Showing posts with label Passive investing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Passive investing. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Karma and investment advice

 Over the last weekend, I attended a lecture on the doctrine of Karma, read couple of books on philosophy of investment, and observed zillion of nuggets of investment advice, apparently written by highly successful investors and/or advisors, on my social media timelines. Admittedly, all this was quite befuddling for me. Everything, I read or heard caused an overflow of conflicting thoughts and emotions. I spent the entire Republic Day holiday in extricating the entangled thoughts. I am not sure, if I attained any degree of success in my endeavour. Nonetheless, I understood the following very clearly–

(i)    Like any other Karma, the process of investing in financial products is personal to every individual. No two individuals will have exactly same investment plan – strategy, goals, process and outcome. The similarities between religion (morality, ethics etc.) and investment end here.

(ii)   Investment advisory issued (free) to common public is mostly a redundant function, inasmuch as it does not take into consideration the individual circumstances of an investor.

(iii)  Financial investment is a tiny subset of the one’s overall life. The life path one sets for himself does impact the investment plan. But vice versa may not be true. If investment plan (strategy, goals, process and likely outcome) begins to drive the life (cart before the horse), it is a huge problem.

Doctrine of Karma

Karma is perhaps the most popular word of Indian origin that has been incorporated in global lexicon. This is despite the fact that the doctrine of Karma is intrinsic to Indian belief system of rebirth and salvation and does not fit the practice of Abrahamic religions (Islam, Christianity and Judaism) and most other traditional religious belief system across Africa and Latin America.

By most simplistic definition, Karma means Acts performed by a living being. The doctrine of Karma says, insofar a living being is engaged in the eternal cycle of rebirth, the condition of present and future lives is determined by his/her Karma of past and present life.

While performance (or otherwise) of Karma is completely individual, the common goal of all Karma, performed by all living beings is to obtain release (salvation or Moksha) from this eternal cycle of rebirth. Each one has to accumulate enough good Karma that will be sufficient to secure a release from this cycle of rebirth.

The doctrine of Karma is thus motivation to live a moral & ethical life. This also explains the pain, suffering and existence of evil.

Investment advisory

Investment advisory is function of formulating a financial plan for a person or group of persons. This involves, evaluating the financial conditions of a person, setting investment gaols, making an investment strategy to achieve these goals, and assisting the person(s) in executing the plan.

Investment advice thus is very personal service. It is less likely that an investment advice shall be equally relevant for two persons or group of persons. It is therefore very important that while accepting a “common” investment advice, one needs to be extremely careful. Let me explain this by way of an example:

A “common” investment advice is that by investing in an Index Fund (passive investment), one can earn a steady return over a much longer period of time. Nifty has given CAGR of ~9% over past 30years. These 30yrs have seen extreme volatility, many wars, multiple scams, global crisis, pandemic, many droughts, extreme political instability (and stability), etc. Even in USD terms, CAGR of Nifty over past 30yrs is close to 5%. This sounds very good.

Now consider the following:

(a)   Nifty witnessed 18 corrections of over 10% in these 30years. These corrections ranged 10 to 60% from the peak level before correction. (See the chart from latest CLSA report below)

If a person had the investment plan period of less than 30yrs, there was a decent chance that he would have made much lower returns. For example, If someone invested in Index ETF in April 1992 (Nifty 1281) and redeemed his investment in September 2001 (Nifty 854), he would have lost over 30% on an nine year investment. Similarly, investment made in Nifty ETF in January 2008 (Nifty 6279) would have yielded just 1.5% CAGR if redeemed in March 2020, a good 12years later.

I appreciate that taking peak and bottom level of indices to state my point may not be appropriate. But it does not change the point. Investment in financial products is not like Karma. One wants to see the outcome of investments over a finite period, usually not as long as 30years.

We do not invest in stocks, with the idea that the profits will come, if not in this birth, may be in next birth; May be I would die before enjoying the fruits of my investment, but my grandchildren will certainly enjoy it. This may be an eventuality. But this is usually not the plan.

Therefore, while investing in an index fund, I must be mindful that only that part of my investment should go in Nifty ETF which I would not be forced to redeem in case of an emergency or contingency, especially if this emergency happens to be a macroeconomic event that might cause a sharp temporary fall in equity prices.

(b)   One must realize that protecting the savings from inflation is one of the primary goals of financial investments. In past 30years (and even in past 10years), India’s average consumer price inflation rate has been above 7%. Adjusted for this Nifty 30yrs CAGR may be under 2%. Does not look glamorous by any imagination!

The short point is that “common” (free) investment advice might be applying the doctrine of Karma to financial investment also. It may be assuming equity investment to be a perpetual endeavour, lasting for generations. Unfortunately, it is not the situation in most cases. People usually invest in stocks for generating some additional income (dividend plus capital gains) in foreseeable future. Their investment plan needs to be prepared accordingly.

 


Thursday, August 27, 2020

Robinhoods may not last long

Continuing from yesterday (see De-institutionalization of household savings)

a close up of a graph


It is important to note that investors moving away from passive investing to active investing is not an India specific phenomenon; rather it is a global shift. For example, there is massive outflow of funds from equity mutual funds in US, while benchmark indices have been scaling new highs. This outflow of funds has coincided with the tremendous rise in "Robinhood" investors - people buying and selling stocks directly on discount brokerage platforms.

As Sanjay Satapahty, a fund manager at Ampersand Capital, highlights "Trend of ETF was a megatrend over last decade and the reversal can have huge implications." (see here)

In past five months we have seen some glimpses of the likely implications for the market, should the shift from passive investing to active investing sustains over a longer period. Since the market bottom in March 2020, the small cap stocks (+73%) have outperformed the benchmark (+51%) and Midcap (+57%) significantly. The sharp small cap outperformance in June and July has coincided with the net outflows in equity mutual funds since middle of June 2020.

This outperformance has come on the back of massive rise in market volumes in value terms; number of daily trades; quantity of shares traded daily; and positive market breadth. It is also important to note that this has happened with no major change in implied volatility, much stricter margining norms and no significant rise in leverage.

I find that the following factors behind these trends-

(a)   Dismal performance of asset managers (mutual funds as well as PMS). Most fund managers have disappointed the investors who were given high hopes through aggressive "Mutual Fund Sahi Hai" campaign. There have been many instances of impropriety and unethical practices, especially in case of PMS. This might have led the investors to take the things in their own hand.

(b)   The socio-economic lock down due to outbreak of COVID-19 has rendered many people jobless. Besides many businesses have been working at zero or sub optimal capacity reducing the working capital requirement materially. Many of the jobless individuals and idle businessmen with cash may have started trading in equities in order to generate some income.

(c)    Many young professionals who have been told to work from home, may have found spare time, which they are utilizing in trading in stocks. (For more details see "Rise of Retail Investor")

GF26082020.png


My primary view has been that this trend of "Robinhood investing" may not sustain as it prevails presently. Nonetheless, we may see the following corrections in the markets over next one year or so:

(a)   The top heavy indices may inspire changes in the methodology of stock market index construction. Till then-

(i)    The diversified funds may take precedence over ETFs based on benchmark indices.

(ii)   Index heavyweights may either stagnate or see correction in prices and broader markets may remain more active.

(b)   The compensation and performance evaluation rules for professional asset managers may see material changes to make them more accountable

(c)    As the economic activity picks up from 2021, the part time investors and traders may return to their jobs. Also, the spare working capital of partially operative businesses may also flow back to routine business. This should mark the beginning of the decline of Robinhood investing.

Tomorrow I shall share my technical view on the Indian equity markets.