From the Archives: Volatility and Personal Responsibility

February 23, 2011

I have to confess that I am a little confused about this article. First, the author presents information from Morningstar that confirms the QAIB information that Dalbar has been pointing out for many years—that investors in funds do not do as well as the underlying funds themselves.

Then, he appears to blame volatility for making investors behave badly and suggests that funds with lower volatility will create better investor performance. After which he quotes Warren Buffett, who indicates the opposite—that he would rather have the higher return and accept the volatility than take the lower return. All of this is a little unclear to say the least.

Let me clear up a few things then. First, I’m not at all sure it is true that lower volatility enhances investor returns. Dalbar’s QAIB shows that bond fund investors lag bond funds by approximately the same margin as stock fund investors lag stock funds. Bonds are significantly less volatile, but that doesn’t seem to help at all. Dalbar shows only a marginally longer holding period for asset allocation funds than for stock funds, where again there is a significant difference in volatility. If volatility were really the determining factor in whether investors could hang in and perform well or not, these metrics should reflect it.

Second, I believe it is the investor and the advisor’s responsibility to do due diligence and know what they are buying. If you buy an emerging markets growth fund, for example, the fund is not exactly trying to hide that it may be volatile. You accept the volatility as your tradeoff for the potentially higher return. That’s the American way. To blame the volatility for poor returns, to me, is symptomatic of current, soft-headed American culture where no one is ever responsible for their own decisions. After all, wasn’t it that mortgage broker who made you buy a house you couldn’t afford?

No, Mr. Buffett has it right, I think. Ultimately, what makes you wealthy is the return. That means you have to deal with the volatility. And really, what is the big deal? The only ”investment acumen” a fund investor has to have to earn the NAV return is to sit like a slug! That’s it—you don’t really have to do anything clever. There is no magic trick involved, just patience. Research a strategy thoroughly, take a stand, and make a commitment, for goodness sake!

—-this article was originally published on July 7, 2009. Warren Buffett still has the right idea, I think: take the higher return and accept the volatility. Investors are still acting like sheep and running from volatility, or seaching for that holy grail of safe returns. Last year, investors bought bonds in record amounts. This year, muni bonds are already being dumped due to the volatility in that market. Now that we’ve had a couple of volatile days in the equity market, how will you react? Will you stick with a well-researched strategy, or will you bail out?

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High RS Diffusion Index

February 23, 2011

The chart below measures the percentage of high relative strength stocks that are trading above their 50-day moving average (universe of mid and large cap stocks.) As of 1/19/10.

Nearly all high relative strength stocks continue to trade above their 50-day moving average. The 10-day moving average of this indicator is 89% and the one-day reading is 84%.

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