Active Investing in the Age of Disruption. Evan L. Jones
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СКАЧАТЬ sector driven by margin stability and large established brand-focused business model is the consumer staples sector. Again, technological disruption has not had a huge influence on the sector (yet) and the sector has been primarily influenced by low rates driven by the Fed (and in Europe by the ECB). Investors have bought into the sector as a bond proxy. When bond rates drop to levels that will not provide the necessary return to an institutional investor, there is a move out the risk curve in a search for yield. Investors have decided that the consumer staples sector is an equity safe haven. Figure 2.6 illustrates the significant multiple expansion that has occurred in the sector, as investors pay up to own consumer staples. In a low-rate environment, investors who may generally hold 30% or 40% of their capital in Treasuries or investment-grade corporate bonds must either accept lower returns than they have achieved historically or take on more risk.

       If an institutional investment mandate is to achieve 5%–6% real (after inflation) returns and the ten-year Treasury trades at 2.5% with inflation at 2.0% (yielding a 0.5% real return), what are your options?

      The first would be to maintain traditional capital-allocation exposures and convince constituents that they should accept lower returns (not usually a readily accepted path). The second would be to sell bonds and buy riskier assets, usually equities. Because allocators know they have taken on more risk in selling safer bonds, they will search for lower risk equity solutions, like utilities, consumer staples, and minimum volatility–factor ETFs, all of which have very extended multiples. These rate-driven investor decisions and valuation increases have nothing to do with fundamental investing and pressure the success of any active manager. Macro concerns and Fed decisions overwhelm business analysis.

Graph depicts the S and P five hundred consumer staples sector trailing twelve-month P or E ratio from the year two thousand and nine to November two thousand and nineteen.

      The fact is almost anyone can achieve positive absolute returns in a trending up market. Watch TV and listen to market pundits, buy the hot stocks of the day, and ignore valuation. Growth and momentum have been the lessons learned by new portfolio managers in the 2010s.

      Only when the tide goes out, do you discover who has been swimming naked.

       —Warren Buffett

      When the tide goes out, good investors create outperformance. Global central banks have made sure the tide has not gone out for a decade. US equity market drawdowns of more than 10% have occurred only four times in the last decade and each drawdown has lasted less than 60 days.

Graph depicts the S and P five hundred net income margin from the year one thousand nine hundred and ninety to November two thousand and nineteen. Graph depicts the S and P five hundred price-to-sales ratio from the year one thousand nine hundred and ninety to November two thousand and nineteen.