and short-term gilt ETF would fall about 3% in price to remain attractive to buyers. (As per the duration of 3 mentioned earlier).1

The three-year savings account would also drop its pants by about 3%, if there was an open market in fixed-rate savings bonds. You can instinctively tell that, by imagining how much interest you’d lose if rates rose by 1% the day after you opened the account.

A 24-hour delay would have netted you an extra £1 in interest per £100 saved for the next three years. Whipping out our compound interest microscope we can see:

£107.06 would be ours after saving £100 for three years at 2.3% interest per year –versus a paltry £103.95 in an alternative universe where we only earned 1.3% interest.

103.95 / 107.06 x 100 = 97.1%, or a 2.9% loss if you were condemned to life in that wrong universe.

Pop this battle royale into a duration calculator and you get a duration of 2.9 – confirming the 2.9% loss for the 1% rise in interest rate.

If you’re as anal as I am then you can put the very same particulars into a bond pricing calculator. The value of your £100 drops to £97.13 due to the 1% interest rise. High five! (C’mon, don’t leave me hanging…)

The savings ‘bond’ is essentially the same as the outmoded gilt. You’ll take a 3% loss if you stick with it. Except that on the bond market you’ve already taken that capital loss quicker than you can say, ‘Bond Apocalypse’. Whereas all you need do with the cash is foist the unwanted savings account back on to the bank. It’s like financial wardrobing.

If the switch costs you less than 3% (in this case) then that’s another win for cash over similar maturity gilts.

Suppose that busting out of your savings account incurs a penalty of 180 days interest.

180 / 365 x 100 = 49.3% (the percentage of your interest rate that you’ll lose that year).

0.493 x 1.3 (the account’s annual rate of interest) = 0.64% (loss of interest that year).

You’re paying a 0.64% cost to ditch the savings account versus a 3% loss on the gilts.

This calculator shows you the interest rate you’ll actually get on a fixed rate savings account if you take an early withdrawal charge.

And this early withdrawal calculator from the excellent Finance Buff goes a stage further if you can’t decide whether to stay or go.

The comparison between cash and gilt losses only worsens as maturities lengthen. If you’re the Nostradamus of interest rate forecasts then you know what to do…

Bonds in a crisis

Where gilts tend to excel – especially over the last two decades – is spiking in price when equities are jumping off a cliff.

Coronavirus crash: gilts vs cash vs equities

Chart of gilts versus cash versus equities during the coronavirus crash.

Source: JustETF.com

The chart shows gilt ETFs peaking in unison on 9 March 2020. The longer their maturity, the higher they surge:

  • Long gilts: +11.9% (red line)
  • Intermediate gilts: +7.2% (orange line)
  • Short gilts: +0.99% (blue line)
  • Money market (cash equivalent): +0.03% (yellow line)

When global equities hit bottom on March 23, a 60:40 portfolio (blue line) was in much better shape than a 100% equities portfolio (green line):

60:40 Global equities : Money market (cash)

Cash and equities portfolio versus 100% equities

The 60:40 portfolio was down 16% while equities face-planted -26%. Of course, -16% isn’t great, but you can see the ride is gentler and that can make the difference between panicking and holding on.

60:40 Global equities : Intermediate gilts

bond and equities portfolio versus 100% equities

The 60:40 intermediate gilt portfolio performed better than its cash cousin but not by much.

At the height of the crisis, this portfolio was down 14%. I was very glad I held gilts on 23 March but I doubt I’d have freaked out at -16% either. With that said, everybody has a tipping point…

Still, this is only one data point. Intermediate gilts did much better during the Global Financial Crisis when they rose 19% while global equities tanked -38%.

You could argue that the spike in gilts gives you more firepower when you rebalance. That’s true, although many studies have shown the rebalancing bonus to be small to non-existent. You also have to actually be able to rebalance into the teeth of the storm.

It’s worth noting that if your cash is in variable rate accounts then yields will most likely tumble during a recession (witness the rate slashing of the last few months). Your gilts can still make capital gains, which may be usefully rebalanced when you regain your poise.

Avoid binary thinking

It’s easy to forget in our polarised age that there is an alternative to ‘For’ versus ‘Against’.

Do we have to choose cash or bonds? The very point of diversification is that we place our chips on both.

120 years of UK asset returns shows that you were better off holding some cash in your portfolio 62% of the time when equities scored an annual loss. (Although cash has taken a beating every year since 2008 versus gilts and equities).

History also tells us that cash has been nothing but a drag on sustainable withdrawal rates if you want your retirement portfolio to last longer than 25 years.

I’m not attracted to this time is different theories but we are living through strange times. As yields fall below zero, cash and short-term gilts act like clapped out O-rings and lose their ability to contain losses. But long bonds (a proportion of which are held in intermediate gilt funds) can still make huge countervailing gains in sub-zero conditions.

It’s interest rate risk that looms largest in most people’s minds when they think about bonds, though. I know I didn’t want it holding me back when I first started investing. As a result, the defensive side of my portfolio was all in cash that doubled up as an emergency fund. Not best practice.

Back in those days I ignored two major risks:

  • I had no idea what my risk tolerance really was beyond some vague notion of ‘backing myself’ in a crisis. The reality is I didn’t know how I’d react.
  • The second problem is that at some point – without realising it – you’re no longer the devil-may-care desperado of old. You wake up one day with something to lose, but you never pass a road sign saying: ‘You’ve Made It. Caution Ahead.’

Without a plan to ease off the brakes, there’s every chance you could careen off the road during a future pile-up.

To that end, government bonds still provide the best stopping power you can buy.

And I’ll keep making room in my portfolio for gilts and cash because, well, diversification.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

Bonus appendix: miscellaneous ‘cash vs bonds’ tie-breakers

Protection

As everyone in the UK is aware since that incident with Northern Rock, banks can go bust. Up to £85,000 worth of your cash is protected per ‘authorised institution’ thanks to the FSCS compensation scheme.

That sounds pretty sweet until you find out that 100% of your readies are protected when you hand them over to the British Government in exchange for an IOU – aka a gilt. Her Majesty’s Treasury will definitely pay you back.2

That in turn sounds pretty sweet until you check out the investor compensation scheme and realise that your 100% protected gilt holdings could disappear in a puff of mismanagement if your fund or platform provider went down in mysterious circumstances.

Then you’re back to £85,000 compensation, or less if the FSCS scheme turns out not to apply. A disaster like this is not likely but it could happen and it casts new shade on the whole ‘backstopped by the UK’ promise.

The sweet spot is cash parked in the National Savings & Investments (NS&I) bank. NS&I savings are guaranteed by the government and there’s no other weak link in the chain forcing me to write several lines of warning.

Better still, NS&I savings products are hot right now especially as the government has a huge hole to plug in the public finances.

Even better than that, you can pop eligible NS&I products into your SIPP. Although it looks like only owners of expensive ‘full’ SIPPs and SSAS vehicles need apply. ‘Simple’ SIPPs – as offered by most platforms – don’t look like they co-operate.

But I’m not expecting NS&I index-linked certificates to come back any time soon. These amazing inflation shields – perfectly tailored for the little guy – are subject to a value-for-money test by the Treasury. That pits them against the cost to the public purse of raising funds in the wholesale markets using equivalent gilts.

As the government has been able to issue index-linked3 gilts at negative real yields for several years, I don’t think they’re likely to come to the likes of you and me for a few billion, even if we agreed to an interest rate of CPI +0%.

Taxes and other cost considerations

Cash in a savings account doesn’t incur dealing fees or OCF charges but that’s neither here nor there when you’re making strategic asset allocation decisions. Most passive investors can hold gilt index trackers extremely cheaply.

Individual gilts are not liable to capital gains whereas gilt funds are.

Interest paid by bonds and bond funds benefits from your tax-exempt Personal Savings Allowance and Starting Rate for Savings, just as cash does.

  1. The duration number tells us approximately how much a bond or bond fund will gain or fall in value for every 1% change in interest rates. []
  2. Although they do reserve the right to inflate away the national debt like a Chinese Sky Lantern if things ever get a bit much. []
  3. That is, a return that keeps the value of your investment unchanged in real terms after a particular measure of inflation. []
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