Title: Structured Asset Management
1 Active, Passive or Enhanced? Sandip A.
Bhagat, CFA Managing Director, Citigroup Asset
Management President, Travelers Investment
Management Company Presented at University of
Connecticut Storrs, Connecticut February 20, 2004
2Discussion Points
- Evolution of Indexing
- Role of Active Management
- Structured Management or Enhanced Indexing as an
Alternative - Implementation Choices in Asset Allocation
3Growth of Indexing
- 1.3 trillion in institutional indexed assets
- Vanguard SP 500 index fund has grown 8 fold in
the last 5 years
trillion
billion
4Factors Contributing toPopularity of Indexing
- Shortfall of Active Management
- Imbalance between size of information advantage
and size of active bets - Academic Arguments of Market Efficiency
- Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
5Relative Merits of Passive vs. Active Management
- Indexing Active Reason
- Relative Performance
- - Efficient Asset Class ??? ??? Empirical
- - Inefficient Asset Class ??? ??? ?Evidence
- Relative Costs ? ? ?Low Info. Needs/
- Turnover
- Implementing Asset Allocation ? ? ?Style
- Reliability
- Tax Efficiency ? ? ?Low Turnover
6Potential Risks of Indexingto the SP 500
-
- Reversal of Size and Style Effects
- Lower Financial Asset Returns Shift Focus to
Active Management - Reversal of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
7Role of Active Management
- Good active managers deliver consistent
value-added relative to a benchmark. - Good active managers will never fall out of favor
or go out of style. - Active management should be used in inefficient
asset classes.
8Evaluating Active Management
- Information ratios provide the litmus test of
active management. - IR ? ?
-
- Active Portfolio - Benchmark
- A high information ratio differentiates skill
from luck in active management. - gt 0.5 Good
- lt - 0.5 Bad
? ?
Active Return Active Risk
?
9Evaluating Active Management
- t-statistic
- IR ???, Standard Error of IR 1/
- IR gt 0.5 implies a top quartile manager
Estimate Standard Error
T
10Evaluating Active Management
t - statistic of 1.6 implies a 90 confidence
level 0.5 If it can take more
than 10 years to confidently identify a skilled
active manager, how long would it take to
identify a lucky or incompetent one?
11Skill and Luck
More Luck
Blessed
Insufferable
Less Skill
More Skill
Doomed
Forlorn
Less Luck
12Structured Management or Enhanced IndexingAs An
Alternative
- Disciplined investment style
- Provides reliable asset class exposure
- Adds value in a risk-controlled process
- Combines desired attributes of reliability
(purely passive) and value-added (purely active)
into one style - Enhances asset allocation decision through risk
control and value-added
13Evolution of Asset Management Styles
- Expected Return Payoffs
- Relative to Benchmark
Share of Enhanced vs. All Indexing
4 to 8
30
1 to 3
-0.1 to -0.3
lt 5
-1 to -3
-4 to -8
Asset Class Less More Reliable Exposure Reliab
le Reliable Value Added Less More Reliable, R
eliable Reliable but zero
14Expectations From Enhanced Indexing
- Enhanced indexing represents a middle ground
relative to passive and active management in
terms of active risk, active returns and advisory
fees. - Large Mid Small
- Active Risk, bps 100-200 200-300 300-400
- Active Return, bps 50-100 150-180 150-300
- Advisory Fees, bps 10-25 25-50 50-70
15Enhanced Indexing Approaches
- Achieve measured, focused and selective
departures from index composition - Conventional Strategies - Statistical Arbitrage
or Research Enhanced - Downside Suitability for
- Strategy Breadth Risk Enhanced Indexing
- Stock Selection High Low ?
- (sector, size, style neutral)
- Industry Rotation Moderate Moderate ?
- (sector, size, style neutral)
- Sector Rotation Lower High ?
- Style Rotation Low High ?
- Size Rotation Low High ?
16Enhanced Indexing Approaches
- Portable Alpha Strategies (Tracking Error 1 to
3) - LIBOR Plus Futures SP 500 SP 500 Plus
- Market Neutral Futures SP 500 SP 500 Plus
- Long-short
- Convertible Futures SP 500 SP 500 Plus
- Arbitrage
- Mid Cap Alpha - Futures Mid cap
Futures SP 500 SP 500 Plus - (Any Inefficient
- Asset Class)
- Derivatives arbitrage (eg. stock-index futures,
rolling cheap calendar spreads) is now
efficiently priced
17Importance of Breadthin Active Management
- Information Ratio Skill . Breadth
- IR IC .
- IC Information Coefficient
- BR Number of Independent Bets per Year
Source Grinold Kahn
18Probability of Success Across Investment
Strategies
- Skill Probability
- Investment Strategy Breadth Required of Success
- Diversified Active High Lower Higher
- Concentrated Active Low/Mod Higher Mod
- Style Allocation Mod Mod Mod
- TAA, Mkt. Timing Low Higher Lower
19Passive vs. ActiveRole of Market Efficiency
- Active management can be futile in efficiently
priced markets (by definition). - Markets are generally efficient in the longer
term but may provide short-term opportunities to
exploit mispricing. - Emphasize active management in inefficient asset
classes.
20Market Efficiency and Implementation Choice
- Market Recommended Mix
- Asset Class Efficiency Passive Enhanced Active
- () () ()
- Large U. S. Stocks High 40 30 30
- Small U. S. Stocks Low - 30 70
- Core Intl. Stocks Mod 30 30 40
- Emerging Mkts. Stocks Low - 20 80
- U. S. Bonds High 30 40 30
- Foreign Bonds Mod 20 30 50
- Emerging Mkts. Debt Low - 20 80
21Summary
- Various forms of indexing are likely to dominate
in efficient asset classes. - Enhanced indexing
- combines reliability and value-added to enhance
asset allocation decisions and - may represent a cheaper outperformance call
option - Active management can add significant value in
inefficient asset classes by exploiting superior
information. - Good active management, if you can find it, will
always be in demand!