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Weekend reading

I’m depressed by the Brexit result and even more so by how it came about. Feel free to skip to the week’s good reads.

Some 25 years ago, I set off from the provinces for university in London.

My family waved me goodbye as the train began its journey through beautiful countryside that turned flatter, plainer, and more urban as I approached the South East.

Within hours I was in London – that vast city so near yet so faraway, which I had only visited two or three times in my lifetime and only then for a few brief hours.

I spent the first night walking around West London, astonished that seemingly every other person spoke a different language. Saw buildings from history books. Was amazed to find fabulously expensive cars that I’d only seen in TV adverts just parked out on the streets. Was bamboozled by one-bedroom flats in the estate agents’ windows at prices that now seem a bargain but back then – as I not-so-tactfully I informed my parents from a phone box a few days later – could have bought their semi ten-times over.

Give or take, I never left.

When Monday rolled around, it was time to become the first person in my family to go to university.

I learned two important things on that first day.

One was that they didn’t take a register of attendance, which I knew meant I would only be showing up when I felt like it.

The other I realized when I went to my first big lecture, alongside 150 or so other freshers on my course.

I entered the lecture hall and walked up the stairs towards the back, instinctively finding my level.

I kept going.

I sat down in the back row.

For the product of a 2,000-strong comprehensive school, the message of this seemingly trivial detail was clear.

I was the “hard kids” now. Nobody here was going to beat me up. Never again would I be fearful about the cast of violent, ill-tempered and stupid bullies that made each day at school a lottery as to whether you’d get a punch on the arm or worse – that forced anyone with a brain into unspoken alliances with robust friends, that made you laugh at the jokes of borderline psychopaths or accept the logic of a moron just because they were bigger than you.

I was free. Screw them all, I thought, as I remembered the yobs I’d left behind.

A design for life

Friday’s vote to leave the EU – and the sorts of places where most of those votes came from – was a punch in the guts that reminded me that you’re never really safe from the mob.

Of course, over the years my views towards the worst of my schoolmates softened.

As I began the typical thoughtful student’s grasping towards a political consciousness, I came to understand that to some extent it wasn’t their fault.

Most of even the dumb ones weren’t bad people. There were only a few monsters in each year group. They had almost certainly had terrible upbringings that I’d been lucky enough to avoid, and even if they hadn’t then perhaps they drew bad genes.

I also learned more about how economic changes had really hit hard the land where I grew up, and how even in the good times most of the profits had been siphoned off by owners who lived elsewhere.

I argued with girlfriends from the Home Counties who had no reason to know that not everyone grew up living next door to lawyers, newspaper editors, investment bankers, and directors at major pharmaceutical companies. That not every school was a safe place for learning. That not everyone was encouraged to be the best version of themselves.

Even after I cut my hair, gave up on true socialism, saw the reality of the workplace, and became the capitalist you know and tolerate today, I still tended to vote for Labour (though not exclusively).

In reality though, I’d become part of the metropolitan consensus that had everything to gain from global trade, open borders, and free markets, and saw very little to lose from the way the economy was headed.

I felt sorry for the marginalized, but I didn’t think their problems were my problems.

The second derivative

Perhaps this contrast between my past and my present was why I found a way to disagree with nearly everybody I spoke to in the run up to the Referendum – as I had for many years before that on some of the core issues that came to the fore.

Particularly on free movement.

As a Londoner who loves its polyglot diversity and all the cultural and economic benefits that accrue from it, I was all for it.

But I understand very clearly that not everybody feels the same way.

Some are flat out racists, and always will be.

But some are people who I can accept as wanting to preserve and be surrounded by a cultural identity they feel they belong to – John Major’s rosy vision of pasty-hued men playing cricket on the village green while their wives discuss kitchen extensions in the pavilion.

As I tried to explain to one of my innumerable London friends who cannot understand why not everyone wants to live surrounded by change and difference and colour, some people just find a universally frightening life more comfortable when they live near a pub where everyone they knew grew up with Fawlty Towers and The Spice Girls.

Are these people racist? I don’t think that’s the right word for it.

They have a cultural preference, just like me and my friends in London. I believe most of them would be happy enough in a workplace with (a minority of) colleagues from other cultures or races, although a good chunk probably wouldn’t ideally want their daughters to marry outside their ethnic roots. But even then, I think most are good enough people who would come to appreciate their new sons or daughters-in-law, given time to get to know them.

Rate of change is everything, always. Increase the UK population by three million in a decade and you’re going to have problems. I argued this again and again and we’ve just seen the results.

The same increase over 20 years? Not so much.

Then there are the security concerns. It is a tragedy – if not a coincidence, given that similar ideologues are involved in the backstory – that the refugee crisis on Europe’s borders has coincided with an existential battle against a new terrorist threat.

I don’t pretend to know exactly how Europe should have responded to the prospect of many millions of refugees arriving at the very same time when a large chunk of the population has rarely been so fearful of difference, but it’s abundantly clear – if only from all the subsequent backtracking, even by the Germans – that their first response was wrong.

Sometimes the perfect is the enemy of the good.

They’re not like us

UK politicians, European Union architects, and all the chattering classes should have been more pragmatic about the free movement of people long ago.

Clearly it’s core to the long-term project, but if there had been an honest appraisal of the fears it would provoke, then it might have been structured more sensitively.

Perhaps there should have been greater restrictions on the poorer Eastern European countries that joined the EU, or longer-lasting restrictions. Maybe there should have been a transitional process for new entrants that lasted 20 years or more, during which time Europe intervened to bring them up to speed. Clearly what curbs there were have not been enough to dampen the rate of change here.

I don’t know the solution, obviously. I don’t think anyone has good answers yet. But pretending it wasn’t a problem was never a solution.

Please understand that – as I’m forced to explain to friends who I have spent a decade warning about this bubbling resentment that was there to see for anyone who looked at it plainly – I myself am happy with the free movement rules of EU citizens as things stand, and even the consequent escalation of the UK population.

I can see the cultural benefits, the economic benefits, and the wider benefits for Europe of EU citizens going wherever they like.

And to return to a point raised in the previous section – I’ve fallen for women of all backgrounds over the years. (Sadly it hasn’t always been reciprocated!)

But I am not everybody. And you have to compromise.

There’s no point in me doing an amateurish rehash of all the arguments about this – you’ve heard it for weeks from better sources, and you can read more in the links below.

The bottom line is if you detoxify the perceived threat of immigration then you drain Leave of its pulling power.

Telling everybody that only racists fear migration isn’t detoxification.

The poor reason to vote Brexit

One reason it has been so hard to argue for free movement – and for the EU project in general – is because it is fundamentally a capitalist project.

Remove borders, remove tariffs, allow capital and labour and goods to move freely, and eventually most people across the Eurozone will be lifted up by the resultant greater prosperity.

You’re scoffing?

Exactly. Belief in capitalism has rarely been at a lower ebb.

You almost can’t blame the provinces for voting Leave, given that a chunk of them have seen their economic circumstances slide for generations.

And as an ardent believer in the good wrought by market systems, I’ve been warning for years that as a matter of self-preservation capitalists should be addressing income inequality as a top priority.

That really hasn’t happened, and Brexit is the first sign that there will be consequences for all of us, rich and poor.

I also blame my often lamented (if much-loved) left-wing friends and their Facebook posturing.

For years they’ve ranted that unemployment would soar to three million (employment is now at a record high) and that the NHS had been all but privatised and ruined (it hasn’t been and won’t be).

Rarely have they let the facts get in the way of their soundbites.

Well, now we see what happens when the other side picks up that particular ball and runs with it.

To Brussels without love

So the poor provincials get some of the blame. The rich elites also for their arrogance and indifference.

And the lefties played a part too, with their years of socially mediated scaremongering, and for telling the British people the country was corrupt and ruined for long enough that much of its population eventually believed it must be true.

Who else?

Obviously the Eurocrats. Jeremy Corbyn (who deserves a massive dollup of blame on a tactical level) famously said he was 70% for Remain. The well-argued gripes about Brussels put me at a similar level of conviction.

I never said Remain was an overwhelmingly slam dunk decision. Just that it was the right one.

To be sure, lots of the complaints about Eurozone bureaucracy are ridiculous. (It takes a massive organization and a big budget to administer to 340 million people in a dozen languages? Go figure.)

But the charges of aloofness and an anti-democratic impulse do ring true to me.

Again, I’m not smart enough to know how to address this, but surely we could have done more than we did.

In any event I don’t think the EU is sufficiently aloof, anti-democratic, and powerful enough to warrant pulling the pin. It has delivered economic gains for Europe as a whole, helped the rich get richer, and targeted money at the poor in places. It’s saved at least as much paperwork as it created.

And I’m happy to say it – it’s made violent conflict between or with Europe far, far less likely for decades. Not solely, but it played a role.

Seriously: How did we go from entering a partnership with the Germans just a couple of decades after they’d fought our relatives, murdered helpless millions and bombed our cities to smithereens to thinking the fact that they insisted fire alarms be fitted in all workplaces or that everyone should get a few paid days off a year1 was the source of whatever ails us?

The wartime generation really was wiser than us – once they’d lived through the evil education of the war.

Whatever the EU’s problems, it didn’t make our problems worse.

And we still had the pound, and our special opt-outs!

We had the best of both worlds and we might well have thrown it away.

Educated fools

The final group of people I blame is what I have called before the Grumpy Old Men brigade.

Well-educated, prosperous, ageing, and feeling themselves to be the owners of Pensieves recalling happier, better-educated, and even more prosperous times, I come across these people regularly in their guise as private investors.

In fact some of you fit right into this bracket.

Sure, we all have some wrong-headed views. However these guys are so pompous even as they’re so often wrong it’s not funny. Peak oil, the value of a manufacturing industry, the impact of women in the workplace, they get most things wrong and now they are on the wrong (albeit winning) side of the Referendum.

They are the supposedly financial savvy people who believe the poppycock money we pay into the European Union is an outrage, because they don’t understand it’s a force multiplier that delivers far greater economic returns.

At least the racists are right about one thing: Being in the EU surely means more foreigners in the UK.

The Grumpy Old Man brigade doesn’t even have that going for them. There is no economic argument for exiting the European Union. None.

Honestly, I almost wish London could enact the newly set-up petition to declare itself a City State just to leave these numbskulls to their dreams of returning ship-building to the Tyne and British-made bombers patrolling high above the channel.

I’d love to see how they got on without London’s smarts, its 21st Century business model, and its tax revenues.

Lies, damn lies, and the Leave campaign

Of course these grumpy men know better than the experts who have almost to a man and woman warned that Britain would be poorer in the event of a Brexit.

I certainly think we will be.

Perhaps not crippled, maybe we’ll even do quite well. But we would have been better off within – that’s been the case for the past 40 years, and it’s been abundantly so for the past 10 years. There was no reason why it wouldn’t have continued.

Britain has been, with Germany, the biggest winner in recent times from the project. London has boomed as hundreds of thousands of smart Europeans flocked to where the recovery was fastest and the prospects of getting a good job or setting up a new business was greatest.

London’s outward looking and increasingly digital economy thrived in a way that the regions should have striven to copy, not attempted to vote out of existence.

Everybody who knew anything said so – but who cares what the experts think?

This is surely the most worrying development, and many have already upgraded Donald Trump’s chances in the US on the same logic.

Politics has always been about exaggeration, and it’s true the Remain camp stretched some truths and forecasts to the limit.

But the Leave case was largely built upon fabrications and lies – not least evidenced by the fact that 24 hours after the win they’re recanting.

Boris Johnson – who was booed by the betrayed Londoners who made his political fortune as he headed off to deliver his victory speech on Friday – has already delivered a bewildering maiden speech, in which he explained immigration is a boon and that it will be business as usual under Brexit.

Let’s hope so, but that’s not what Leave said, nor what many of those who voted for Leave thought, Johnson.

Market madness

H.L. Mencken famously quipped, “No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public.”

But many smart investors just lost a fortune by over-estimating the British people.

As skilled political animals, the likes of Johnson and Michael Gove have adroitly channeled the self-destructive mood of a huge swathe of the population to propel themselves within sight of the leadership role of a now-divided nation.

But for their part, global markets couldn’t believe we Brits would so dumbly vote against our own self-interest.

The resultant dislocations in the market on Friday morning were truly breathtaking.

Long-term readers will be aware of my active trading style that sits completely at odds with what this site in general and my co-blogger in particular strongly suggests you do. (In short, you should probably be a passive investor in index funds).

And the Referendum has been the most confounding event I’ve faced as an active investor.

I felt confident enough through the various Greek issues, the US fiscal cliff, the tumult earlier this year. Even the financial crisis felt logical, if sometimes terrifying.

But trying to figure out the best collection of assets to own in advance of and through the referendum was a mind-bender, and I changed my exposure many times.

While I tried to stay fairly balanced throughout, for weeks I was tilted more towards a Brexit. I sold out of much of my UK exposure, and at one point I had a pretty large wodge of gold.

A savvy friend in the finance industry didn’t see the need for this caution – like most in the City he thought the chances of Brexit were very low. Perhaps 8-10%, he estimated.

I was nothing like so confident, as I emailed back: “The danger is this is the mother of all protest votes.”

But with the horrible and pointless murder of MP Jo Cox, you could feel the market turn. (My first thought before I saw the news but felt the impact in prices was that Johnson had resigned from Leave, perhaps in disgust at Farage’s misleading migrant poster.)

As this shift continued, my current style meant I sought to reflect it in my positioning, and I sold the gold and upped exposure to some small cap UK cyclicals.

However I just couldn’t bring myself to the same sanguine position that everyone else evidently felt. And so my portfolio shed value daily as the anti-Brexit positions I held (mainly US stocks) wilted in sterling terms and the pound climbed.

All that changed on Friday night, as reality homed in. Before the markets opened, my portfolio notionally soared as the pound tanked. Stocks hadn’t yet had the chance to respond.

They got their chance at 8am.

My plan was basically to dump the less obvious positions I owned in UK exposed companies inside tax-sheltered ISAs and SIPPs, hopefully while the major funds and algorithms were concentrating on offloading the big blatant stuff like UK banks and major housebuilders.

I’d then reverse direction, buying certain blue chips they were throwing overboard in the panic, and hopefully the net result would be I’d get through the day fairly unscathed.

(Again, don’t try this at home!)

It half worked. I was able to get rid of a few UK positions, some in decent size, but for many I couldn’t get any sort of live quote.

I wasn’t prepared to buy “At Best” in a market in freefall, so my attempt to raise liquidity before the price rout took its full toll was only part-completed.

More surprising though was that I couldn’t even get a firm quote for the big companies I wanted to buy.

I was looking at huge banks down more than 30% and certain construction firms down over 75% in the early minutes of trade, and I just couldn’t buy them, at least not with any firm price guide.

The brokers at least stayed up-and-running – in the financial crisis you couldn’t log in at the worst times.

But they blundered, too, for example routing one of my orders into purgatory where it was neither executed nor could it be cancelled. (My fellow blogger Ermine saw his portfolio disappear for a while!)

By the time the US market opened, sanity had returned to UK trading – and then we were off on another rollercoaster.

At the end of the day, I’d achieved my aim; I’d lost less than 1% on what had become an all-equity portfolio.2

Sure, as Lars Kroijer noted to me later, it would have been far easier to hold a few index funds for a similar result, since most of the returns were down to currency swings. Home currencies often tank at the same time as home markets, he reminded me, which means overseas holdings in a diversified portfolio will see coincident gains. Another notch for his belief you should just own a global tracker.

From my point of view though, Friday was about survival in the chaos. I’ve done better by stock picking and trading over the long-term, and I hope to do so in the future.

I didn’t see the Brexit as a profit opportunity, but rather I had to negotiate a chasm of potential downside.

Young, less free, and singularly shafted

You’ll see more in the articles below about how the prospect of Brexit caused chaos in the global markets.

Glib comments to the effect that you shouldn’t care because your US shares went up 10% may well prove to be wide of the mark.

Uncertainty has massively increased, and Europe faces an existential threat.

Global growth will be without doubt slower than it might have been – simply because there is no mechanism by which this vote and this shock can increase it, though we can argue about the scale of the decline.

Yes, life will go on. The UK pound might even eventually rise as a haven, if the Euro goes to hell in a basket and even a stodgy, self-strangling UK economy looks like a better bet in comparison.

I have no doubt though that Britain is going to be poorer as a result of this vote. The extent to which whoever gains power in the aftermath implements the professed wishes of Leavers will determine exactly how much poorer.

It’s easy enough to paint apocalyptic scenarios – a run on the pound, soaring interest rates as we lose our triple-A status and foreigners refuse to finance our deficit. Maybe some localized violence.

However the truth will likely be more mundane, economically-speaking.

London will come off the boil, much global capital will head elsewhere. A few Northern exporters irrelevant in the grand scheme of things will sell a few more widgets to China and India. If immigration is massively curbed, then there’ll be fewer jobs but hourly wages for the crappest jobs might rise by a few pennies. But most things will be more expensive because labour costs will increase and for as long as the pound is weak we’ll import inflation. The poorer regions who voted for Brexit will see less money as tax revenues dwindle and growth slows.

Something like that.

But while I feel somewhat sorry for these poor and marginalized communities – and as I say I was concerned about them long before this vote – I save my greatest sympathy for the urban young.

The aging provincials voted in their imminent decline. The clever young overwhelmingly voted the other way.

As an FT comment that went viral on Twitter pointed out on Friday, young Britons may be about to lose their generation’s single biggest advantage.

They can’t see how they will ever afford a home of their own, job security and pensions are long gone, and they are crippled by student debts.

But free movement in Europe gave them the incredible opportunity to live elsewhere and to enjoy an entirely different life if they chose to.

That freedom, that potential – and all the living that would have gone with it – may just have been voted into oblivion, by old people.

In the worst versions of what happens next, the drawbridge goes up, those freedoms are lost entirely, and they’ll be stuck in the UK even as their bright young European peers drift home and their foolish parents who voted for Brexit wonder why it takes so long now to be served a coffee in Costa.

At its pre-Brexit best, Britain was a large cap version of thriving Estonia.

At worst, it’s now on the path to becoming a less socially ordered version of Japan.

Some Brexiteers are all for this, incidentally. On Friday I re-tweeted a comment by The Reformed Broker that sardonically congratulated the Brexiteers – they’d still have the immigrants, but now they’d have a whole lot less money, too.

One reply: “Good. To kill a tape worm you starve it out.”

Get poor and the immigrants go home. Genius.

Down with the revolution

I feel I haven’t said half of what I was going to say, but I doubt many people even read this far and I don’t blame you.

I avoided Brexit articles in the run-up to the vote, which I now slightly regret. It seemed a kindness to readers, but perhaps it might have swayed a few Leavers not to be so silly.

I know plenty of Monevator readers will agree with my sentiments – because about a quarter of this site’s readership hails from London.

We know London has its problems. Some persevere with it just for the salary. But others of us love the place as much as it has confounded and frustrated us, and know that this vote against the EU is as much a vote against our home.

They – and certainly many other Remainers around the country – will agree with a friend of mine on Facebook who wrote this morning:

Nigel Farage described the result of the referendum as a “victory for ordinary people, a victory for decent people”.

So I am now proud to be extraordinary and indecent.

Anyone with a passing knowledge of history should shiver when politicians with ugly views start championing the cause of the common man. True lasting progress nearly always happens slowly – populism virtually always end badly.

From the demise of the Roman republic to the rise of communism in Russia, even when (as so often) the populace had every right to be angry, they typically cut their nose off to spite their faces and uprisings made things worse.

Some of you disagree. Some of you – mainly grumpy, mainly old – voted for Brexit.

That was your right, just as it’s your right to be angry (and wrong) about what I’ve written today.

I hope soon enough we can talk about expense ratios and using your new ISA allowance. I don’t think you’re bad people.

But don’t look forward to a vibrant debate about the pros and cons of the Referendum to follow this article.

And I wouldn’t bother explaining your vote to Leave.

I am likely to delete all but the very most thoughtful pro-Brexit contributions. My site will not be another platform for the wail of stupidity that has led to this result.

I doubt any of my old school bullies or their like read this website. But do I know some Blimpish investors do.

Well, Monevator is not a democracy.

You had your vote. You can take your views elsewhere.

Brexit articles: Quarantine box

  • England just screwed us all – Felix Salmon
  • After the vote, chaos – The Economist
  • Brexit will reconfigure the UK economy [Search result]FT
  • Boris Johnson’s Pyrrhic victory – Guardian
  • Evan Davis loses it with one Brexit liar – Huffington Post
  • Petitions: For London to declare independence; for a 2nd referendum
  • The sky has not fallen, but we face years of hard labour – Telegraph
  • Owen Jones: The escalating culture wars have to stop – Guardian
  • Brexit is a wake up call: Save Europe – Guardian
  • Britain is not a rainy, fascist island – Guardian
  • World’s richest people lose $127 billion in Brexit chaos – Bloomberg
  • The golden generation leaves a tarnished legacy [Search result]FT
  • London just threw its race with New York – Bloomberg
  • So it’s Brexit. What next for shares? – The Motley Fool
  • Bag a bargain post-Brexit investment trust – Citywire
  • Star fund managers on Brexit’s impact on shares – ThisIsMoney
  • EU exit expected to end UK house price boom [Search result]FT
  • More: What does Brexit mean for UK house prices? – Guardian
  • Why Brexit is so bad for the global economy – The Atlantic
  • Europe makes Brexit-voting UK a safe haven [Search result]FT
  • Revenge would be the wrong E.U. response to Brexit – Bloomberg
  • My secret plan for surviving after Brexit – UK Value Investor
  • Voted Brexit? How to forgive yourself – Aeon

[continue reading…]

  1. Or whatever, I can’t be bothered right now to look up the “red tape” that has supposedly crippled our growing economy. []
  2. I have a massive slug of cash and cash equivalents, but they sit outside my trading accounts and tracking, as they’re earmarked for a house purchase someday. []
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The Monevator demo HYP: Five years (and a bit) on

Five-year old badge: Our demo HYP is now five years old.

Five years ago I experimentally invested £5,000 into 20 dividend-paying shares that I judged could deliver a growing income for the foreseeable future.

This simple investing approach is known as a High Yield Portfolio.

I’ve written a few articles over the years about high yield portfolios – or HYPs – and filed them under the HYP tag. Please check them out if you’d like to know more.

Briefly, the idea is to buy and hold blue chip stocks indefinitely.

In the version I was implementing1 you intend to never trade the shares. You just leave them alone, unless forced to act by corporate events such as takeovers.

The idea is this protects you from your worst instincts (that you think you know something the market doesn’t on any given Tuesday) and from the bad decisions and worse consequences that may result.

But there’s a subtler benefit, too.

By investing one-time in a basket of higher-yielding shares (with a few safety filters as I outlined in those previous articles) you hope to capture a collection of companies that are on-average undervalued – without needing to be an expert on any of them.

It’s a sort of ‘knowingly know-nothing’ way to try to get an investment edge.

If the portfolio works out, you’ll enjoy a growing income and perhaps some capital gains – a steady cash flow to buy all the Werther’s Originals you could want for in your old age.

To that end, please note that my demo HYP assumes all the dividends are spent each year. Such portfolios are usually intended as income vehicles, and that’s what I’m demoing here.

Investing for the ages

The HYP is basically how wealthy families used to invest in days of yore, when men were real men, women were real women, and small furry creatures from Alpha Centuari were real small furry creatures from Alpha Centuari.

Family members might even have passed their stakes in the great oil companies, industrial firms, banks – and yes, railroads and other eventually antiquated concerns – down through the generations.

Aunt Agatha bequeathing a trust to Bertie Wooster, Reginald Cornelius Hubert II an income to Reginald Cornelius Hubert III in the US – that sort of thing.

But to be honest, I’m not sure this good old-fashioned investing has much relevance today.

It’s now so cheap to buy and hold global equities with index funds, and you can get such funds with a dividend tilt if you want them. Much less hassle than even a low-hassle HYP, and much more diversified, albeit for a small additional fee.

Even for active investors, the advantage of saving money by avoiding trades has been much reduced by low-cost, fixed-fee brokers (although you usually still pay stamp duty in the UK, and the other drawbacks of trading will never go away).

You’ve always been able to buy income investment trusts in the UK as an income alternative, too, and I have a soft spot for them. But then we’re back facing the drawbacks of active management such as high costs, mean reversion, likely under-performance and so on.

Yet while it may be about as hip and happening as Roland Rat in a zoot suit, the HYP strategy remains popular with DIY stockpickers.

You could do a lot worse if you’re set on owning a portfolio of individual shares.

Note: The Monevator demo HYP is just that – a demo. It’s not a recommended list of shares to buy today, and it is not a reflection of my own wider portfolio, nor how I manage it. The demo HYP is just a small side-account set up for Monevator purposes. Please don’t take me to task (as some have done in the past) for this or that reason as if I’d bet my future on it, or say it’s inconsistent with some other article I wrote six months ago, or tell me why I shouldn’t invest all my money this way. I don’t!

2011 Demo HYP: Frequently Asked Questions

I expect there may be questions from new readers – as well as those of you who for your own selfish reasons haven’t memorized every last word we ever wrote – so here are some links to my previous posts, in FAQ form:

What’s another six weeks after 60 months?

Now for something annoying. You see, this isn’t going to be a five-year update.

It’s going to be a five-year and a month and a bit update.

In the grand scheme of things this doesn’t matter much – another 45 days or so around the sun is neither here nor there for a portfolio you intend to own until you die.

But it is needlessly clumsy.

It’d have been great to present a five-year anniversary snapshot. To be able to say that this is exactly what the demo HYP did over five years, and then to compare it with other strategies past and present over the same timescale.

Unfortunately, I forgot for two years to even do an update, and then after I became enthusiastic about this five-year anniversary, I got preoccupied writing something else. Sorry!

If it’s any consolation, I invested 500,000 of my pennies just to make my record keeping easy, and yet I’m still unloosing a six-shooter into my foot every few years.

This hurts me more than it hurts you.

How has the demo HYP fared since inception?

Enough waffle – here’s how the demo HYP stood as of the market’s close on 23 June 2016:

Company Price Value Gain/Loss
Aberdeen Asset Management £3.13 £334.33 33.7%
Admiral £20.11 £285.71 14.3%
AstraZeneca £38.99 £312.27 24.9%
Aviva £4.45 £250.60 0.2%
BAE Systems £5.04 £383.48 53.4%
Balfour Beatty £2.55 £192.56 -23.0%
BHP Billiton £8.71 £90.77 -63.7%
British Land £7.63 £319.04 27.6%
Centrica £2.18 £172.87 -30.9%
Diageo £18.33 £367.91 47.2%
GlaxoSmithKline £14.29 £271.00 8.4%
Halma £9.66 £650.19 160.1%
HSBC £4.54 £172.86 -30.9%
Pearson £8.88 £195.21 -21.9%
Royal Dutch Shell £18.89 £212.41 -15.0%
South 32 £0.89 £9.28 n/a
Scottish & Southern Energy £15.50 £292.36 17.0%
Tate £6.27 £256.08 2.4%
Tesco £1.68 £101.63 -59.4%
Unilever £31.87 £400.99 60.4%
Vodafone  £2.18 £250.69 -0.5%
£5,522.25 10.2%

Note: The portfolio was bought on 6 May 2011, with £250 invested into each of 20 shares. All costs (stamp duty, spreads, and dealing fees) are included. See Vodafone and South 32 note below. Valuation from Halifax.

In summary:

  • The portfolio is currently valued at £5,522.
  • This is up 10.2% on inception.
  • It is down 5.2% since the last update three years ago.
  • Remember, these returns do not include dividends. Capital only.

Book keeping notes on Vodafone and South 32

Now a quick explanation about the Vodafone holding, and the £9.28 stake in South 32.

Following the sale of its massive stake in Verizon Wireless in 2014, Vodafone issued a big special dividend and shrunk as a company to around half its size.

I decided that this qualified a special one-off event, and that doing nothing in response – just treating that special dividend as income, and leaving the position roughly half-sized – would distort the returns for years to come. So I decided to reinvest income into Vodafone to restore its weighting within the demo HYP, and so offset the impact of that big payout.

I did this judiciously but not insanely precisely. I can’t remember my exact thought process, and I do not intend adjusting the returns from the benchmarks to reflect it because, well, life is too short.

Just keep in mind that the demo HYP benefited from an extra £90 or so as a cash infusion that the FTSE 100 didn’t enjoy, and that the investment trusts may or may not have seen (depending on whether they owned Vodafone and whether they chose to reinvest the special dividend or pay it out as income).

I’d argue that in real world terms this isn’t a bonkers deus ex machina payment, exactly, given the huge spike in income that it offset and which is unaccounted for here, yet would be if we were tracking total returns2.

You could certainly argue that I shouldn’t have done anything. Companies are rejigging their holdings all the time with mergers, acquisitions, and disposals. Some of the dividend income they pay out in any given year may well come from small disposals. Why make an exception for this move from Vodafone?

Simply because it was so big. I felt it was a pragmatic decision, and in the spirit of the portfolio.

As for South 32, this is a new company spun-off out of the BHP Billiton, trading under its own ticker symbol. In this instance, I didn’t sell the spin-off shares, and I didn’t top-up the BHP position. I kept my shiny and tiny stake in South 32, which I confidently expect to grow into a vast multinational, and to thus swell my wealth by fifty quid.

Perhaps you’d have made different decisions about Vodafone and South 32, and that’s fine.

All I’m trying to do here is follow the ups and downs of a particular 20-strong share portfolio. I’m no data hound (quite the opposite) and I’m not trying to sell this strategy versus another. But I do want to show my workings.

Ups and downs in the individual shares

So what of the performance? Well, at £5,522 it’s down from the last update in June 2013, when it sat at £5,828. Harrumph.

But it could be worse. In fact it was at the end of the first year (it had fallen below its starting capital value) and it has also recovered a bit since the turbulent times of spring.

According to UK inflation data, £5,000 in 2011 money is worth £5,782 today, so the capital value of the portfolio is so far failing to keep up with inflation.

That’s disappointing, but then it would have been a different story a year or so ago when the market was 15% higher. Certainly something to watch in the future though.

In terms of the individual shares, you can see that there’s been quite a bit of divergence since inception – and also since we last checked in at the two-year mark.

Back then Aberdeen was up 102%, while the worst performer, Balfour Beatty, was down around 32%.

Since then Balfour has recovered a bit but BHP Billiton has taken the wooden soon and run with it, with a lurching 63% plunge.

As for Aberdeen it is now up a mere 34% since inception, having suffered from the turmoil in the emerging markets.

But boring and beautiful Halma is now up 160%!

These gyrations might seem perturbing if you’re used to only seeing the aggregate returns of trusts or funds. Indeed they are a bit disturbing, and the sort of thing that gives a 20-stock portfolio a bad name.

But they’re very normal.

Check in after 10 years and we’ll probably have a few multibaggers3, and perhaps one or more companies that have disappeared, or as good as done so return-wise. Par for the course.

Again, these are just share price returns. All the dividends have been ‘spent’ by the portfolio (in reality snaffled off by me to be reinvested elsewhere) so they’re not full reflections of how the companies have delivered for their shareholders.

Also note that several companies cut their dividends – BHP, Tesco, and Centrica for starters.

Again, pretty standard. I expect Centrica and Tesco will grow their dividends again soon, and perhaps BHP will eventually.

Many of the other companies raised their payouts by a fair clip though.

How did the HYP do versus the benchmarks?

The HYP was bought on 6 May 2011. I decided to compare it two benchmarks from that date – a small basket of investment trusts, and the iShares FTSE 100. You can read more about this in the benchmark article.

Benchmark One: The iShares FTSE 100 Tracker

The ETF benchmark is a hypothetical £5,000 that was invested into 836 shares4 of the iShares FTSE 100 tracking ETF ISF.

The ETF shares were notionally bought at £5.98 per share. The (tiny) purchase costs were taken into account, and there was no stamp duty to pay.

Here’s where the ETF stood at close of 23 June 2016.

Company Price Value Gain/Loss
iShares FTSE 100 ETF £6.29 £5,260.63 5.2%

Note: Prices from Yahoo.

Back at the two-year mark the ETF was up 12.3%, but that gain has been more than halved by the miserable markets of the past few years.

Pah! It’s not been an easy time to be an investor in UK shares – or a writer of an investing blog for that matter.

For now, the demo HYP is ahead of the FTSE 100 ETF.

Benchmark 2: A trio of income trusts

I also track three income investment trusts as an alternative to the HYP.

Again I assumed these were bought via Halifax Sharebuilder, and again I averaged the opening and closing prices on 6 May 2011 to get the initial buy prices. Stamp duty and a penny spread on each trust’s price were factored in.

Here’s where a hypothetical £5,000 pumped into these three trusts stood at close of 23 June 2016.

Trust Price5 Value Gain/Loss
City of London IT £3.86 £2,114.18 26.9%
Edinburgh IT £6.88 £2,422.80 45.4%
Merchants Trust £4.13 £1,617.67 -2.9%
£6,154.65 23.1%

Note: Prices from Yahoo.

Firstly, it’s interesting to me that the highest yielding trust at the outset – Merchants – has done by far the worst in capital terms since then. It’s relative performance would be enhanced by reinvesting income, but not by enough to really undo the marked contrast with the other two trusts. A nice reminder that a high starting yield isn’t everything.

In terms of the basket’s returns, whereas the FTSE 100 has slipped back from its position at the two-year market, the investment trust folio has continued to make progress.

It’s turned a 19.3% advance at last check-in into a 23.1% gain since inception.

Now it isn’t hugely surprising to see it doing better than the ETF tracker, if you’re a follower of the markets.

The commodity crash over the past few years and the ongoing train wreck that are bank stocks both hit the FTSE 100 hard. Investment trusts would have been lighter in both those sectors.

Will the FTSE 100 ever bounce back? Or will investment trusts always maintain this edge? We’ll see.

It obviously bears stating that the IT basket is doing much better than my 20 shares, too.

As I’ve said many times before, UK equity income investment trusts are pretty much my favourite vehicle for active UK investors. I keep an eye on a small portfolio of them for my mother, as it happens.

But even if we are still remembering to look back at this comparison after 20 years, we won’t be able to say anything truly definitive about their merits versus trackers or the HYP, because this portfolio is just a snapshot in time, from 2011 to whenever.

What if we’d started in 2007? Or 2003?

Also the whole shebang reflects my particular 20 stock picks and my arbitrary selection of three trusts. (Arbitrary in the sense that you might have chosen differently). That’s idiosyncratic, not the stuff of scientific rigour.

Obviously the same is all true if the HYP comes good in the years to come, too.

What about income and reinvestment?

In the early years of this project I maintained a spreadsheet that tracked income and tried to estimate what would happen if you reinvested it every year.

However I feel that boat has sailed after the three-year hiatus, and it’s not coming back. (Even looking at the spreadsheet makes my head hurt.)

It would be interesting to see where the annual income-delivering power of these three strategies stands at the five-year mark, however.

While the focus of my tracking is on capital, the actual aim of the strategy is to deliver a rising income. That’s what really matters.

I’ll take a (shorter!) look at that next time.

  1. Popularized by writers such as Stephen Bland of The Motley Fool in the UK and Robert Kirby with his similar Coffee Can portfolio in the US. []
  2. That is, capital and income. []
  3. Gains of 100%, 200%, 300% and so on. []
  4. Actually 835.87 shares to be precise. []
  5. I’ve rounded these here for clarity, but have used the exact price in my spreadsheet. []
{ 21 comments }

Use threshold rebalancing to lower your portfolio’s risk

A powerful technique for controlling risk in your diversified portfolio is threshold rebalancing.

Like other rebalancing strategies, threshold rebalancing is used to prevent your asset allocation veering too far off-target due to the diverging returns of the assets you hold.

There is endless debate about the ‘best’ rebalancing strategies and whether they can juice up returns.

It ultimately depends on future market conditions and the unique contents of your portfolio – in other words, whip out your crystal ball.

We therefore think it’s better for passive investors with a broadly diversified mix of equities and bonds to be aware of the rebalancing techniques available, and to choose a mix that best suits them.

I’ve already mentioned threshold rebalancing. The other main school of rebalancing is calendar rebalancing.

Calendar rebalancing is the simplest option – you just rebalance at the same time(s) every year, or every number of years.

However the threshold approach enables you to better fine tune your operations to take more control over costs and to reduce the impact of choppy markets.

Threshold rebalancing

Rebalancing occurs when threshold amounts are reached

As the name implies, with threshold rebalancing you set asset allocation boundaries and then rebalance whenever they are breached, as opposed to automatically rebalancing your portfolio on a pre-determined date.

Picture a portfolio with a 50/50 equity/bond allocation.

  • If the rebalancing threshold is set at 5% then you would swing into action when either asset accounted for 55/45 of the mix.
  • At that point you would sell enough of the dominant asset to rebalance the portfolio back to its original 50/50 asset allocation split.

The idea of threshold rebalancing is that you’re only forced to act when there’s a significant shift in your asset allocation.

You don’t tinker with tiny percentages that make little real difference, just because the calendar tells you to do so.

This can help to control trading costs, where applicable. In a fairly steady market you may not need to rebalance for a number of years, if you can live within a generous threshold.

The less you rebalance, the less you may pay out in trading fees. You could also save on taxes (although ideally you’ll have squirreled everything away in ISAs and pensions, in which case you’re in a nicely tax-protected position already).

Choosing your threshold

The first step is to choose a threshold that suits your risk tolerance:

Low threshold High threshold
Rebalance more often Rebalance less often
Portfolio sticks closer to target Drift to higher risk/reward assets
Suffer less volatility Some increase in volatility
Lower potential returns Higher potential returns
Higher costs of rebalancing1 Lower costs of rebalancing2

N.B. Based upon the conclusions of various rebalancing studies, not a guaranteed outcome.

The obvious conclusion is that the more risk you can take, the higher you can afford to set your threshold, the greater your returns are likely to be, and the lower your costs.

Even a relatively high threshold still needs to offer a decent level of risk control. There are a number of different levels to choose from:

Common or garden thresholds
5% or 10% bands are routinely used by the financial services industry in threshold rebalancing, triggered whenever any asset’s proportion of the total portfolio rises or falls by 5/10%.

Tim Hale’s risky/defensive manoeuvre
A 10% movement between aggregate risky and defensive asset classes is the rebalancing alarm bell. In other words, you act when the total number of equity assets in your portfolio swings 10% versus cash/bond assets.

William Bernstein’s urbane subtleties
Rebalancing occurs when an asset moves 20% from its specific target. So if an asset’s target allocation was 20%, you rebalance when it strays out of a 16-24% range i.e. 20% of 20%. This is obviously a better approach than a straight 10% threshold, which is too clunky to deal with assets that occupy small niches in your portfolio.

Larry Swedroe’s 5/25 rule
An even more subtle approach. Asset classes with a target allocation of 20% or more: rebalance when it moves by 5% versus the entire portfolio. Asset classes with a target allocation below 20%: rebalance when they drift by 25% in proportion to their target allocation.

Rebalancing ranges

You can refine your strategy still further by rebalancing towards a range, rather than strictly returning to an asset’s exact target allocation.

For example, let’s assume property occupies 20% of your portfolio with a range band of 5%.

If the asset drops 6% to 14% of your portfolio, you would only need to purchase an additional 1% to bring property back into your 15% to 25% tolerance band.

The idea of bands is to limit the costs you incur when rebalancing. If you only need to buy 1% worth of an asset class, then you may only have to sell one other asset in order to rebalance, for a total of two trades. Better still, you might be able to use new money or divert dividend or interest income to the cause for a total of one trade. The method also reduces any capital gains tax liabilities you may incur.

In contrast, if you rebalance to exact targets, then it is likely that whenever one asset requires rebalancing they all will, meaning more trades and potentially cost.

Proceed with caution, however. By only moving the asset back to the extreme of its range, there’s a reasonable chance you will have to rebalance again in the near future.

It may well be advantageous to make a bigger trade to return it back to the original target allocation, thereby potentially reducing the proportion of any trading commission payable, and the overall number of trades made.

Of course, swapping money from one index fund to another may well be costless these days (as opposed to if you’ve built your portfolio out of ETFs or investment trusts, where you will certainly incur trading fees).

We rebalance the positions in our model Slow & Steady portfolio for free, for example.

So time and the faff-factor may be more of an issue for many passive investors than costs nowadays.

Also keep in mind that you may be out of the market for some time with a portion of your rebalanced funds, which is another potential (small) risk.

Hybrid rebalancing

The downside with pure threshold rebalancing is that it requires greater vigilance than calendar rebalancing. You have to check regularly that the thresholds have not been triggered.

One solution is to combine calendar and threshold rebalancing into one custom rebalancing strategy.

For example, you could decide that the portfolio will be rebalanced no more than annually but even then you will only intervene if an asset class has drifted by more than 20% in proportion to its target allocation.

Or you could decide to rebalance at least annually, but also to intervene if any asset deviates by more than 5% from its target during the year.

US index fund giant Vanguard has researched the rebalancing question and concluded:

“The relatively small differences in risk and return among the various rebalancing strategies suggests that the rebalancing strategies based on various reasonable monitoring frequencies (every year or so) and reasonable allocation thresholds (variations of 5% or so) may provide sufficient risk control relative to the target asset allocations for most portfolios with broadly diversified stock and bond holdings.”

So don’t drive yourself around the bend trying to find the ‘best’ rebalancing technique. Experiment with the options to find your own strategy that balances your personal risk tolerance against the administrative effort and potentially the costs of rebalancing.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

  1. May or may not be applicable, depending on the trading costs of your chosen funds and strategy. []
  2. May or may not be applicable, depending on the trading costs of your chosen funds and strategy. []
{ 39 comments }
Weekend reading

Good reads from around the Web.

I have often sung the virtues of cash, which – despite my love affair with shares – I consider the king of the asset classes.

For example, I have been happy to suggest new investors start with a 50/50 cash and share portfolio, rather than bothering with bonds. And I have commented many times over the years that the official historical record underplays the benefits of cash as an asset class, because it considers cash from a stodgy institutional perspective, rather than that of a rate-tarting Monevator reader.

I’ve even argued with a certain UK blogger – an online chum who has long hated the stuff, and believes it’s a zero-gain asset after inflation – that cash can sometimes clean up, especially when you’re actively seeking the best rates. (We had that friendly tiff the last time research appeared showing that actually, cash could be surprisingly competitive).

Even my co-blogger is a secret rate tart, despite his feeling that we’re best-off assembling our portfolios with the more traditional building bricks of bonds.

So I wasn’t particular surprised this week when readers started pointing me towards research from Paul Lewis, the presenter of the BBC’s Moneybox program, that showed cash had beaten shares over various periods of time.

Making a splash via the FT [search result] and also writing on his own blog, Lewis stated:

Money in best-buy cash savings accounts produced a higher return than a FTSE 100 tracker over the majority of investment periods from 1995.

Money put into “active cash” beat the total returns from the tracker in 57 per cent of the 192 five-year periods beginning each month from 1 January 1995 to the end of 2015. No account is taken of inflation, which affects money in cash or in shares equally.

For longer periods, the difference was even more marked. In investments made over the 84 14-year periods from 1995 to 2015, cash beat shares 96 per cent of the time.

Only periods of 18 years or more showed shares outperforming cash more often than not. But assuming you can find 20 minutes a year to search for the best rate and move your money over a shorter period cash really can be king.

There’s more to his piece than that, and I obviously can’t excerpt it all here – please follow the links above for more on his methodology and findings.

It’s also worth noting that even he concludes:

Cash, of course, is not for everyone in all circumstances.

Over long periods, a simple share index tracker is probably best.

However that isn’t the headline of the article, and it’s certainly not the impression people were taking away from his piece.

Why bother with shares when you can do better with good old cash? That was the more appealing message.

Dash for cash?

If cash did deliver superior returns to investing in equities over most periods then there’d be absolutely no point in bothering with the ups, downs, and uncertainties of shares.

Indeed that would be the conclusion of most of us even if cash moderately under-performed.

An easy and stress-free life in the safety of cash earning say 6% would beat the scary and potentially ill-fated pursuit of say 7% any day.

But I don’t believe that’s what Lewis’ research really suggests, even on its own terms – and moreover that its own terms miss the bigger picture.

As Merryn Somerset-Webb – writing in the FT [search result] in a good piece that was annoyingly published just after I’d finished mentally drafting this one – Lewis’ comparison is a stretch:

Mr Lewis’s research makes an important behavioural assumption: that investors are too supine to move from the HSBC FTSE 100 tracker he uses for the comparison for the entire 21 years in question, but that savers have the energy to move to the best-buy account on the market every single year.

That makes his comparison a little bit apples and oranges: a lazy and utterly uninquisitive equity investor takes on a fantastically energetic and research-oriented cash depositor.

The FTSE 100 has been a dud of a market for decades. In the past I’ve considered it a good starter to get people comfortable with equity investing (although these days I am pointing friends who ask towards Vanguard’s LifeStrategy funds and other global trackers) but nobody should have it as their entire portfolio for Lewis’ 21-year period.

A better comparison would be with an investor with a properly diversified and regularly re-balanced portfolio that had money invested in other risk assets such as the US, Europe, Japan and the emerging markets, and property, bonds, and gold – as opposed to just one relatively odd index that has been through two deep bear markets during the period and has recently suffered from its skewed weightings towards commodities and banks.

Of course you might argue that during other times the FTSE 100 might benefit from its exposure to those sectors, but that brings me to my second big beef.

Lewis writes on his blog that:

“For a cautious person investing for periods of up to 20 years this research indicates that well managed active cash beat a FTSE100 tracker more often than not.”

But that is not what his research shows, in my opinion.

What he has pointed out – and as I said at the top, I think it’s worth pointing out – is that over a specific 20-year period from 1995 to 2015, cash has done well against the UK’s main market, and that you don’t hear much about that from the fund management industry.

But this is just one 20-year period out of, well, at least a hundred you could reasonably compare it to.

Lewis does analyze smaller multi-year periods in his research, but they are all from within that same two-decade block.

And why start in 1995 anyway? Why 20 years? Why not 23 years, or 17?

I wouldn’t be too hard on this – all looking backwards must by necessity have constraints – but equally I wouldn’t make too bold assumptions based on what I found.

It would in my view be foolish to turn your back on shares and their demonstrably superior returns over the past 100-odd years based on just this last 20-year period – not least when that period was marked out by banking craziness that put growth ahead of profits, and thus might lead you to suspect that the Best Buy booty we saw in the past might not lie in our future.

Lowly yielding world

On that last point, I’m not quite as bothered as some of Lewis’ critics by today’s low interest rates versus those he studied.

As I say, I think it’s quite possible that because of the beanfest that was consumer banking before the crisis, Best Buy rates were too generous back then and won’t be so in the future.

But when it comes to the wider low-yield world we seem to live in, there are two contrasting interpretations as to what it means for shares.

The optimistic view for equity investors – and the one I’ve tended to lean to – is that low rates on cash and bonds are mainly reflective of severe risk aversion among investors, and also of the artificial, remedial action (low rates and QE) taken by Central Banks to avoid the banking system going bust.

Through this lens shares might be a bargain, because it could mean they are not relatively cheap compared to cash and bonds for any good reason except that people are scared of them.

However the other interpretation – which is surely at least half-right – is that low yields are reflective of a wounded, over-indebted global economy that will take many more years to get over the after-affects of the credit crunch.

If that’s true then shares only offer the seeming potential for higher returns (via higher dividend yields, say) because they are more risky. Their apparent cheapness could be because they are pricing in the possibility that those dividends will be cut in the face of more economic shocks.

We could debate this all weekend. The point is that you can’t really say “cash only pays 1.5% these days but shares have delivered 10% over the long-term” without at least considering that your projected 10% figure might be far too high too in today’s low-yield world.

So Lewis gets a pass from me on that complaint.

Digging into the data

A last and more niggly point is that in explaining his workings, Lewis highlights a laundry list of caveats.

Each one he says doesn’t really change the results – but what if they were all added up together?

For instance, he ignores tax despite using Best Buy interest rates that were available only on taxable accounts (as opposed to ISAs). He ignores the time lag affect of moving your money every year. I also wonder about the veracity of data systemically taken from the January issue of magazine that would have been physically written and printed in the prior month?

Again, I don’t want to come across as too harsh on his piece.

On the contrary I applaud Lewis for doing the research – I haven’t got the resources to do any better job here – and I think his main points about the benefits of seeking the best interest rate on cash, the non-trivial risk of losing money in shares, and that the vested interests of the finance industry will usually encourage you into products that make it money are all worthwhile.

However I wouldn’t start pretending you can enjoy equity-like returns from the comfort of cash indefinitely. As he himself says, cash should not be the main driver of any truly long-term strategy.

  • If you want to read more, don’t forget Merryn Somerset-Webb’s article I linked to above.
  • Lewis’ research was also picked up by ThisIsMoney, which among other things features a Hargreaves Lansdown analyst rather predictably comparing cash to a top-performing active fund, as well as more reasonably highlighting what he claims is the slight edge of the average UK fund over the FTSE during the period. (Perhaps true, but many UK active funds have enjoyed a big boost in recent years by being very underweight the commodity sector. Will this last? Also beware of survivorship bias, where dud funds that were shut down may have been stripped from the data).

[continue reading…]

{ 45 comments }