GMO High Quality Stocks - Portfolio Allocation/Best Vehicle
GMO High Quality Stocks - Portfolio Allocation/Best Vehicle
GMO predicts the highest returns over the next 7 years to be US High Quality Stocks as outlined in Grantham's recent quarterly newsletter.
Does anybody have a fixed allocation to these stocks?
What is the best passive investment vehicle that fits GMO's definition of US High Quality stocks?
Does anybody have a fixed allocation to these stocks?
What is the best passive investment vehicle that fits GMO's definition of US High Quality stocks?
Re: GMO High Quality Stocks - Portfolio Allocation/Best Vehi
Bridgeway Blue Chip 35 - BRLIX? Not sure.Blue wrote:What is the best passive investment vehicle that fits GMO's definition of US High Quality stocks?
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GMO has a fund that incorporates the strategy and is available to institutional investors, the GMO Quality III Fund ( GQETX )
The fund in it's seven years since inception has slightly underperformed the S&P 500, which leads me to ask myself if they cannot pick these superior companies how am I supposed too.
edit to add: Blue to answer your question, I know of no passive funds that would fit this strategy. Some active funds that would attempt it would be funds that try for a Growth At Reasonable Prices approach like, T Rowe Price Growth Stock, Jensen J Fund, maybe even Vanguard Primecap Core.
The fund in it's seven years since inception has slightly underperformed the S&P 500, which leads me to ask myself if they cannot pick these superior companies how am I supposed too.
edit to add: Blue to answer your question, I know of no passive funds that would fit this strategy. Some active funds that would attempt it would be funds that try for a Growth At Reasonable Prices approach like, T Rowe Price Growth Stock, Jensen J Fund, maybe even Vanguard Primecap Core.
Last edited by SteveB3005 on Tue Aug 24, 2010 9:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Apparently, not so high quality stocks can do just as well or better as high quality stocks.SteveB3005 wrote:GMO has a fund that incorporates the strategy and is available to institutional investors, the GMO Quality III Fund ( GQETX )
The fund in it's seven years since inception has slightly underperformed the S&P 500, which leads me to ask myself if they cannot pick these superior companies how am I supposed too.
Ignore the market noise. Keep to your rebalancing schedule whether that is semi-annual, annual or trigger bands.
Re: GMO High Quality Stocks - Portfolio Allocation/Best Vehi
Out of curiosity, has GMO ever predicted that US Low Quality Stocks would outperform?Blue wrote:GMO predicts the highest returns over the next 7 years to be US High Quality Stocks as outlined in Grantham's recent quarterly newsletter.
Does anybody have a fixed allocation to these stocks?
What is the best passive investment vehicle that fits GMO's definition of US High Quality stocks?
Paul
Re: GMO High Quality Stocks - Portfolio Allocation/Best Vehi
Grantham has said that there's a high correlation between quality and megacap. You can see this looking at the top holdings of VTI. So, I'd say that BRLIX is the best passive, that I know about anyway. Another possible could be Diamonds ETF, compare quality overall. Neither BRLIX nor Diamonds are cap weighted, which in megacap U.S. might be a benefit.Sammy_M wrote:Bridgeway Blue Chip 35 - BRLIX? Not sure.Blue wrote:What is the best passive investment vehicle that fits GMO's definition of US High Quality stocks?
I've been a fan of BRLIX a long time, but if you really become a quality believer, you would probably need to roll your own. BRLIX still has some companies with high debt, cyclicality in profits, and probably some with low profits as measured ROA or ROE.
My portfolio includes many companies which can be considered Quality, partly because I think they seem relatively cheap, but also because I think they seem relatively safe, for someone in the withdrawal phase, as part of a well-balanced portfolio.
Doesn't mean they will outperform over the next x years. Actually, perhaps one should expect a little underperformance because of the non-cyclicality of them; one tenet of Quality according to Graham is steady profits, or something like that.
Re: GMO High Quality Stocks - Portfolio Allocation/Best Vehi
Paul, not sure, but such a thing could happen. IIRC, they look at several metrics, such as Value, Size, Quality, and others. Easy to be sceptical since Quality sounds vague, but it does have a definition not much more vague than Value, which isn't always taken to just mean high BtM. And it isn't a new thing, at least not very new. Maybe someone knows the history of the word when used this way--did it mostly refer to quality of earnings, and sometimes also dividends, and could GMO or others have extended it to include low/reasonable debt? I guess leverage boosts earnings but at a risk, so that isn't a stretch.tibbitts wrote:Out of curiosity, has GMO ever predicted that US Low Quality Stocks would outperform? Paul
Grantham has made some good calls. He said get into Emerging Markets when they were out of favor just before they took off. That said I don't follow hot tips. However if you want a ETF that holds good quality wide moat large blend stocks like Grantham is recommending, look at the Vanguard ETF VIG, Vanguard Dividend Appreciation. The nice thing about it is that it's good in a down market, so if he is wrong you likely won't get killed. Dave
Re: GMO High Quality Stocks - Portfolio Allocation/Best Vehi
No, my days of following the guesses of this or that investment advisor are long (long long) over.Blue wrote:Does anybody have a fixed allocation to these stocks?
Nick
- Opponent Process
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Re: GMO High Quality Stocks - Portfolio Allocation/Best Vehi
I have VDAIX, the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation Fund. There's is a sibling ETF, namely VIG.Blue wrote:GMO predicts the highest returns over the next 7 years to be US High Quality Stocks as outlined in Grantham's recent quarterly newsletter.
Does anybody have a fixed allocation to these stocks?
What is the best passive investment vehicle that fits GMO's definition of US High Quality stocks?
A better Quality list than I expected. I own 21 of the first 50 companies. A few names I wanted to buy, but found too pricey, such as Avon, Colgate, and Clorox. GMO doesn't always agree with me though.DaveS wrote:look at the Vanguard ETF VIG, Vanguard Dividend Appreciation.
Of the first 35 companies: Target and IBM have lots of debt. Others might be too cyclical or have unsteady earnings, like Caterpillar, maybe Lowes? I haven't looked at McDonalds, Emerson Electric, EOG, Praxair, Illinois Tool Works, Franklin, Aflac, Air products, Nucor, though some sound cyclical.
Blue, if you really want to invest this way, you can find GMO fund reports on Edgar, to see which fund is closest to the Quality fund, and if any is close enough. Don't forget about the $ weighting of each fund. And make sure you're committed before doing it, since it could underperform a long while; but if you believe in it and either have good reason to invest in Quality (such as safety in economic downturns) or don't put too much % there, you have a better chance of riding out any long big underperformance period.
A really useful and intriguing set of comments/thoughts so far.
I had always assumed that my large cap TSM would be a good correlate to Grantham's "U.S. High Quality", but with a prediction by Grantham of future real returns of 7.3% for High Quality vs 2.9% (U.S. Large Cap) and 1.1% (U.S. Small Cap) it left me wondering a bit as to how much exposure I really have to "High Quality" if Grantham is correct.
That High Quality could diverge so significantly from Large Cap is not intuitive to me. Grantham seems to have a level of respect on this board and has made a few good calls in the past so I wanted to better understand the ramifications of what he is predicting relative to my portfolio.
http://www.gmo.com/websitecontent/JGLet ... s_2Q10.pdf
I had always assumed that my large cap TSM would be a good correlate to Grantham's "U.S. High Quality", but with a prediction by Grantham of future real returns of 7.3% for High Quality vs 2.9% (U.S. Large Cap) and 1.1% (U.S. Small Cap) it left me wondering a bit as to how much exposure I really have to "High Quality" if Grantham is correct.
That High Quality could diverge so significantly from Large Cap is not intuitive to me. Grantham seems to have a level of respect on this board and has made a few good calls in the past so I wanted to better understand the ramifications of what he is predicting relative to my portfolio.
http://www.gmo.com/websitecontent/JGLet ... s_2Q10.pdf
Respect--not from everybody, for sure.Blue wrote:Grantham seems to have a level of respect on this board and has made a few good calls in the past so I wanted to better understand the ramifications of what he is predicting relative to my portfolio.
Ramifications--if your portfolio is well diversified, such as Swensen's typical listed in Unconventional Success, or William Bernstein's, or some other sample AAs, then only 20-35% or so of the portfolio will be in U.S. stocks other than REITS. If 25% U.S. stocks and GMO prediction is exactly right, you could have made 7.3 instead of 2.9 for 7 years, on just that fraction, not that large a difference.
If you do follow GMO, there's all the risks Bogleheads teach you, plus the risk that GMO will stop reporting on valuations before Quality becomes relatively expensive, if they are right.
Sorry to be somewhat hypocritical; I do lean towards Quality today with my own money, but wouldn't really see myself suggesting others do so in today's market, unless they have strong convictions built over time, and maybe also don't have any history with other asset classes of selling low. Much research shows that people with normal personalities will usually buy high sell low. At least that's my way of thinking of it.
Here is a description of research by Rob Arnott suggesting that the very largest companies underperform, which I think is consistent with Fama/French:
http://www.mebanefaber.com/2010/08/12/t ... -msft-exc/
How many of these would Grantham recommend as "quality"?
http://www.mebanefaber.com/2010/08/12/t ... -msft-exc/
How many of these would Grantham recommend as "quality"?
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Blue: it should be noted that a basic review of the book to market data on Ken French's website reveals that large neutral/growth stocks do not trade at any meaningful discount to their long term (70-09) averages. The most steeply discounted of the 2X3 grid is large value (with a book to market ratio 50% below its long term average) followed by small value (20% below its long term average).
This data is probably of limited use, and using current valuations to make allocation decisions is unwise in my opinion, just wanted to pass the data along.
MA
This data is probably of limited use, and using current valuations to make allocation decisions is unwise in my opinion, just wanted to pass the data along.
MA
- jeffyscott
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I don't think they were calling high quality under valued 7 years ago. Their forecasts from that time do not have a separate figure for high quality. 7 years ago the highest expected returns, according to GMO's published forecast was for emerging market stocks.SteveB3005 wrote:GMO has a fund that incorporates the strategy and is available to institutional investors, the GMO Quality III Fund ( GQETX )
The fund in it's seven years since inception has slightly underperformed the S&P 500, which leads me to ask myself if they cannot pick these superior companies how am I supposed too.
By June 30, 2005, the forecast was +2.5% real for high quality compared to -1% for the S&P 500. GQETX has a slight lead on the S&P over the last 5 years (about 1% annualized) and has been much less volatile (SD 13% vs. 17%).
In consideration of the above comments, I spent a little time comparing portfolios of GMO's quality fund and Vanguards TSM.
The top 25 holdings of GMO Quality GQETX represent roughly 69% of GQETX. These same stocks make up roughly 21% of Vanguard's TSM VTSAX.
Extrapolating, the totality of GMO High Quality fund portfolio likely represents about 30% of Vanguard TSM.
It seems then, that by having a primary holding of TSM or SP500, that an investor is likely to have reasonably high allocation to Grantham's favored High Quality Stocks.
The top 25 holdings of GMO Quality GQETX represent roughly 69% of GQETX. These same stocks make up roughly 21% of Vanguard's TSM VTSAX.
Extrapolating, the totality of GMO High Quality fund portfolio likely represents about 30% of Vanguard TSM.
It seems then, that by having a primary holding of TSM or SP500, that an investor is likely to have reasonably high allocation to Grantham's favored High Quality Stocks.
- jeffyscott
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Probably many of them.dave.d wrote:How many of these would Grantham recommend as "quality"?
http://researchaffiliates.com/ideas/pdf ... 201006.pdf
The first page is amusing to me compared to a decade ago, when it was a given that larger companies were superior and would do better.
Several reasons were given then why large=good, valid reasons even today, not included in Arnott's argument. People were too enamoured with largecaps. Today, I wonder if too many seek small and value premia. And overlearned the lesson "good company=bad stock" without checking valuations to see if it's still a good rule.
The second page uses data, but over a relatively short period and ending at a time some people think megacaps or leaders are underpriced, so one might complain that it's period specific, maybe even data mining. If the study ended 1/2000, would results be the same?
For someone attempting TAA, it all depends on price. Generally, I'd expect megacaps, especially the largest in an industry to have less risk and lower return. Even more so for Quality. But I believe relative valuations change, and sometimes I even change my AA because of them. (Not very Bogleheady, not for everyone, and most wouldn't even call Quality an asset class.)
That's surprising to me, not sure what to make of it.Multifactor Advisor wrote:The most steeply discounted of the 2X3 grid is large value (with a book to market ratio 50% below its long term average) followed by small value (20% below its long term average).
Though in my very amateurish look at valuations, I look at other multiples than just BtM, and with Quality stocks that have a history of steady earnings, I usually ignore book value except perhaps growth of it over time. For example, if a megacap like JNJ, PnG, Pepsi, etc not long ago and maybe today is trading at P/E of 12 or 14, has long history of very steady and maybe nicely growing earnings, while having P/E, P/CF only a bit more expensive than their sector and competitive with the market, I'm very interested.
I've even seen a few Quality stocks that appear to be cheaper than the lower quality stocks in the same sector. When Quality should be safer, lower risk, lower return, more expensive.
Again--amateur here. And Quality being cheap now isn't even my idea, of course got it from Grantham.
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When GMO makes their asset class forecasts for international (developed international and emerging markets), are those 7 year forecast returns their expected returns in dollars? In other words, do their international forecasts account for expected fluctuations in the dollar and foreign currencies, or are the forecasts just how they expect the foreign equity markets by themselves to perform (not considering dollar or other currency fluctuations)?
If they're taking currency fluctuations into account, how can they forecast next 7 year currency fluctuations?
If they're taking currency fluctuations into account, how can they forecast next 7 year currency fluctuations?
- fishnskiguy
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If Grantham is correct, next 7 years could be challenging for those that tilt away from TSM.Blue wrote: I had always assumed that my large cap TSM would be a good correlate to Grantham's "U.S. High Quality", but with a prediction by Grantham of future real returns of 7.3% for High Quality vs 2.9% (U.S. Large Cap) and 1.1% (U.S. Small Cap) it left me wondering a bit as to how much exposure I really have to "High Quality" if Grantham is correct.
If we take TSM as ~30% Grantham HQ, ~10% Small Cap, and remaining 60% as large cap, then TSM would be expected to return a weighted real 4.04%.
An investor splitting domestic equity 50:50 with SCV (1.1% expected return), would have an expected real return of 2.57%.
At 7 years, a TSM investor would have 10% more wealth than a 50:50 TSM:SCV and 22% more wealth than a pure SCV investor seven years from now if GMO predictions hold.
IIRC, Grantham indicated his personal view was high quality would be realize more out-performance than indicated in the GMO numbers which would of course amplify the wealth difference in 7 years.
If Grantham's predictions are on target.... there will be more talk of SP500 funds than SCV tilting in 7 years on this board.
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To be fair, the 1.1% is GMO's forecast for small cap (SCV + SCG), not SCV specifically. I'm not sure what GMO's forecast is for SCV specifically. Anyone know?Blue wrote:If Grantham is correct, next 7 years could be challenging for those that tilt away from TSM.Blue wrote: I had always assumed that my large cap TSM would be a good correlate to Grantham's "U.S. High Quality", but with a prediction by Grantham of future real returns of 7.3% for High Quality vs 2.9% (U.S. Large Cap) and 1.1% (U.S. Small Cap) it left me wondering a bit as to how much exposure I really have to "High Quality" if Grantham is correct.
If we take TSM as ~30% Grantham HQ, ~10% Small Cap, and remaining 60% as large cap, then TSM would be expected to return a weighted real 4.04%.
An investor splitting domestic equity 50:50 with SCV (1.1% expected return), would have an expected real return of 2.57%.
At 7 years, a TSM investor would have 10% more wealth than a 50:50 TSM:SCV and 22% more wealth than a pure SCV investor seven years from now if GMO predictions hold.
IIRC, Grantham indicated his personal view was high quality would be realize more out-performance than indicated in the GMO numbers which would of course amplify the wealth difference in 7 years.
If Grantham's predictions are on target.... there will be more talk of SP500 funds than SCV tilting in 7 years on this board.
And anyone know an answer to my question a few posts above?
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If my predictions are on target we will be talking about something or another on this board in 7 years.If Grantham's predictions are on target.... there will be more talk of SP500 funds than SCV tilting in 7 years on this board.
and...If the Mayan predictions are right, nobody will be talking at all, anywhere.
- StoneReader
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List of GMO's High Quality Stocks
For the curious, here are some examples of GMO's High-Quality stocks from their fund by the same name (the top 60% of the fund). GMO says that they start out by screening for high Return on Equity that is not produced by debt leveraging. They then screen by Valuation and its deviation from historic averages. GMO also avoids companies with bad balance sheets and lots of debt, e.g. GE, so you can not just choose stocks based on their size or name or presence in the Dow30 or the S&P500. Most of these companies incidentally have a large international presence so you get a good dose of foreign stock exposure too.
GMO High-Quality Stocks As of 9/30/2010
Oracle Corp. 6.9%
Microsoft Corp. 6.0%
Johnson & Johnson 5.5%
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. 4.8%
Pfizer Inc. 4.7%
Coca-Cola Co. 4.2%
Exxon Mobil Corp. 3.6%
Google Inc. (Cl A) 3.5%
PepsiCo Inc. 3.2%
Procter & Gamble Co. 3.2%
Nestle S.A. 2.9%
Merck & Co Inc 2.8%
Apple Inc. 2.8%
Cisco Systems Inc. 2.6%
Abbott Laboratories 2.4%
Total 59.1%
GMO High-Quality Stocks As of 9/30/2010
Oracle Corp. 6.9%
Microsoft Corp. 6.0%
Johnson & Johnson 5.5%
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. 4.8%
Pfizer Inc. 4.7%
Coca-Cola Co. 4.2%
Exxon Mobil Corp. 3.6%
Google Inc. (Cl A) 3.5%
PepsiCo Inc. 3.2%
Procter & Gamble Co. 3.2%
Nestle S.A. 2.9%
Merck & Co Inc 2.8%
Apple Inc. 2.8%
Cisco Systems Inc. 2.6%
Abbott Laboratories 2.4%
Total 59.1%
Does anyone recall if "Large Cap" in GMO predictions means S&P 500?Blue wrote:If we take TSM as ~30% Grantham HQ, ~10% Small Cap, and remaining 60% as large cap, then TSM would be expected to return a weighted real 4.04%.
If so, then Blue, I'm very sorry, but TSM would be more like 70% or 75% Large Cap, and perhaps 10%small cap (blend), the rest midcaps not in S&P500
OR 70 to 75% Large Cap, and 25-30% S&P Completion Index.
Or for those of you who insist that TSM is the same as Largecap, TSM would just be Largecap.
Even if LargeCap isn't S&P500, you're including the HQ, but not the LQ that is in TSM.
Of course, GMO could be very wrong this time.
A few thoughts.lazyday wrote:Does anyone recall if "Large Cap" in GMO predictions means S&P 500?Blue wrote:If we take TSM as ~30% Grantham HQ, ~10% Small Cap, and remaining 60% as large cap, then TSM would be expected to return a weighted real 4.04%.
If so, then Blue, I'm very sorry, but TSM would be more like 70% or 75% Large Cap, and perhaps 10%small cap (blend), the rest midcaps not in S&P500
OR 70 to 75% Large Cap, and 25-30% S&P Completion Index.
Or for those of you who insist that TSM is the same as Largecap, TSM would just be Largecap.
Even if LargeCap isn't S&P500, you're including the HQ, but not the LQ that is in TSM.
Of course, GMO could be very wrong this time.
We established above in this thread that TSM is ~30% HQ (which are also large caps)
We know that TSM is 70% LC, 20% Mid Cap, 10% SC
Grantham only provides projections for HQ, LC (presumably LC ex HQ?), and SC
So, for estimation purposes, I lumped Mid caps into LC (ex HQ) to get TSM = 30% HQ, 60% LC (40% LC ex HQ + 20% Mid Cap), with 10% SC.
I agree you could take a number of different reasonable alternative approaches but since Granthams predictions for LC (2.9%) and SC (1.1%) are reasonably close vs prediction for HQ (7.3%), I think where you stick mid caps is probably less important.
As an aside, I noticed Ed Tower's collection of work on this topic mentioned in summary document of Bogleheads 9. When I get some time this evening, I am hoping to dig through his work a bit.
2. E. Tower, “Are GMO’s Predictions Prescient? Using Them to Predict Vanguard’s Mutual Fund Returns”
http://econ.duke.edu/Papers/Other/Tower ... r_2010.doc
3. E. Tower, “Strategic Asset Allocation in Practice: Using Vanguard Funds toClone GMO’s Benchmark-Free Allocation Fund.”
http://econ.duke.edu/Papers/Other/Tower ... ctice.docx
4. E. Tower, “GMO’s Predictions as Pilots for Vanguard Portfolios: Are They a Useful Guide for Strategic Asset Allocation?” Not available on line yet. Will be shortly.
http://econ.duke.edu/Papers/Other/Tower ... ilots.docx .
Ed Tower,The GMO predictions are prescient enough to be a useful input into investment decisions. Investors should be grateful to GMO for providing them at no charge.
Are GMO’s Predictions Prescient?
Using them to predict Vanguard’s Mutual Fund Returns
I don't know how good that estimate is, but if you're going to include HQ in your estimate, then you also need to include LQ.Blue wrote:We established above in this thread that TSM is ~30% HQ (which are also large caps)
What % of TSM is LQ?
Or, keep it simple, and just estimate that TSM = 75% Largecap, 10% Smallcap, and 15% other. Maybe to keep things simple, "other" could be lumped in with Largecap or split between the two.
You're cheating if you take some of the HQ estimate, but none of the LQ estimate.
Not sure if Tower would apply his earlier work to Quality or not. Not everyone even considers it an asset class. (I haven't looked at his stuff lately.)
Also don't forget a couple months ago, we discussed the implications if GMO is right. If U.S. LC and SC is a reasonable % of portfolio, because you are diversified globally into several asset classes like in Swensen's book or other sample AA's, then the result would be relatively small. You can even calculate it as you have been doing in recent posts, multiplied by % held. I hope few people are all U.S. with 50% SC and no bonds, unless they are really prepared for massive underperformance.
Also don't forget a couple months ago, we discussed the implications if GMO is right. If U.S. LC and SC is a reasonable % of portfolio, because you are diversified globally into several asset classes like in Swensen's book or other sample AA's, then the result would be relatively small. You can even calculate it as you have been doing in recent posts, multiplied by % held. I hope few people are all U.S. with 50% SC and no bonds, unless they are really prepared for massive underperformance.
Normally, I index but to focus only on high quality stocks such as those held by Vanguard Dividend Apprecation Index Fund, I find the managed Vanguard Dividend Growth Fund a better choice.
Frist, Dividend Growth has the ability to be most widely diversified;
Second, Dividend Appreciation's requirement that a company has raised the dividend for at least 10 consecutive years means excluding a company's stock for a very long time. The failure to raise the dividend (or even to reduce it modestly) could have been a temporary slow down in earnings from which the company recovered quickly.
peace
maj
Frist, Dividend Growth has the ability to be most widely diversified;
Second, Dividend Appreciation's requirement that a company has raised the dividend for at least 10 consecutive years means excluding a company's stock for a very long time. The failure to raise the dividend (or even to reduce it modestly) could have been a temporary slow down in earnings from which the company recovered quickly.
peace
maj
This seems to be the issue:
Also, GMO used to provide estimates of LQ for free, some here might still have these in their download folders. It was very low, maybe slightly negative.
I take LC to be all of LC, not LC-HQ.Blue wrote:Grantham only provides projections for HQ, LC (presumably LC ex HQ?), and SC
Also, GMO used to provide estimates of LQ for free, some here might still have these in their download folders. It was very low, maybe slightly negative.
http://moneywatch.bnet.com/investing/bl ... oited/498/The GMO predictions are prescient enough to be a useful input into investment decisions. Investors should be grateful to GMO for providing them at no charge.
- Houston101
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The commentary they publish sounds intellectual, none of the usual CNBC stuff.SteveB3005 wrote:The fund in it's seven years since inception has slightly underperformed the S&P 500, which leads me to ask myself if they cannot pick these superior companies how am I supposed too.
But if you look at there funds performance they have hardly beaten the respective benchmarks, however there funds do show notable out-performance in the International equities section (but not always).
Leaves me to wonder the same question, if they are so smart why can't they beat the market by a wide margin?
You are correct, this is the issue for discordance.lazyday wrote:This seems to be the issue:I take LC to be all of LC, not LC-HQ.Blue wrote:Grantham only provides projections for HQ, LC (presumably LC ex HQ?), and SC
Also, GMO used to provide estimates of LQ for free, some here might still have these in their download folders. It was very low, maybe slightly negative.
If LC is 2.9% estimate inclusive of HQ (estimated at 7.3%), then that implies a ex-HQ LC estimate of 0.4% (if LC is 70% of TSM, with 30/70 of HQ and 40/70 ex-HQ).
I assumed since Grantham broke out LC vs HQ he meant them as separate and distinct units.... but if you are correct and the LC estimate is inclusive of very high HQ estimate then the implications are much worse for us as TSM/S&D investors.
Same questions, same answers. And investors in their funds have to identify these guys prior to their outperformance, and for reasonable cost, then hope the deluge of hot money doesn't dilute future success, which so often seems to follow.Houston101 wrote:
The commentary they publish sounds intellectual, none of the usual CNBC stuff.
But if you look at there funds performance they have hardly beaten the respective benchmarks, however there funds do show notable out-performance in the International equities section (but not always).
Leaves me to wonder the same question, if they are so smart why can't they beat the market by a wide margin?
But I agree that his level of discourse far exceeds that demonstrated in the CNBC "Looney Tunes" arena. (Love your avatar—the very symbol of outperformance!).
Fair points.Roy wrote:http://moneywatch.bnet.com/investing/bl ... oited/498/The GMO predictions are prescient enough to be a useful input into investment decisions. Investors should be grateful to GMO for providing them at no charge.
To play devil's advocate a bit, selecting individual securities and tactical asset allocation seem to be two different skill sets only partially correlated I suspect. History is favorable to Grantham on the latter point but not the former.
Maj, It looks like Ed Tower agrees with your assessment.maj wrote:Normally, I index but to focus only on high quality stocks such as those held by Vanguard Dividend Apprecation Index Fund, I find the managed Vanguard Dividend Growth Fund a better choice.
Frist, Dividend Growth has the ability to be most widely diversified;
Second, Dividend Appreciation's requirement that a company has raised the dividend for at least 10 consecutive years means excluding a company's stock for a very long time. The failure to raise the dividend (or even to reduce it modestly) could have been a temporary slow down in earnings from which the company recovered quickly.
peace
maj
From his GMO Strategic Allocation paper,
Dividend growth, VDIGX, a clone of GMO’s Quality fund
....................
GMO on its web page has been recently been predicting high returns from investing in quality stocks. Thus it seemed likely that GBMFX would invest in part in assets which are held in the GQETX portfolio. VDIGX is the Vanguard mutual fund whose returns best explain GQETX, using Sharpe’s method of style analysis. Thus, it seemed likely that one component of the return of GBMFX would be explained by that of VDIGX.
Fascinating conclusions at the end of the paper,
My first take away from this is that the gains from strategic asset allocation as exhibited by GMO are substantial, but they are not consistent. My second take away is that GMO does not use its 7 year asset class return predictions to guide the asset allocation of its Benchmark Free Asset Allocation Fund III.
Here's a comparison of the GMO Benchmark Free portfolio with the historical backtest to 2004 of the portfolio I set up in M* that uses GMO's 7-year asset class forecast to guide annual assest allocation among 10 mostly Vanguard index funds.My second take away is that GMO does not use its 7 year asset class return predictions to guide the asset allocation of its Benchmark Free Asset Allocation Fund III.
Code: Select all
Annual returns, %
GMO Back-test
Benchmark-Free GMO 7yr Forecast Portfolio
2004 18.2 18.4
2005 16.4 18.4
2006 12.9 14.9
2007 11.3 12.6
2008 -11.2 - 10.4
2009 20.7 37.8
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- jeffyscott
- Posts: 13484
- Joined: Tue Feb 27, 2007 8:12 am
Larry's conclusion that: There certainly doesn’t seem to be any evidence of Grantham’s ability to exploit the supposed inefficiencies he is railing about., misses the point that the inefficiencies that Mr. Grantham "rails" about are not at all related to the selection of individual securities within funds that are limited to a specific asset class, instead they are related to the selection of asset classes in which to invest. If, for example, their forecast says foreign is a better value than US, this is not proven wrong by pointing out that their small cap value fund under-performed a small cap value index fund.
I agree. Yet his distinction of "high quality" seems elusive, and it may require skill to corral stocks that fit this class.Blue wrote: To play devil's advocate a bit, selecting individual securities and tactical asset allocation seem to be two different skill sets only partially correlated I suspect. History is favorable to Grantham on the latter point but not the former.
Look at his "Quality" fund. Why ORCL, and not HP, ADBE, IBM, etc? Why CSCO and not INTC or WDC? Why is ORCL double weighted in comparison to PEP? And there are many companies with earnings growth, low debt, fair valuation, multinational business, and other signs of "quality" that are not included. It is so difficult to pin down specifics, that "quality" is really whatever GMO says it is - not an asset class, of course, but their own prediction of their own skill.
I agree with his general thesis. But doesn't it seem like a tall order for this category to outperform large cap US equities by 3-4% per the next 7 years? This seems possible, given very low or nonexistent returns from all broad equity indexes - in sync with GMO's prediction, Hussman's forecast and other forecasts based on the Shiller PE/10. It does follow that JNJ, KO, PEP would beat a down market - these are unlevered, low beta, low volatility offerings. You may think of it as collecting dividends while the market muddles through.
The opposite would be something like Arnott's RAFI index (PRF) which has outperformed in recent decades (Arnott sees the trees, rather than the forest) because it tilts toward value, small, and levered companies. Grantham predicts mean reversion.
- Noobvestor
- Posts: 5944
- Joined: Mon Aug 23, 2010 1:09 am
http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/ ... ?id=359359
Risk of quality
Click link at start of article for October article on international revenue, and benefit of quality.
Risk of quality
Click link at start of article for October article on international revenue, and benefit of quality.
- Noobvestor
- Posts: 5944
- Joined: Mon Aug 23, 2010 1:09 am
I guess I'm curious to know how 'quality' on the GMO definition compares/contracts to 'value' as an FF risk factor and 'wide moat' as M* talks about - and if 'value' and 'quality' are strongly correlated, does the GMO prediction suggest we're in for some troubled times ahead?
"In the absence of clarity, diversification is the only logical strategy" -= Larry Swedroe
Quality is more oriented towards growth stocks. Value would pretty much be the opposite. That said, part of the prediction comes from the idea that quality is now cheap. (Today JNJ has a PE of 12.65; WMT has a PE of 13.29.)noobvester wrote:I guess I'm curious to know how 'quality' on the GMO definition compares/contracts to 'value' as an FF risk factor and 'wide moat' as M* talks about - and if 'value' and 'quality' are strongly correlated, does the GMO prediction suggest we're in for some troubled times ahead?
In the forecast dated 10/31/10, GMO predicts a real return of 1.2% for large-cap US equities. This is a dismal forecast. I would argue that this is an important factor in their prediction for the outperformance of quality.
newb,
I'd guess that years ago quality and value were negatively correlated, and today that correlation is close to zero.
A wide moat helps to make a quality company, but alone isn't enough according to GMO's definition of quality.
For those who have diversified portfolios, I don't see the predictions as especially dire, nor do I think this is a bad time to have a diversified Boglehead TSM+international incl EM+FI portfolio. Earnings yield of the markets look ok, in spite of the bad economy.
My opinion is that it might be a very risky time to have extreme tilts to small and value, which might not be treated kindly if we have a double dip. My perspective is from someone in withdrawal phase.
I'd guess that years ago quality and value were negatively correlated, and today that correlation is close to zero.
A wide moat helps to make a quality company, but alone isn't enough according to GMO's definition of quality.
For those who have diversified portfolios, I don't see the predictions as especially dire, nor do I think this is a bad time to have a diversified Boglehead TSM+international incl EM+FI portfolio. Earnings yield of the markets look ok, in spite of the bad economy.
My opinion is that it might be a very risky time to have extreme tilts to small and value, which might not be treated kindly if we have a double dip. My perspective is from someone in withdrawal phase.