Showing posts with label Flight To Liquidity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flight To Liquidity. Show all posts

Monday, April 20, 2009

We should welcome such deals as rare signs of health amid collapsed trade and retrenching finance.

TO BE NOTED: From the FT:

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From vultures to white knights

Published: April 20 2009 20:00 | Last updated: April 20 2009 20:00

Lou Jiwei, the head of China Investment Corp, cannot contain his glee. A year ago, sovereign wealth funds were portrayed in the US, Europe and Japan as vultures bent on gaining political influence through their investments. These days, in a welcome change of attitude, governments and companies cannot throw their doors wide open enough.

The scaremongering was fuelled by a mix of xenophobia and legitimate security concerns, illustrated by US opposition to Dubai Ports World’s attempt to acquire six US ports in 2006. To pre-empt such opposition, SWFs last year agreed on the “Santiago Principles”, a code of conduct promising transparent and non-political investments.

Perhaps they need not have bothered. Mr Lou says Europeans now “come to me without conditions”. Japan is relaxing tax rules that previously discouraged Middle Eastern funds from investing in the country.

In fact recipient countries have little choice. After financial markets’ rush to liquidity and safety, SWFs are among the few remaining sources of capital with patience and tolerance for risk. Governments, making a virtue of necessity, can no longer indulge their earlier hysteria. This is good for everyone.

The political worries were always overdone. Many SWFs are portfolio investors of no political consequence. Large strategic equity stakes, however, could give political influence, and may legitimately be limited in sectors crucial to national security. But the politics cuts both ways. France is reportedly considering giving Middle Eastern funds a stake in Areva, its nuclear champion, to reinforce its political influence and improve the company’s prospects in the region.

SWFs also face political constraints at home. Chinese and Norwegian funds have lost record amounts from badly timed shifts into equities and bad bets on US banks. Norway’s government will review its fund’s investment strategy. In less-transparent China, the funds have become even more tight-lipped to fend off criticism.

This illustrates an often-forgotten point. Most SWFs cannot allow themselves to lose large amounts of money on nebulous political strategies. Like large private investors, their purpose is above all commercial. This is obvious for portfolio investments. Strategic investments, too, can serve economic diversification. Abu Dhabi’s decision last month to buy 9.1 per cent of Daimler through Aabar Investments is an attempt to transfer manufacturing skills to the emirate.

We should welcome such deals as rare signs of health amid collapsed trade and retrenching finance.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

This flight to quality and demand for liquidity causes investors to flock to the safest investments.

TO BE NOTED: From Disciplined Approach to Investing:

"Diversification and Correlation During Market Crisis Periods

One factor that has been painfully clear in this market downturn is the high correlation of nearly all asset classes. The result for investors is nearly all the asset classes experienced significant declines during the recent market contraction. So what is the purpose of diversification if it does not minimize the negative portfolio returns during stress market periods? The answer begins with the question as to what are investors trying to diversify.

During periods of market stress there tends to be two factors that influence the price of investments:
  • there is a flight to quality and
  • a high demand for liquidity
This flight to quality and demand for liquidity causes investors to flock to the safest investments. For fixed income this tends to be government bonds and for equities it tends to be high quality equities. These high qulaity equities tend to be large cap blue chip dividend growth stocks.

A recent paper by Barclays Global Investors titled, Is Diversification Dead?, provides more detail on the conundrum for investors as it relates to the diversification issue.

Is Diversification Dead
In the end though, it is difficult to predict when the market will experience these significant drawdowns. For investors, building the foundation of the equity portion of their investment portfolio in high quality dividend paying stocks is one way to potentially gain some assurance they will not experience significant market value erosion in market downdrafts.

As I have written several times before, when the market rallies off of a bottom during these corrective phases, the higher quality equity investments will likely lag the broader market returns though.

Sphere: Related Content
More on this topic (What's this?)
Diversification Across All Asset Classes
What is Diversification
Investors and diversification
Read more on Diversification at Wikinvest

This is often blamed on a “flight to liquidity” that can have a similar effect across different strategies.

TO BE NOTED: From All About Alpha:

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Study sheds light on mechanics behind “herding” in equity markets
Apr 15th, 2009 | Filed under: Today's Post

A new academic study examines how equity betas jump with the release of earnings announcements. It seems that, as in the hedge fund industry, a dearth of information in equity markets can lead to an over-reaction when news is finally released - even if that news is about a competitor.

It’s a widely-accepted axiom that “correlations go to one” in times of distress. In volatile periods like August 2007 and October 2008, hedge funds using seemingly disparate, unrelated strategies, tend to exhibit strikingly similar performance. This is often blamed on a “flight to liquidity” that can have a similar effect across different strategies. At its heart, such a run for the exits is usually precipitated by investors who extrapolate specific occurrences (e.g. a fund collapsing) across the entire industry. In fairness, this may be a good bet. After all, what affects one fund is bound to affect other funds operating with similar strategies.

A new study by academics at Oxford University and the London School of Economics shed some light on this phenomenon. Michael Patton and Michela Veradero find that individual stocks also experience an increase in correlation with their peers when they announce any news.

This makes intuitive sense. When a company announces news such as earnings, information-starved investors are likely to jump on that as an indication of industry conditions. As a result, the fortunes of competitors, suppliers and other industry participants respond accordingly.

They divide the beta of individual securities into its two components: relative volatility and covariance. While volatility relative to the market is bound to change when news is announced, they find that the lion’s share (80%) of any change in beta can be attributed to a pop in the covariance.

As the authors put it:

“The intuition behind the model is simple, and is based on three realistic assumptions of the news environment and the firm’s stock prices: Firstly, some portion of the earnings of a given firm reflects wider macroeconomic conditions. Secondly, investors use many sources of information to update their expectations about future earnings, not merely news from a single firm. Thirdly, firms only announce their earnings infrequently (e.g., quarterly). In such an environment, investors are able to update their expectations about a firm’s profitability quite accurately when the firm announces its earnings, while in between earnings announcement dates they update their expectations using other pieces of information available to them, such as the announcements of other firms. As an individual firm’s earnings figures contain some information on the wider macro-economy, good (bad) news for one firm represents partial good (bad) news for other firms, and investors update their expectations accordingly. Thus on an announcement date the covariance of the announcing firm’s return with other firm’s returns goes up (regardless of whether the earnings news is good or bad), which also increases its beta with the market portfolio.”

So investors glean precious information from the news surrounding other companies. As you might expect, the propensity to jump on any hard news - no matter where it comes from - is highest in industries where there is a shortage of valuation data points.

For example, the Patton and Veradero find that technology companies tend to exhibit a higher pop in beta around news events than pharmaceutical companies:

Since hedge funds don’t (generally) trade as securities, they have no “price” per se. As a result, the market is only able to place a value on a hedge fund with increased or decreased asset flows. When news regarding one particular hedge fund is announced, adjacent funds may be more likely to experience inflows or outflows. Granted, this is a much slower process. But, like price, quantity also reflects underlying demand.

In other words, while the “herd mentality” shows itself in higher (or lower) prices for securities, it reveals itself in the hedge fund world as higher (or lower) asset flows.

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