The following chart comes from Todd Sohn at Strategas.
Dabble if you must, but most of this is air. Bitcoin might even be air. I don't think it is but there's no way to know. Meanwhile, as the chart shows, there has been an absolute explosion in the number of products tracking alt coins that many people haven't heard of, like HBAR (there's an ETF for it, the full name is Hedara). I am including levered versions and derivative income versions too.
There is asymmetric potential for some of these...I guess, and I continue to hold Bitcoin for this reason. I mentioned selling some for the down payment on our Tucson house and that I had bought back about half what I had sold. I sold at $115,000 on the way up to $126,000. I bought a little back at $115,000, some at $111,000 and early on Tuesday I bought a little more at $91,000. The purchase today is inline with an idea I've talked about before. I have no idea whether $91,000 will be any type of bottom (it's at $95,000 as I write this post), that wasn't even my thought process. I bought a little after a 27% drop. That is buying low, even if it goes lower. Even if this one doesn't work out as being a good purchase in hindsight, buying assets after a large decline will turn out to be a good entry point more often than not.
Meb Faber tweeted out that there is $700 billion in mutual funds like VBAIX that are intended to be "single ticker portfolios" versus just $20 billion in single ticker portfolio ETFs. The mutual funds are pound for pound more expensive and less efficient tax-wise.
Meb included these tickers but it is not an exhaustive list. AOA, AOK, AOM, AOR, AVMA, CGBL, DDX, DSCF, ELM, GAL, GMOD, INCM, IYLD, NTSX, PBL, RSSB, TBFC, TBFG if you want to check them out.
Dave Nadig replied "Advisors hate single ticker portfolios. Individual investors only find them after they've had their hands burned market timing. Give it time...." These types of funds are absolutely valid as we've said many times before but they have drawbacks. You have to want the sort of bond exposure that they have and often that is AGG-like exposure. After 2022, I believe you need to think long hard about that sort of allocation with any kind of meaningful percentage. A small slice to AGG as part of a diversified strategy, ehhh, ok I guess but 40%, if interest rates have another meaningful move higher, these fund will get hit.
Looking at AOR, AOK and IYLD, there were all down mid teens in 2022 when bonds with any sort of duration went down in price in a similar fashion to equities. The point is just to understand the drawbacks.
Here's an article that looks at active versus passive portfolio management with work by William Sharpe as the starting point for the conversation. The article disagrees with Sharpe for being overly academic and theoretical, my words not theirs. My usual refrain is that there are many managers running very active strategies with passive products and this research never accounts for that. It's possible there's no way to fully account for it.
Not all active has to involve a lot of trading and repositioning. I have quite a few holdings for clients that have been in there for 15-20 years. An important point I would reiterate on this topic from previous posts, is that sometimes the most important decisions center on what to get out of or otherwise underweight. Sidestepping ground zero for some sort of future calamity or maybe just underweighting it and doing nothing else could add a lot of basis points to long term results. Think tech in 2000 (before I was a portfolio manager, I was a trader back then), financials in 2007 and bonds with duration in late 2021.
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