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Showing posts from February, 2017

The unnecessarily complex alphabet soup of ETF investing

Whilst advisers and investments are comfortable and familiar with the simple term “funds” (has anyone heard of an “CIS (Collective Investment Scheme) Conference” or being an “AUT (Authorised Unit Trust) investor”?  There is much less familiarity with the once-institutional and now pervasive ETFs (Exchange Trade Funds).  That lack of familiarity means that for some reason that particular TLA has stuck. Claer Barrett in FT Weekend’s FT Money section tries to demystify the jargon  – but ends up makes thing sound more complicated than they need to be. Advisers wanting to check or brush up on the difference between an ETP, ETF, ETN and ETC could do well to invest 2 hours of their time to earn accredited CPD (Continuous Professional Development) from the roadshow being run by Copia Capital Management to get a solid understanding of this increasingly popular and pervasive investment vehicle. As for civilians – customers and investors – it's actually quite simpl...

Market timing is a mug’s game

John Authers’ Long View article in the FT this weekend addresses market timing.  While he claims that just passive investors are such bad timers, we would go further: most are. Attempts to time the market (choosing the right moment to buy or sell into risk assets) are a mug’s game.  Great for brokerages that delight in investors’ fees levied to senselessly overtrade.  Bad for investor’s portfolio outcomes.  Despite the annual survey by Dalbar that investors’ attempts to time the market is really bad for their portfolio, people – including some portfolio managers – still try and have a go. The problem is that in timing the market, we become slaves to our behavioural biases around entry points, and the noise around market sentiment.  An investor fearing Brexit might have – out of emotion – sold everything to cash stocked up on gold sovereigns and run for the hills whilst tracing Irish ancestry.  The smart thing was to acknowledge sterling weakn...