"Disciplined Systematic Global Macro Views" focuses on current economic and finance issues, changes in market structure and the hedge fund industry as well as how to be a better decision-maker in the global macro investment space.
Sunday, September 29, 2024
Discretionary versus quant - Tied to the growth value choice
Thursday, September 26, 2024
China stimulus - Is this pushing on a string?
China (PBoC) cut its benchmark interest rate and reduced reserve requirements for bank to support the targeted growth rate of 5 percent. The 7-day Repo rate was moved from 1.7 to 1.5% with reserve requirements dropped .5% and a signal that there would be further cuts later this year. This adds about 1trillion in RMB liquidity. It was also announced that 500 billion RMB will be used to help brokers, insurance companies and funds to buy stocks and the PBoC will use 300 billion RMB to help firms conduct stock buybacks. The PBoC lowered mortgage downpayment for second homes from 25 to 15% and it would improve terms for its 300 billion RMB programs to help local government-owned enterprises to buy unsold inventory from property developers.
This is a robust stimulus program which has provided a strong market bounce. Equities are up nearly 10% for the week. This is the best since 2008, but there are structural problems that still have not been addressed. Consumer confidence and a change in the direction of policy to consumer spending from exports and investment has not occurred. Allowing for private companies to better compete is not really on the table.
There is not a good economic story for China at this time. Leverage is too high. Debt is too high. The real estate problem still exists with property prices still falling. Growth is slow, and there is not a good business environment. Investors have been pulling money out of the country.Whatever happened to the average inflation rate policy?
If you go back to August 2020, you may remember that the Fed announced a new policy of "average inflation targeting". If inflation was below the 2% target, the Fed would allow prices to move above the target, so that the average would 2%.
It "seeks to achieve inflation that averages 2 percent over time ...following periods when inflation has been running persistently below 2 percent, appropriate monetary policy will likely aim to achieve inflation moderately above 2 percent for some time."
How did that workout?
If we stay with higher inflation above 2%, that is there is an inflation floor of 2%, purchasing power will be lost forever. At best you might get wage increases to match inflation. Better wages will need to see higher productivity.
Yes, to gain purchasing power you will need deflation and that is unlikely to happen. Inflation has been well above trend and no one especially the Fed has any plan or desire to change that situation.
The Fed will always push for higher inflation if inflation is below 2% and will always back-off the inflation target as it approaches 2% from above.
Monday, September 23, 2024
If there is a crash, worry about the clearing system
"Never bet on the end of the world, because it only happens once, and even if it does, who are you going to settle the trade with?" - Art Cashin
The quality of the clearing system matters greatly, and we do not have to wait until the end of the world. There has been significant work in improving the clearing system of stocks and bonds and with the clearing of swaps.
There are several added proposals that are being considered that should add to clearing safety. The goal for most of these rules is for more centralized clearing and more transparency, but there is also a need to have flexibility and allow for alternative approaches to risk management and clearing otherwise the system is sensitive to the single set of rules that control the system. A one size fits all approach means that the rules must be right. There is no alternative and no room for error. If that is the case, we should be more conservative with any rule changes.
Nevertheless, if you think the financial markets are headed for a crash, you should assume the system and institutions will crash, so trades have to be made to ensure you get your cash early. It also means that waiting until the bottom will never work.
Larry Bird and prospect theory
I hate to lose more than I like to win. - Larry Bird
This single statement tells us almost all you need to know about prospect theory. If it applies to Larry Bird during his playing time, it applies to most investors. We have marginal falling value from gains and marginally increasing aversion to losses; however, the key is knowing that there is an inflection point or what can be called the adaptation point which is usually at the price that the asset is bought. The starting point matters. Our willingness to hold losers and sell winners is based on the starting price.
Sunday, September 22, 2024
What you can and cannot control in finance
You cannot control:
Markets - what markets will do
Outcomes - the outcomes from your actions
Returns - The returns you will receive
You can control:
Your behavior relative to the markets
The process you use for making decisions
The amount of diversification you want
One of the most important investment lessons for either a discretionary or quant investor is knowing what you can control and what is out of your control. You may form expectations and forecasts that you may think you control, but the end result is still out of your control. The focus has to always be on the process. If you have a better process, you will have better outcomes.
Risk rules that are laws
Risk is never destroyed, only transferred.
Risk is never eliminated, only transformed.
Your risk reduction is someone else's increase.
There is good risk and bad risk and the rules above apply to both.
How can you describe the principles of risk management in as few a words as possible? These four sentences provide the basics for thinking about risk in total for the economy, but do not apply to the individual investor who can do something to change their risk profile. Risk can be reduced, yet it will always come at a cost.
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Sharpe versus Sortino - It does not seem to make a difference
In a very simple paper "Sharpe & Sortino - Does it Matter", Linus Nilsson present his findings on comparing the Sharpe and Sortino ratios. The correlation between the two risk measurement approaches is very high regardless of the strategy set used. You may think there is added value with using more complex risk measurements, but you will still get the same answer. This does not mean that you should throw-out other measures, rather the conclusion is that you will not get any more information from these alternatives. This similar risk comparison is even the case when there is positive skew with a strategy. The sample must be large to make a distinction.
How should you rank hedge funds
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
Algo anxiety and aversion - Investors do fully trust AI
The FT recently posted an article on algo anxiety based on a paper titled, "Man vs Machine: The influence of AI forecast on investor beliefs". This is a topic that has been associated with technological change in finance for years. We have discussed this issue in the past as the problem of algorithm anxiety. Humans wants to embrace models, but they often don't trust models.
The authors look at incentive experiments with over 3500 participants to determine whether investors are more likely to change their beliefs in response to a forecast generated by AI. The researchers find that investors are less responsive when an analyst incorporates AI to help generate forecasts. For all the talk about the AI revolution, there is still the issue that many do not trust the AI forecast, or at least there is a degree of caution or anxiety associated with these forecasts.
It was found that those who are more AI-literate will be more responsive, and women are more open to AI generated forecasts. New technology is feared less when it is better understood. New ways of generating forecasts may be effective but there is learning curve before it is accepted.
We have discussed this issue in the past. Here are a few references:
We forgive humans but not machines - Bias against algos
"Algorithm aversion" and managed futures
Algorithm aversion or just a desire for low cost optionality?
Monday, September 16, 2024
Should you invest in the SG CTA index?
The SG CTA index has reached its 25th birthday and as a celebration, the people at Transtend offered their ode to the index called "Just Buy the Index". However, their paper does not offer the celebration that the index creators would like. There is no question that the SG CTA and Trend indices have become somewhat of a benchmark for the industry. It is popular, yet there are significant issues once you start to dig into the construction of the index.
The SG CTA index is supposed to be investable through being an equal-weighted index of the largest 20 CTA funds that are open for investments. Hence, you can, in theory, replicate the index. Nevertheless, the components of the index will change every year with fund joining and being dropped from the index. The composition of the index today is not the same as the composition five or ten years ago. Since the index is for CTAs, it is not a trend-following index although many of the funds in the index are trend-followers. The index behavior will change with the composition of the managers and the changes in the strategies of the managers. It is hard to compare the behavior of the index today with performance ten years ago other than to say that both represent the behavior of the largest investable CTAs at a given point in time.
There is an argument that the index is not that different than a portfolio of stocks. These companies change their behavior through time like managers. The stock composition of the index will change like the CTA index. Hence, there is nothing special with investing in a manager benchmark.
Transtrend shows that if you invest with just the largest CTA listed in the index you will have a higher return and lower risk. You can beat the index by holding a subset of the index. Unfortunately, the work does not focus on what would happen if you randomly invested in a few of the index components. Is there a benefit with holding the index? That question was which was he title of the paper was not addressed.
Volatility laundering and private equity - A big potential problem
Cliff Asness describes this private equity volatility issue as "laundered volatility", generating lower volatility than the true investment will lead to excessive allocation or a strong demand by investors who want to have a lower overall portfolio volatility. Investors love return-smoothing and really don't want to know how managers got it.
If volatility applied to private equity is too low, then for a given expected returns versus other assets, an optimizer will generate significantly higher allocations than what would be expected from an unlaundered volatility. The volatility should be roughed-up or at least made more realistic.
The argument is that since these are long-term investments, there does not need to be daily pricing, yet there are other investments that are long-term and are public with daily pricing. Should we smooth the prices of any long-term investment? These pricing issues have major ramifications for portfolio construction and asset allocation. We should get this right.
For more on this issue see: "Demystifying Illiquid Assets:
Sunday, September 15, 2024
Buy high volatility for capital efficiency
Cliff Asness in his work "In Praise of High-Volatility Alternatives" argues that holding a higher volatility may be better for a portfolio. The normal view is that higher volatility will be a drag on compounded returns. Hence, many managers attempt to keep volatility low in their strategies. However, there can be better capital efficiency if you can lower the dollar exposure and take on the higher risk. This is subtle argument based on a number of assumptions, but it can make sense. If there is a volatility associated with a dollar investment, you can lower your dollar exposure through cutting the dollars committed to the strategy.
This really work well with a strategy like managed futures. If you think the volatility is too high at a 5% exposure, then cut the exposure. As usual, you must look at the correlation and diversification benefit from a strategy. A low correlated alternative can have a higher volatility and provide strong benefit at a lower allocation. This is not an especially innovative paper, but it goes back to basics and provides some insights on portfolio structure. Volatility is not always bad.
The less-efficient markets hypothesis
In a provocative paper, Cliff Asness argues that equity markets may have grown less efficient than 40-50 years ago. The one measure of market inefficiency is the presence of bubbles. They should not occur, yet they do although the term is often overused. HIs arguments are based on the observations that stocks have become more disconnected from reality based on the value spread. The value spread between expensive and cheap stocks has increased and reach extreme not much different from the dot-come bubble.
His argument for markets being less efficient is based on three hypotheses or was to measure relative efficiency.One, indexing has ruined the markets. This is possible because if everyone is just investing in the market portfolio, who will make the markets efficient. Asness argues that more work has to be done on this topic.
Two, very low interest rates for a long time. Low interest rates distort valuation, yet financial history does not seem to match well with this story. The tech bubble was not associated with low rates; however, financing was cheap. Still, low or negative interest rates will distort investment decisions.
Three, the effect of technology is backwards. The impact of technology which causes crowds not to be independent but provide a mechanism for positive feedback loops makes for situations where markets are less efficient.
Although markets may be less efficient, there are still opportunities for profit from good rational investing. Markets may deviate from some idea of fair value for longer time periods, but that does not mean they will be misplayed forever. Volatile may be higher especially volatility that is associated with forecast errors. The horizons may be longer for good investing, or the type of strategies employed may be different.
Friday, September 13, 2024
Over-precision and forecast errors - don't follow the professionals
Belief overreaction and stock market behavior
Markets forms beliefs as embedded in the long-term earnings of stocks, yet the markets will often overreact to those beliefs which drives stocks higher only to see them fall or under-perform in the future. Investors love good news, and they believe that this good news will continue. The extrapolation of long-term earnings will lead to stock prices to being pushed higher only to fall when the market finds that their optimism is not rewarded. This seems to be a very reasonable story that can be applied to all markets as presented in the simple paper, "Belief Overreaction and Stock Market Puzzles".
This paper solves the stock market puzzle that there is excessive return predictability for both time series and with cross-sectional equity prices. Errors in expectations from relaxing the assumption of rational expectations leads a solution the stock market puzzle without generating complex models.
What this tells us is that if investors make mistakes, we can get variations in valuation that can be exploited. These can be exploited by the trends in prices. If expectational mistakes trend, then prices will trend. Instead of trying to focus where those expectations make mistakes it may be easier just to follow prices especially during periods of exuberance.
Tuesday, September 10, 2024
The Kahneman legacy - The impressive thinking outside the box
The work of Danny Kahneman is truly impressive. He was not just a prolific writer who put psychology back into economics, but the breadth of his work is astounding. Here is just a list of some of his major accomplishments.
Hat tip to Charles-Henry Monchau of Syz private bank for compiling the list:
1. System 1 and system 2 thinking - (fast versus slow / subconscious conscious, error-prone versus reliable). This is the basis for his most important book.
2. Investor irrationality - There were many others working in this area but his focus on decision bias change the direction on thinking that we always act rationally.
3. Prospect theory - This was, by far, his most important theoretical achievement.
4. The Halo effect - If we see the good in one part of a company, we will think it applies more broadly.
5. Availability heuristic - We will focus on information that vivid or readily available.
6. The fallacy of sunk costs - This is well know, but the psychological research tell us we cannot avoid it.
7. The confirmation bias - we always look for information that will justify or actions or decisions.
8. The hindsight bias - Of course, I know that there were behavioral biases, and the efficient markets hypothesis was wrong.
9. The framing bias - This bias leads to the major idea that we can nudge individuals to make better or at least different decisions.
10. The anchoring effect - We don't want to give up what we already hold.
Active or passive investing? Think about strategy investing as another alternative
“You either have the passive strategy that wins the majority of the time, or you have this very active strategy that beats the market... For almost all institutions and individuals, the simple approach is best.”
- David Swenson, former CIO of the Yale Endowment and the architect of the Yale Endowment Model
Swenson comment is a cautionary statement. If you can find the active manager that has skill then use him and beat the market, but those managers are few, so the better downside protection is to just focus on the passive investment. For most the passive approach is better than chasing the elusive skill-based manager.
Yet, if we are headed to a market slowdown or downturn, it may be worth looking at a subset of managers that may have timing skill at avoiding the downturn. Unfortunately, the sample size is very small for those managers. We just have not had that many bear markets. A middle ground approach is to add a strategy that does well in down markets. You are not directly investing in skill but playing the odds that the market will have characteristics that can be exploited by strategy action. For example, trend-following that is diversified across asset classes, investing both long and short, and follows trends that may be more likely to occur when there is uncertainty will likely do better in a period of downside transition. If you cannot invest effectively in the man, invest in the strategy.
Forecasting and Shakespeare
If you can look into the seeds of time
And say which grains will grow and which will not,
Speak then to me
Macbeth (I, iii)
Of course, this is a conversation with witches, but the basic premise holds true. If you can look at a handful of seeds and say which ones will grow, then let's have a conversation otherwise, it is a waste of time. For investors, if someone has the skill to forecast correctly expected returns, then it may be worth conducting active management, but if there is no skill then focus on passive allocations.
Sunday, September 8, 2024
China is the key headwind against global growth
The China economy is a global driver for growth for the simple reason it is a big economy and has a large trade footprint, but the current state of the Chinese economy is negative and not getting better, so China is likely it will be a drag on global growth for the rest of the year and well into 2025.
Consumer confidence is low and not improving. The animal spirits of optimism do not exist.
The real estate market continues to grind lower which impacts wealth and consumer spending. You can have strong consumer confidence it the largest investment of consumer is falling in price.
The PMI numbers are weak and clearly show a recessionary. environment for the real economy. Businesses are not making money.
The stock market pushes lower and is not providing a positive signal for the economy.
Finally monetary policy is pushing rates slower, yet government policies are tilted to stagnation as economic data are suppressed and there is little innovation in policy.
This weakness will show in commodity prices and in global trade. It is a growth headwind.
Zillow versus Case-Shiller housing index - Liking Zillow data
Friday, September 6, 2024
Who is going to solve the debt problem - the bond vigilantes?
The US government deficits are not going away regardless of who is elected president. If there is an economic slowdown, the deficits will increase at the very least because of automatic stabilizers. If there is normal growth but plans for either higher spending or tax cuts are passed, the deficit will increase.
There is no plan to solve this imbalance problem, and no one really wants to talk about it. The only solution is that the markets will have to send a signal that it has enough Treasuries, yet that signal is unlikely to be sent, nor will it be heard.
We would like to believe that bond vigilantes will impose market discipline, yet the activities of central banks make it harder for large private buyers to impose their will on the bond market. The Fed can change its QT sales. The Treasury can continue to fund short-term. If the rest of the world is in slowdown and the dollar is stable, money will move into Treasuries. The wake-up call may be coming, but the process of how it will happen is still unclear.
It is not the inversion - it is the switch back to normal that signals a recession
Wednesday, September 4, 2024
There is no bear market memory and that is a problem
Gold behavior - Not what you may expect
Gold has always been known as an inflation hedge. It has also been known as a good investment when the real rate of interest is negative. Now we are seeing inflation lower with current levels at approximately 2.5% and real rates are positive even if the Fed starts to lower nominal rates. Under this world, we are seeing gold reach new highs of $2500 per ounce. This is not what one would expect.
A higher gold price only makes sense if the market believes that inflation is not tamed, the dollar will move lower, and there will be significant financial risk. The gold market is an expectational market and the view from gold buyers is that the future will not be as good as what we currently see.
Sector galaxies based on risk aversion and business cycle sensitivity
Tuesday, September 3, 2024
Narratives and momentum - another source of trends
We read stories in the newspapers. Most investors are new junkies. They are constantly reading the news and looking for new information to support their thinking or developing new ideas. I am not saying this is a good idea. It is just a fact. Even if someone uses a model, there is still the desire for news validation. An understudied area of research is narrative economics which was developed by Shiller. Markets are often driven by stories or narratives which can lead to excesses.
An interesting study has focused on narrative momentum or the fact that investors often under-react to news narrative based on the intensity of news reports. Simply put, investors do not respond quickly to rising narrative intensity. You can gain an edge by buying stocks that have an increase in news intensity. See Narrative Momentum. This would be a failure of the efficient market hypothesis, but it makes sense.
There is an increase in the interest of stock based on narrative intensity. If there is good buzz about a stock will start to rise, but there is a time lag between the increase in the narrative and the reaction in price. It takes time for the narrative to move through the investment community and create enough reaction to drive the price higher. Investors need validation. They take time to react.
If this is the case, there trend-follower who does not follow the news but only prices may have an edge. When the trend-follower see prices increase, he will be a buyer and not look for supporting news. The trend could be driven by a special narrative, but that does not matter. Only the movement in prices matter. These trends exists because the there is a slow reaction to news, but you do not need to follow the news to make the trade.
Monday, September 2, 2024
End of summer and investors are satisfied
It was a good summer, now we must prepare for fall and winter.
Some basic rules for financial regulation
- The government should recognize that bubbles can happen. It is rare, but the cost of a bubble is high and should be addressed prior to the peak.
- The government should not subsidize or penalize some activities over others. Picking winners and losers should not be the role of the government even if other country may have a different view.
- The government should not promise to eliminate the downside. Capitalism is about winning and losing.
- The government should encourage disciplining mechanisms like short-selling (and conversely, it shouldn’t ban or penalize them). Markets need short-seller to keep the markets honest.
- The government should encourage, not tax, liquidity provision. Liquidity is critical for the pricing of markets and regulation to reduce it will have strong negative effects.
- The government should punish true fraud harshly. Fraud creates a lack of trust. Trust is critical for market success.
- The government should have consistent laws consistently applied (for example, when it comes to bankruptcy). Consistency is critical if long-term investment decisions are to be made.
- The government and self-regulatory bodies should encourage consistent and reasonable accounting. Accounting is the lifeblood of market information.
- The government should encourage that financial institutions mark more things to market. Book value accounting masks mistakes.
Market efficiency and two schools of thought
Tests of market efficiency are two tests. One, a test of efficiency, and two, a test of the model used. This is leads to the great divide in finance. There is one school, the behavioralist view, which states that a failure of a model is based on irrationality. There are mistakes caused by a deviation from rationality, behavioral biases. The other school states that markets are rational, rather it is the model that is the problem. If we have a model failure it is because we have not modeled risk properly. Any anomaly is based on our inability to correctly measure risk. Hence, there are two camps or schools of thought, the risk pricing camp and the behavioral camp.
Many of the factors that are studied in finance cane be structured around these two camps. The value factor can be thought of as price for value risk or it can be thought of as a behavioral issue. The same can be said for something like the momentum factor. The challenge for the efficient markets hypothesis is whether there is a good risk story for market anomalies or whether it is necessary to fall back on a behavioral story.
Can markets be irrational or inefficient? Yes, it is possible, but it is rarer than often thought and the first view should be that markets are rational but prices are not modeled correctly. Anomalies exist relative to our core theory and modeling. Markets are reasonably efficient, but this is not the same as perfect efficient. Market usually use all information, but the pricing of this information may not be properly models which offers opportunities for investors. Efficiency is a theory which must be tested constantly. The theory is based on the assumption that markets are competitive, and it is hard to make money in a competitive marketplace.