Friday, May 10, 2019

Still lot of space for active investors

Some food for thought
"Ask the young. They know everything. "
—Joseph Joubert (French Writer, 1754-1824)
Word for the day
Blossom (v)
to flourish; develop
 
First thought this morning
Recently, results for Xth and XIIth standard examination for 2018-19 academic session were announced. Many students scored 99% or more marks. Two students even scored 100% in aggregate. Students scored 99 or 100 marks in subjects like political science, history, economics, literature, psychology, etc. Our ministers and other politicians have congratulated the "toppers". Many celebrities (including politicians) have posted marks scored by their wards on social media.
I have written it many times before also (see here). To me so many students scoring near perfect score in political science, history and literature means that system encourages only those students who are conformist. The examiners are trained to punish the students who like to differ and offer alternate views on history and political issues, even at 12th standard level. This cannot be a good sign for a progressive society.
More than one lac students scored over 90% marks in XIIth standard, which means, it will very tough for the students scoring less than 90% marks to get admission in a decent college.
My niece scored 97.25% in Commerce stream. She is feeling totally frustrated and delusional since there is little chance she will get admission in college or course of her choice. The family is dismayed and no one is celebrating. You can imagine the pressure on the children who are preparing for examination next year and their families. With such a state of mind, how do we expect children to take forward the glorious tradition of seeking knowledge.
After all objective of education cannot be to end up behind desk of a bank, after completing the strenuous trek through IIT and IIM!
Chart of the day

 
Still lot of space for active investors
Continuing from yesterday (See here)
In my personal view, passive investment in benchmark indices in India may not be advisable for non institutional investors, for the following simple reasons.
(a)   Nifty is still an evolving index. Unlike the primary benchmark indices in developed countries, Nifty undergoes significant amount of changes every year. So much so that since beginning more than 80% of the index constituents have been changed. So many frequent changes in benchmark increase the cost and tracking error for the passive investors. For S&P500, For the past 51 years, the average number of component changes has been 23 per year or under 5%.
(b)   About 50% of Nifty constituents have Beta materially more than 1. The rest have beta materially lower than 1. This large skew in Beta makes performance of various Nifty constituents very asymmetrical in all market conditions.
(c)    Very large proportion of trades in Nifty constituents are speculative in nature. About 2/3rd of the constituents see average delivery volume of less than 50%, with 1/4th seeing less than 30% traded quantity resulting in delivery. This raises the chances of sharp moves in Nifty and unpredictable volatility.
(d)   Last but not the least, the performance of broader markets has been better than Nifty over 5, 10 and 15yr horizon.
Not only point to point, in the interim period also, for most of the period, broader markets have outperformed Nifty.
 
This also corroborates the hypothesis that Nifty is evolving index and many mid and small cap are still rising significantly to join the top club. The chances of making better returns are materially higher in mid and small cap arena. The caveat however is that the rate of casualty is certainly higher in broader markets, but then it is not much less in Nifty. JPA, Suzlon, ADAG group, PSU Banks, MTNL etc being some cases in point over past 2 decades.

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