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Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
Lesson
# 22
COMMON
STOCK: ANALYSIS AND
STRATEGY
The
Passive Strategy:
A
natural outcome of a belief in
efficient markets is to employ
some type of passive
strategy
in
owning and managing common stocks. If
the market is highly
efficient, impounding
information
into prices quickly and on balance
accurately, no active strategy
should be able
to
outperform the market on a
risk-adjusted basis. The
efficient market hypothesis
(EMH)
has
implications for fundamental
analysis and technical analysis,
both of which are
active
strategies
for selecting common
stocks.
Passive
strategies do not seek to
outperform the market but
simply to do as well as
the
market.
The emphasis is on minimizing
transaction costs and time spent in
managing the
portfolio,
because any expected benefits
from active trading or
analysis are likely to be
less
than
the costs. Passive investors act as if
the market is efficient and
accept the consensus
estimates
of return and risk, recognizing
.current market price as the
best estimate of a
security's
value.
An
investor can simply follow a
buy-and-hold strategy for
whatever portfolio of stocks is
owned.
Alternatively, a very effective
way to employ a passive
strategy with common
stocks-is
to invest in an indexed portfolio. We
will consider each of these
strategies in turn.
Buy-And-Hold
Strategy:
A
buy-and-hold strategy means
exactly that an investor
buys stocks and basically
holds
them
until some future time in
order to meet some objective.
The emphasis is on
avoiding
transaction
costs, additional search costs, and so
forth. The investor believes
that such a
strategy
will, over some
period; of time, produce
results as good as alternatives that
require
active
management whereby some securities
are deemed not satisfactory;
sold, and replaced
with
other securities. These alternatives
incur transaction costs and
involve inevitable
mistakes.
Notice
that a buy-and-hold strategy is
applicable to the investor's
portfolio whatever
its
composition. It may be large or
small, and it may emphasize various
types of stocks.
Also
note that an important
initial selection must be
made to implement the
strategy. The
investor
must decide to buy stocks A, B, and C and
hot X, Y, and Z.
It is
important to recognize that
the investor will, in fact,
have to perform certain
functions
while
the buy-and-hold strategy is in
existence. For example, any
income generated by
the
portfolio
may be reinvested in other
securities. Alternatively, a few stocks
may do so well
that
they dominate the total
market value of the
portfolio and reduce its diversification.
If
the
portfolio changes in such a
way that it is no longer
compatible with the
investors risk
tolerance,
adjustments may be required.
The point is simply that
even under such a
strategy
investors
must still take certain
actions.
Index
Funds:
An
increasing amount of mutual
fund and pensions fund assets can be
described as passive
equity
investments. These asset pools
are designed to duplicate as
precisely as possible the
performance
of some market index. An
index fund is an unmanaged
fund designed to
139
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
replicate
as closely as possible (or practical)
the performance of a specified
index of market
activity.
A
stock-index fund may consist
of all the stocks in a well-known
market average such
as
the
S&P 500- Index. No attempt is
made to forecast market
movements and act accordingly,
or to select
under of overvalued securities.
Expenses are kept to a
minimum, including
research
costs (security analysis),
portfolio manager's fees and brokerage
commissions.
Index
funds can be run efficiently by a
small staff.
1.
The index Trust 500
portfolio consists of stocks selected to
duplicate the S&P 500
and
emphasizes large-capitalization
stocks.
2.
The. Extended Market
Port/olio consists of a statistically
selected sample of the
'Wilshire
4500 Index and of medium-and
small-capitalization stocks.
3.
The Total Stock Market
Portfolio seeks to match the
performance of all
(approximately
7000) publicly traded U.S.
stocks.
4.
The Small Capitalization
Stock Port/olio seeks to
match the performance of
the
Russell
2000 Small Stock Index,
consisting of 2000 small-capitalization
stocks.
5.
The Value Portfolio seeks to
match the investment
performance of the S&P/BARRA
Value
Index, which consists of stocks selected
from the S&P 500 Index
with lower
than
average ratios of market
price to book value.
.
6.
The Growth Portfolio seeks
to match the investment
performance of the S&P
500/BARRA
Growth Index, which consists of stocks
selected from the S&P
500
Index
with higher than average
ratios of market price to
book value.
7.
The Total International
Portfolio covers 31 countries
across Europe, the Pacific,
and
emerging
markets, and holds over 1500 stocks.
The European Portfolio
invests in
Europe's 14
largest markets, whereas the
Pacific Portfolio invests in
the six most
developed
countries in the Pacific
region. The Emerging Markets
Portfolio invests in
14 of
the most accessible markets
in the less-developed countries.
The
Active Strategy:
Most
of the techniques discussed in
this text involve an active
approach to investing. In the
area
of common stocks, the use of
valuation models to value and select
stocks indicates that
investors
are analyzing and valuing stocks in an
attempt to improve their
performance
relative
to some benchmark such as a
market index. They assume or
expect the benefits
to
be greater
than the costs.
Pursuit
of an active strategy assumes
that investors possess some
advantage relative to other
market
participants. Such advantages
could include superior
analytical or judgment
skills,
superior
information, or the ability or
willingness to do what other
investors, particularly
institutions,
are unable to do. For
example, many large
institutional investors cannot
lake
positions
in very small companies, leaving
this field for individual
Furthermore, individuals'
are
not required to own
diversified portfolios and are
not prohibited from short
sales or
margin
trading as are some
institutions.
Most
investors still favor an
active approach to common stock
selection and management
despite
the accumulating evidence
from efficient market studies and
the published
performance
results of institutional investors.
The reason for this is
obvious that the
potential
rewards are very large, and
many investors feel
confident that they can
achieve
such
awards even if other investors
cannot.
There
are numerous active
strategies involving common
stocks. We consider the
most
prominent
ones below. Because of its
importance, we then consider
the implications of
market
efficiency for these
strategies.
140
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
Sector
Rotation:
An
active strategy that is
similar to stock selection is
group, or sector rotation. This
strategy
involves
shifting sector weights in the
portfolio in order to take advantage of those
sectors
that
are expected to do relatively better and
avoid or deemphasize those sectors
that are
expected to do
relatively worse. Investors
employing this strategy are
betting that
particular
sectors
will repeat their price
performance relative to the
current phase of the
business and
credit
cycle.
An
investor could think of
larger groups as the
relevant sectors, shifting between
cyclical,
growth
stocks, and value stocks. It is quite standard in
sector analysis to divide
common
stocks
into four broad sectors:
interest-sensitive stocks, consumer
durable shocks, capital
goods
stocks, and defensive stocks. Each of these
sectors is expected to perform
differently
during
the various phases of the
business and credit cycles.
For example,
interest-sensitive
stocks
would be expected to be adversely
impacted during periods of high
interest rates, arid
such
periods tend to occur at the
latter stages of the
business cycle. As interest
rates decline,
the
earnings of the companies in this sector
banks, finance companies, savings and
loans,
utilities,
and residential construction firms
should improve.
Defensive
stocks deserve some explanation.
Included here are companies in
such
businesses
as food production, soft
drinks, beer, pharmaceuticals, and so
forth that often
are
not
hurt as badly during1 the down side of
the business cycle as are
other companies,
because
people will still purchase bread, milk,
soft drinks, and so forth. As
the economy
worsens
and more problems are foreseen,
investors may move into
these stocks for
investment
protection. These stocks often do well
during the late phases of a
business cycle.
Investors
may view industries as
sectors and act accordingly. For
example, $ if interest
rates
are
expected to drop significantly, increased
emphasis could be placed on the
interest-
sensitive
industries such as housing,
banking, and the savings and
loans. The defense
industry
is a good example of an industry in
recent years that has
experienced wide
swings
in performance over multiyear
periods.
It is
clear that effective
strategies involving sector rotation
depend heavily on an accurate
assessment
or current economic conditions. A
knowledge and understanding of the
phases
of
the business cycle are
important, as is an understanding of
political environments,
international
linkages among economies and credit
conditions both domestic
and
international.
Obviously, an insight into
the expected performance of various
industries
or
sectors is also necessary.
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