Grantham-- Letters to the Investment Committee XI* Let’s All Look Like Yale Part II: Yale Meets Goldilocks Jeremy Grantham
Summary of Part I
Last quarter I made the point that a continuously large flow of funds from the traditional assets – U.S. stocks and U.S. bonds – towards diversifying assets – everything from emerging markets equity to infrastructure and private equity – was almost certain. This quarter it is time to look at the effects of this revolution in asset allocation on individual asset categories.
First of all, it is important to realize that the “let’s all look like Yale” effect is not the only important driver of asset allocation. The other extremely important issue is the effect of sustained global liquidity combined with sustained rapid global growth, which has created an unusual Goldilocks effect where the economic and financial world are “just right,” which in turn has led to an unprecedentedly low risk premium across all assets (see the first section of the quarterly letter) and broadly overpriced assets.
These two quite separate effects – Yale and Goldilocks – interact. The Yale centrifugal force unfortunately often coincides with the drive towards riskier assets stimulated by Goldilocks. Prime examples of this would be emerging country debt and equity and private equity, all both risky and diversifying. There are, in fact, few examples of intrinsically conservative investments where only the Yale effect holds. The obvious example would be forestry holdings, where even alone the diversifying effect has been enough to dramatically change the pricing. The worst effects, though, should rationally be at the intersection of these drivers to high risk and exotic diversification, and this is where we should expect to see the most extreme
relative overpricing in coming years. Certainly in the last five years the outperformance of these categories has been extreme. Here is just a sample.
Cumulative Performance of S&P 500 and Other Assets from 3/31/02 to 3/31/07
S&P 500 35.5% Russell 2000 68.1% U.S. Low Quality Stocks 72.7% Int'l. Small Cap Stocks1 191.8% Emerging Equities2 221.4% Lehman Brothers U.S. Government 28.1% U.S. Junk Bonds 63.9% Emerging Country Debt3 87.0%
Other than commenting on the broad outperformance of these newly desirable areas, a few categories bear special mention, either for their unexpectedness, such as timber, or for their potential dangers. Let us start with timber. This has gone from an obscure asset favored passionately 10 years ago by a dozen or so institutions thought to be eccentric, to a fashionable new frontier 5 years ago favored by an incremental handful of avant-garde institutions, to a hot asset class today that is at least considered by most larger endowments and foundations. The impact on this small asset class
– in 2000 Microsoft’s market cap was larger than all the world’s forests (what a nice arbitrage that would have been!) – was of course spectacular. The discount rate used in evaluating forest properties was as recently as 3 years ago about 8.5% in the U.S. and over 10% in New Zealand
This was a ridiculously high real return for an asset whose virtues included that it was exceptionally diversifying – it has had a history of rising in all great equity bear markets– and in the context of a diversified forest portfolio, very safe: if the sun shines and it rains, the trees grow about on schedule. The discount rate today with forestry’s new popularity and the general desperation to fi nd high returns has fallen to barely over 5% and 6.5%, respectively, in the two countries. This represents both a wonderful windfall for existing owners (Harvard was rumored to have sold most of its U.S. forestry holdings in one big transaction) and a heart-breaking loss of a great opportunity for asset allocators like us.
Other commodities have changed perhaps even more profoundly. Their attractiveness hinged on great diversification characteristics. Both bonds and stocks are hurt by unexpected inflation – nominal bonds suffer directly and stocks suffer behaviorally – investors are unsettled and P/E ratios fall. In glorious contrast, commodities are positively correlated with inflation, and in a real inflationary crisis their prices are likely to rise far more than the rate of infl ation as a scarcity of infl ation protecting investments rapidly develops. This attractive case for commodities was formerly held back not only by unfamiliarity (and hence more career risk) but also by the well known dreary track record for price increases. As The Economist magazine has periodically reminded us, the 100 year history in just about all commodities has been of falling real prices, in the range of 1% to 1.5% a year as productivity gains have exceeded the naturally rising marginal costs of deeper wells and second-class land, etc. This argument was countered by what we can call the Goldman Sachs case: that there has been, notwithstanding falling commodity prices, a positive return to buying commodity futures. This theory is based on original observations by my usual hero, Keynes, that speculators who bought futures were rewarded by producers who were laying off their risks.
The intellectual case seems a little unconvincing since speculators by no means only go long – I am still personally short copper as we speak – but the historical numbers were not bad. Rolling long positions in the futures seemed historically to have good returns comparable to equities if you weighted your positions heavily to oil contracts, say equal to their relative market value, or if you only invested in contracts that typically paid you to roll (contracts said to be in “backwardation”). Many contracts however were not typically priced this way and cost the speculators to
roll (said to be in “contango”). The data was moderately convincing, but not very convincing. But combined with undoubted diversification benefis and the institutional drive to have their portfolios be new and improved, the total package was deemed by some to be attractive. The final straw for breaking down resistance was the surge in growth rates of developing countries led, of course, by the all-time monster growth story – China. Incremental demand for commodities from these new sources of major growth has changed the relationship between technology improvements and demand so profoundly that most commodities now probably have price trends that are moderately up – say, 1 to 1.5% real a year. In the long term, this shift from a downward drift to an upward drift is very important. In the short term, recent great strength in most commodities may have already discounted this change for the next 20 years.
The rush of new investors drawn to commodities in the last 3 or 4 years has, in addition, pushed up the prices of the commodity futures in relationship to the commodity itself, perhaps by a lot: it may have permanently changed the shape of the futures curve so that few if any contracts may now routinely pay long investors to roll. In a neat irony the flood of new money attracted by the ability to roll contracts profitably may have ended that condition forever! Venture capital is a tough market these days that always has plenty of competition, and I’m not going to kick someone when they’re down other than to say that the returns have been poor now for quite a few years. In any case the flood of new money is for the time being more or less passing them by, which is a relatively good sign, for it is worth remembering that the size of the yearly cohort of investors is the largest determinant of future returns: small inputs predicting good future returns and vice versa. There is nothing that suppresses the success of a brilliant new idea more completely than having 12 nearly identical start-ups.
Infrastructure is the most recent area to attract rapid increases in capital partly, no doubt, in response to other opportunities becoming overpriced. In some of these pools the fees, both declared and submerged in the complex financial structures, go on and on so that infrastructure has become an extremely appealing proposition to the managers. And the supply of funds is such that infrastructure can appear in odd places, bidding up, for example, the pricing of very large forestry deals (although it’s not clear from the early deals if they would know a tree if it bit them on the leg). As always, the effect of the much increased supply
of funds has been to take formerly handsome risk-adjusted returns down quickly to the lean and mean. Hedge funds are getting to be an old topic, but make for a remarkable story. An esoteric $35 billion enterprise 15 years ago with 800 funds serving rich individuals has turned into a $1.2 trillion enterprise with over 8,000 funds and numerous funds of funds increasingly owned by institutions as well as individuals. The trillion is leveraged several times and turns over far more frequently than ‘old-fashioned’ money, so that the percentage of trading represented by hedge funds has been said to be closing in on 50% of U.S. equities. The effects of this flood of money are numerous and significant. Hedge fund investing does not change the iron rule of investing: it is a zero sum game minus the fees and the trading friction. The total cost of regular long-only investing has averaged about 1% for institutions (½ fees and ½ transaction costs) and about 2% to individuals (? fees, ? transaction costs, and ? selling costs). Hedge fund fees are of course a tad higher: typically about 1.5% fi xed fee plus 1% transaction costs (typically ignored and often much higher) plus at least 20% of all the profits (including the risk-free rate that can usually be had free of charge). Today let’s assume a 5% risk-free rate and 4% outperformance for a total performance fee of 1.8%. The total fees thus reach 3.3%, and the total costs including transactions total 4.3% for institutions, or almost twice the ‘slippage’ for long-only. Thus, the first consequence of increased alternatives, especially hedge funds and private equity, in a world that remains mercilessly a zero sum game is an incremental drain on total assets. The second effect is on the availability of alpha (or outperformance) to the winners in the poker game. Increased hedge fund money absolutely does not increase the available inefficiencies. They at best stay the same, so the same inefficiency is now exploited by more aggressive alpha-seeking dollars and is therefore spread thinner. This effect of increased competition is also not by any means confined to hedge funds only, but is also affecting long-only investors. There is a nice irony here too: that the institutional drive into these new, more expensive vehicles may also lower the return available to those of their existing long-only managers fortunate enough to have a positive alpha.
But it is not only the case that the dollars chasing alpha increase. The other, closely related but clearly separate effect is, as mentioned last quarter, the enhanced flow of bright and even brilliant people drawn into our industry by the sometimes vast fees, and hence salaries, that until
recently was a quiet backwater in terms of talent flow. With an increased inflow of more talented people, the standard of competition rises and rises until … well, to be honest, I’m not quite sure how the story does end. What for sure does not end soon is the flow of money, for a survey released last quarter based on interviews with large institutions said that these institutions expect to triple their hedge fund holdings in 4 years, which would make institutional hedge fund holdings larger even than those of individuals.
Private equity has been growing in the last 3 years even faster than hedge funds with the leading firms leap-frogging each other in the size of new funds raised, with several already well over $10 billion. The dirty secret here is that their ‘2 and 20’ fees are not justified by any positive alpha (or outperformance of the asset class) at all. But, unlike traditional equity investing where outperformance is mainly dependent on style, and therefore mean reverting with good performance typically followed by bad, in private equity, returns are in complete contrast very sticky: there is a huge and remarkably consistent difference between the best and the worst of them, so this is an area where endowments and others with the resources, talent, and pull have exercised those advantages. Accordingly, the early moving and skillful institutions have picked the better managers that are now largely closed. These better managers have produced wonderful performance in the range of 20% to 30% compounded per year. In stark contrast, the larger, later arrivals have barely averaged a return that is even positive. More to the point perhaps, the cap-weighted average is at best, depending on the analysis you read, equal to the S&P 500. It does this, however, by sometimes leveraging over 4 to 1 in today’s market. 2 to 1 leverage on the S&P 500, let alone 5 or more would have produced a much higher return, order of magnitude 21% compared to 14% max for private equity (source: Private Equity Performance: Returns, Persistence and Capital Flow by Steven N. Kaplan and Antoinette Schoar, November 2003). However, fees of ‘2 and 20’ charged on 21% could account for this gap, so there may not actually be a negative alpha pre-cost – lucky investors! (Although there probably is.) LBOs are thought by several academics, in fact, to be a modest destroyer of real value. But let’s be friendly: the case for private equity creating societal or long-term economic value at a company-by-company level is modest, and the case for the average invested dollar returning more than an equivalent leveraged S&P return is non-existent. What the industry on average offers is freedom from the traditional margin calls that on a similarly leveraged equity
portfolio would sooner or later ruin you. As long as you can make your quarterly interest payments in private equity deals, you are okay. There is, however, a little snag. If our 7-year forecast were to turn out right – it just might happen one day – then U.S. equities would return minus 1.4% real per year as P/Es decline modestly over 7 years to their long-term average and profit margins decline substantially to theirs (standard GMO assumptions). The T-bill rate would, in contrast, likely be about +1.5% real, and average borrowing costs about 2.5% higher than that, or about +4% real. The incremental cost of debt at 4 to 1 leverage comes to over 2% a year even after tax deductions. 3.5% a year loss is not normally a disaster, but with only 20% equity, it wipes out all value in 6 years, other things being equal!
In real life the losses would be hidden for a while by selling divisions, reducing research and advertising, and, above all, by <itreating depreciation charges as profit rather than necessary rebuilding costs. So the leveraged deals, even if GMO’s forecasts were correct, would last longer than expected before defaulting, but only at the cost of hollowing out the acquired companies. And some managers would exit so fast by unloading their company that the clock ticking against them would have had little time to tick, and any hollowing out would be harder to spot, although usually still there. But for slow movers, default will probably be common. The good news for the managers is that they still get their 2% fixed fees. The good news for the investors is that at least there would be no carry! The effect of the current flood of money riding the wave of diversifi cation and currently cheap and available debt will also serve to push initially high prices even higher. The real shocker here is the asymmetry of returns. The first deal is good: the managers make a fortune and the client does well. The second deal is good: the manager makes a second fortune (usually a bigger one on a larger fund) and the client does well. The third deal is a bust: the manager makes 2% and the client loses a bundle. Total returns: the manager makes two fortunes and 2%; the client probably makes some money but probably not commensurate with the risk. And this is known as alignment of interest, apparently so lacking in public companies. I wonder what this alignment would look like.
Summary In general, more diversifi cation is better than less. And it is as near a certainty as things get in investing that 10 years from now institutional funds in aggregate will be
substantially more diversified than they are today. The flood of institutional money moving into foreign and emerging equity and alternatives will mean that these assets will be looking for excuses to be overpriced for they will, more often than not, be on the right side of supply/demand imbalances. Conversely, the sources of funds – U.S. blue chips and U.S. bonds – will be in the reverse position and will mostly be lower priced relative to fair value than the trendier ‘newer asset classes.’ An ominous report from Greenwich Associates, an investment research firm, in The Wall Street Journal of April 12, 2007 confirms just how powerful this asset movement is. 24% of institutions expect to lower their allocation to U.S. active equity portfolios versus only 4% that intend increases. But for private equity the increase intentions are 34% and the decreases 2%. It almost can’t compute, but it will be exciting trying. Of course in the longer run all assets are worth replacement cost and supply/demand imbalances do not change that.
Ben Graham famously said that in the short run the market is a voting machine, but in the long run it is a weighing machine. In this sense replacement cost is Ben Graham’s ‘weighing machine’ and supply/demand his ‘voting machine.’ Every time the supply/demand imbalance is interrupted, even if only for a short time, prices will trend towards fair value or replacement cost, sometimes quite slowly and sometimes very fast indeed. So we are probably in for an extended period of mispricing, usually in favor of the trendy assets, but with reactions that will sometimes likely be dramatic.
It is also worth remembering that some of these trendy assets are real asset classes like foreign and emerging equities, small cap equities, and timber. Others, like hedge funds and private equity, are merely the existing asset classes repackaged at higher fees, with less regulation and much greater leverage. They are not new asset classes and should be reclassified into their component parts, as I’m sure they will be routinely in a few years. Above all, these fashionable, repackaged assets are still part of a zero sum game and their higher fees are, in the end, your lower returns.
The really difficult task for investment committees is to steer a careful course between increasing beneficial diversification while being aware of the landmines caused by the intersection of the widespread move to risk taking and the trendiness of exotic investments. All in all we should fasten our seat belts. It’s likely to be a bumpy ride. |