Just a couple of quick hits today.
AlphaSimplex has a paper that looks at some serious dispersion in managed futures.
The first chart shows dispersion between differing signal lengths. We've talked a little about fast signals versus slower signals, I believe more programs lean toward slower signals but either way, fast or slow, they all take turns leading and lagging.
The next chart compares full implementation (wide) versus replication (narrow). To the left it looks like full implementation did better and lately, replication has led.
The paper thinks the recent outperformance of replication strategies is just random chance.
There are other factors addressed in the paper that might account for dispersion but I think the bigger point is to consider owning more than one fund. Not necessarily a larger allocation but adding in a second or third fund. AI can help tease out differences in how many markets a fund invests in as well as differences in risk weighting and signal length.
Barron's looked at convertible bond funds and had this table.
This is an interesting space. The textbook on these is that when stocks go up, converts trade like equities and that when stocks go down, further away from their conversion price, they trade more like bonds. Maybe individual issues, I don't actually know, but the funds usually trade like stocks on the way down too as implied by the 2022 result.
What's the deal with the Franklin fund listed there? I asked Copilot if it targets a lower equity beta than FCVSX. Copilot said yes. It said the Franklin fund is a more "classic, balanced convertible" strategy where the Fidelity Fund "runs a more equity-forward, higher delta book."
A little longer term, I'm not sure Copilot is correct. When I pressed, it gave what I would say is vague reasoning for why it was correct related to realized betas versus target betas. This is a good example of being curious, getting some AI help and pushing back when it seems off.
Peter Mallouk Tweeted this out;
While I wouldn't count on a 10% growth rate, it makes an important point. Being a little older and far behind doesn't mean you can't still accumulate a meaningful piece of money. I don't think too many 60 year olds are going to be able to put away $163,000 every year but $31,000 at 50 where both partners make a decent living doesn't seem crazy to me especially if they pay off a mortgage in this window. Even $20,000 a year from age 50 to age 66 at 9% per year would be $666,000 which is enough to create a meaningful income stream even if it is not sufficient to meet all needs.
Yes, Mallouk used 15 years but if someone is starting from scratch at age 50, maybe they would consider working a little longer.
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