Day: June 11, 2011

Learning to Like Lumpiness

Learning to Like Lumpiness

Simplistic financial plans assume a smooth return that the client will earn.? Why?? No nefarious reason, but planners don’t know the future, so they either:

1) Assume an average rate as a baseline for calculations, or

2) Display the average, median, or some? percentiles from a series of randomly estimated possible futures.

But life isn’t that way.? Markets are lumpy.? High and low returns happen more frequently than average returns.? What’s worse, returns tend to streak over years and decades.? So much for the Efficient Markets Hypothesis.

So what to do?? Better to be like the great moral philosopher Linus van Pelt, who carried a candle at night, and his sister Lucy asked him why he was doing so.? Linus replied, “It is better to light a single candle than to curse the darkness.”? After Linus left, Lucy mused for a moment, and shouted, “YOU STUPID DARKNESS!”

Volatility is a fact of life, and even the volatility is volatile, with regions of seeming stability, and regions of extreme booms and busts.

My “single candle” is simple — it is an adjustment of expectations, which involves reasoning that when things have been horrible, after some amount of time, it is time to take risk again, before it is perfectly obvious to do so.? Same thing when things are great, it may be time to take risk off the table.? I would add that delay in doing so is not a failure — lumpiness means that trends run further than would be reasonable.? But when the momentum wanes it is time to change.

I’ve been in the situation multiple times, but it is really difficult to get permabulls or permabears to recognize that something has shifted.? I wrote about this a number of times in my series “The Education of a Corporate Bond Manager.”? I was constantly fighting those who were hanging onto the old trend too long.

And at another firm, I could not convince my boss to go long once the nadir of the credit crisis had passed.? He expected more trouble to come, while I looked at the bond market and found an absence of distressed credits.

The lesson of both cases is that opportunities to earn total returns or preserve capital are lumpy.? If the market is longing for safety now, it will likely do so for a while, and the same is true for bull markets.

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Many retirees say “I just need a certain reliable income of X%/year. Please get that for me.”? We may as well tell these people to buy a CD or annuity, except that Fed policy makes the rates inadequate for their needs.? And yes, this is a deliberate policy of the Fed, picking on the elderly and the conservative in order to fund marginal lending that might? result in some tiny increment of growth.

It is far better to ask three questions:

1) Where are we now in the credit risk cycle? Rising, Peak, Falling, or Trough?

2) Where are yields on high-grade corporate bonds now?

3) Can you afford to spread your yield needs over five years?

Bond investors need to realize that most returns of the bond market are earned at three times: first, after the nadir of the credit cycle, credit-sensitive bonds soar.? Second, during deflationary times, buying long-dated Treasuries.? Third, when inflation is running, rolling over short-dated fixed income claims.? Beyond that, one can clip bond coupons during abnormal times of stability.

By asking the above first two questions, we can ascertain whether it is a favorable time to take risk or not, and what sort of risks to take.? The last question is more of a reasonableness check on the client.? If he has to have the return every year without fail, tell him to seek it at a bank or insurer, and see if he is pleased with the results.

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But now take it one step further.? When will our stupid economists and politicians get it through their heads that lumpy economic growth is normal, and even that it is desirable that growth is not smooth?? Effort to produce a smooth economy led to a debt build-up, which ultimately sabotaged growth.? Far better to let small recessions do their work, and leave the Fed funds rate high until marginal investments are repriced, with the attendant bankruptcies.

The US economy grew more rapidly when there were no efforts at stimulus.? Yes, there were severe recessions, but the booms thereafter more than made up for it.? Though it would hurt a lot in the short-run, far better to end the deficits of the US government, and the pitiful efforts of the Fed, giving greater certainty to the private sector, that businessmen could make long-term decisions without worries that taxes, regulations, or interest rates might change dramatically.

Like it or lump it, some say.? Why choose?? Learn to like the lumpiness of the asset markets and the economy in general, and many things will go more easily for you.

On Redistricting

On Redistricting

Given all the brouhaha that exists over redistricting, I thought I would give one simple idea that would free our nation and states from tyranny. ;)? Turn the job over to a computer.? Yes, take the blood and politics out of it, and let computers make fair districts.

How do we do that?? Simple.? You need a computerized map of the political entity being divided, and the locations of the voters.? You give the computer a simple instruction: minimize the length of the internal boundary lines within the political entity, subject to the districts being roughly the same population.

No one can argue that such a method is not fair.? It produces compact, convex districts that look? fair, and no one needs to say a word — just accept the output of the computer.

What would be the benefit?? Districts would be a lot less polar, and seats would not be as safe for incumbents.? And when the new census comes out — boom! Many politicians would find themselves fighting for their lives in new districts that don’t fit them.

This could herald the return of the citizen-lawmaker, because it would be difficult to maintain a seat for a long time.? Perhaps with some help, such as permanently disallowing politicians from being lobbyists, it could make a genuine change in the way our government works.

PS — In my life, I have been approached by others to use my math skills to gerrymander a large state in the US.? I refused (at age 29), though I knew how it could be done.

Book Review: Enchantment

Book Review: Enchantment

How do you get people to like you?? Love you?? Be insanely passionate over you, and what you do, sell, etc?

If the book “Enchantment” is correct, it means you have to become the person that inspires people in what ever you are pursuing.? It means that you have to be:

  • Likeable
  • Trustworthy
  • Prepared
  • A risk-taker who produces
  • A salesman (in a good sense — you are out to persuade in a good cause.)
  • Persistent, and make persuasion stick.

But that must extend to customers, employees, and all influencers.? If you are not your own boss, you must manage up and learn to influence the boss as well.

Beyond that, learn to use both push and pull technologies to make people want to know what you are about.

Finally, as with all marketing texts, the reader becomes educated on techniques.? It helps to inoculate you against others who try to use such techniques on you, particularly those that have nothing to offer.

I enjoyed the book and would recommend it to others.? Guy has a gift for making the complex simple.

Quibbles

I may come off as a prude in saying this, but there is never a? good time to use crude language.? It is a substitution of negative emotion in place of thought.? I have never yet found a situation where one could not use clean words to express the same idea that profanity aims for.? Also, workplaces where profanity is common among leaders spawn it among followers.? Everyone is worse off, and your company will come of as rude or lower-class.

Who would benefit from this book:

Many would benefit from this book.? It has a lot of good ideas that would aid your marketing.

If you want to, you can buy it here: Enchantment: The Art of Changing Hearts, Minds, and Actions.

Full disclosure: I asked the author for the book and he sent it to me, apologizing for the delay.? Guy, thanks for sending it, delay or not.

If you enter Amazon through my site, and you buy anything, I get a small commission.? This is my main source of blog revenue.? I prefer this to a ?tip jar? because I want you to get something you want, rather than merely giving me a tip.? Book reviews take time, particularly with the reading, which most book reviewers don?t do in full, and I typically do. (When I don?t, I mention that I scanned the book.? Also, I never use the data that the PR flacks send out.)

Most people buying at Amazon do not enter via a referring website.? Thus Amazon builds an extra 1-3% into the prices to all buyers to compensate for the commissions given to the minority that come through referring sites.? Whether you buy at Amazon directly or enter via my site, your prices don?t change.

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