You Can’t Argue With Success … But You Can Define It (Part II of II)

January 25, 2010   

In Part I of this blog, I covered the importance of a fee-only pricing structure as one of the two most important components in how my wife Šárka and I chose to define success when founding Posey Capital Management. In this Part II, I’ll address the second component: applying a passive investing strategy.

 

Passive investing seems deceptively simple, and yet it is the most disciplined and sophisticated way I know of to expect to achieve your investment goals.

·    Active investors -- Hope to beat the market by trying to make wily predictions about where stocks, sectors or the market as a whole is headed next. They try to buy future winners and sell future losers. 

·    Passive investors -- Assume that it is too hard to make these kinds of predictions in a generally efficient market. Besides, the increased costs of trying are highly likely to outweigh any benefits. Instead, the passive investor seeks to act on matters that are within his or her control: (1) fine-tuning the amount of market risk/reward in the portfolio to match personal investment goals, and (2) equally important, doing so as cost-effectively as possible.

 

To me, passive investing makes a whole lot of sense. But it doesn’t make for catchy headline news. The strategy doesn’t change much based on market whims, so maybe it’s not exciting enough to report on regularly. Like most people, I had to discover it on my own by looking past the popular press and big-name fund managers.  

 

My personal path to passive came through a Morningstar analysis I was conducting in the early 1990s, while still an active investment advisor. I came across a Dimensional Fund Advisors (DFA) fund that looked good to me, so I placed a buy order. Or, more precisely, I tried to place an order. I was shocked to learn that, to purchase DFA funds, I first had to be on their approved advisor list, which required that I attend their two-day educational seminar. Oh and, by the way, I would have to pay my own travel expenses.

 

When we founded Posey Capital, my corporate goal was to establish a rigorous, intellectual approach to investing based on analytics rather than hunches. I wanted a strategy that would withstand the test of time and various market conditions. So, despite — or maybe because of — the unusual requirements, I wanted to know more about DFA’s “odd” approach. Šárka and I decided to attend the seminar.

 

It turned out to be one of the single most intellectually stimulating experiences in my life. I learned how DFA builds its fund solutions according to decades of academic inquiry into the science behind capital markets, asset allocation and passive investing. No wonder they first wanted me to understand what they were about.

 

I realized I had found a strategic alliance with a mutual fund company that would enable me to pursue my corporate goal. Next, I was faced with a decision. I was convinced that passive investing was the right way to go, and that I could use DFA funds and a few other resources to do it. But how was I going to communicate the strategy to clients? I didn’t guess most folks would be interested in a two-day seminar. My compromise solution was to devise a presentation (really, a conversation) I can typically do in about three hours, to educate clients on how passive investing works, and why I recommend it.

 

I chose this approach before I knew for sure if it would work as a business strategy. Would investors commit to this level of education? For me, it was a choice I felt I had to make, because I strongly believe that taking the time to help my clients understand how and why they’re investing is in their best interest. More than a decade later, it’s a choice I would make all over again, in exactly the same way.

You Can't Argue With Success ... But You Can Define It (Part I of II)

January 8, 2010   

Whether or not you’re the resolution type, the arrival of a fresh new year offers as good an excuse as any to revisit life goals. What does “success” mean to you and yours? Allow me to share how my wife Sarka and I defined it for ourselves when we founded Posey Capital Management.

 

Before Posey Capital I started life as an accountant/CFO, became a corporate tax lawyer and launched my investment advisor career from within the insurance industry. These weren’t bad ways to earn a good living, and the years of experience gained during that time certainly helped us shape our firm into an effective and multifaceted service provider.

 

During my days as a lawyer, I discovered, you’re always in contention with someone. That’s because there’s always another side to every negotiation, and your job is to ensure that your side prevails. As an advisor, there isn’t – or at least shouldn’t be – “another side.” You can advocate for your client, conflict-free. I like that a lot, and so that’s one important way I have defined “success” for my firm.

 

There are a couple of ingredients I’ve found key to fulfilling my role as client advocate, helping clients define and pursue their own definitions for success. These are:

 

1.       Delivering our services in a fee-only pricing structure

2.       Applying the principles of passive investing to your investment portfolio

 

The Importance of Fee-Only

The two most common ways financial intermediaries are compensated for helping you invest are commission versus fee-only. Here’s an illustration that summarizes the differences between the two models.

 

 

With fee-only pricing, we are compensated for the advice we provide. As your portfolio grows, so does our compensation, which means our incentives are generally aligned with your own: to seek portfolio growth. In contrast, if we were to receive commissions for trades completed or products provided, we would be paid whether your portfolio shrunk, grew or remained the same. It’s also possible to be a fee-based advisor, primarily compensated through fees, but also paid commissions under certain circumstances. When Sarka and I were filling out the regulatory paperwork for establishing Posey Capital, we got to Section 13 of the Form ADV, Part II, where it asked us to disclose whether we received additional compensation from non-clients while dispensing advice to our clients. In other words, were we receiving any commissions along with our fees?

Hold the phone,” we said to each other. If we’re going to do what’s best for our clients, how can we check “Yes” to having outside interests? Shouldn’t our only source of compensation be from the clients we serve; i.e., fee-only? On the other hand, checking “No” meant that several promising opportunities from my existing book of business would have to be abandoned.

As a new firm, passing up likely business isn’t a decision made lightly. But it’s what we did … and do. Let’s not bring over any commission-based business, we agreed. We checked the “No,” box and we’ve never looked back. We’ve lived fee-only happily ever after. In my next blog, I’ll describe how adopting a passive investment strategy represents another key to my personal definition for success. In the meantime, I hope you and your family enjoy a happy, healthy 2010.