On the heels of yesterday's post about the financial sector, Jaime Dimon said that he sees some people, meaning banks, doing dumb things like they were in 2005, 2006 and 2007. Nassim Taleb has been talking about the extent to which risk is underpriced and Torsten Slok says that tail risk has increased.
This brings us to a couple of different articles about how investment products are evolving, bad per this Wall Street Journal and bad per the comments on an article at Barron's. The take from here has always been that for anyone inclined to move beyond the plainest of vanilla funds, there needs to be a lot of sifting through to find a few things that capture something very effective.
If you can accept that observation then yes, there will be a lot of crap. The WSJ article notes that a 2x Doge fund is down 70% since its inception and that a 0dte covered call fund on MSTR is down a similar amount, both in very short periods. We covered that 0dte fund, it's from Tuttle. An exec at Morningstar is quoted as saying "many of the funds being launched just don’t pass the quality test." Yes, if you're buying an inverse Coreweave ETF, quality may not be your first priority which is fine as long as that reality is understood. Inverse XRP? I mean, hopefully anyone swimming in those waters understands what their strategy actually is.
The comments on the WSJ article were interesting because most them didn't understand how the funds work or how to evaluate them. Same with the comments on the Barron's article which made a weak case for buying alternatives now. It was a poorly researched piece. It recommended a mutual fund that appears to be closed, not closed to new money but shut down. As a note, when you see that a fund minimum is some very high dollar amount, that's not the minimum. That's a way of communicating the shares are institutional shares or that the fund is only available through an advisor.
Evaluating ETF slop and non-slop as well as alternatives is kind of a big thing here. Anyone curious enough to want to learn needs to make sure they are viewing funds with the right lens as well as understand the mechanics.
A fund that "yields" 50% on a stock that goes up by 20% is going to go down a lot on a price basis. That's how going ex-dividend works. You need to look at total return to have a better sense of the result. The total return might stink too but at least you'd be looking at the right thing. Some sort of market neutral or arbitrage fund is not intended to keep up with the S&P 500. Thinking that type of fund is not a good fund because it was up 8% when the index was up 20% is not actually understanding the fund.
To the intro of this post, if you're going to use any complexity in your portfolio make sure you understand what it is supposed to do (negative correlation, low volatility and so on) and what it is vulnerable to. A bunch of alts that all take the same risk will lead to tears if/when that particular risk has consequences.
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