08-04-2008, 09:19 PM | #21 | |
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08-04-2008, 09:25 PM | #22 | |
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I have discussed the modern portfolio theory with someone in the investment world I have learned to respect a great deal. He showed me all sorts of facts and figures that indicated the modern portfolio thoery is bogus and meant for intellects to mentally masterbate with. However, to each his own and if someone wants to use that method, I would say go ahead. I have found a lot of methods will work if they are stuck too. Emotion is the one element that comes in and messes with returns. It is a proven fact investors in mutual funds do far worse than the funds they invest in. Why, it would be my contention they get in and out at the wrong times, because of emotion. I call it the "I can't take it any longer theory". I can't take seeing my investments go down in value any longer and therefor get out. Or, I can't take seeing the market go up any longer without me in and so they get in. One thing I will agree with you on. I suspect you are saying don't put all your eggs in one basket. I would agree with you there. |
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08-04-2008, 09:31 PM | #23 | |
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P.S. I would not got around condemming portfolio theory ... address a specific weakness but don't engage in some silly characterization based on meeting a smart guy who didn't like it. |
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08-04-2008, 09:36 PM | #24 | |
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I wouldn'tnecessarily think badly of Waters friend. I am not privy to the whole conversation. Its possible he had a very nuanced discussion of risk and expected returns and Water's summary leaves something to be desired. I don't know ... more information would be required before I made the inference the Waters should avoid investing with him. |
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08-04-2008, 09:38 PM | #25 | |
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I was suggesting, maybe not clearly enough diversification. Diversification could mean a portfolio of large cap value, large cap growth, small cap value, small cap growth and an international blend. You wouldn't have to have bonds, real estate, commodities, etc. to be diversified as you probably would have to have those in order to be following the portfolio theory. Anyway, I find diversification is enough of a mental oil change without moving onto diversification on steroids in order to get a mentally chanllenging oil change. To each his own though. I personally would not condemn someone if the chose the "theory" as their discipline to invest by. My advice would be stick to it and don't switch with every new theory you here. As for "genius investors". Those folks give us long term capital, over the counter bubbles and sub-prime. The first genius I encountered was Michael Milliken (sp) who gave us Junk bonds. |
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08-04-2008, 09:55 PM | #26 | ||
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LTCM was clearly not following portfolio theory ... it may be an interesting example but it can hardly be used to condemn portfolio theory. Last edited by pelagius; 08-04-2008 at 10:02 PM. |
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08-04-2008, 10:00 PM | #27 | |
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I'm being overly aggressive in this thread but it's to balance what I perceive the vast majority of being way too far on the trusting side of "investment advisors". |
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08-04-2008, 10:06 PM | #28 | |
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A "swipe" is not a condemnation, let alone a "bit of a swipe". LTCM was a swipe at supposed "smart guys" and their investing. It was meant to show "smart" and good investing do not necessarily go hand in hand. Too many let their intellect get in the way of using common sense. Of course greed takes over which is a malady of smart, dumb and average alike. I am not arguing against "modern portfolio theory". I am saying it is one discipline that can be followed, but not necessarily "the" discipline to be followed. Just as a closer. My favorite manager I use and showed the numbers for wouldn't be for everyone. He has some year or years in a cylce of 5 to 10 year period where he will underperform the S&P. If my client is one who gets more upset about a year of underperformance than appreciates outperformances over a longer period, I won't suggest this manager to that client. The marriage won't work. |
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08-04-2008, 10:13 PM | #29 | |
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You have most of the ex ante implications right. It is, of course, easy to find a strategy that from an ex ante perspective that will on average outperferform the market by over 2-3%: buy a double the market ETF. Of course, its pretty risky. Controlling for risk it is very difficult to find persistence in performance particularly at that level. This is not to suggest that fund managers don't have skill but on average they charge you for that skill and after costs on average they do worse than the market. Yes, there are always some managers that outperform the market in a given period, but there is almost no persistence in the performance. Some characteristics seems to matter but only ones that are difficult to observe. For example SAT score actually matter. Managers with higher SAT scores actually outperform (relative to some risk adjustments). |
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08-04-2008, 10:17 PM | #30 |
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All of your advice so far has been consistent with portfolio theory even the advice that you suggested was contrary to it. So yes you are not arguing against it. In fact as near as I can tell, broadly defined, you follow or incorporate some of its basic tenants at least occassionly.
Last edited by pelagius; 08-04-2008 at 10:24 PM. |
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