The investing website, TheStreet.com, asked me late last year to give my picks for the best performing ETFs in 2009. Of course this is guesswork as things can change fast (remember 2008?), and when the road turns we have to turn with it. Nevertheless, predicting the winners is a fun exercise and I'm comfortable holding my selections. Here is the article:
http://www.thestreet.com/story/10455806/1/money-managers-top-picks-for-2009.html
David Vomund
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Diversification Balderdash
I recently read the December’s Investment Advisor magazine and found most investment advisors were touting their use of diversification to reduce the risk of their client accounts. Do people really buy into this rhetoric?
The issue was filled with articles and pretty pie charts explaining the benefits of diversification until the very last page where the article, “The Failure of Asset Allocation” appears. This article reveals the truth: Having a diversified portfolio has not protected investors from this bear market.
With the exception of U.S. Treasury Bonds, all major asset classes have lost value in 2008. Equity REITs and REIT mortgages were supposed to be a diversifier, but they are down 37% plus. Foreign stocks and emerging markets were supposed to diversify away some of the equity market risk exposure, but they are down 46-56% respectively. TIPs and high yield bonds were supposed to help “diversify” fixed income allocations, yet relative to plain garden variety intermediate government bonds they have underperformed by 18-27% respectively. Commodities were another “asset class” tossed into the theoretical diversification bucket, but they are down 26%.
Holding all of these asset classes was supposed to protect client assets by lowering portfolio risk. It didn’t, and it won’t. As the market recovers, the securities will become uncorrelated once again placing a drag on portfolios.
I prefer to place bigger bets on individual areas and as I perform research for a follow-up on ETF trading, I’m finding it pays to run our rotation model on the asset classes, making sure to include both long and short choices, to see where portfolios should be concentrated. By including securities such as long dollar and short dollar, we can be sure that there truly is “always a bull market somewhere.”
David Vomund
http://www.etfportfolios.net/
The issue was filled with articles and pretty pie charts explaining the benefits of diversification until the very last page where the article, “The Failure of Asset Allocation” appears. This article reveals the truth: Having a diversified portfolio has not protected investors from this bear market.
With the exception of U.S. Treasury Bonds, all major asset classes have lost value in 2008. Equity REITs and REIT mortgages were supposed to be a diversifier, but they are down 37% plus. Foreign stocks and emerging markets were supposed to diversify away some of the equity market risk exposure, but they are down 46-56% respectively. TIPs and high yield bonds were supposed to help “diversify” fixed income allocations, yet relative to plain garden variety intermediate government bonds they have underperformed by 18-27% respectively. Commodities were another “asset class” tossed into the theoretical diversification bucket, but they are down 26%.
Holding all of these asset classes was supposed to protect client assets by lowering portfolio risk. It didn’t, and it won’t. As the market recovers, the securities will become uncorrelated once again placing a drag on portfolios.
I prefer to place bigger bets on individual areas and as I perform research for a follow-up on ETF trading, I’m finding it pays to run our rotation model on the asset classes, making sure to include both long and short choices, to see where portfolios should be concentrated. By including securities such as long dollar and short dollar, we can be sure that there truly is “always a bull market somewhere.”
David Vomund
http://www.etfportfolios.net/
Monday, November 3, 2008
Radio Intervew
Here is a 15 minute interview with the Big Money Show in Denver, Colorado. The recording took place November 3:
www.etftradingstrategies.com/interview.mp3
David Vomund
www.etfportfolios.net
www.etftradingstrategies.com/interview.mp3
David Vomund
www.etfportfolios.net
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)