TIP023: STOCK MARKET BUBBLES AND ASSET ALLOCATION

W/ PAUL ARNOLD

 15 February 2015

As of February 2015, the Stock Market is at an all time high. As a result, The Investor’s ask MorningStar’s expert, Paul Arnold, about the proper asset allocation during these periods of high valuations. If you have a lot of money in the stock market, you might want to listen closely to this weeks episode.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Who is Paul Arnold, and what is asset allocation?
  • How can I make the optimal asset allocation?
  • Can stock picking be profitable when the stock market is overvalued?
  • Ask the Investors: Do Preston and Stig use P/E and P/B to pick stocks?

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CONNECT WITH PRESTON

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Preston Pysh  01:03

All right! How’s everybody doing today? This is Preston Pysh, and I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast, and as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host, Stig Brodersen, out in Denmark.

Today we’ve got a special guest for everybody. We’ve got Paul Arnold on the show. Paul is a senior consultant in the investment advisory group of Morningstar’s Investment Management Division. Paul worked for two years at the Bank of America before he went to Morningstar and their Principal Investment Group.

Paul also holds a bachelor’s degree in finance and international business from Indiana University and a master’s degree in business administration with honors from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business which is a fantastic business school, one of the best in the entire world. His masters were in finance and economics, and on top of that, Mr. Arnold holds a Chartered Financial Analyst designation, the CFA designation, and is a member of the CFA Institute. I just want to throw out there for people that don’t know what the CFA is, these guys are like the Jedi Knights of Finance, so it’s a very, very difficult charter to get in. If you are not familiar with that, you can look it up on the internet and see how difficult that is to get certified and become a CFA.

So, Paul, we are pumped to have you on the show. I know we’ve got some hard questions that we’re going to be slinging your way. But we’re really excited to hear your response to those.

Paul Arnold  02:19

Thank you. I’m glad to be here.

Preston Pysh  02:21

Alright, so we’ve got our first question. And Stig is going to go ahead and take that one away.

Stig Brodersen  02:26

So Paul, I often hear that there is such a thing as an optimal asset allocation strategy. So for instance, that might be if you’re 30 years old, you should have 30% in bonds and 70% in stocks. At other times, I hear it’s just 50/50. But I want to ask you, as an expert, do you have like a magic formula to asset allocation?

Paul Arnold  02:48

My short answer is no. And I think a lot is going on. It might seem like a simple question, but a lot is going on in that question. So I’m going to break it into two separate thoughts, and my thoughts are going to be a sort of long-term strategic picture, and then I’ll talk briefly on perhaps a more tactical type of asset allocation strategy.

So, market expectations are always going to play a role in trying to determine optimal asset allocation. Of course, if we were all clairvoyant, you might be able to have the perfect asset allocation decision. But we all know that the world works in probabilities of success and investing, and so, to say that there’s optimal asset allocation, that’s not accurate. And so, what we do is we calculate capital market assumptions. And we do this on several hundred different asset class benchmarks. We use our forward-looking expectations on both return and risk and correlation as the baseline for making our asset allocation decision. Our goal whenever we create an asset allocation is to make it as optimal as possible.

04:06

One of the reasons why there is no specific optimal asset allocation for everybody is that, as an investor, and no matter the type, let’s say you’re an institution or an individual, each investor has some specific goal in mind, and each of those goals might have its own specific asset allocation, and you’d like to get as optimal as possible towards that allocation. But everybody needs return over some time. This should really drive your strategic asset allocation decision.

04:40

Risk tolerance is one of the most important components to sort of help you determine what that appropriate mix of assets is for a strategic asset allocation program. Over the long run, you might have an individual, for example, who might want to purchase a car in three years. That same individual, for example, might want to retire in 20 years. So you have the same individual with two separate goals, and those goals will require two separate asset allocation policy. For example, why would an 80/20, an 80% equity portfolio, be appropriate for somebody retiring in 20 years? And why would a 20% equity portfolio be appropriate for somebody purchasing a car in three years? So, you could have two separate asset allocation for the same person even.

Really, what that drills down to them with a risk tolerance questionnaire, when individuals work with an advisor, or when we work with institutions, we always are trying to gather objectives and what the goal of a portfolio is. That helps us with our asset allocation to the time horizon and risk capacity. These are really, really important concepts for investors to understand when they’re making that asset allocation decision.

We’ve done some research recently on human capital and you could take the time horizon and risk capacity one step further and look at an individual’s or institution’s earning streams. So, for example, if you’re a tenured professor. Your income is very much like a bond, and that should factor into your asset allocation decision. If you’re, for example, I work in finance, my bonus is largely tied to market fluctuations or the fluctuations of my business, whatever that business is. For me, finance, but for others, it could be more tied to the general economy, or a very niche part of the economy. And how do those earnings act? Are they more stock like are they more bond? That really paints another sort of slant on how one would come up with a strategic asset allocation policy that is “optimal”.

Preston Pysh  06:57

Paul, what I’m taking away from what you’re saying is something that Stig and I don’t typically talk about with a lot of people, and that’s really, what are your goals? I think a lot of people just say, “Oh, I have one goal, I want to be able to have half a million dollars by the time I’m 55,” or something like that. That’s their goal. But what you’re talking about is if you map out all your goals, like I want to buy a car, I want to be able to move into a new house in 10 years when you map those other goals out, they put ripples and waves into that overarching, maybe end-state goal that you have. Without setting up these different pots of money and different asset allocations, and each one of those different goals and pots of money that you’re setting aside and categorizing, you’re not going to be able to meet your end state and you’re overarching a big picture goal. And I think that that’s a really profound point that I think a lot of people don’t think about them. Am I catching it straight?

Paul Arnold  07:53

Absolutely. And you know, I think perhaps the question might have been targeted a little more towards a shorter-term, asset allocation decision. But before, I even talk about that, I wanted to at least lay out what you just summarized more succinctly than I did. And that is, there really are multiple drivers on it, and it’s a very individual specific basis for what somebody’s asset allocation picture should look like.

Once you have this idea of why you’re investing in the first place settled, then you can work on making the most optimal decision possible, in that regard. And this idea of “optimal asset allocation”, an investor’s decision to make shorter-term moves has a much wider standard deviation of potential results. And so, what I mean by that is, just as I mentioned earlier, when we’re looking out over a very long term time horizon, we can be more confident that our decisions are going to end up somewhere near where we’re projecting.

I’d like to think about it as a funnel. If we expect this is a high number, but it’s easy for people to understand a 10% return over 20 years, and as you go out, and out, and out, you know that first year, you could have a standard deviation of maybe 20. You could see a gain of 30%, you could see a loss of 30%. But over time, that funnel narrows in, and your average return ends up closer to the range that we’re projecting.

Of course, in the short run, it’s very difficult to be correct. So I think that’s important for especially retail, the average investor to understand is that it’s very, very difficult to predict and time markets. And over the very, very short term, you might believe you’re making an optimal asset allocation decision, but in turn, you could actually be harming your ultimate strategic asset allocation objective. And perhaps, harming your ability to meet a goal in the future.

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