You've made my day, Prism! 15-20% small caps give you the lowest risk, and 35% small caps gives you a better return than 0% small caps with no extra risk. And an efficient frontier chart to go with it. Well tickle my whiskers and call me Mary!
For convenience: "there is no doubt that adding a small/mid-cap element to a portfolio can achieve the seemingly impossible feat of generating additional return whilst reducing risk ... if you changed 35 per cent ... of your portfolio to MSCI World Small Cap you would get a higher return for the same risk. For any lower percentage, the higher return would be accompanied by lower risk".
Be interesting to hear an updated view. 3 years on. Historic comments need to considered in context. Far too often immediately become gospel at a later date.
Smithson is almost 3 years on from IPO - I will put together a 3 year monthly standard deviation when it is and see how it went. The timing of this article was before that launch and I'm not sure he would comment any further.
Be interesting to hear an updated view. 3 years on. Historic comments need to considered in context. Far too often immediately become gospel at a later date.
Smithson is almost 3 years on from IPO - I will put together a 3 year monthly standard deviation when it is and see how it went. The timing of this article was before that launch and I'm not sure he would comment any further.
What's happened has happened. Global markets have risen over 40%. Views change.
Real insurance claim quote : -
"Going to work at 7am this morning I drove out of my drive straight into a bus. The bus was 5 minutes early.".
rofl. It's not rocket science. If you want to know the risk of an investment, just look up the beta. Equities have a higher beta than bonds. Small companies have a higher beta than big companies. You take the risks that you are comfortable with. There's no "final frontier".
rofl. It's not rocket science. If you want to know the risk of an investment, just look up the beta. Equities have a higher beta than bonds. Small companies have a higher beta than big companies. You take the risks that you are comfortable with. There's no "final frontier".
Combining different financial assets leads to a portfolio beta that is not simply the average of its constituents. That is an indisputable fact.
Efficient Frontiers do exist. They are not static, just as a single asset beta value is not static, so the only question is whether what worked in the past will continue to work in the future. This is a question that applies to any tactic you use when investing.
You do realise that Jack bogle died in January
2019. Any viewpoint needs to be considered in relation to the markets at
the time the interview was recorded. Not years later.
Yes, I do know, but Bogle was talking about how to invest for fixed interest when interest rates are rock bottom. You yourself said the link between bonds and equities is "irretrievably broken" or at least "hibernating" due to low rates so, given they remain low (although with rumours of an increase to quell post-Covid inflation), I think his view remains relevant at least for today.
What's happened has happened. Global markets have risen over 40%. Views change.
The easy answer would be that we are talking about data and not views, but that would be a little disingenuous, wouldn't it? After all, "lies, damned lies and statistics" (Mark Twain).
You've made my day, Prism! 15-20% small caps give you the lowest risk, and 35% small caps gives you a better return than 0% small caps with no extra risk.
Steady on. The thread title is about ‘smaller’ companies, as are many of the charts. What are these beasts? But now you’re talking about ‘small’ companies’. ’Small’ companies has some sort of a definition(s) in the hands of index makers; something about the smallest 15% of the market, maybe. What are ‘smaller’ companies? Because the Terry Smith 2018 FT article talks about small AND mid-cap stocks giving the nice efficient frontier he shows. Is he talking about ‘smaller’ companies?
Secondly, and to repeat another post, don’t hang your hat on an efficient frontier without remembering that the curves have had a different shape when you use data from a different time period. Past performance does not …etc.
I watched a Jack Bogle video yesterday (I just can't get enough of him) and, with rock bottom interest
Can you post a link?
....since the historic equities/bonds formula isn't working well these days.
In what way is it not working, because I looked at the returns for 80/20, because it was mentioned here, for 5 year periods covering the last 25 years. Arbitrary of course; choose your own. The annual returns for each 5 year period starting 1995, ending 2020, were: 5.3%, 2.6%, 5.5%, 7.6%, 8.6%. The standard deviations are all similar. Something's working.
You've made my day, Prism! 15-20% small caps give you the lowest risk, and 35% small caps gives you a better return than 0% small caps with no extra risk.
Steady on. The thread title is about ‘smaller’ companies, as are many of the charts. What are these beasts? But now you’re talking about ‘small’ companies’. ’Small’ companies has some sort of a definition(s) in the hands of index makers; something about the smallest 15% of the market, maybe. What are ‘smaller’ companies? Because the Terry Smith 2018 FT article talks about small AND mid-cap stocks giving the nice efficient frontier he shows. Is he talking about ‘smaller’ companies?
Secondly, and to repeat another post, don’t hang your hat on an efficient frontier without remembering that the curves have had a different shape when you use data from a different time period. Past performance does not …etc.
Yes, small vs. smaller vs. SME. vs midcap. Terms need defining but not now as I need to turn on my work computer, but the index Terry Smith references is, I think, represented by iShares' WLDS.
And Yes re the frontier changing dramatically over each decade, which I did mention in my opening post.
In what way is it not working, because I looked at the returns for 80/20, because it was mentioned here, for 5 year periods covering the last 25 years. Arbitrary of course; choose your own. The annual returns for each 5 year period starting 1995, ending 2020, were: 5.3%, 2.6%, 5.5%, 7.6%, 8.6%. The standard deviations are all similar. Something's working.
That was sloppy of me. I was just mentioning how fixed interest is less straightforward than it used to be, in these times of low interest rates. That does not mean the 80/20 equity/bond rule will not turn out to be sound if that suits your risk tolerance, especially compared to alternatives.
You've made my day, Prism! 15-20% small caps give you the lowest risk, and 35% small caps gives you a better return than 0% small caps with no extra risk.
Steady on. The thread title is about ‘smaller’ companies, as are many of the charts. What are these beasts? But now you’re talking about ‘small’ companies’. ’Small’ companies has some sort of a definition(s) in the hands of index makers; something about the smallest 15% of the market, maybe. What are ‘smaller’ companies? Because the Terry Smith 2018 FT article talks about small AND mid-cap stocks giving the nice efficient frontier he shows. Is he talking about ‘smaller’ companies?
The IA defines four smaller companies sectors - UK, North America, European and Japanese. They represent roughly the bottom 10%, 20%, 20%, 30% respectively of their region by market cap. In comparison MCSI uses the term small cap and defines it as the bottom 14% in all regions. MCSI also combines these country indexes into a global index.
Currently that means a median of around £1bn but the range is pretty large. Some UK small caps make it into the FTSE 100
Replies
"Going to work at 7am this morning I drove out of my drive straight into a bus. The bus was 5 minutes early.".
Secondly, and to repeat another post, don’t hang your hat on an efficient frontier without remembering that the curves have had a different shape when you use data from a different time period. Past performance does not …etc.
....since the historic equities/bonds formula isn't working well these days.
The IA defines four smaller companies sectors - UK, North America, European and Japanese. They represent roughly the bottom 10%, 20%, 20%, 30% respectively of their region by market cap. In comparison MCSI uses the term small cap and defines it as the bottom 14% in all regions. MCSI also combines these country indexes into a global index.
Currently that means a median of around £1bn but the range is pretty large. Some UK small caps make it into the FTSE 100