Presidential Cycle

Interesting article in the FT today regarding the 4 year presidential cycle.

“The third years of US presidential terms have been great for investors. Research by academics Scott Beyer, Gerald Jensen and Robert Johnson shows that in the past 12 presidential terms, large-cap stocks gained 23.8 per cent on average during the third years. In years one, two and four they averaged 8.3 per cent. For small caps the gap is bigger: 38 per cent in year three, and 11.75 per cent in the other three years.

This is when presidents are spending money on bolstering their case for re-election, conventional wisdom says. Unpopular policies happen in the first two years. Uncertainty is greatest in the fourth. You make money in the third year.

But the research suggests this argument may rest on a false correlation. Presidents do not matter to the market as much as chairmen of the Federal Reserve. The Fed has been accommodating (it has been reducing the discount rate) in 65 per cent of year threes. It has been so lenient in only 48 per cent of all other years.”

On the Way From Amazon

Capital Ideas Evolving” by Peter Bernstein

The Handbook of Portfolio Mathematics” by Ralph Vince

and this for a (late) Mother’s Day present so Mom can have her own Pinkberry in Colorado. . .

I’m also enjoyed this paper by Harry Kat, “Alternative Routes to Hedge Fund Replication” (PS I am convinced Dr. Kat is a robot – look at all of these papers he churns out, unbelievable! )

And check out this great post on the seasonality of microcap returns. . .(I use the free F&F data as well)

Here are the annualized micro-cap returns by month from July 1926 to December 2004:

January………159.82%
February………25.10%
March……………1.21%
April…………….12.86%
May……………….6.85%
June………………6.57%
July……………..22.64%
August………….8.16%
September…….-7.75%
October……….-14.60%
November……….7.97%
December………-1.94%

Hulbert Trendfollowing Article

In his recent column, “Reports of it’s Demise Were Premature“, Mark Hulbert examines the historical track record of the 39-week moving average:

The study was conducted by Ned Davis Research for Israel-based Psagot Mutual Funds, which shared the study with me. The study encompassed the period from late 1979 and until last week, over which time buying and holding the S&P 500 index produced a 10.2% annualized return.

In contrast, a strategy that switched between the S&P 500 and commercial paper according to whether the S&P 500 was above or below its 200-day moving average produced an 11% annualized return. And not only did the strategy market more money than buying and holding, it did so while being significantly less risky than the overall market. That’s a winning combination.

(The 39-week moving average is basically the same as the 10-month moving average used in my paper. )

Below is a chart of the strategy vs. buy and hold from 1990 – 2005, and as you can see, it lagged the market for the bull market, but also sat out the bear market in cash:

One of the key take-aways from my paper is that utilizing a moving average strategy is a risk-reduction technique, not a return enhancing one. Many people emailed in commenting that the lagging performance of the strategy during the 1990′s was evidence that the strategy was broken, possibly due to too many people following it. That is missing the point – buy-and-hold is the best strategy during a raging bull market(excluding leverage). But if you know a bull market is coming then you would be buying call options or futures and probably living in Costa Rica at this point.

Many people do not find the strategy that attractive since it merely reduces risk rather than “beating the market”. In fact, the timing strategy only beats the market around 50-60% of the time. The timing strategy would have underperformed in 4 of 10 years of the 1990′s.

However, by reducing the volatility of an asset class, then combining a number of asset classes into a portfolio, the results can be staggering. A diverse portfolio of assets utilizing the timing strategy results in similar returns as stocks, but with approximately one-third of the risk as measured by drawdown and volatility. Leveraging that portfolio results in > 50% increases in returns, STILL with less risk than stocks. Below are two charts (log, non-log) from the paper that detail the results (the second looks like one you would find in the back of a trading magazine touting uranium stocks or the like).

An initial investment of $10,000 at the beginning of 1972 would be worth almost $500,000 while an investment in the leveraged strategy would be worth almost $2M. . .(and that number is conservative as I used the broker call rate for leverage).


Leave a comment if you have any questions, or would like to see any sub-period charts from any of the asset classes mentioned in my paper. . .

Let Seth Klarman Manage Your Portfolio


Seth Klarman is profiled in this recent article from the NYTimes titled, “Manager Frets Over the Market, but Still Outdoes It“. [Thanks to reader RT for the link]

Klarman returned 22% last year while holding HALF his portfolio in cash. From the NYT article:

Mr. Klarman’s record has generated intense loyalty from investors. Since he began Baupost in 1983, it has posted an average annual total return of 19.55 percent, according to data provided by the hedge fund group. Declines have been posted in only 11 of the total 97 quarters since Baupost’s debut.

In 2006, Baupost’s portfolio held an array of assets, including United States, European, Asian and Canadian equities, which accounted for 17.1 percent of the portfolio; debt and real estate, which each made up 10 percent; and 4.7 percent in private equity funds. And there was that big dollop of cash.

“Seth has a remarkable record, and even more so when you realize that he has achieved it by holding significant amounts of cash,” said Jack R. Meyer, who until 2005 ran Harvard’s endowment, which has been a longtime investor in Baupost.

“In other words, his risk-adjusted numbers are spectacular. What is unusual is the high return and the high cash levels,” added Mr. Meyer, who now runs the investment fund Convexity Capital.

What does Klarman own now? Below are his top 10 holdings:

SLM CORP (SLM)
DOMTAR CORP (UFS)
HOME DEPOT INC (HD)
NEWS CORP (NWS-A)
SYNERON MEDICAL LTD (ELOS)
INFOSPACE INC (INSP)
MARATHON ACQUISITION CORP (MAQ)
OMNOVA SOLUTIONS INC (OMN)
STAR MARITIME ACQUISITION CO (SEA)
NATIONAL FUEL GAS CO N J (NFG)

The Apprentice – Omaha

If you haven’t heard, Warren Buffett (76) is beginning the process of finding and grooming his replacement. In the Berkshire Hathaway annual letter to shareholders, Buffet states:

“At our October board meeting, we discussed that subject fully,” Buffett said. “And we emerged with a plan, which I will carry out with the help of Charlie and Lou. Under this plan, I intend to hire a younger man or woman with the potential to manage a very large portfolio, who we hope will succeed me as Berkshire’s chief investment officer when the need for someone to do that arises.

“As part of the selection process, we may in fact take on several candidates. Picking the right person(s) will not be an easy task. It’s not hard, of course, to find smart people, among them individuals who have impressive investment records. But there is far more to successful long-term investing than brains and performance that has recently been good.”

Morningstar lists five fund analyst picks that they feel represent Buffet inspired managers (I would look to the hedge fund arena personally). Below are the five funds with their historical track record. Granted the last 7 years have been favorable to the value approach. . .

The Little Stock that Beats the Market


Back in early February I penned a post focusing on the methodology of Joel Greenblatt, author of “The Little Book That Beats the Market” and manager of super-successful hedge fund Gotham Partners.

At the time Greenblatt only owned 4 stocks, and his sister (who runs Saddle Rock) only owned two. Between the two of them, the Greenblatt’s owned over 3.5M shares of Aeropostale (ARO). Following a brilliant hedge fund manager, with a long track record of success, (and major cajones to only own a few stocks) sounds like a winning plan to me.

Since that post, ARO is up roughly 20% in 3 months, not bad. . .What does Greenblatt currently own? American Express (AXP), Wal-Mart (WMT), and Ameriprise (AMP, options). All three of these are included in the hedge fund consensus strategy we track – maybe it bears in mind that we’re not the only ones following Mr. Greenblatt. . . Saddle Rock only owns ARO, AMP, AXP, and Abercrombie (ANF). I will update these portfolios next week when the new 13Fs come out.

As far as Mr. Greenblatt’s screen, what does it like currently? A list is below:

American Eagle Outfitters Inc. (AEO)
Avici Systems Inc. (AVCI)
Axcan Pharma Inc. (AXCA)
BP Prudhoe Bay Royalty Trust (BPT)
Barrett Business Services Inc. (BBSI)
Biovail Corp. (BVF)
Cellstar Corp (CLST)
Fording Canadian Coal Trust (FDG)
Frontier Oil Corp. (FTO)
Great Northern Iron Ore Properties (GNI)
Intevac Inc (IVAC)
JAKKS Pacific Inc (JAKK)
King Pharmaceuticals Inc. (KG)
Korn/Ferry International (KFY)
Mannatech Inc (MTEX)
Nathan’s Famous Inc (NATH)
New Frontier Media Inc (NOOF)
OPTi Inc (OPTI)
PDI Inc (PDII)
Pacer International Inc (PACR)
Pinnacle Airlines Corp (PNCL)
Pre-Paid Legal Services Inc. (PPD)
Vaalco Energy Inc (EGY)
Wayside Technology Group (WSTG)
Williams Controls Inc (WMCO)

The Singularity is Near! ! !


But, in the meantime, he’s busy running a quant hedge fund.

FatKat – Financial Accerlerating Transactions from Kurzweil Adaptive Technologies

Fortune article here.

Creative Capitalism

I just finished reading “Founders at Work“, a highly recommended book comprised of interviews with many successful entrepreneurs who founded companies such as Paypal, Hotmail, etc. It is written in a similar style as Market Wizards, and the book is easy to pick up and flip through the short chapters instead of having to read it cover to cover (although you may have a hard time putting it down like I did). I never tire of hearing about all the amazing ideas that people come up with.

Back in the early Internet days a few of my buddies from high school started a website called Freecondoms.com (seriously). All the web surfer had to do to receive the free merchandise was to sign up for a few offers (such as a Blockbuster Online trial), and then get a few friends to sign up for similar offers. The company would get paid for each sponsor offer completed, and experienced a decent amount of success.

The watershed moment, however, was the introduction of the Ipod. The partners set up freeipods.com, and revenues skyrocketed. Check out this Wired article from a few years back on the company. The company, Gratis Internet, is now involved in all areas of the incentive marketing industry and the founders are millionaires.

Whenever I am bored, one of my favorite blogs to pass the time is Unusual Business Ideas That Work. The author posts a business profile most every day of a successful business. Today’s post is titled, “How to Make Money Selling Tumbleweed Online”, and profiles a crafty entrepreneur that sells $40,000 worth of (free) tumbleweed worldwide. Unreal. A couple of recent interesting posts:

How To Get Real New York Pizza In Any US Town
How To Make Money With Medical ID Jewelry
10 Wacked Out But Wildly Successful Homebusiness Ideas

While not businesses per se, Million Dollar Homepage and One Red Paper Clip were two websites that reveal the power of the viral nature of the Internet.

If you have any other great blogs to check out, or any good Summer reading, leave a comment. . .

To Infinity and Beyond!

I have mentioned the magazine cover indicator before on this blog, and there is a new academic paper out in the current FAJ on the subject – “Are Cover Stories Effective Contrarian Indicators?“.

The Economist had a good review of the article titled, “Covered in Shame“.

Abstract:

Headlines from featured stories in Business Week, Fortune, and Forbes were collected for a 20-year period to determine whether positive stories are associated with superior future performance and negative stories are associated with inferior future performance for the featured company. “Superior” and “inferior” were determined in comparison with an index or another company in the same industry and of the same size. Statistical testing implied that positive stories generally indicate the end of superior performance and negative news generally indicates the end of poor performance.

Hedgies Piggybacking


One of my favorite topics on World Beta is mining the SEC filings for hedge fund ideas. Judging by how many people have bookmarked the portfolios on Stockpickr, they are the most popular topic on the blog as well. The 13Fs come out in a week or so, and we will be updating the Hedge Consensus, Activist Consensus, and Hedge Fund Best Ideas portfolios with YTD performance as well.

Whitney Tilson has a great article here on how he piggybacked on some fellow value funds to ride Wendys stock to a double. . .

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