Step 11 - Risk Exposure


Risk Exposure



11.1

Introduction

Now that you understand risk capacity, the next step is to match the results of the risk capacity survey with a specific risk exposure. By doing this, investors position themselves to achieve personalized optimal returns. Not all investors have the capacity to expose their investments to high levels of risk; therefore, a continuum of risk exposures is needed to meet the unique risk capacities of each investor. This concept extends to larger institutional investments, such as fire and police pension plans, church funds, college endowments, and any other funds governed by committees.

Numerous studies including those by Gary Brinson, Ron Surz, and Roger Ibbotson have determined there is essentially only one decision that investors need to make: Which mix of indexes is best for them.

IFA now offers 100 Index Portfolios, but for ease of display there are 20 premixed portfolios of indexes presented in this step. These portfolios have a specific percentage allocation of asset classes that match 20 specific Risk Capacities. Figure 11-1 shows the asset class allocations of the 20 IFA Index Portfolios, labeled 5 through 100 in five-point increments. Each one is coupled with a specific risk capacity. Investors can be matched to one of these based on the results of Step 10’s Risk Capacity Survey.

Once investors determine their best mix, they or their investment advisor can determine which available index funds will best represent the chosen mix of indexes.

Figure 11-1

The mix of indexes in your portfolio, or your asset allocation, accounts for a little more than 100% of your total return on average. The "little more than" refers to the negative returns of active management. Active returns are near zero, but negative on average. (see article)* This is also referred to as your Investment Policy. As Charles Ellis points out in his 1985 classic, Investment Policy, it is the most important choice an investor can make. In this Step, we will review various mixtures of risk exposures and show the long- term historical returns of those portfolios. Now that you have established a Risk Capacity™, you need to evaluate risk before actually taking it. This will complete the matching of Risk Capacity™ (people) and risk exposure (portfolios).

Numerous studies, including one by the worldwide accounting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers , conclude that index funds will best achieve an investor's goals, making them a perfect way to implement your Risk Exposure. This concept is even incorporated into legal guidelines, under the Prudent Investor Rule.

 

Prudent Investor Rule


In 1992 The American Law Institute published Restatement of the Law, Trust, Prudent Investor Rule. This is meant as a guideline for the prudent management of trust assets.

In 1995, the National Conference of Commissioners on the Uniform State Laws adopted the Uniform Prudent Investor Act as a guideline for states to create their individual laws. It has been made into law in many states. In California it became law in 1996 under the title of the Uniform Prudent Investor Act. This rule points out the value of Modern Portfolio Theory. It essentially tells trustees that index funds are the prudent way to invest trust assets. The rule acts as a legal road map for estate planning attorneys, trustees of all types of trusts, and investment advisors.

The Reporter's Notes to the Prudent Investor Rule point out the problems with active management.

"Economic evidence shows that from a typical investment perspective, the major capital markets of this country are highly efficient, in the sense that available information is rapidly digested and reflected in the market prices of securities. As a result, fiduciaries and other investors are confronted with potent evidence that the application of expertise, investigation, and diligence in efforts to 'beat the market' in these publicly traded securities ordinarily promises little or no payoff, or even a negative payoff after taking account of research and transaction costs. Empirical research supporting the theory of efficient markets reveals that in such markets skilled professionals have rarely been able to identify under-priced securities (that is, to out guess the market with respect to future return) with any regularity. In fact, evidence shows that there is little correlation between fund managers' earlier successes and their ability to produce above-market returns in subsequent periods."

Principles of Prudence

  • Sound diversification is fundamental to risk management and is therefore ordinarily required of trustees.

  • Risk and return are so directly related that trustees have a duty to analyze and make conscious decisions concerning the levels of risk appropriate to the purposes, distribution requirements, and other circumstances of the trusts they administer.

  • Trustees have a duty to avoid fees, transaction costs and other expenses that are not justified by the needs and realistic objectives of the trust's investment program.

  • The fiduciary duty of impartiality requires a balancing of the elements of return between production of current income and the protection of purchasing power.

  • Trustees may have a duty and the authority to delegate as prudent investors would.


Quotes


Eugene Fama, Jr. "Investment planning is about structuring exposure to risk factors."
Eugene Fama, Jr., The Error Term, Dec, 2001
Charles Ellis "Investment Policy [asset allocation] is the foundation upon which portfolios should be constructed and managed."
Charles D. Ellis, author of Investment Policy, 1985
Miguel de Cervantes "Tis the part of a wise man to keep himself today for tomorrow, and not venture all his eggs in one basket."
Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616), Author of Don Quixote
Evel Knievel "Risk is good. Not properly managing your risk is a dangerous leap."
Evel Knievel, Motorcyclist
Eugene Fama "History shows that in the long run a thoughtfully designed, diversified strategy of "passive" funds typically beats all but a few active managers. It's not easy to structure and maintain such a strategy. It requires some initial research and discipline to stay the course. But it�s much easier than predicting which active managers will randomly beat this approach."
Eugene Fama, DFA
Roger Ibbotson "We can extrapolate from the study that for the long-term individual investor who maintains a consistent asset allocation and leans toward index funds, asset allocation determines about 100% of performance."
Roger Ibbotson, Ibbotson Associates, The True Impact of Asset Allocation on Returns
William Bernstein "The essence of effective portfolio construction is the use of a large number of poorly correlated assets."
William Bernstein, The Intelligent Asset Allocator
Warren Weaver "There is safety in numbers."
Euripides; Lady Luck by Warren Weaver, The Theory of Probability
Farouki Majeed "The $4.8 billion Orange County Employees' Retirement System, Santa Ana, Calif., more than doubled its total indexed assets to $1.2 billion during the 12 months ended Sept. 30, 2001 from $593 million the year before. We think that (indexed) exposure was a reasonable portfolio for the return characteristics and compared favorably with active (management)."
Farouki Majeed, chief investment officer, ASSETS UP 30%: Where the action is: Funds embrace enhanced indexing, by Fred Williams, www.pionline.com, Jan, 2002
Roger Ibbotson "On average, 90 percent of the variability of returns and 100 percent of the absolute level of return is explained by asset allocation."
Roger G. Ibbotson and Paul D. Kaplan, "Does Asset Allocation Policy Explain 40%, 90% or 100% of Performance?," December, 1998, revised April 1999
Eugene Fama Jr., DFA "Ninety-seven percent of performance variation is due to asset class structure" -- Study by of 31 institutional pension funds during a range of six- to 12-year periods.
Eugene F. Fama Jr., Dimensional Fund Advisors' Conference, University of Chicago Graduate School of Business, 1997
Dave Astor "Don't invest all your money in just one or two stocks. That's the danger. I know a man who put all his money in just two stocks --a paper towel company and a revolving door company. He was wiped out before he could turn around."
Dave Astor, 2001
Gary P. Brinson "Approximately 94 percent of variability of a fund's investment return is due to asset allocation" -- Study of 91 large pension funds over a 10-year period.
Gary P. Brinson, L. Randolph Hood and Gilbert L. Beebower, Determinants of Portfolio Performance," Financial Analysts Journal, July-August 1986, Follow-up study, "Revisiting Determinants of Portfolio Performance: An Update," 1990 Working Paper, 1986, 1990
Rene Descartes "It is a truth very certain that when it is not in our power to determine what is true we ought to follow what is most probable."
Rene Descartes, Discourse on Method, Lady Luck, the theory of probability by Warren Weaver
*According to Ibbotson Associates to top


11.2

Definitions


11.2.1

Modern Portfolio Theory

One day in the early 1950s, a Ph.D. candidate in economics sat in the library at the University of Chicago. The young man, Harry Markowitz, was studying leading investment guides used by professional money managers. The guides seemed to recommend that an investor should invest in stocks with the highest expected return and ignore all the rest. After awhile, it suddenly occurred to Markowitz that investors should consider risk as well as return.

It was a simple conclusion; however, it spawned one of the most important investment ideas of the 20th Century, and has generated a whole body of scholarly work known as "Modern Portfolio Theory." Thirty-eight years later it earned Markowitz a Nobel Prize in Economics. The fact that trillions of dollars around the globe are now invested and managed according to the principle





proposed by Markowitz is testament to its central importance in the investment process. This revolutionary insight has not only transformed the investment world of corporate and government pension plans, insurance companies, banks and other large institutional investors, it has also changed the way individual investors invest.

Markowitz knew that no one had really tried to systematically understand the importance of risk in the investment process. Up to that time, investors had focused on an investment's return, but if they believed it contained some arbitrary, undefined notion of risk, then the investment wasn't included in the portfolio. Markowitz understood quite clearly that risk and return are related. After all, investors like return and want to increase it, and they dislike risk and want to reduce it. On that day in the library, Markowitz set out to show investors how they could improve their investment performance by optimizing trade-offs between risk and return.
Because it seems so obvious, it's hard to appreciate how truly profound Markowitz's idea was. Of course both risk and return should be considered. In spite of the evident nature of this idea, the investment media continues to spread the "good news" of returns, while downplaying the "bad news" of risk.

11.2.2

Diversification

Diversification in investing refers to the process of spreading out risk. Let's look at a single stock in an index versus the entire index as seen in Figure 11-3. Because of the random nature of risk, no one knows what is going to happen in the short term to a subset of stocks in the index.

Members of the Dimensional Fund Advisors team explain the benefits of diversification.

Figure 11-3

A subset of the index would actually be another index altogether with different risk and return characteristics. At an extreme, one stand alone stock represents its own index, but it has a very high risk and offers no additional expected return over the asset class to which it belongs.

Look at one small value stock in Figure 11-3. It has a risk of about 75% and an expected return that's the same as the small value index. However, the index only has a risk of 30%. So, why buy just one stock? Or better yet, why buy any stocks with an expected risk higher than the index? There is no logical answer, other than to speculate on the random outcomes of a higher risk investment. What is the expected return of speculation? Answer: Zero minus your costs.

When investors concentrate their investments, they are increasing their risk with no added benefit of higher expected return. In other words, investors are not rewarded for taking the higher risk of concentrating their investments such as selecting just a handful of stocks for their portfolio. The result is that over a period of 20 years or so the risk or volatility of an individual stock is about 2.5 times that of a market index with no expected extra payoff.

The most prudent approach to minimize risk and maximize the probability of achieving a market rate of return is to hold the entire index. The optimal approach is to find an index with desirable risk and return characteristics and then adhere to the index rules of ownership, which is the job of the index mutual fund manager. This way the specific risk of each stock in the index is diversified down to near zero. This leaves investors with the systematic risk of the market the index is designed to track. Anything less than this optimal approach will cause the portfolio's risk to exceed the risk of the index as a whole.

Harry MarkowitzWhen Harry Markowitz wrote his Nobel Prize-winning paper in 1952 titled "Portfolio Selection," he laid out the mathematics of diversification and the foundation of the design of risk exposure. He set out to apply his engineering background to investing, so, his thesis could be referred to as "portfolio engineering." In his paper he indicated that it's best to engineer a portfolio to include stocks that do not act like each other or move together.

For example, stock A and stock B move in opposite directions. When stock A goes up, stock B goes down and vice versa. This is called a low correlation of the two investments. If each stock yields returns with the exact same average, investors actually earn a diversification benefit of lower volatility and higher returns if they hold these stocks in the same portfolio. This is a good thing! As Markowitz stated in 1952, investors should consider expected returns desirable and variance of returns undesirable.

Unfortunately, many investors still do not get this important point. One diversification detractor is the book, The Battle for Investment Survival, written by Gerald Loeb in 1935. Loeb expressed a conventional investing idea that became popular in the 1950s. He claimed that an investor who diversifies is basically admitting a lack of knowledge and trying only to strike an average. Loeb recommended that one, two or at most three or four securities should be bought. He said that competent investors will never be satisfied beating the averages by a few small percentage points. Broad diversification was considered undesirable, and he suggested that investors analyze securities one by one, focus on picking winners, and concentrate holdings to maximize returns.

Fortunately, there is now ample evidence to counter and debunk Loeb's theories. This 12-Step Program was created to educate those investors who still insist on practicing futile investment strategies, such as non-diversification of portfolios.

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11.2.3

Global Diversification and Regional Bias

Global diversification is a good idea because the international market is increasingly important in the world economy. The United States used to be a much larger percentage of the world market. It declined from 68% of the global equity value to 46% in 2004, as seen in Figure 11-4.

Figure 11-4

 

As of 2009, the US and Canada has declined to about 46% of the world total market value. There are additional risk factors in international markets that can both smooth out your volatility and increase your expected returns. To be effective, a portfolio cannot afford to exclude international investments.

Regional bias, also known as home bias, is the tendency for investors to hold a higher percentage of their portfolio in their home country than would be suggested by the weighting of their country relative to the rest of the world.

For example, as of 4/30/2010, the United States alone made up 43% of the total global market capitalization or $12.6 Trillion of the $29.3 Trillion global market. An American investor who has a higher percentage than this in U.S. equities is exhibiting regional bias. Even when it comes to international investing, regional bias is also present, as shown in "Home Bias in Foreign Investment Decisions" (Ke, Ng, and Wang, 2006). Specifically, American investors are more likely to overweigh foreign companies that have a strong American presence (e.g., Sony, Toyota, BP).

 

 

 

 

The extent of regional bias around the world is pervasive and surprisingly high, as illustrated by data from a 1997 IMF survey of cross-border equity holdings.

Country
% of Global Market Cap
Actual % Held by Local Investors
Australia
1.46%
77.96%
Canada
2.72%
70.39%
France
0.42%
79.75%
Japan
13.33%
89.38%
United Kingdom
11.43%
69.37%
USA
55.20%
85.45%

Although in theory it would be the most efficient approach in accordance with the Capital Asset Pricing Model, it is not IFA's recommendation that investors hold the global market percentage of their home countries, as this would be simply unrealistic. Most investors follow their home markets much more closely than they do foreign markets. In the U.S., for example, we are constantly bombarded by news and commentary from outlets such as CNBC.

During time periods when the U.S. market outperforms the foreign markets (as in the late 1990's) the pain of not having all of our investments in U.S. stocks is felt acutely. In other words, we have a tendency to assign a mental tracking error to our portfolio with respect to the U.S. market.

One objective to portfolio design is to minimize the urge to trade. Having a large percentage of our portfolio in U.S. equities mitigates that urge to trade and trades placed under duress are often deleterious to investor wealth.

The true US equity portion of IFA's standard portfolios is hard to determine, but the allocations indicate that it would be 65% US. However, we estimate that about 20% of sales from the US companies come from international markets, which would bring the allocation closer to 45% US. On the other hand, several international companies have a portion of their sales in the US, which may move the US allocation back to 50% or more. While higher than the CAPM suggested percentage of 43%, IFA considers this to be a reasonable allocation that aligns with IFA's goal of matching investors with portfolios that they will be more likely to hold when they are out of sync with US market returns.

The IFA Index Portfolios also address the issue of investors being overly attracted to foreign companies with a strong American presence. These companies tend to be categorized as large growth, and IFA's tilt towards small and value companies will result in de-emphasizing these companies.


11.2.4

Portfolio Rebalancing


One idea built into the long-term buy and hold strategy of risk exposure is the concept of maintaining consistent exposure to risk as the individual indexes that comprise a portfolio change along the way. For example, an original mix may include 10% of a U.S. small value index. If that grows to 15% of the overall mix, the portfolio now has a different overall risk exposure. In this case, it would be important to trim the 15% back down to 10% by investing the proceeds in other indexes that have gone down or not grown as much. Then, the original mix is restored to its proper allocation.


11.2.5

Whole Portfolios and Tax Hybrid Portfolio Design


Most investors end up with at least three accounts. They have a 401(k) or 403(b) at work, an IRA or Roth IRA, and a regular taxable investment account. The risk capacity analysis applies to an investor's total investable assets, so the resultant risk exposure represents all accounts as if they were one whole portfolio.

This is where the tax hybrid portfolio design process gets a little tricky. A tax hybrid strategy must be applied to optimize the tax deferred and taxable nature of different types of accounts. For example, fixed income and REIT index funds should be placed in tax-deferred accounts (like IRAs) and equity or stock index funds should be placed in the taxable accounts.

Tax hybrid design is necessary because fixed income and REIT index funds generate high-tax-rate non-qualified dividend income and tax-managed equity index funds have very little, if any, high-tax-rate non-qualified dividend income. Therefore, fixed income and REITS derive more benefits from tax-sheltering. If they were held in a taxable account, their non-qualified dividends would be taxed at ordinary income rates up to 35% for Federal taxes and whatever state taxes may apply.

In addition, when these investments are distributed during retirement, the full amount of each distribution is taxed at your ordinary income tax rate. Therefore, the lower expected return asset classes, like fixed income, are better off residing in tax deferred accounts. This way you will have less overall gain and therefore less high-tax-rate ordinary income taxes upon distribution, even at the lower tax rates of retirement income levels.

Tax-managed equity index funds, on the other hand, achieve most of their life time returns in the form of unrealized capital gains (no tax incurred until sold) and to a far lesser extent, realized long term capital gains from rebalancing and long term capital gains and qualified dividends from fund distributions. Tax-management virtually eliminates short term capital gains. These long term capital gains in equity funds are typically a lower percentage of the fund value than the non-qualified dividends are of fixed income and REIT fund values. The long term capital gains and qualified dividends of tax-managed equity funds are also taxed by Uncle Sam at a more favorable long term capital gains rate of 15%, plus applicable state tax, as of 2008. If this is still confusing to you, please consult your investment advisor and/or tax advisor. Also, see this article by Jason Zweig. A related subject has to do with the questionable protection of your IRA assets from lawsuits, see here.

A spreadsheet that combines the assets of each account and verifies overall risk exposure is a required tool for determining the dollar amount to be invested in each mutual fund and to optimize future cash outflows, inflows, rebalancing, and tax loss harvesting. This is where an index funds advisor adds substantial value to an investor's portfolio. Since risk is the source of returns, and too little or too much risk is undesirable, the maintenance of proper risk exposure and the optimization of a tax-hybrid strategy is a highly rewarded effort that leads to optimal returns unique to each investor.


11.2.6

The Prudent Investor Act

Index funds are an ideal way to implement risk exposure making them the best way to achieve an investor's goals. This concept is even incorporated into legal guidelines under the American Law Institute's so-called "Restatement of the Law, Trust, Prudent Investor Rule."

The rule, published in 1992, was written as a guideline for the prudent management of trust assets and many states passed it into law. In California it passed into law in 1996 under the title "The Uniform Prudent Investor Act." This rule points out the value of Modern Portfolio Theory. It essentially tells trustees that index funds are the prudent way to invest trust assets. The rule acts as a legal road map for estate planning attorneys, trustees of all types of trusts, and investment advisors.

The following reporter's notes on the Prudent Investor Rule points out the problems with active management. "Economic evidence shows that from a typical investment perspective, the major capital markets of this country are highly efficient, in the sense that available information is rapidly digested and reflected in the market prices of securities. As a result, fiduciaries and other investors are confronted with potent evidence that the application of expertise, investigation, and diligence in efforts to ‘beat the market' in these publicly traded securities ordinarily promises little or no payoff or even a negative payoff after taking research and transaction costs into account. Empirical research supporting the theory of efficient markets reveals that in such markets skilled professionals have rarely been able to identify under priced securities, (that is, to outguess the market with respect to future return) with any regularity. In fact, evidence shows that there is little correlation between fund managers' earlier successes and their ability to produce above-market returns in subsequent periods."

Five Principles of Prudence


1. Sound diversification is fundamental to risk management and is therefore ordinarily required of trustees.

2. Risk and return are so directly related that trustees have a duty to analyze and make conscious decisions concerning the levels of risk appropriate to the purposes, distribution requirements, and other circumstances of the trusts they administer.

3. Trustees have a duty to avoid fees, transaction costs and other expenses that are not justified by the needs and realistic objectives of the trust's investment program.

4. The fiduciary duty of impartiality requires a balancing of the elements of return between production of current income and the protection of purchasing power.

5. Trustees may have a duty as well as the authority to delegate as prudent investors would.


11.3

Problems


11.3.1

How Much Risk is There?


It is extremely rare for any stockbroker, investment advisor or mutual fund manager to quote the risk level of a client's whole portfolio or any part of it. This is one of the many reasons investors do so poorly. So where do investors obtain this rare and important data? The most convenient and accessible measurement is the standard deviation, and the data becomes more reliable the longer the time frame is considered.

The standard deviation quantifies the variation of the returns around the average return. A larger variation or standard deviation often goes hand in hand with a higher risk that an investor may sell the investment out of fear or panic when it goes down. This obviously is an undesirable outcome. Ideally, a high risk exposure is accompanied by a high expected return. That is not always the case. Clearly there are high risks with low expected returns such as small growth and large growth indexes.

Statisticians require a minimum of 20 years of data to reduce the error and increase the confidence to an acceptable level of the reported risk and return characteristics of any investment. This dramatically reduces the investments options to index mutual funds and ETFs, since the indexes they track provide more than 20 years of data. There are currently only 86 active managers in the Morningstar database with 20 years or more tenure.

As with anything, the best strategies are useless without quality input — "garbage in." A minimum of 20 years of data is necessary to generate quality output. So how much risk is in a fund or portfolio? A globally diversified portfolio of indexes with a 50-year history holds a risk with a standard deviation of approximately 14.1%. Coincidentally, the simulated return is also 13.4%. However, in order to handle this level of risk exposure, an investor must score 90% on The Risk Capacity Survey.

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11.3.2

Where is the Data?


Virtually all reliable data about the stock market originates from the University of Chicago's Center for Research of Security Prices (CRSP). CRSP is a descendant of the Cowles Commission, which was created out of the deep pain caused by the 1929 stock market crash.

Today, many firms and research organizations obtain new data from CRSP and crunch numbers. Among them are Dimensional Fund Advisors (DFA), Ibbotson and Associates, and Standard and Poor's Micropal. Other data sources include Morningstar and Lipper.

David Booth Of all the mutual fund companies, DFA stands alone in providing its pool of unique financial advisors with a complete data set on numerous indexes, going back to 1927. This allows index funds advisors to perform analysis that is normally only available to academic researchers. DFA is the only company that provides several seminars per year, offering the best and brightest of academia to lecture and interact with practicing professional advisors. The term "professional" here is important. Genuine professional advisors use index funds to construct portfolios.

So, where is the data? DFA houses the best source of meaningful long-term data, including the unique indexes or rules of ownership established by Eugene Fama, Kenneth French, Merton Miller, Myron Scholes, David Booth (CEO), and Rex Sinquefield. On a Web site that offers peer-reviewed academic research in the social sciences, (www.ssrn.com), Fama is the number one downloaded author from more than 50,000 authors. Out of 8.8 million downloads, Fama has 3 of the top 10 downloaded articles. Besides his Ph.D., Fama has received honorary degrees and numerous awards.


11.3.3

Investors Want to Avoid Risk


Another problem related to risk exposure is that most investors do not like risk, but they do want returns. Unfortunately, it just does not work that way. To avoid risk is to avoid returns. If an investor is feeling uncomfortable taking a risk, not much return can be expected.

The desire to avoid risk is at the very core of the poor performance many investors experience. Investors like to invest after the market has already gone up. They like to invest in companies that are best described as glamour stocks, otherwise known as large growth stocks. They like to turn their hard earned money over to the fund manager with favorable three to five years of market beating returns — the manager that appears on the cover of Money Magazine. All these tendencies feel good, safe, and less risky. The fact is: these featured funds are all relatively expensive due to their popularity. These funds provide their sellers a low cost of acquiring an investor's capital. Here's the big lesson: an investor's expected return is the same as the seller's cost of capital. A low cost of capital exists in all high priced investments; therefore, investors end up with a low return, hence the adages, "No risk, no return. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. Buy low and risky, sell high and safe." Simply put, risk is good. Embrace it.


11.3.4

Risk is Good in Proper Doses


Investors must learn to relish risk and to realize it is the source of their returns, not their nemesis. It's all a matter of matching people with portfolios or risk capacity with risk exposure. This process results in the arrival of a risk exposure that each investor can hang onto through thick and thin, sickness and health, bull or bear markets, for richer or poorer or until there is a need to withdraw the money.

In proper doses, risk is a beautiful thing. This concept is brought to investors by the brilliant minds of academics and Nobel laureates.


11.3.5

Portfolios get out of Balance


Another concern for investors is the maintenance of risk exposure or portfolio rebalancing. As discussed in the definition of rebalancing, this procedure is far more complex than it appears, especially when it is conducted across several investment accounts with different tax considerations. There is also a balance between the transaction costs and capital gains generated by rebalancing. A trade-off between risk exposure maintenance and transaction costs must be carefully weighed and include the changes in risk capacity since the previous measurement.
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11.3.6

Selecting Investments

As a fiduciary for its clients, IFA only receives compensation from its clients and is therefore unbiased in its choice of investments. So, how is the wheat sorted from the chaff by an independent investment advisor, like IFA, that receives no payments from any products that it advises clients to invest in?

Since index funds are the only funds that use risk and return data that deploy a constant set of rules of ownership, they are the first screen of the thousands of mutual funds in the Morningstar database.

This process of elimination limits the choices down to about 1,300 index funds and exchange traded funds (ETF’s). ETF’s are essentially index funds that trade like stocks, but like individual stocks, they usually have commissions and spreads between bids and asks. Most importantly, investors need to consider the net expected return of each index fund representing each set of rules of ownership. A sorting of index funds, loads, fees, and expenses will quickly eliminate all but Vanguard and DFA index funds. Then another problem arises.

DFA funds require a minimum trade amount of $2 million per fund purchase unless the purchase is made through a DFA approved fee-only advisor that has demonstrated to DFA that it understands the current status of financial science. Most advisors require minimum account sizes of around $250,000. However, Index Funds Advisors’ (IFA) minimum account size is $100,000. DFA limits access to their funds so that fund shareholders are shielded from excessive trading by short term speculators who increase costs, cash drag and capital gains distributions to long term shareholders. A Morningstar study documented this benefit to DFA fund shareholders and concluded that individual investors guided by a DFA approved advisor made very smart decisions that allowed them to captured an average of 109% of the DFA fund returns, while other indexers only captured 82% of other index fund returns, a whopping improvement of 27%. This study supports DFA's wise decision to only make their products available when investors are guided by a passive advisor.

The primary difference between DFA and Vanguard is that they use different indexes to design their index mutual funds. DFA custom designs its indexes to capture the risk factors that explain 95% of stock market returns. Those factors include company size (market capitalization) and value (book to market ratio or BtM).

There are smaller size and higher value oriented stocks in DFA indexes. Based on the higher long-term returns of these factors, there are higher expected returns for long-term investors with DFA index funds. However, past performance is not a guarantee of future performance.

Vanguard is now a fairly aggressive proponent of “tandem investing,” which is a post-Bogle slogan that encourages Vanguard investors to mix in some actively managed funds in their portfolios. It is as if the dark force has encroached on this champion of investor protection and low costs. There is no conceivable or logical reason for Vanguard to do this, other than it can make higher fees off uneducated and unsophisticated investors.

DFA, for its part, is the purest among all mutual fund companies in their application of the Efficient Market Theory and low-cost structure. They have an added benefit of providing substantial index data going as far back as 1926.


As evidence of DFA’s unique position in the investment product industry, Dalbar surveyed investment advisors four times between 1997 and 2004. The study was titled “The Professionals’ Pick.” Dalbar's survey rated DFA the best overall no-load mutual fund company in 1997, 2000, 2002, and number two in 2004. DFA rated highest in the “Investment Management” and “Current Use” categories in the 2004 survey. See Table 11-1. The DFA funds are low cost, style pure and well diversified.

Table 11-1

 

The Best Fund Families in 2010
In 2010, DFA ranked number one in Barron's annual ranking of best fund families. Click here to read the full article.



11.3.7

The Advantages of Investing in Dimensional Funds

1. Dimensional Adds Value Without Relying on Forecasts


Over time, a structured investment approach based on financial science and the efficacy of capital markets will add value with a higher reliability and confidence level than one based on instinct and prophesy. Prudent investing involves deciding how much risk to take, then choosing asset classes to match an investor's preferred risk-return tradeoff. Dimensional (DFA) helps build strategies to deliver precise risk dimensions. But they are not a traditional investment manager—and traditional labels do not fit them because they design their own indexes and have refined their trading methods to minimize friction and costs.



2. Investment Philosophy Is Grounded in Robust Academic Research


The Three Factor Model has replaced the Capital Asset Pricing Model in the work of financial economists. DFA's equity strategies capture the insights of the model, which has withstood rigorous open review by academics all over the world. Dimensional has forged working relationships with some of the world's leading financial economists to bring their latest theories and research to practice. Though bound to a rigorous scientific process, they also have an instinct for knowing what works with investors. DFA's founder, David Booth, provided the largest gift to any business college in the history of such gifts. He donated $300 Million to the University of Chicago, which then name the school the The University of Chicago Booth School of Business.

3. Diversification and Minimal Style Drift


Diversification is the most essential tool available to investors. It enables them to capture broad market forces while reducing the excess, uncompensated risk arising in individual stocks. DFA's strategies draw upon this power in numbers. Successful investing means not only capturing risks that generate expected return but reducing risks that do not. Avoidable risks include holding too few securities, betting on countries or industries, following market predictions, and speculating on "information" from rating services. To all these, diversification is the antidote. It washes away the random fortunes of individual stocks and positions your portfolio to capture the returns of broad economic forces.



They also adhere to specific rules of ownership to maintain reliable asset class exposures. Their portfolio managers have no discretion to purchase stocks that do not meet these rules, and no financial incentive exists for them to deviate from the very specific disciplines.

4. Smart Trading Increases Returns


Careful trading can reduce or even reverse the costs borne by traditional managers. Because Dimensional focuses on capturing the systematic performance of broad market dimensions rather than the random fluctuations of individual securities, they can keep costs low, patiently and expertly. They concentrate on favorable price execution that neutralizes the effects of momentum and index reconstitution and they maintain portfolio-specific hold ranges that reduce turnover and trading costs. This video explains DFA's trading advantage in their own words.

5. Low Cost


In line with DFA's structured, scientific approach to investing, their investment management fees are positioned well below those of typical, traditional active managers and inline with other passive managers. Their patient and price-conscious buy-and-hold approach to trading is designed to minimize costs. But ultimately what matters is performance net of all feesand risk and as seen in the comparisons below, this is where DFA's advantage is confirmed.

6. DFA is the Pioneer of Risk Factor Based Management Using the Three Factor Model for Equities


Dimensional has pioneered many strategies now taken for granted in the industry. The firm was originally founded in 1981 to provide institutional investors access to US small and micro cap stocks, underrepresented at the time in most portfolios. Dimensional later introduced its first value strategies based on the Fama and French Three Factor Model. In 2004, they launched core strategies that efficiently target risk factors across regional stock markets like the US and emerging markets. Financial science has demonstrated that investors are rewarded in proportion to the risk they take. Framing decisions around compensated risk factors in the equity and bond markets positions investors to market forces that create opportunities to build wealth over time.



The Three Factor Model offers a logical and useful framework for portfolio design, analysis, and investment discipline. It brings order and clarity to the investment process, isolating and explaining the market forces that drive returns in a portfolio.

Figure 11-5



Dimensional's research has shown that the Three Factor Model on average explains about 96% of the variation of equity returns among fully diversified portfolios. Therefore, investing largely consists of deciding the extent to which your portfolio will participate in each of the equity market dimensions: small/large and value/growth. The greater the risk exposure, the greater the expected return.

Figure 11-6



7. Broad Line of Strategies for a Complete Total Portfolio


Dimensional's broad array of investment strategies offers calibrated exposures to the full spectrum of key asset classes across dimensions of size, value, and geography. The goal is to provide investors with global investment solutions that, at the total portfolio level, maximize returns at an investor's level of risk capacity.

8. Clear and Accessible Philosophy and Approach


Dimensional strives to keep its process clear and transparent so that investors can easily understand it. Concepts such as the fact that market prices reflect the vast, complex network of information, expectations, and human behavior. These market forces drive prices to fair value, incorporating the global news, risk and expected returns appropriate for the investment. This simple yet powerful view of market equilibrium has profound investment implications that change the focus from short term speculation to long term investing.

9. Combination of Theory and Practice


By acting as a conduit between scientists and practicing investors, Dimensional has pioneered many strategies and consulting technologies now taken for granted in the industry. This feedback loop serves as an idea growth engine, positioning DFA to impliment these ideas into investment products. Dimensional has developed working relationships with some of the world's leading financial economists to bring their latest theories and research to practice. Though bound to a rigorous scientific process, they also have an instinct for knowing what works with investors. Financial science leads the way in understanding risk and return in securities markets. By maintaining a continuous feedback loop between the academic community, practitioners, and clients, Dimensional appears to be ahead of other firms at bringing academic research to investors.

10. Low Professional Turnover Strengthens the Team Process


IFA has known the DFA leadership since 1999 and they have remained committed to fostering a culture of learning, teamwork, innovation, and dedication to always doing what’s right for investors. To this end, the firm’s leadership brings a valuable perspective to their work and deep resources to enhance their offering. They have had very few departures among the portfolio managers and key personnel. The hiring of investment managers at Dimensional is the antithesis of the "Morningstar Star" system of managers that is the rule at most firms. DFA’s board members and consultants include some of the world’s most distinguished academic theorists: Eugene Fama, Kenneth French, Roger Ibbotson, Donald Keim, and Nobel laureates Myron Scholes and Robert Merton.

11. Successful and Independent


Dimensional is one of the largest independently owned investment management firms in the world, with over $200 Billion in assets under management as of Jan., 2011. In the opinion of IFA, the firm has operated its business in a true fiduciary manner, keeping the the best interest of its investors in their business practices.

12. Excellent Service Provided to IFA


Dimensional appears eager to continue building relationships with institutional clients, financial advisors, and consultants through development of customized investment programs and an interchange of investment research and ideas. Dimensional serves a distinguished group of institutional and advisor clients. They structure support teams to connect with firms like IFA, to learn from them, to inform them of the key research and practical work that will shape current and future investment strategies.

A regional director services Index Funds Advisors. This approach keeps IFA fully informed of current research and developments while quickly addressing any questions we may have.

Dimensional also provides IFA with a wide range of communications resulting from internal and sponsored research. These range from investment research reports commissioned from leading academic centers to Dimensional's seminars providing general discussions on issues facing plan sponsors and advisors. Their direct links to the academic community provide a large body of original research supporting existing investment strategies and creating the foundation for new investment approaches. This is one of the many reason we advise clients to invest in Dimensional funds.




13. DFA versus Vanguard


We are sometimes asked what the difference is between Vanguard, ETFs and DFA Index Funds. The short answer is they use different indexes. DFA has custom designed their indexes to capture the risk factors that explain 95% of stock market returns, going back to 1929. Those factors include company size (market capitalization) and value (based on the company's Book Value divided by its Market Capitalization, or Book to Market Ratio (BtM)). [also see DFA vs Vanguard]

IFA's concern with Vanguard: Vanguard investment plans 50% active funds? Say it ain't so...
- Here is an actual proposal with active funds! Where is Jack? What have they done to his song, Ma? And now they are offering a Hedge Fund (12/15/07)! "When asked about this departure from low-cost indexes, Ms. Chain pointed out that Vanguard actually manages more active assets ($680 billion) than passive ($600 billion). “We serve many clients beyond the investor who holds the 500 fund in an IRA,” she said.

In this presentation from Vanguard, Daniel Wallick speaks about the choice of active managers in portfolio construction. The data in Steps 3 and 5 of the IFA 12-Step program conclude that there should be no actively managed funds in portfolios.

Here are a few charts explaining why IFA prefers to advise clients to invest in DFA funds.

Figure 11-7


These differences in fund returns are explained by difference in small and value tilts of the funds. When we assemble diversified portfolios and scatter plot the data, the chart below shows the combined impact of these fund differences based on risk and return.

Figure 11-8


The Vanguard Target Retirement Funds have not been around very long, but over this period, it clearly would have been better to be in the IFA constructed index portfolios. This is a short period, but the small value tilt is less in the Vanguard Funds than it is in the DFA funds.

Figure 11-10




14. IFA's concern with iShares


"To generate more revenue, Barclays has worked in recent years to build up its actively managed funds like hedge funds. About 21% of BGI's assets are actively managed, some of in hedge funds. A recent report by Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. says BGI has been successful in subtly shifting to the higher fee, actively managed funds." WSJ 08/13/07. iShares are now owned by Blackrock, of which Merrill Lynch owns about 30% of the shares. Enough said.



Figure 11-11

15. Comparisons of Various Alternative Portfolios

IFA recommends that its clients invest primarily DFA funds when implementing a risk exposure. We also have a Diversified Index Manager implementation that we mostly recommend for large institutional investors. Short articles on DFA can be found at these links, 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 .

DFA originally designed their funds for large institutional clients. If you become our client, you will have the opportunity to invest alongside some of the world's largest institutional funds. For a list of institutional clients of DFA, click here.

Here are several portfolios constructed based on portfolios based on Vanguard Funds or iShares, portfolios recommended in various books or in target date funds. They are compared on the basis of risk and return. As you can see in every case, the portfolios based on IFA Indexes, using DFA indexes and DFA funds stitched together provide a more optimal solution. This is why we advise clients to invest in DFA funds. In a 2010 contest of 25 various passive portfolios, IFA's Index Portfolio 100 took top prize, beating the number two portfolio by an absolute 4.5%.


Figure 11-12



Figure 11-13





Figure 11-14




Figure 11-15


To compare DFA funds, based on DFA Indexes to the closestthird party indexes, see the table below. Youcan see the positive difference over the last 10 years and since inception.

Figure 11-16

It is often said that DFA funds are not "index funds." But as you can see below, the returns of portfolios of DFA funds closely tracks a same allocation of indexes of similar names, mostly from DFA. If you add back the 0.41% annual expense ratios of Portfolio 100, the 10 year, 6 month return is almost exactly the same as the same allocation of indexes.

Figure 11-16a

Dimensional Mutual Fund Portfolios vs Dimensional Index Portfolios

16. The Only Pure Passive Play is DFA


DFA is the only fund company that adheres to a non-forecasting, efficient markets strategy for all of their funds. All other firms that offer passive funds, also offer active funds and the active funds are more profitable for the firm.

It is normal for investors to be suspicious when an author or advisor leans so heavily toward one mutual fund company. Indeed, it is wise to be cautious of loads or 12b-1 fees that may be kicked back to the advisor. This is not the case with IFA and DFA. DFA has no loads or tailing fees for advisors and they provide the absolute best education of any fund company, including monthly updates on risk and return data and a software package to analyze the data. Simply put, they are the best in the business.

For reference, here are links to other index providers: Russell Indexes - Wilshire Indexes - Dow Jones Indexes - MSCI Barra Indexes - S&P Indexes. DFA does not publish its indexes, but IFA has modified them with fees and stiched together index and live fund data and presented them as the IFA Indexes.


11.4

Solution


11.4.1

One Hundred Index Portfolios

The answer to the investor’s dilemma is to design the most efficient set of portfolios. IFA has created 100 Index Portfolios, providing a solution that is individualized and indexed.

The graph below show the risk and reward scatter plot for 20 of the 100 Index Portfolios and the component indexes for 2007, 2008, 2009, and 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, and 82 year periods.

Figure 11-17


We have assembled a continuum of risk exposures as summarized in histograms below. They are depictions of both the risk and return of 20 Index Portfolios. They are numbered and color coded to denote their risk level beginning with Portfolio 5 — Ivory at the lowest risk and up to Portfolio 100 — Bight Red at the highest risk. The charts show a histogram of monthly of returns data going back to Jan., 1928 on the left side and the growth of one dollar over the specified period on the right side. The risk capacity painting is also included to give an idea of the age appropriateness of each portfolio.

Figure 11-18



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12-Step Program

Step 1: Active Investors

Step 2: Nobel Laureates

Step 3: Stock Pickers

Step 4: Time Pickers

Step 5: Manager Pickers

Step 6: Style Drifters

Step 7: Silent Partners

Step 8: Riskese

Step 9: History

Step 10: Risk Capacity

Step 11: Risk Exposure

Step 12: Invest and Relax

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