CalPERS’s announcement of its intention to exit its $4 billion hedge fund portfolio on 15 September grabbed industry headlines. And rightly so. CalPERS (California Public Employees' Retirement System) has a long history of thought leadership in its corner of the institutional investing world, and its actions are widely watched by other large pension funds. In fact, almost exactly 15 years ago, CalPERS touched off a firestorm with equal bravado by proclaiming it would invest in hedge funds for the first time.
More broadly, the CalPERS news can be applied to a framework that considers the impact of investment leadership and job risk on both an individual decision maker and future industry trends. As depicted in the following chart, a simple 2×2 matrix pits investment decisions on the y-axis against the ex post outcomes of those decisions on the x-axis. We simplify investment decisions as either following the crowd or going against it, and we describe the result as either a winning bet (outperform) or a losing one (underperform). The chart shows what we believe to be the likely assessment by the actors making the investment call.
Career risk, according to Jeremy Grantham of GMO, is by far the biggest challenge for professionals. By choosing to invest with the crowd, the outcome in either ex post performance scenario is perfectly acceptable to the decision maker relative to the alternative. If the investment works out, the constituents are usually happy, irrespective of the path taken. If the investment falters, the decision maker can talk about the rational process involved and not get fired for hiring the perceived market leader (IBM in the 1980s, Goldman Sachs in the 1990s, Blackstone in the early 2000s).
When going against the crowd, the investor follows a riskier, binary path. If successful, he could either be seen as a hero or find that fiduciaries nevertheless question the wisdom of his unusual approach. An unsuccessful investment probably signals the end of the road for his career. Given these choices, rational actors often seek to minimize career risk. In the elegant words of John Maynard Keynes, “Worldly wisdom teaches that it is better for reputation to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally.”
This matrix reveals the significant challenge faced by a professional investor in sticking his neck out and leading others in a new direction. The question at hand is whether CalPERS’s recent announcement will become a successful example of thought leadership that prompts a wave of outflows from the industry.
The Fortunes and Misfortunes of Market Leadership
The world gets far more interesting when someone outspokenly defies the crowd and subsequently earns outsize returns. David Swensen of Yale University came to prominence in part by writing a tome about Yale’s investment process and in part by backing up that differentiated asset allocation with an impressive track record after the book’s publication. CalPERS became a thought leader in the hedge fund space from a combination of its 1999 announcement and the terrific performance by hedge funds amid market turmoil in 2000–2002, as shown below.
When a thought leader takes a new stance and succeeds, her peers’ career risk shifts from investing in the new thing to not investing in it. Back in the 1990s, investing in hedge funds was a form of job risk for institutional allocators, whose boards were leery of so-called secretive pools catering to the wealthy. Yet, those taking the unconventional approach back then had a robust opportunity set and were rewarded with uncorrelated, equity-like returns. As that occurred, the conversation at the board level and the commensurate job risk shifted from investing in the new thing to being left out of the game, and hedge fund industry assets soared. In the five years from 2002 to 2007, following this golden era of hedge fund relative performance, hedge fund industry assets tripled from approximately $626 billion to $1.8 trillion.
Alternatively, industry participants tend to ignore leading-edge shifts when thought leaders’ prognostications fail to deliver. Whether calling for market moves (see Meredith Whitney, Elaine Garzarelli, or James Glassman) or a novel asset allocation strategy (George Washington University endowment), leading thinkers without performance follow-through are soon forgotten. For institutions to follow CalPERS’s lead, hedge funds would likely need to experience a prolonged period of pronounced underperformance.
A Coal Mine or a Lump of Coal?
Through this lens, we can attempt to forecast the industry’s reaction to CalPERS’s announcement by looking both back at its incentive in making the announcement and ahead to whether its divestment from hedge funds will be a winning bet. As a starting point, CalPERS’s decision this time around was not a controversial, leading-edge change. For its own idiosyncratic reasons, CalPERS never made the commitment to hedge funds it originally intended to make 15 years ago.
First, at only 1.5% of its assets, hedge funds were insignificant to CalPERS’s overall investment program. In fact, the $4 billion in its portfolio today never came close to achieving the $11.25 billion long-term target it articulated in 1999. Moreover, CalPERS denominated that original goal in 1999 dollars. At today’s purchasing power, the target would equate to between $22 billion and $25 billion of hedge fund investments, or around six times the amount it actually invested. Ramping up to that scale quickly and effectively would be an insurmountable challenge for any allocator — or any hedge fund manager for that matter.
Second, we would surmise that this relatively small investment likely led to a significant misallocation of CalPERS’s internal resources. Hedge funds often command more research time than do traditional investments, so the subportfolio may well have taken up far more than 1.5% of the staff’s efforts. Even worse, with public scrutiny at the forefront of the CalPERS debate, the subject of hedge fund fees no doubt took up far more than 1.5% of its board’s discourse.
Lastly, following the unfortunate passing of former CIO Joe Dear, the organization’s new CIO has a chance to make his own mark. By headlining the fee savings of divestment, Ted Eliopoulos can earn a quick win with his constituents, an important step in his building long-term confidence as a leader.
In summary, regardless of the program’s performance, which appears to have been well below hedge fund industry norms, CalPERS seemed ill suited to making a substantial commitment to hedge funds. Other very large pools with similar constraints that are currently underallocated to hedge funds may find themselves challenged to scale up and may follow CalPERS’s lead. However, we believe that those who currently have a meaningful and well-performing hedge fund program also have stronger hands and a different set of conditions to evaluate.
Looking forward, our suspicion is that CalPERS’s recent announcement is like a canary in a coal mine but perhaps not the one the organization intended. Far from signaling the industry’s demise, we think that CalPERS’s announcement means that it has thrown in the towel with respect to its hedge fund program at just the wrong time in the market cycle. We believe that the next five years in the equity and bond markets are highly unlikely to look anything like the stimulus-induced last five. After five years of poor relative performance, hedge funds are overdue for their day in the sun.
The core focus of hedge funds — to protect the downside — continues to resonate with investors, who have bolstered allocations even as the industry has underperformed. Without the tailwinds that have allowed passive investing to lead active management in general and hedge funds in particular, allocators must seek other routes to achieve investment goals. Thus far, many institutions have stayed the course in partnerships with the best and brightest investment talent in public markets globally.
With great respect for CalPERS’s willingness to take a public stance — and recognizing that career risk may shift for some followers — we continue to believe that hedge funds constitute an important part of a well-diversified investment program, especially if the rosy skies of the last five years give way to darker clouds down the road.
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All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author's employer.
Image credit: Courtesy of CalPERS
16 Comments
Mr. Seides is probably one of the most highly regarded managers in the fund of funds space, and, for that reason, it's truly fascinating to see what a thin argument he musters in defense of hedge funds. Indeed, it actually gets weaker with each further comment, and provides an interesting window into the hedge fund community.
Most significantly, note how in every post his comments focus on just how smart, talented, and industrious his peers are; we don't see citations of studies, any analysis, or actual performance results, much less any refutation of the mountain of evidence compiled by Mr. Lack or other critics. When Mr. Case marshals substantive, detailed arguments to make his case, Mr. Seides, accuses him of not "diving in" to the details, and then fires back with what Seides himself calls "statistically insignificant data." Does he not see the irony here?
It may not be arrogance so much as the insular, self-referential world that many of these managers inhabit -- the extreme case being Mr. Paul Singer's recent comments about home inflation in Aspen and East Hampton proving that we nearing some sort of hyperinflation.
As Mr. Lack has pointed out many times, the hedge fund industry has retreated from earlier claims of absolute return, and then retreated from uncorrelated market returns, and finally is clinging to the idea that they won't lose as much money during a bad downturn as a passive index fund. That last argument is not standing up too well to recent evidence and studies, so the last refuge of the community is the assertion that they are the smartest and best compensated individuals in the public markets. With 98 percent of the profits from its industry retained as fees (as Mr. Lack has pointed out), it's clear that this last argument is good place to plant your flag, Mr. Seides. Yes, you and your peers are reaping millions. But investors should stay as far away as possible.
Robert,
Thanks for your kind words about me.
You are correct that in my attempt to respond to blog posts quickly, I have not supported statements with research and data. Suffice it to say that plenty exists, the best of which comes from the experience of longstanding investors in hedge fund vehicles.
As for refutations, I'll leave that to others with more time. For a critique of Simon Lack's book, I would suggest you look up the review by Brian Portnoy, a former academic and former allocator who took issue with many of Simon's methods.
I'll conclude these posts by saying that hedge funds are an investment vehicle constituting a wide array of strategies and asset classes that may be suitable to constitute a place in an investor's portfolio if implemented effectively. Many others may conclude that hedge funds are too expensive for the returns they deliver. Both are valid arguments, and I find it a bit extreme to blindly support or adamantly ignore all hedge funds because of a broad brush statement about fees or returns in aggregate.
Nothing in investing, or in life, is that black and white
I've seen this many times, and it's a very interesting tactic. When hedgies are talking about how wonderful hedge funds are, it's all about the category as a whole. Notice Ted's initial post: nothing at all about "a wide array of strategies and asset classes," only about "the terrific performance of hedge funds" as an entire category. But when others start criticizing hedge fund managers--and especially when they produce data showing that hedge funds haven't actually performed well in the real world--suddenly the hedge fund world is "a wide array of strategies and asset classes," meaning it must be somebody else who's performing poorly.
You're right, Ted, nothing in investing is that black or white. For example, you were crowing about how great hedge funds did in 2000, 2001, and 2002 while the S&P 500 lost ground all three years. Well, no investor needed hedge funds to protect against losses in large-cap stocks in those years, and they certainly didn't need to pay hedge fund fees. The U.S. bond market outperformed hedge funds in all three years, even before fees and other investment costs: the BC US Agg gained 11.6%, 8.4%, and 10.3% (for a total gain of 33%), while the "terrific performance by hedge funds" amounted to a piddling 5.0%, 4.6%, and -1.4% (for a total gain of 8%) according to your data.
The U.S. real estate market did even better: the FTSE NAREIT All REITs gained 25.9%, 15.5%, and 5.2% for a total gain of 53%. So did the global real estate market (+13%). So did non-U.S. bonds (+13%). So did TIPS (+42%). So did commodities (+35%). So did mid-cap value stocks (+10%). So did small-cap value stocks (+24%).
There's nothing wrong with saying that some hedge funds, some of the time, may be suitable for some investors, IF "implemented effectively." That's sort of like saying that heroin may be suitable for some patients if implemented effectively. Still, it's way better to stay away from it.
As a fun comparison, let's take Mr. Seides on his own, redefined terms in his latest post, and narrow our focus to what we know about the performance of his own fund, Protege Partners; specifically, let's revisit Warren Buffett's July 2008, 10-year bet that a simple Vanguard S&P 500 index fund would outperform a fund of funds chosen by Protege.
Some readers may already be familiar with the great FT Alphaville work in this space, but it's worth reading their summary of a terrific July 2014 Nomura Global Markets Research report (the FT post and summary takes you to a separate section where you can download the Nomura study itself -- well worth it. http://ftalphaville.ft.com/2014/08/01/1914342/the-hare-gets-rich-while-…)
Nomura brings us up to date on the long bet, and it has not been going well for Mr. Seides -- six years into the bet the Vanguard fund has outperformed Protege by a wide margin.
The reasons why are devastating not just for Protege, but the entire class of similar funds: both beta and correlation with standard asset classes are high; alpha is near zero (if not negative), and just to add insult to injury, there are those ridiculous costs and fees hedge funds charge compared to the de minimis Vanguard fees.
Perhaps the most damning part of the Nomura study is the exposure of the "secret sauce" that fund of funds claim to bring to the process in picking managers. As Nomura determines by unpacking the Protege fund performance (again, please look at the report and the detailed analysis): to achieve the basic model of alternative asset returns:
1) start with basic market exposure using the S&P 500 index or a rolling short VIX position,
2) reduce leverage to achieve an exposure of somewhere between 30% to 60% of standard, and
3) deduct fees.
The panoply of numbers and charts are there for all to review, and it's not pretty for Mr. Seides' case. As the late, great Pat Moynihan once said, everyone is entitled to his own opinion but not his own facts.
(In passing and if Mr. Seides would care to provide a very brief response or even just a link, I've searched for any comment, response, or analysis of how he thinks the bet is going and have found nothing; nor have I found anything by any third party taking his side. Mr. Seides probably thinks it best to keep silent -- hoping things turn before the bet ends -- but it would be nice to see any sort of response.)
I wasn't going to return to this discussion, but, "breaking news" does justify one last comment. It so nicely brings us up to date (h/t Mr. Simon Lack) the hedge fund mirage.
We just got an update from Fortune's Carol Loomis (posted on the Fortune site) on how thing are going for Mr. Seides in his bet against a simple Vanguard S&P 500 index fund, and, as Ms. Loomis says, "it's looking like a rout." While Mr. Seides thinks nothing in investing is "black and white," it sure looks pretty darn clear (as clear as black-and-white, one might say) that his highly compensated staff (aka, "the best and the brightest") are getting clobbered by a passive index:
"Through the seven years, Vanguard’s 500 index fund, as represented by its Admiral shares, is up 63.5%. That’s the portfolio carrying Buffett’s colors. Protégé’s five hedge funds of funds are, on the average—the marker the bet uses—up an estimated 19.6%. (The “estimated” takes into account that not all of the five funds have final figures for 2014)," writes Loomis.
One can only wonder how you justify charging Protege's clients enormous fees over the past seven years to earn a mere fraction of a Vanguard fund at a de minimis fee. That's an investment letter and argument that only the best and brightest could draft, I'm sure.
Robert, check out Ted's excellent empirical analysis in his new article, "Betting with Buffett: Seven Lean Years Later" (http://blogs.stage.cfainstitute.org/investor/2015/02/12/betting-with-bu…).