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Category Archives: Local Charterholders

Easy as (Lotus) 123

6th October, 2014 · John Boylan, CFA · Leave a comment
John Boylan, CFA

Not long ago I wrote about how many securities analysts including myself have a strong, almost obsessive, preference towards calculator brands. Every so often I also get asked which software I prefer to analyze securities as well. Over time my answer has changed—to a simple spreadsheet.

Before you write me off as some technology Luddite (which my children did long ago), I believe there is a great deal of value within analytical software. I personally use these tools constantly. It saves a lot of time screening securities, determining potential valuations, and figuring out statistical nuances between competing investments. Most importantly is helps investment teams speak the same valuation language—at least in the initial investment discussion.

In other words, we all have “go to” tools in our valuation toolbox, which may differ dramatically from our co-workers favorite methodologies. Therefore having analytical software can help teams start with a base scenario for a particular security in which everyone can understand and discuss. However, it is the main tool I use to determine valuation and investment value? At least for me—no.

So why do I prefer the simple spreadsheet? It goes toward the qualitative side of investing—what I consider its art. So what is art (if you ever lived in Madison, WI in the 1980’s, you know Art was a window washer)? For me personally, the art of investing means determining the right questions to ask. Spending the half day to a day or so it takes me to generate models of the various financial statements of a company helps me think deeply about what happened in the company’s past as I enter those numbers into the spreadsheet. Can I see those same numbers much more quickly with analytical software? Yes, but in a strange way I find myself glossing over them more if they are merely provided to me as opposed to trying to build a model and trying to understand why a certain number or ratio is what it is. I have more intellectual ownership of the analysis if I build a model from scratch. Additionally it is a lot easier to make notes on your model changes in the spreadsheet than in analytical software. I wish I knew how many times I created a scenario in a software program and came back to it several weeks later wondering why I used the numbers that I did.

Again, I do find those products very useful and I use them quite a bit. However, if I want to really dig down deep into a company, I find the good old fashioned spreadsheet works best for me. Plus I may not not as a big of a technology Luddite as I think, as I once knew a person who did their models using just a calculator and MSWord.

 

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Posted in Freezing Assets Shout Out, Local Charterholders | Tags: freezing assets shout out, Lotus, number crunching, technology, valuation |

Twenty-Four Little Hours

3rd October, 2014 · Susanna Gibbons, CFA
Susanna Gibbons, CFA

September was, to be blunt, a terrible month for credit. Rates were higher, spreads were wider, banks were weak, and record-setting supply weighed on the market. The Merrill Lynch U.S. Corporate master was down about 2 points, a combination of rates that were double-digit higher in the belly of the curve, and spreads which were about 10 bps wider. That may be better than small cap equities, but it was the worst month for credit all year.

What seems most interesting is that supply continued to hit the market all month long, to the tune of about $150 billion. It seems that M&A activity has been driving a lot of the issuance. That represents a change in motivation from earlier this year, when borrowers were tapping the market opportunistically. Up until now, many borrowers could pull back in the face of a less-than-rosy market, but now they no longer seem to have that flexibility.

Case in point this week was the Bayer deal. Bayer issued $7 billion in a 6 part deal, sprinkled across the curve out to 10 years. The company was financing its $14 billion acquisition of Merck’s consumer care business. Bayer already had bridge financing from a $12 billion syndicate of banks, but needed to get permanent financing in place. Given the timing, this deal looked on the cheap side, and as a result it performed well through month end.

What a difference a day makes. The Bayer deal has lagged a little bit, but the rest of the market is notably improved. Rates are better, with the 10 year below 2.5%, and spreads have improved on higher secondary volumes. Bank paper snapped back on Thursday morning, and continues to trade well. It may not be all sun and flowers, but the market feels like it has come through an autumn rainstorm. I cannot say whether it will be all rainbows before us, but I think I will enjoy the moment of romance while it lasts.

Since it rarely does.

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Posted in Hot Topic Commentary, Local Charterholders, Weekly Credit Wrap | Tags: Bayer deal, credit, high rates, Weekly Credit Wrap |

The Pimco Soap Opera and the Challenge of Due Diligence

2nd October, 2014 · Tom Brakke, CFA · Leave a comment
Tom Brakke, CFA

The news that Bill Gross left Pimco stunned the investment world.  The man and the organization have been indelibly linked.  In fact, the man was the organization as far as most were concerned, a notion that neither Gross nor Pimco went out of their way to dispel.

This could be the start of a cautionary tale that will be played out over the next few months and years, one about the unwinding of an organization dominated by and seemingly dependent on one individual.  Of course, Pimco is more than Gross, and the professionals that remain with the firm will have a chance to prove what they can do and to rebuild the firm in a new way.

It is worth remembering that we have seen this soap opera before.  Not with the same characters or exactly the same plot, but the same conclusion:  If you choose to build an organization based upon a star, you have “key man” risk that can get triggered in short order by an organizational test of wills, the proverbial bus on the loose, or some other unforeseen factor.  If you choose to invest with such a firm, that risk comes along for the ride, and, when something happens, you don’t get a call in advance from the portfolio manager, the PR department, or your sales representative.

That said, for clients of Pimco, the immediate question is, “What do we do now?”

But, a more important question is, “How do we select managers?”  And it should be asked not just by those investors who are unwitting players in the Pimco drama, but also by those who happened to avoid that particular soap opera.

Predictably, believers in passive management have used the Pimco events to reiterate the difficulty (some would say folly) of trying to pick active managers.  The body of evidence supports their claim – and undoubtedly more and more investors will come to the conclusion that the manager selection process is stacked against them, further supporting the trend toward indexation.

For many, that would be a good decision.  Asset owners and gatekeepers (advisory firms, consultants, etc.) often have a stated belief in active management that isn’t accompanied by the proper resources or the differential analysis that would be required for success.  It doesn’t do any good to have that belief if you can’t capitalize upon it.

This is obviously an issue for most individual investors, and it’s a particular problem for advisory firms, most of whom (in my estimation) do not have sufficient in-house investment staff to devote to understanding asset management organizations.  But, as performance studies have shown, even investment consultants, funds-of-funds managers, and large asset owners (all of whom tend to have greater resources and more experience at the process) struggle to add value through manager selection.

So, the takeaway from the soap opera ought to be, “We need to determine if we can select managers well enough to make it worth our while (after hassles and expenses).”  To do that, you need to do an in-depth evaluation of the “how” of your due diligence.

Having seen selection processes from throughout the investment world, I believe that most are reactive by design.  To see why that is the case, let’s use the simple template of “the four Ps”:  philosophy, process, people, and performance.

There really is no way to understand the interplay of those four factors without doing detailed, in-person evaluations.  That knocks out most organizations, who can’t afford to do that, unless they use a third-party provider (more on that below).  And you can’t just show up (or, as is so often the case, have a relatively junior person show up).  Good due diligence requires an approach that goes beyond the conventional norm of a) hearing a manager’s presentation and b) filling out a list of due diligence questions.

Philosophy is a factor that is relatively easy to assess from a distance.  The underpinnings of a strategy, at least as it is stated, can be judged in the light of historical experience and economic circumstances.

Whether it is executed in a way that makes sense depends on the manager’s process.  But without a direct observation of it, the vision of a manager’s process in your head is the marketing version of the process rather than the process itself.  The gap between the two of them accounts for a great many allocation errors.

And then there is the assessment of the people at an organization.  Again, without being inside an organization, you don’t have much of a chance of understanding its culture.  That certainly has been proven by the Pimco episode; try to find any bad “people” grades in due diligence examinations of it in the past.  Most of the time, downgrades of a firm on this attribute come after someone leaves.  The change in judgment might be warranted, but it is reactive nonetheless.

Of course, performance is backward-looking and triggers the most powerful and destructive set of reactions.  Investors buy past winners and sell losers.  Those selecting managers talk about how everything else (especially process) is much more important than performance in their decision making, but that’s simply not true in the vast majority of cases.  I often say, “we see performance and infer process,” but really it’s broader than that:  We see performance and infer the quality of all attributes of an asset management firm.  Performance is a force field that distorts everything (approached in power only by the force field that is a star manager).

If you rely on third parties to do the due diligence on your behalf, you are not immune from these problems, you have just outsourced them (and probably don’t truly understand what has been done on your behalf).  Those you hire to do due diligence might do a better job than you would have, but that is not the proper measuring stick.

“We’ve done our due diligence.”  That phrase is heard time and again, but what does it really mean?  The challenge of due diligence is to take a process that is reactive by nature and remake it into something that is useful.  It can’t be done by following an industry standard that has been shown not to work.

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Posted in Hot Topic Commentary, Local Charterholders | Tags: Bill Gross, Due Dilligence, PIMCO |

Nothing is Easy

22nd September, 2014 · Susanna Gibbons, CFA
Susanna Gibbons, CFA

For most of September, we have been bungling through the jungle of corporate credit. Interest rates in the belly of the curve have risen by about 25 basis points since the end of August, and credit spreads have been leaking wider. The story here is probably more about rates than credit, though. Credit spreads have been following modest weakness in the equity markets, and both have improved this week. The move in interest rates has been much more pronounced, and has mirrored the strength in the dollar.

It doesn’t really feel like an economy where the dollar should be skyrocketing. Housing trends, employment growth, and general economic activity are all on the anemic side. We wouldn’t call them bad, but they certainly aren’t booming. So maybe it isn’t the dollar skyrocketing, maybe things everywhere else are cratering. Europe continues to be weak, putting further pressure on the ECB to take anti-deflationary action. Japan’s strategy of promoting inflation seems to be geared primarily towards weakening the yen. Russia is struggling with economic sanctions brought on by its extracurricular activities in the Ukraine. And finally, we had the British Pound, beaten down by concern over the Scottish Independence vote.

The Scottish question had implications well beyond the Moors, for Northern Ireland, the Basque region & Catalan to name a few. As the Euro still looks shaky in its loose confederation, many countries seem to be asking to what extent independence should be pursued rather than unity. The markets clearly prefer the stability of unity, and hope that the currencies in question have strapped on their aqualungs to survive what they hope will be temporary plunges. It was a new day yesterday, as the No votes prevailed.

Corporate bonds have probably been impacted by the locomotive breath of continued heavy supply, which abated somewhat this week. Total new issue was around $20 billion, led by $2.5 billion from Mizhuho across 4 tranches, $2.0 billion of long and very-long paper from Teachers, as it funds its acquisition of Nuveen, and $1.75 billion from Humana. None of these deals have done all that well, with spreads moving a little wider. Even though the market felt better today, it has not been a great week for credit. It’s just hard to know whether a benign credit environment will continue to prevail, or whether we will find ourselves skating away on the thin ice of a new day.

With apologies to Ian Anderson.

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Posted in Local Charterholders, Weekly Credit Wrap | Tags: Weekly Credit Wrap |

2014 Compensation Survey Results

18th September, 2014 · CFAMNEB · Leave a comment

2014 CFA Results Brochure

Back by Popular Demand

We’re excited to release the results of our 2014 Financial Compensation Survey, the 2nd Annual in-depth look at compensation levels in the Twin Cities and surrounding region, conducted by CFA Society Minnesota.

Click the image at right to download, at no charge, this white paper summarizing high-level survey findings in an easy-to-read format. In return for the white paper or for deeper data requests, please complete the contact form below. Your feedback is welcome and appreciated.

Thanks for your interest!

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Posted in Hot Topic Commentary, Local Charterholders | Tags: 2014 Compensation Survey, Compensation Survey |
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