Short-term Thnking about Long-term Capital
by Ben Carlson, A Wealth of Common Sense
Information is a double-edged sword in the investment industry. Investors now have access to more opinions, analysis, real-time prices and research than ever before. It cannot be overstated how much this has changed the investment landscape when you compare it to how things once were in the pre-Internet stone age of insider tips, expensive research subscriptions, phone calls and a lack of useful historical market data.
One of the downsides to all of this information being available at our fingertips is that itâs made investors much more short-sighted in their approach. Case in point from a recent Chief Investment Officer article about endowment fund returns:
US endowments recorded the lowest returns for the 2015 fiscal year since 2012 and reached a hiatus in outsourcing, according to NACUBO and Commonfund.
The joint study of 812 colleges representing a total of $529 billion in assets revealed endowments returned an average of 2.4% net of fees, a sharp drop from 2014âs 15.5%.
âFY 2015âs lower average one-year return is a great concern,â said John Walda, NACUBOâs president and CEO. âLower returns may make it even tougher for colleges and universities to adequately fund financial aid, research, and other programs that are very reliant on endowment earnings and are vital to institutionsâ missions.â
NACUBO does a great job of aggregating endowment asset allocation and performance information every year in their annual report. But I get the sense that many of these funds have an unhealthy obsession with their performance in relation to their fellow endowments. These numbers are now headline news the minute theyâre made public. It makes no sense to me.
There are a number of other reasons for the short-sightedness from many of these institutions. Theyâre all ultra-competitive. Envy runs deep between these institutions so theyâre constantly checking the peer rankings to see where they stand in relation to their fellow investors. Ego also comes into play when dealing with such large amounts of money at stake and group decisions with investment committees and alumni always looking over their shoulder. Then thereâs the fact that investment committees pay so much attention to benchmarks that the monitoring periods become shorter and shorter.
My friend Morgan Housel sent me the following story which illustrates this line of thinking perfectly:
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink once told a story about having dinner with the manager of one of the worldâs largest sovereign wealth funds. The fundâs objectives, the manager said, were generational. âSo how do you measure performance?â Fink asked.
âQuarterly,â said the manager.
If your organization or investment fund canât deal with one poor year in the markets â and letâs be honest, it wasnât even that bad of a year in 2015 when compared with 2008 â then you donât really understand risk in the first place. One year performance numbers are extremely dangerous when theyâre not put into context.
Endowments have the longest time horizons of any funds in the investment industry. Theyâre technically set up to last in perpetuity (translation: forever). They do have to meet short-term spending obligations, usually in the 3-5% range in terms of their fund size, but many of these funds are also bringing in large donations on an annual basis that help cut down on endowment spending rates.
Hereâs what happens when you make short-term decisions with long-term capital:
- You constantly change your strategy and chase past performance.
- You ignore any semblance of a long-term plan.
- You end up being reactive instead of pro-active with your decisions.
- You incur higher fees from increased trading, due diligence and switching costs.
- You lose sight of your actual goals and time horizon.
- You end up with a portfolio thatâs built to withstand the last war, not the next one.
- You lose out on much of the long-term benefits that come from diversification, rebalancing and mean reversion.
One of the easiest solutions I see to this problem is to think about your portfolio in terms of your various time horizons and risks. That means keeping enough liquidity in cash equivalents and high quality bonds to survive periods of below average performance and bear markets. Then you structure the remainder of the portfolio to meet various intermediate and long-term goals, respectively. That way youâre creating a portfolio based on your personal needs and objectives without allowing what others are doing to impact your decisions.
This is simply a form of mental accounting, but it helps to understand where you can accept and benefit from volatility (long-term capital) and where you cannot (short-term spending needs). Itâs simply a matter of matching up your various liabilities and time horizons with different assets and risks. Thatâs the entire point of diversification, risk management and asset allocation.
Institutional investors love to show that they beat their benchmark or some risk-adjusted return target or their peers in the industry over the most recent one year period. Itâs not as sexy to brag about, but a true benchmark will always be that they are able to meet their short-term liquidity needs and have a high probability of meeting their long-term goals and mission as an organization.
Source:
Endowment Returns Drop, Outsourcing Steadies (CIO)
Further Reading:
Goals-Based Investing
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