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28 July 2015 Enterprising Investor Blog

Alpha Wounds: Benchmark Tail Wags the Portfolio Management Dog

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Active management is under siege from many corners, including passive investment advocates, robo-advisers, academics, and individual investors. The narrative, of course, is that active managers add no alpha after fees. Is active management dead? Hardly. But active management is certainly wounded. And many of these alpha wounds are self-inflicted.

This and other forthcoming articles will seek to identify some of these wounds and propose some possible solutions for practitioners of active management.

Benchmark Tail Wags the Portfolio Management Dog

Chief among the alpha wounds is that the benchmark tail wags the portfolio management dog. What I mean is that benchmarks were supposed to be the foundation for understanding a portfolio manager’s performance after the fact. Instead the investment industry evolved so that benchmarks are now the navigational compass for investment managers before the fact.

How else do you explain a common conversation overheard in our industry that goes something like:

Pension Fund: "We need a new large-cap core manager. Our old one has too much tracking error relative to bench."

So how did we arrive at benchmark idolatry?

A Brief History of the Benchmark

Profitable investment management firms all have one thing in common: assets under management (AUM) scale. There are two ways to grow an asset management firm: one short-term and easy, and one long-term and difficult. They are, respectively, successful marketing and successful investing.

In the beginning of an asset management firm’s life cycle, AUM is very difficult to acquire. Without quality returns there is not much to market to prospective investors. Consequently, in the beginning, firms — often founded by quality investment managers — focus on generating outsized returns relative to their competition.

But then what happens? Inevitably the firm begins to think to itself, "With these returns in hand, we can now gather assets by telling the world our good news story. Scale is now possible. So, too, is that lustrous paycheck we all work so hard to earn." Enter those adjuncts to the business that aid our growth through marketing. Exit growing AUM by earning the returns.

Unless an investment manager is careful at this stage, the focus of the successful investment management firm shifts to pleasing adjuncts to the investment management business — private wealth managers, registered representatives, and consultants among them – rather than its clients. But initially what everyone wanted from an investment manager’s performance was similar:

  • A strategy that had the possibility of achieving clients' financial objectives.
  • A strategy in which returns exceeded the risks in adhering to the strategy.
  • Ideally, risk-adjusted returns that exceeded those of an investment manager’s competitors.

With these three simple bullet points met, clients and the adjuncts were typically happy.

Necessarily though investment adjuncts wanted to identify quality managers from among the vast sea of such beasts. “How do we know that you are as good as you claim in your marketing literature?” “How do we know that you are not taking crazy risks to achieve your results?” “How do we know that you actually have a strategy, and that you are not just a trend follower?” And so on. The questions were many, and they are noble. Fortunately — and I sincerely mean that — benchmarks were invented to help address some of these questions and, most importantly, to help our end clients.

Then whole careers became about refining the process of manager selection beyond simple benchmarking. Philosophical concepts were developed and coupled with hard math to birth new tools. Ultimately what happened is that now if a manager wants to raise AUM through marketing, the price is to clear the preferred mathematical hurdles of the adjuncts.

Particularly pernicious, and especially germane to the current discussion, are the concepts of “style box,” “style drift,” and “tracking error.” If an active manager statistically violates any of these three important concepts, then they likely lose the endorsement of, for example, the consultant who sold the fund to an institutional client. There goes a large chunk of AUM, a measurable amount of operating leverage, and that lustrous annual bonus. Ouch!

The Shackles of the Style Box

The style box was invented because many investment strategies were similar and thus suggested a natural point of comparison. This allowed clients and their representatives to compare active managers to one another, and it also held these managers accountable to their stated strategies. All of this is the work of the angels.

Unfortunately, along the way managers who refused to declare a style because they believed their job was to make money regardless of market and economic conditions did not have access to the rich AUM mine available to those declaring a style box. So most stopped protesting and instead allowed themselves to be chained to a style box.

Also, style boxes became a way of limiting the opportunities available to managers. If a manager is labeled as mid-cap core, then the opportunity set must be the same and thus be smaller. So if you are an active manager with active management skills, you have agreed to be handcuffed in your ability to apply those skills.

The Schizophrenia of Style Drift

If active managers actively search for opportunities to apply their skills to take advantage of the shifting vagaries of asset prices, they now receive the investment industry equivalent of a schizophrenia diagnosis. This comes courtesy of the concept of “style drift.” Style drift was invented to identify managers who, having agreed to be shackled to a style box, had the audacity to attempt to shed those bonds.

The Error of Tracking Error

Last among the benchmark-related concepts that unintentionally make active managers inactive is tracking error. Tracking error compares the actual performance of an investment manager to the benchmark and comes loaded with a qualitative judgment. Specifically, you must beat the style box benchmark while limiting your universe of possible investments to keep style drift low. But should you succeed in this endeavor, then you cannot do so by too much. Else, you have tracking error.

We Active Managers Did It to Ourselves

The preceding may have convinced you that I blame academics, consultants, private wealth managers, and other investment industry adjuncts for the current sad state of active management. But I do not.

Active managers: We have done it to ourselves! In short, we allowed static concepts, such as benchmarks, style boxes, style drift, and tracking error, to contravene our mandate to be active managers. I actually like each of these concepts (and worked for a pension consultant early in my career) and believe they are useful . . . in moderation. But there are remedies to this madness that can restore moderation. Here are some:

Remedies

  1. Earn AUM through performance, not marketing. A majority of your time should be spent on research, not giving presentations to third parties.
  2. Run your firm leanly. If AUM walks out the door because you begin managing money for end clients and not for the expectations of a third party, then you still have scale enough to endure. Remember: good performance news eventually reaches client ears . . . especially in the era of social media.
  3. Remember that benchmark is a noun, not a verb — namely, “A standard or point of reference against which things may be compared or assessed," according to Oxford Dictionaries. Where in this definition does it say that you should navigate to the benchmark? Your job is to navigate away from, and better than, the benchmark.
  4. Talk to your clients and develop a relationship with them so they know who you are and what your investment philosophy is. Then they may develop expectations in alignment with yours.
  5. Be aware of the potentially Faustian bargain entered into when you agree to be measured by third parties in exchange for possible AUM favor.

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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: ©iStockphoto.com/CSA-Printstock

28 Comments

JW
Jay Weinstein (not verified)
31st July 2015 | 5:15pm

As you noted, both investment managers and wealth managers [who hire the investment managers] have brought this problem on themselves by TRAINING their clients to focus on poorly designed or irrelevant benchmarks. The creation of an infinite number of benchmarks, regardless of utility or statistical validity, is a classic example of the tail wagging the dog.

The truth is, any asset class that cannot be reasonably indexed should be considered as an absolute return vehicle. The active management fee is just the price of admission, just like DisneyWorld! :)

Back in the day, I would simply compare myself to the S&P 500 as essentially that's the cheapest "monkey throwing darts" benchmark that everyone has access to. If I couldn't do better after my fees, regardless of what my portfolio had in it, then I didn't deserve to have a business.

You write with an excellent voice, I am casting my vote that you pursue this topic further!

Best regards...

JV
Jason Voss, CFA (not verified)
1st August 2015 | 11:21am

Hi Jay,

Your commentary rings true to me. Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Thanks, too, for the compliment about the writer's voice.

Yours, in service,

Jason

EO
Elliott Orsillo (not verified)
4th August 2015 | 11:20am

Jason,

I think you nailed it in this first post. We have this same conversation with our clients all the time. I look forward to reading the rest of this series.

I did have a question about the following statement:

“How do we know that you actually have a strategy, and that you are not just a trend follower?”

When you say "trend following" do you mean performance chasing or do you mean all trend following strategies including CTAs and managed futures? If the latter, how would you explain the "alpha" generated from the momentum factor in the Fama/French research?

Cheers,
Elliott

JV
Jason Voss, CFA (not verified)
4th August 2015 | 11:53am

Hi Elliot,

Thanks for the praise and for the question. Regarding my statement...I was referring to the closet indexer. The money manager that looks at the portfolio holdings and thinks that it is a radical alpha generator to overweight by less than 100 basis points a particular sector because of a macroview. Or the money manager that looks at the portfolio holdings twice yearly of the top performers' in his/her category and buys the same stuff so as to minimize the amount by which they trail. And so on. Lots of examples.

The results of our business our objectively measured, not subjectively. In short, "Show me the money!" of a strategy.

Hope that helps to clarify!

Jason

GH
Gerry Heffernan (not verified)
2nd September 2015 | 5:03pm

Jason,

I greatly appreciated your piece. (As well as many of the comments) I agree with your assertion that benchmarks have created a problem. As an institutional manager I was often asked what benchmark I should be judged against. In most cases I told the client (or consultant) that that was their decision. That if they were in agreement with my investment philosophy and process (two very different things that I'm interested to see if your future writings will touch on) and choose me to run their money then I will do my very best to maximize their return and then we can compare it to whatever benchmark they see fit to better understand the returns that were produced. The benchmark should be used to review performance, not as a starting point for building a portfolio.

As far as the consultant (the middleman) being the problem I would offer the argument that it is the portfolio managers responsibility to establish a strong relationship with the end client. This is not to say that one should try and squeeze out the consultant. Rather, if a strong relationship is forged between manager and client where the client has chosen the manager for philosophy and process, (not statistical tables in a pitch book) then the performance review meeting will have much more of a partnership tone as opposed to a judgement panel feel. In my experience this is a preferable situation for the consultant as they are part of the partnership also, and not spending their time worried about having to defend their previous advice. (It also had the very positive effect of future positive recommendations from that consultant) Unfortunately, I believe, that too many managers view the client as judge and jury as opposed to a partnership with the common goal of investment returns.

I look forward to your future writings

Gerry

JV
Jason Voss, CFA (not verified)
2nd September 2015 | 9:03pm

Hello Gerry,

Thank you for your comments about the consulting community. But even greater thanks for your emphasis on partnerships in service of clients. I believe these are important words, and thank you for expressing them.

Yours, in service,

Jason

SC
Savio Cardozo (not verified)
12th November 2015 | 11:52pm

Hello Jason
In your usual inimitable style you have tackled not just the boxed-in manager but also an entire industry whose livelihood depends on keeping that manager boxed-in.
Like many things in life, as you elegantly point out, you either play the game, or stay on the sidelines.
Technology may yet undo some of these shackles but it will be a battle hard fought with a lot of lucrative year-end bonus cheques at stake for the investment consulting industry.
To your last point, my all time favourite poem has to be the Tragic End of Dr. Faustus - what's a soul compared to paycheques worth several million - a small price to pay.
Kind regards and a pleasant weekend
Savio

JV
Jason Voss, CFA (not verified)
13th November 2015 | 7:32am

Hello Savio,

Wow, that is such high praise! I agree with you; the implications for the industry would be enormous. Frankly, I am not sure there is any appetite to reform the industry when margins remain north of 25% for most asset management firms. But perhaps if robo-advisers start to harvest the fat in these margins there will then be a desire by the industry to refocus on the client, and on consistent returns, and across all of the products. As opposed to focusing on entities most clients would be hard pressed to explain: the "wire houses."

Yours, in service,

Jason