|
Market DNA Blog October 22 2009
In my many years as a derivative trader and hedge fund manager, I forged a
solid and long lasting relationship with risk. Like a beautiful but dangerous
woman, risk permeated my professional life -- a constant courtship leading
me to many attempts at fully understanding its mysterious ways... a never
ending effort!
The theoretical foundations of risk analysis were laid in business school
where I diligently learned of Alpha and Beta, Random Walks and Efficient Market
Hypotheses (EMH). These theories were elegant and pure, like a fresh mantle
of snow they seem to perfectly cover all market uncertainties and provided
a boost of confidence to a young man ready to leave his mark in Wall Street.
Yet, the one reason why I was fascinated by the markets was the mesmerizing
and intellectually challenging example of hedge fund manager extraordinaire
George Soros. His book "The Alchemy of Finance" seemed to directly
contradict EMH and his track record seemed to be damning evidence. Nevertheless,
one of my first large successes came from the application of the bell curve
to index returns for an option strategy. It worked like a charm in the roaring
late nineties.
This initial success aside, every night I could not shake off that feeling
of disconnect from theory to practice. Yogi Berra once said: "In theory
there is no difference between theory and practice, in practice there is." Indeed,
while the trading model was successful, the distribution of returns seemed
way out of line with even a fat tail distribution. Adding to my discomfort
it was the clear pattern of price dependency upon past changes (the H factor
as Mandelbrot defines it) versus the theory of price randomness.
In 1999 and in 2000 we witnessed a ridiculous bubble in internet and technology
stocks and a consequent blow up -- a dynamic that really should not have
happened in the EMH universe. During 1999 I had decided to tweak my model and
added heavy behavioral components. I think such changes saved me from terminal
disaster in 2001, 2002 and more recently 2008.
In spite of evidence of misleading logic and cracks in the foundation behind
the concepts of Beta and EMH, the theories are still wildly popular among academics.
Academic politics and group thinking may be the cause; after all, almost every
economist in the country is one way or the other on the Federal Reserve payroll
for example. Yet Beta and EMH are now under attack not only by behavioralists
but by mathematicians as well. Benoit Mandelbrot, one of the most influential
mathematicians of our times, is again very vocal -- he started his critique
40 years ago and was derided by the mainstream---against these alluring but
ultimately deceiving theories. Paul Wilmott also has been active in his criticism.
The idea that equity returns are random and therefore should be expected to
fall in line with Gaussian distribution models is a bizarre conceptual starting
point. While many natural events follow such distribution, why would something
like investment returns follow a statistical order? Aren't stocks prices
the result of fear and greed? Aren't financial markets the making of
highly emotional beings? Isn't information asymmetry a major issue in
financial markets? If anything, a clean statistical distribution should have
been a last resort explanation for price formation rather then a starting point.
The real world does not move neatly -- markets are messy and simple mathematical
relationships cannot capture reality. Equity prices can be explained by more
logical (yet less statistical) structural and behavioral relationships. The
Capital Asset Pricing Model armed with the false fortitude of the bell curve,
reduces everything to one variable, Beta, to explain risk. Does one variable
for a system as complex as financial markets make sense?
The buy and hold theory forced stocks in people's portfolios even when
valuations were clearly off on the assumption of a consistent equity risk premium.
This dynamic snowballed into the commercial explosion of beta-driven portfolios
and unhooked Wall Street from any effort to produce intelligent analysis. Portfolio
management reduced its legal liabilities and turned the large majority of the
asset management universe into a huge marketing machine sucking in money flows
which perpetuated the fallacy.
Beta is dead, long live Beta! Or perhaps it never existed. Maybe Beta was
just a mirage of an industry looking for order and economies of scale. In the
end, however, investment returns were proven to be influenced not by statistical
distributions but by real issues.
Financial markets are highly reflexive as George Soros pointed out 25 years
ago, and as a result, equity prices are dependent on the past. Momentum is
a constant component of price formation. Also, the structural dynamics of the
money management business are clearly heavy influences in stock prices -- the
heavy hand of relative performance among money managers and the problem of
career and business risk are two of the most important influences in the process
of pricing investments. Tax issues and the changing regulatory environment
are certainly more important drivers of prices than the Gaussian distribution.
Not to mention social contagion, feedback loops, and of course changing technology.
The smart money manager must rely on a much more sophisticated framework than
just the bell curve. I like to approach my investments following a 4 level
framework (ex hedge fund manager turned media entrepreneur Todd Harrison follows
a similar approach):
-
Structural overview. An analysis of the political, regulatory and technological
environment.
-
Fundamental overview. Valuation analysis like Cyclically Adjusted Price/Earnings
ratios and others.
-
Technical market make-up. Momentum, mean reversion, support and resistance,
volatility.
-
Sentiment overview. A comprehensive behavioral analysis.
Comprehension of financial markets and the risks they inherently breed is
a never ending process. As elegant as Beta and EMH were they were clearly not
the answer.
Sources:
Benoit Mandelbrot, The (Mis)behavior of Markets, Basic Books, New York,
2004
James Montier, Insight: Efficient Markets Theory Is Dead, Financial
Times, June 24, 2009
George Soros, The Alchemy of Finance, Wiley and Sons, 1994
|