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Portfolio Yoga - Part 5

Should Equity Fund Managers take Cash Calls? – November Newsletter

It’s a question that has been debated and discussed deeply in the financial community. Those who believe equity fund managers should go to Cash when the odds aren’t favorable suggest that the objective of a fund manager is to generate superior risk adjusted returns.

On the other hand, those who believe that the equity fund manager should not go to cash within the portfolio base their belief on the fact that the asset allocation is best left to the discretion of the client.

A not so recent thread on the subject

Cash calls in Asset Allocation can be taken in two ways. One would be based on Valuation while the second method is based on Trend. Both have their positives and negatives and it’s important to understand the merits and demerits of each before deciding on what suits one best. A combo works well as long as one is willing to stand apart from the crowd.

Compared to other methods of investing, a key expectation of Momentum Investing is going to cash when the market goes down. While from the theoretical angle of risk, this appears to be a great way to reduce the draw-downs, going to cash has draw-backs of its own including the fact that going to cash at the wrong time results in opportunity costs that are never calculated.

Even setting aside that, the issue with going to cash suggests that the strategy is more of a speculative strategy which inturn means that serious allocation becomes tough. The only time Cash as a position makes sense is when there aren’t enough stocks that pass through one’s filter. This happens rarely – last time it happened was in March / April of 2020.

Cash as a position has its utility when the odds are heavily stacked against the strategy.I don’t believe that we are at a stage where going to cash makes eminent sense. If the view turns out to be wrong in which case, we shall see a mid month shuffle. 

Market Trends

Writing in March of this year, I used the idiom that Lightning doesn’t strike the same place twice to suggest that a big fall wasn’t on the horizon. Even though VIX in the US has done what it did way back in February 2020 – a breakaway gap of nearly 50% then and we  have seen the same on Friday too, I think the future path isn’t looking similar.

In his book, New Methods for Profit in the Stock Market, Garfield Drew writes

The human mind is always inclined to go back to the past experience in the market and judge the future by that. Post Mortems may be held after each largely unforeseen collapse in order to determine what the warning signals were. Attention is then focused upon them for a time in order to avoid the next crisis , but when it comes, it is usually found afterward that the primary signs of danger had shifted to another field.

Since the original crash is still very fresh in Investors memory, the anticipation is that the current fall will be of a similar nature. 

In early 2020, Markets were unprepared for the impact of an epidemic and one that seemed to shut down countries. The markets expected the worst well before the worst actually took place. When markets bottomed out, the number of new cases per day worldwide was just around 50,000 versus the peak we saw of nearly a million in early April of this year.

Broader market trends have been starting to show weakness for a while but not all weakness leads to crashes either.  Number of Stocks (Universe being all listed NSE stocks) that are currently above their 200 day EMA stands at 60%, something we saw in September 2020. Markets saw a slight pull back before it bounced back with some ferocity.

Primary Trend: The primary trend in Nifty has been bullish as is easily evident from the lows of March 2020 seems to have now been broken. A break of the primary trend means that the market now will tend to trend either sideways – time correction or downwards – price correction. 

In August 2013 Nifty began a strong rally upwards. The Primary Trend from February 2014 onwards was especially strong. This ended in March 2015 though the confirmation as such became possible only in June of the same year. The correction would last nearly a year with Nifty bottoming out in March 2016 before the next leg of the rally started.

I sense we are somewhere closer to March 2015 with a lot more sideways – slightly downwards action on the way. 

“History Doesn’t Repeat Itself, but It Often Rhymes” – Mark Twain

There is no reason that the market should follow what it has done historically to the dot. What history provides us is a perspective from which we can draw conclusions and act on the same.

How did Momentum work during these times?

The backtest for the period shows that Momentum did not initially succumb to the weakness though it did bottom out with similar drawdown by the end. The reason for the divergence can be seen when we look at the performance of the Nifty Small Cap Index in the same period. While Nifty was trending down, this was trending flat. This enabled Momentum strategy to actually outperform both the Small Cap Index and the Large Cap Index for a while. From early 2016, the Small cap too took a severe pounding and took everyone down with it.

This time around, we don’t have that divergence. Large, Mid and Small Cap indices are behaving in a similar fashion and what this means is that there could be pain ahead regardless of the methodology one uses to be invested in the market.

So, how should one play this out?

This depends on what your time horizon is, your ability to digest a drawdown and the willingness to bear pain of a different nature if you are out and the market takes off.

While the Momentum Portfolio will continue to be fully invested as long as we have enough stocks that meet our criteria, the action can be taken from the asset allocation side. 

The old adage – a penny saved is a penny earned doesn’t hold good in the markets. While saving a penny is always appreciated, it often results in an opportunity cost of two to three pennies. This is because while getting out is easy, getting back in full force when the market trend turns up once again but the overall newsflow is still very much negative is tough for most investors – new or experienced.

I wrote about some historical examples in this post – Mayhem in Markets. Will it End

Markets were due for a correction, this is something that everyone knew.  The reason could have well been different and we would have seen the same action play out. The question though, what next is always difficult to predict especially in the short term.

I drive a bike and have been driving one for the last two decades and more. Roads being what they are, we do get into numerous potholes. The key to safe driving is not avoiding such potholes but avoiding the massive ones that can literally throw you off the vehicle.

In similar ways, I feel that the only time when we should get out of Equity and into the safety of Bonds / Cash is when we find ourselves on the cusp of a major drop. Small jerks are best accepted as the trade off for ability to garner returns that are way better than any other asset class.

When we look at market corrections, the calculation is between the peak and the trough. But neither are known other than in hindsight. Let’s assume that we cannot sell before the market is down 10% from the peak and buy back 10% above the trough. In essence we miss out on 20%. Gains accrue only if the fall is deeper and smoother without violent pullbacks that get smashed.

In the fall of 2000 (Dot Com bubble) for instance, Nifty rose 10%+ from the intermediate lows multiple times but failed. In hindsight, it’s easy to notice things that would have made one avoid getting caught in the bounce, but in reality, I remember seeing more money lost in these bounce back trades than in the first fall itself.

The key to successful investing lies in having an exposure that allows you to peacefully sleep at night even during the worst times but also has enough exposure to ensure that the goals are reached. Peaceful sleep can be had by stuffing the pillow with cash, but that doesn’t grow.

Contrarian Investing – Investing in China

In recent times, there has been a lot of talk about Global Investing with all kinds of narratives spun around to make it sound that if you are not investing globally you are missing out. Nothing could be further than the truth, but selling expensive products requires a good narrative and right now with US markets providing market-beating returns, a good excuse is all that is required.

Why to invest globally vs locally. The first time I heard about Global Investing was from experts in the United States. The United States, they said, being a mature country will grow around 3% while emerging giants such as China and India are growing close to double digits. Why confine to the United States alone they argued.

Over the last decade and more, anyone who followed their advice and invested in emerging nations underperformed the S&P 500. Diversification is good but mindless diversification adds no value.

In India, at last count, there are 56 Mutual Fund Schemes offering various themes and a few countries with 5 new offerings. But if one were to look at the Assets under Management, 5 funds and one fund of fund, all focussed on the US markets.

Axis and Kotak have global innovation funds but where majority of the underlying stocks are from US (65% and 80% respectively). A key attraction for investors has been the recent strong trends one has observed in the US markets.

But the same US markets saw a near 12 year period of Zero return between 2000 and 2011. Nasdaq was able to break above the high of 2000 only in 2016. In the same period of time, Indian Markets did phenomenally well.

Post the recent attack on Indian Troops, China evokes a very different sentiment than one we had before that. This is not limited to India alone as we have seen a severe spike in China being seen as unfavorable across much of the developed world.

Much of this is a result of not just trade disputes China has with others or the fact that CoronaVirus started out there but the aggressive Wolf Warrior Diplomacy that has been carried out with Ambassadors all but threatening the leaders of other nations for what China sees as errors of Omission or Commission. 

The biggest risk of investing in Autocratic countries is that they lack the rule of the law which allows for fair competition and pricing. This in a way pushes away prospective investors. This also means that such countries are generally cheap. They are of course cheap for the reason that your companies can get booted out of business without any compensation.

Take a look at the Cyclically Adjusted PE Ratio of major indices (end June 2021)

Anyone who has read Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One Man’s Fight for Justice by Bill Browder knows how risky it can be to invest in such a country. While I loved reading the book, I did wonder, is there another side to the story? The problem for autocratic countries is that their Judiciary is seen as one sided, even if there is another side to the story, we may tend to not believe the same.

Countries such as China & Japan have a conviction rate of 99%. A very high conviction rate either means that the police is extremely efficient or the judiciary is compromised not to challenge the state. Either way, it’s an extremely risky proposition to invest in such countries directly.

China tech crackdown is India’s gain was a recent article pointing out how in this year, Venture capital funds have shifted funds to India due to the duress they are observing in China post the Alibaba incident. 

Excess returns are not possible by investing into companies or countries where everything is working out great. Decent returns, Yes but not Excess returns. Excess returns is the fee that the market pays the risk taker for buying something when no one wants. Value Investing 101 is all about investing in what everyone seems to think as risky. Markets are right a lot of times with risky companies going down the tube. But they are also wrong and that is where the opportunity lies.

Currently I am starting to see China as one such country which is out of favor, seems to carry risks that are opaque in nature but can blow up spectacularly and a country that is said to have peaked early.

Investing in China for outsiders is tough. This is a reason why Hong Kong for long has been the gateway for investing in China. In 2010, when there was little talk of International Investing, the Benchmark Asset Management Company brought out a HangSeng ETF. Motilal Oswal followed up with the N100 the very next year.

When compared with one another, the returns can be said to be Chalk & Cheese. The Nasdaq 100 ETF since its listing has delivered an absolute return of 884% vs 162% for the HangSeng Bees. Not surprisingly the Hang Seng Bees has a very small asset under management – just 100 Crores.

While Nasdaq has been an outperformer for a long time, the Assets themselves are fairly recent. As of end October 2019, the N100 ETF had an AUM of 242 Crores and its Fund of Fund an AUM of 98 Crores. Today (end October 2021), the AUM of the ETF is 5,703 Crores and the AUM for the FOF stands at 3,998 Crores.

The highest risk in investing is not going with the crowd but going with them when they are wrong which usually happens at peaks and bottoms. The best tech companies are no doubt in the United States, but when it comes to valuations, how many are priced to perfection and what happens if those predictions fail to come true.

When an asset management company starts a new fund, the general reasoning is that they are getting into the asset gathering mode. But what if a fund launches a fund that may not really get its asset base to swell. The launch of the Mirae Asset Hang Seng TECH ETF to be suggests that rather than it being another attempt to boost their assets (which crossed the magical figure of 10 Lakh Crore a few months ago), this is a attempt to provide a opportunity to invest in a market that is cheap, seems to have a decent future with a affordable product.

Another interesting NFO that is coming out is the Nippon India Taiwan Equity Fund. While much of Taiwan’s market is China, it’s tough to know how they can play out if China decides to start squeezing Taiwan economically. 

One of the reasons to avoid International country specific funds is we really know so little about them. Seven years ago if you had invested in the Franklin India Feeder – Templeton European Opportunities Fund, the value of investment would have grown by an awesomely obscene CAGR of 2.20%. This even as Europe has recovered from the crisis that was seen as the end of the European dream. Anyone remember the PIIGS and the doomsday that was pointed out then?

Investing as a whole is always risky. All we can do is attempt to address the risks as efficiently as we can while also hoping that our thesis is not extraordinarily wrong. 

Introducing Portfolio Yoga Fundamental Bets Portfolio

The antidote to Momentum if there is any, lies in the domain of Value investing. Momentum and Value are often seen as two sides of the same coin even though believers may think that the world is flat and there is only one side to it.

When it comes to building portfolios, though, Value and Momentum can be as different as chalk and cheese. One looks for stocks making new lows while another looks for stocks making new highs. Value investing requires in depth business analysis, while momentum is a heavily data driven approach.

At Portfolio Yoga, we believe that an investor need not be chained to one factor that is currently fancied. This is why we introduced the Quality Portfolio which looks at stock picking differently from the Momentum Approach with a much longer holding period.

Stocks that qualify for Quality for most part are already well known companies that have shown the  mettle for many years. On the other hand, there are stocks – stocks that may not be currently fancied for whatever reason but one with high potential. Lack of interest provides opportunities for the discerning investor who is willing to wait for the market to recognize its potential. 

With thousands of companies, searching for a few good companies is more like searching for a needle in a haystack especially since quantitative filters can only filter out only the really unreasonable leaving hundreds of others available for picking. To build a sensible portfolio, we need to drill it down to a couple of dozen stocks and this requires a lot more than just historical data.

Building Wealth | Building Relationships is not just our tagline but how we wish to live in reality. Building relationships is never easy but once built, good relationships can last a lifetime. Building Wealth on the other hand, it’s all about being with the right people.

With the launch of Portfolio Yoga Fundamental Bets portfolio, we are expanding our team by collaborating with people who have been in the world of fundamental investing for more than a decade.  

With their expertise and our experience, we hope to be able to deliver a portfolio that produces a decent reward for the risk taken. We hope you can join us in the journey we are about to begin.

Strategy 

The portfolio is designed for long term investors with a time horizon of two to five years. 

The criteria for inclusion of any stock into the portfolio will be based on businesses we understand and one we feel have a long runway for growth. We dislike companies with high debt ratios and would try to stay away from the same even if they seem to be available cheap. 

A pure value portfolio is one where the firm is being sold for less than its intrinsic value for any number of reasons. While finding such companies in India is not an issue, the issue always is the ability of the management to unlock such assets. As we have in multiple cases, even when such assets are unlocked, the retail shareholders may be left high and dry with the management deciding to use the funds based on their own rationale and reasons.

This portfolio hence is a combination of Value and Growth. Our Universe of stocks is across all market segments and hence will be multi-cap in approach. The portfolio currently holds nearly 38% of the capital in Cash and which shall be deployed as and when new opportunities are found.

Current Market Cap Distribution of the Portfolio

The minimum capital we advise for those wishing to subscribe to the portfolio is Rupees Six Lakhs. The reason for the high commitment is to ensure that the fees you pay are inline with fees you get charged at Mutual Funds when going through the distributor mode. 

The portfolio stocks shall be in either Buy Mode, Hold Mode (wherein those who have bought can hold the same though new investments aren’t recommended) or Sell (either complete exit or partial exits based on each stocks individual situation).

Given that the market doesn’t wait for a weekend for opportunities to surface, additions may happen at any time during the week and shall be communicated via email. In future we are also contemplating using other tech tools to provide you with timely alerts on mobile and one that is not easy to miss.

Benchmarking: This portfolio would be benchmarked against Category Returns of “Value Oriented Funds”.

Want a sneak peak at the portfolio before you decide? Check out the sample here 

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1P3a-ZaqDZntjt28JL0uaVW7DLQapztTuPHlqcXWKKpE/edit?usp=sharing

Do note that this is part of the real starting portfolio though changes in the real portfolio will not be reflected here. This is just a sheet to provide you with a clue on the kind of stocks we shall pick. 

The Fee for this portfolio has been set at Rs.12,000 (Rupees Twelve Thousand Only}. Link for the payment is available on the Philosophy & Services page.

Have questions, mail us or DM on Twitter. 

Random thoughts on the IPO Market and Market Tops

In 2008, Reliance Power came out with a massive public issue. At that point no one could have called it a peak but in hindsight that became the peak due to the fall in the US markets which set the ball rolling downwards across the world.

From that point onwards big issues are seen as a probable peak point though no one seems to know which IPO. These days every IPO seems way too overpriced making even the Reliance Power issue relatively a value pick. But markets seem to ramble on with even more ridiculous IPO being able to list at valuations that in other times would make no logic.

Does anyone remember which IPO was the peak in the Dot Com bubble? The peak came without any large IPO hitting the market. One day we were hitting upper circuits and suddenly another day we were hitting lower circuits.

These days analyzing IPOs is a total waste of time. Investors loading in for the IPO aren’t there because of their belief in the company. It has more to do with listing returns. Even analysts whose job is to track and analyze have run out of reasons to recommend buys on such offers unless they assume linear growth for decades to come.

At some point of time, every bull market loses its legs. While we could causate the reasons behind why it fell on such and such a day, it most probably is because the marginal buyer stopped buying. 

Every high there seems to be dramatic predictions (some veiled, some not so) about a forthcoming crash. The other day a friend mentioned how his friend’s kid and other kids he knew were now opening trading accounts and whether this could be a signal of a top.

Like the dinosaurs which went extinct in the Cretaceous age, so too shall the IPO’s. But unlike the dinosaurs, they shall come again back in force for we had seen similar trends in IPO’s in 1995, 2000, 2007 and who knows 2021?

We are a Year Old

The other-knowing are wise

The self-knowing are discerning

Those who triumph over others have muscle

Those who triumph over themselves are commanding

Those who what enough is are affluent

Those who practice strenuously have resolve

Those who don’t lose their place are enduring

Those who die and don’t disappear are long-lived

– Laozi / Tao Te Ching

For many businesses, the first year can be a make or break. Fifty percent of businesses die in their very first year of operation. Most businesses get started because the founder generally sees either a lacunae in the current setup which he hopes to fill or believes he can offer a better product compared to those that are currently available.

It doesn’t matter how good a product is or how big a gap the founder thinks he is filling if the market doesn’t validate him and the way of validation is achieved by being able to sell the idea to the public for a price. 

Financial Advisory is dime a dozen and yet there is a real dearth of quality financial advice. The biggest sellers of Mutual Funds for example are not Financial Advisors but Banks. Selling Insurance and Mutual Funds is part and parcel for most Private Bank employees to the extent that many would rather push investors who come to place a fixed deposit to either a Unit Linked Insurance Plan or a Mutual Fund. 

Technology is seen as a one stop solution for all things including finance. Robo Advisory is the next big thing in finance with personalized solutions being provided to clients at a fraction of the cost that traditional advisory shall cost. Think of it as a Low Cost Airline vs a Full Service Airline.

While low fees is definitely a great appeal, the issue when it comes to finance is our inability to hold our emotions in check when the chips are down. Asking a computer to solve it isn’t going to help. 

In March 2020, I saw fear and panic envelop as markets cracked like no other time before with the Index down 40% from a peak it had hit at the start of the year. My own portfolio was down more than 25%.

When markets fall big time, even experienced professionals tend to panic. Today, it’s all nice to wonder what if one had bought during the fall but at that time, the question was whether to take the hit and move on or wait and see how things may unfold. 

To try and get a better understanding I tweeted 

https://twitter.com/Prashanth_Krish/status/1241242995300564993

What I could see was real pain and pressure felt by many. This was also the time that Analysts on TV were warning about even more pain that could be coming. A famous technical analyst using an esoteric model of analysis even painted a picture of Nifty going down to 2000. 

Looking back at the DM’s I don’t think I advised many to buy more but I did advise to hold on for now, the pain has been seen and I personally felt that markets may not tumble down the rabbit hole as many seemed to predict.

If there was any doubt on what space Portfolio Yoga wanted to occupy, this episode gave the clarity it required. While the initial thought was to take the Registered Investment Advisor License, the new rules that were being circulated meant that it was not worth going down that road. 

One could not have asked for a better first year in terms of how the market has behaved. Even a lousy strategy would have worked wonders and it’s not surprising that the Portfolio Yoga portfolio’s had a dream run.

We started with just one portfolio – Portfolio Yoga Multicap Momentum Portfolio and have over the months expanded the offering to include Portfolio Yoga Large Cap Momentum Portfolio, High Price Portfolio and the Coffee Can styled Quality Portfolio.

All this at a simple and single price that we felt was something that would be affordable by those who may not have a large capital to start with but required a bit of hand-holding and a good portfolio to start their investment journey.

One of the differences we feel that we offer compared to others is the ability to call us if you wish to get a better understanding of the services or even the market. This meant getting in touch with more than 50 of our clients and even meeting a few of them personally. 

Also, did I mention that we even today are the only guys that offer partial refunds if one is not satisfied with the services anytime after subscription? Love to say that just 8 of the total of 294 who have subscribed to us wanted a refund. 

One of the easiest ways to sell is to talk about performance. In bad years, everyone wants to talk about the process while in good years, it’s all about performance and how great their stock picking ability has been. While we write a monthly newsletter to clients, we have never talked about our performance. 

Our performance is not shitty but is not the best either. But the reason not to talk about performance is because it in a way sets expectations that may or may not be matched in the future. In 2017, I distinctly remember small cap fund managers tomtomming their returns with many comparing against Nifty 50. Over the next couple of years, it was just one way down for many with drawdowns to the tune of 50% or more. Clients panic at the exact wrong time because they got sold an idea without selling them on the risks.

Momentum is a good strategy and has an outstanding year and half. But at some point the returns shall wane even as the returns of some other factor will shine. Momentum is not some free lunch in the market. 

After a strong start, client growth has kind of tapered off but that is what happens even when a spaceship is launched, so all izz well 🙂

What Next?

In the world of factors, the only gap that remains from Portfolio Yoga stable is the “Value Portfolio”. Unfortunately the quantitative approach is not the most ideal given the nuances when it comes to Indian stocks & their promoters. We are actively working with someone who has deep insights into Value Investing to bring a Discretionary Value Portfolio out. 

With Corona on the wane and a new office now setup, the hope is also to attract a few youngsters to work with us to bring out deeper insights into stocks and market. In the meanwhile, we now have a presence on the Smallcase platform with our Large Cap Momentum Portfolio.

To better days ahead. Onwards & Upwards. 

September 2021 Newsletter – Eight Common Investor Mistakes

In the book, Winning with Stocks, author Michael Thomsett lays out 8 mistakes he feels that most investors end up making and how to avoid the same. Rather than copy paste the same, I felt I shall try to explain the mistakes from my own experience. 

Mistake #1: Investing with more risk than you can afford

This is the number one account killer I have come across in my career as a stock broker. Clients overestimate their ability to take risks and end up taking way too high a risk which when things go wrong generally ends up with the account losing 100% of the capital. 

Once upon a time, exchanges in India used to follow a weekly settlement schedule. While BSE operated a settlement from Monday to Friday, it was Wednesday to Tuesday for NSE. This meant that you could buy a stock on say Wednesday and square off the same on Tuesday without making the full payment. Think of it as an extension of today’s intraday exposure brokers allow with minimum margins. 

In those days, margins were barely collected by brokers. Trust was the key. This meant that most clients were able to access pretty large exposure without putting down any real money. In regional stock exchanges, we had a way to carry forward this to the next settlement by a process called Badla and in this way, a client could carry over a position while paying off only the marked-to-market difference (if it was negative).

Given the nice brokerage (plus many brokers padded the prices in addition), both clients and brokers were happy but this meant rampant speculation and accompanied by failures – both of clients and many a time of the broker himself.

Badla is long gone but leverage has not. Derivatives have replaced Badla. While you could carry forward just 100 shares of most shares in the good old days, these days one carries a much higher quantity and one that can make or break a lot of traders’ accounts.

Leverage for most traders ends up badly. Yes, there are always the occasional winners who seem to have made much more thanks to the ability to leverage his minimal capital but out and out, it’s a losers game for most. Yet, the attraction never fades.

Mistake #2: Chasing Income but forgetting Cash Flow

At the first glance, both seem to be the same thing. Income is nothing but Cash Flow. Only when one looks at Cash Flow as negative (outflow vs inflow) does this start to make better sense.

A friend has built up an enviable portfolio of real estate assets which has not only gone up in value since his purchase but also for a long time provided him a good cash flow that took care of his other requirements. That is until Corona hit and his income evaporated. 

While there are many reasons why investors are generally fascinated with Real Estate, one big reason is the ability to generate a continuous stream of income. In many ways, this is the same attraction that drives investors to dividend yielding stocks.

Recently a question that was asked to me was the point of asset allocation. If one were able to hold onto their behavior when markets were bad, does it really make sense to have an allocation to debt with interest rates being so low.

The upside of equity combined with the recency bias of a bull market makes us forget that the risk of 100% equity is not that of equity falling but falling and then one losing one’s source of income. 

But as Warren Buffett says

“We never want to count on the kindness of strangers in order to meet tomorrow’s obligations. When forced to choose, I will not trade even a night’s sleep for the chance of extra profits”.

An allocation to debt in the asset allocation mix not just ensures a smoother equity curve but also something that can be dipped into during the bad times. Whoever said Cash is King isn’t entirely wrong.

Mistake #3: Limiting your investment horizon

What should be an ideal portfolio of assets. Should one limit oneself to Stocks or deal with Commodities, Forex not to mention Real Estate. What about Country Bias – should one restrict oneself to one’s own country or be spread across multiple countries to take benefit of both diversification of country as well as being hedged versus the Rupee.

An ideal portfolio is one that has the lowest correlation between the assets themselves. Most discussions on diversification tend to discuss how many stocks are good for being diversified. But given that most stocks have very high correlation between each other, is that really true diversification.

True diversification revolves around having assets that at best have negative correlation between themselves or at worst a low correlation. One of the reasons for the fascination with Gold for instance has been its low correlation to equities. 

Since the introduction of Gold Bees, the 200 day correlation between Gold Bees and Nifty has moved between a max of 0.87 and a min of -0.93 with average being -0.03. This year for instance, Gold has moved down by 7 odd percent while Nifty has moved up by 28 percent. 

International diversification is gaining a lot more acceptance these days thanks to the massive moves in US Equities and products launched by Indian AMC’s. While country bias is removed, this doesn’t provide true diversification since equities in India tend to move the way they move in the US. In fact, there are very few countries whose fortunes aren’t in some way linked to the performance of the US markets. What International diversification provides at best is a hedge against the Rupee.

A better diversification can be achieved by investing in Trend Following programs. Unfortunately in India, we don’t have any CTA style funds. While there are advisories that provide trade ideas based on trend following, they are very limited in nature and require constant personal interventions. 

Real Estate is a massively large diversifier and one with low correlation to equities. A right amount of Real Estate in the portfolio can work wonders during good times and bad. Debt Mutual Funds are another way to diversify. Both of these also tend to be the biggest driver of returns for most investors. 

Personally though, I believe in Charlie Munger’s idea of having everything invested in a single basket and watching the basket carefully. While this means a higher level of volatility, my belief is that if I can keep my head when things aren’t working out, when they work out it really works wonders.

Mistake #4: Overlooking the Essential Research

As investors, it’s easy to get swayed by the current trends. Buy First; Research Later is something most tend to do though once a certain asset or stock has been bought, does it even require any more research.

Research is tough. In fact, it may not be possible by investors to do the kind of research necessary owing to multiple limitations. But true research ideally starts with having a good philosophy and one I have found to be missing by a large number of investors.

Momentum is a hot product these days. Given that Portfolio Yoga runs an advisory with 2 portfolios focussed on Momentum, I get to talk to a lot of investors. It’s not really surprising to find that Momentum is new for a lot of folks which makes me wonder how the folks will behave when the trend turns around. 

Mutual Funds are bought when the strategy is reaping great rewards. When the returns start to fade, the fund manager is blamed for incompetence. How could he not see that the stocks he has bought are not Value Stocks but Value Traps was the constant refrain of one of the top fund managers in town but one who had been going through a very long period of underperformance.

Good research requires the underpinnings of a deep understanding of the philosophy. Every philosophy has its good and bad and only a keen insight into the workings allow one to develop a framework that works out in the long term. 

The thing about research though is that there is never an end to it. One can research a whole lifetime and still not be sure. The search for perfection never ends. Some compromise is always necessary.

I don’t consider myself a deep fundamental investor but when I wish to understand a company or a business, I have a checklist on things I wish to be sure upon before deciding whether it’s worth buying or not. This is not an exhaustive checklist but yet it covers a lot of ground where mistakes can be made. 

Refinement of any strategy is a continuous process. As new evidence comes along, one needs to change. We see this in other professional fields such as Medicine, Law among others. Finance is no different.  

Mistake #5: Buying and Selling at the wrong time

So much ink has been spent  on the Behavioral Gap that occurs due to investors buying at highs owing to the fear of missing out and selling at low owing to the fear of being invested and yet things hardly have changed.

In the last year, most investors I have spoken to have expressed a combination of both fears. Most want to get in and yet are afraid of what if markets decide to tank the moment they enter. Post the Covid crash, there have been umpteen analyses on how the economy may take years if not decades to recover. Markets moving higher was supposedly a trap and one which could crash any day soon. From the risk of a third wave to the Inflation risk in the US to the Evergrande mess in China, there is always something that looks scary. In hindsight, they are best a mosquito bite to an Elephant.

One of the reasons why Systematic Investing or basically Dollar Cost Averaging is gaining acceptance is because investors are finally figuring out that timing the market is exceptionally tough – not impossible but tough and in the long term, one may be better off spending the same time on other avenues than trying to time the markets.

The biggest grouse of advisors is how investors are more comfortable with respect to drawdowns in asset classes like Real Estate or Gold vs Equities. While there are several reasons that can explain this phenomenon, quickly try and remember the last time a non business newspaper had a headline – Investors lose 10 Lakh Crores as the Real Estate Market tumbles overnight. Never.

The biggest advantage of stock markets is the ability to instantly liquidate one’s assets and convert it to cash. Yet this advantage turns into a very big disadvantage since it allows one to make decisions based on the mood of the day without delving too deep. 

In most other fields, mistakes are eliminated by experience. In the stock markets, experience counts for zilch as even those with long experience may get swamped by fear and decide to cut one’s losses at the worst possible time.

Stanley Druckenmiller’s quote from his experience in the dot com bubble is worth a mention,

“I bought $6 billion worth of tech stocks, and in six weeks I had lost $3 billion in that one play. You asked me what I learned. I didn’t learn anything. I already knew that I wasn’t supposed to do that. I was just an emotional basket case and I couldn’t help myself. So maybe I learned not to do it again, but I already knew that.”

Of all the crashes one has observed or read about in history, the Corona crash and the rise has been the fastest. Yet, it has impacted different investors in different ways. While the new age investors seem not to be bothered with either the speed of the rise and the valuations, the old investor has been skeptical and more the rise, more skeptical he has become. The opportunity cost to such investors has been enormous.

As much as buying when markets are crashing and valuations are low is appealing in theory, execution is way harder for most including professionals. Every crash has been different. The Corona Crash for example was the fastest crash we had ever come across with analysts painting an even gloomier picture. The best investors were those who were able to stay put, very few could add significantly to their exposure during these times. Sometimes, just doing nothing as the 5 Star Advertisement says works out well.

Mistake #6: Assuming the Entry Price is the Starting Point

In behavioral economics, this is explained by a bias called Anchor Bias. When an investor buys a stock and the stock crashes, he promises himself that the moment the stock comes back to his buying price, he is getting out. This even though in the larger scheme of things, the entry price has nothing to do with whether to hold or sell. 

One of the biggest advantages of moving to a quantitative strategy is its ability to not be too bothered with the Entry / Exit Prices. This has a very huge implication since it overcomes our inability to sell a stock that is lower than where we got in while also willing to buy a stock way above where we once had sold.

An Example: In my personal Momentum Portfolio I entered Abbott India in July 2018 and exited more or less for the same price in April 2019. The stock once again came up as a Buy in July 2019 but by which time it had moved nearly 2000 rupees higher. Ignoring this stock for the single reason that I had sold it at a much lower rate would have cost me dear. 

Regardless of whether it’s a stock or a real estate investment or even Gold, it’s tough to forget our Buy Price and any and every decision taken with respect to that asset generally starts with the buy price. 

Owing to Corona, there has been a surplus in houses available for rent. The same anchor bias prevents a lot of landlords from giving the houses at the new prices which may be lower than what the previous tenant had paid. There are landlords who have kept their houses empty for a year rather than give it out for a slightly lower amount. 

Averaging higher is also problematic when one focuses on the entry price. Should I buy the stock that has gone up 50% stops additional investment which if the original thesis is still true should not really matter. 

This is also a question I face with investors who wish to enter the portfolio at the current juncture. Since the portfolio is up X%, is it advisable to buy now or wait for a correction. What about the stock which has gone up 300% since it was introduced, should I buy or not? Most of these questions to be honest have no right answer but have their roots in our fascination for the entry price.

When it comes to prices, sometimes Ignorance is Bliss

Mistake #7: Believing High Price Stocks are always Expensive

A disclosure: Portfolio yoga has a portfolio that is composed of High Priced Stocks. 

Higher the price, more forsaken the stock tends to be when it comes to an investors portfolio. A high price NAV of a Mutual Fund is a tougher sell vs a new fund offer even though NAV has nothing to do with future returns.

Most investors when given a choice between a high nominal price stock vs a low nominal price stock will invariably choose a low priced stock. Of course a higher price doesn’t have to mean a lower risk either. In the financial crisis crash, MRF which then as its today commands the highest nominal share price fell by an astonishing 84% from the peak. 

But does a high share price mean anything? Warren Buffett has this to say on why he won’t split the stock (Berkshire Hathaway) 

“Were we to split the stock [writes Buffett] or take other actions focusing on stock price rather than business value, we would attract an entering class of buyers inferior to the existing class of sellers. Would a potential one-share purchaser be better off if we split 100 for 1 so he could buy 100 shares? Those who think so and who would buy the stock because of the split or in anticipation of one would definitely downgrade the quality of our present shareholder group.” 

While Splits and Bonus are good as a form of publicity, they add nothing to the bottom line of the company. Infosys would have been as good as it is today even if they had not given out a single share in Bonus or split the shares. Underlying business and valuations are what matters more than the nominal price.  

If one is building a portfolio for “Rip Van Winkle”, I would have much greater confidence buying a set of stocks with very high nominal stock price vs any other portfolio chosen by any other method. A management that doesn’t go for gimmicks in my books has a lot more integrity than one that does.

Mistake #8: Worrying too much and being Impatient

The cardinal sin most of us end up making. We worry too much and this ain’t even limited to the stock market. I was impatient once and I have learnt (or have I, I do wonder some days) the lessons that are worth a lifetime. 

When I talk to prospective clients, I always mention that the first year will be the toughest. This is because when one is starting off fresh, he has no cushion of profits to take the blow if the market starts to trend down and the portfolio ends up losing money. From year two, this risk reduces though one could still end up being negative at the end of the 2nd year though the risk is low. Only by year 5 can you be pretty sure that there will be a very low percentage of risk that one is underwater after that count of time. 

Five years is a very long time and not easy to digest if things don’t work out. Patience can be really tested and crack even the best of investors. 

Patience in investing is sometimes confused with being patient with a bad investment in the hope that one will finally see a return to the golden age. Patience in bad stocks rarely gets rewarded. 

We all learn from mistakes. But this is only true if we take the right lessons. For me, learning is what has fascinated me for long and continues to help me build a framework with respect to not just investing but other aspects of life as well.

I bought HDFC Bank in 1996

In 1996, I was a greenhorn in the stock markets. My guide and mentor then had a few years experience but in hindsight was even more naive than me. I did not know about Beginner’s luck but I had the luck of not just entering the market at a time when sentiments were not great and arbitrages all around but also at the cusp of the dot com bubble.

I was able to buy stocks of quite a few good companies along with a lot more of the bad ones, some of which remain in my custody even today. One such purchase was HDFC Bank. I bought 100 shares which was the minimum lot size in those days for HDFC Bank at around 40 bucks. 

HDFC Bank that trades today has a face value of 1 versus the face value of 10 which I had purchased then. Adjusted, my buy price would be 4 bucks. At today’s closing price that would mean a CAGR of 27% over the last 25 years. 

The investment of 4000 hence is now worth 16 Lakhs. A very nice sum but one which won’t change the life of any person who has been investing for 25 years. What would have changed is if I had either bought a much higher quantity at that point of time or added through and through the years. Doing neither means that the outcome while extremely satisfactory is nothing really great to talk about.

Tweets of the nature below are common 

Bias for some reason is supposed to be a wrong word to use. People I admire seem to suggest that one should not attach biases to such analysis. But biased is what the tweet really is.

At the same time as HDFC Bank and at a similar price I bought another bank – Global Trust Bank. While I don’t own the HDFC Bank stock I bought, I hold Global Trust Bank in its Certificate form. Talk about ignorance.

From CNBC to Twitter, everyone loves to talk about the Winners and why not. Stories of success are always inspiring. Becoming the next Jhunhjunwala is all about buying the next Titan and holding it for a couple of decades. 

But when Jhunjunwala bought Titan, the future of Titan was very uncertain. The watch business wasn’t really doing great even though HMT by that time was on the decline. Another listed player Timex was facing tough times as well. When Juhunjunwala bought Titan, Titan had just launched its game changer – Tanishq but no one including the management knew that. Indians for long had bought jewellery from their neighbourhood goldsmith and could Titan change that one wondered.

But they did and that changed everything. 

Since unlike Warren Buffett, the transactions and holdings of Rakesh are private, it’s tough to glean how much he invested as % of his net worth. Based on some rough analysis I figure it’s somewhere around the 3% mark. That is what even a simple 30 stock equal weighted portfolio will result in. What worked for Rakesh was that he did not do anything in the stock, letting it go through its twists and turns in his incredible journey. Oh, he also allowed the stock to balloon to what I assume nearly 70% at one point of time. Most financial advisors will sweat with even a 7% exposure let alone 70%.

Compared to the 90’s and the early part of this century, the ability to identify future multibaggers has dwindled considerably thanks to a much larger segment of population now involved in digging up any and every information there is about stocks.

These what if scenarios have given rise to stocks that are identified as the next HDFC Bank, the next Titan, the next Asian Paints but the investors would have been better off with the originals than the supposed disruptors, But the story is sold and retail is generally left holding the bag.

Sixteen years back Hero Honda was the market leader in two wheelers. It is the market leader even today. For the investor though, the stock has generated (not accounting for dividends which do add up a bit) a bit lower than what Sensex has generated. So much so for buying Market Leaders which who generate good free cash flow.

I believe having a good understanding of biases helps understand data better. Selectively looking at the winners and assuming how easy it is to build wealth only leads to disappointment unless you have been very lucky in investing big time into at least a few big winners and then had the balls to keep them through and through.

Good Stories are basically a by product of what Charlie Munger says 

“Show me the incentive and I will show you the outcome.

The world of finance is driven by incentives. Understanding that helps one read between the lines.

“It’s good to be cynical,” he said. “That is, if you know when to stop. Most of the things that we’re all taught to respect and reverence- they don’t deserve anything but cynicism.”

― Aldous Huxley, After Many a Summer Dies the Swan