The Flaw of Averages

December 2, 2009

A fantastic article in the Wall Street Journal today discusses the problems with aggregated data, something we have discussed previously on this blog.

The article discusses Simpson’s Paradox, a statistical phenomenon that can make averages misleading due to the differing sizes of subgroups. It uses the example of unemployment. The current unemployment rate is 10.2%, not as bad as at the peak of the 1982 recession when it was 10.8%. However, according to Princeton University economics professor Henry Farber, compared with a similarly educated worker in 1982, “the worker today has higher unemployment at every education level.” It turns out that the average unemployment rate is only lower now because today’s workers are, on average, more educated.

College graduates, who have the lowest unemployment rate, are now more than a third of the work force, compared with roughly 25% in 1983, says the Labor Department. Meanwhile, the share of high-school dropouts has shrunk to roughly 10% of the work force, from nearly 20% in 1983.

It could easily be argued that this recession is worse than 1982, since college graduates (4.9% versus 3.6%) as well as high school dropouts (14.9% versus 13.6%) are having more trouble finding jobs.

Aggregate data is tricky and can often obscure the real truth behind the numbers. People find statistics persuasive and many groups cite statistics to “prove” their position. This article points out that it is entirely possible that the statistics they cite prove exactly the opposite position.

In the investment industry, junk statistics can sometimes crop up in backtesting. It’s important to know how the backtesting was conducted, whether the data set has survivor bias, how many parameters are fit to the data, and what kind of testing for robustness was done. All too often, product behavior going forward does not match what was expected from the backtest. Part of the appeal of our Systematic Relative Strength family of products, I think, is that the statistical testing is well done. In fact, we are planning to put out a white paper on our proprietary testing methods and how they differ from what is typically seen in the not-too-distant future. If you are interested in being on the distribution list for this white paper and you are not already on our distribution list, please sign up here.

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What’s Really In Your Bond Fund?

December 2, 2009

A new study points out that many bonds funds are less safe than their average bond ratings seem. Lower-rated bonds default at increasing rates, not at rates that increase in a constant fashion. For example, an imaginary portfolio of 50% AAA bonds and 50% A bonds will carry an average rating of AA—but the default risk will be higher than if the portfolio were 100% AA.

One article about the study remarks:

Craig McCann, principal at Securities Litigation and Consulting Group and one of the study’s authors, cites their analysis of 285 taxable intermediate bond funds from Morningstar’s database, in which they excluded all of the duplicative share classes: 47 were graded AAA; 193 were AA; 38 were A; and seven were B. Of those funds, they found that only 18, or about 6%, warranted the grade they were given; 153 of the funds — more than half — should have been a letter grade lower; and, 112, or 40%, should have been two letter grades lower.

You can read the whole white paper here.

The point is that averages can hide a lot of things. Statistics are extremely useful, but you still need to dig in and understand what you are looking at. Due diligence for any investment product must be done carefully so that you know what to expect.

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Sector Performance This Decade

December 2, 2009

(Click to Enlarge)

Source: Bespoke Investment Group

Ten years ago, if you were asked to predict which sectors would be the leaders over the next decade, would you have come up with the chart above? Unlikely. At that point, all the talk was about the “new era” economy led by Technology and Telecom. It was easy to believe that the party in those sectors would go on indefinitely. The future always has a way of surprising us.

Thankfully, relying on relative strength relieves us of the burden of trying to forecast what is going to happen. We simply keep an open mind and allow our relative strength models to allocate as the market dictates.

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