Embrace three-bucket idiosyncrasy for alpha

The creation of wealth, or alpha, is limited if your strategy is the traditional allocation between asset classes, instead investors need to embrace idiosyncratic risk to achieve wealth generation, which is at odds with modern portfolio theory’s ambition. Chief investment officer of the Institute for Advanced Study, Ashvin Chhabra (pictured), explores this in his latest article.

Speaking at the CFA Institute asset and risk allocation conference in Chicago, Ashvin Chhabra, chief investment officer, Institute for Advanced Study, says a good investment process rests with identifying what an investor’s objectives are, as this separates what you can and can’t control.

“What are the objectives of your process, what risk, return and drawdown do you need, then your process is the execution of how to get those objectives. The quality of managers, and things like the amount of leverage, costs, all help in shaping a realistic risk management,” he says. “You can’t control market returns and volatility. The risks you don’t know about are incredibly important. People associate risk with volatility, the variability of returns, but if you control variability then it’s not a risk anymore. But risks are not just volatility, they are what you don’t know about.”

Chhabra has developed a framework for investing over the past 10 years, and it is how he manages the endowment at the Institute for the Advanced Study. The essence of his philosophy is to separate the portfolio into different pools, which reflect the return objectives, and while have very different risk profiles.

Chhabra says that as an endowment manager, his key objective is to be able to write a cheque when the institute wants it, not to be in an arms race with other endowments for returns, or to achieve the “best” quarterly returns.

“The market over the long term will give you a pretty good return, create a basic safety net, but it doesn’t know your particular situation,” he says.

Sponsored Content

Chhabra observed that whenever there was a bubble investors were sucked into the thinking there was serious money to be made, and so he decided to explore the exact result of what an aggressive movement in asset allocation does to wealth.

His paper, co-authored by Ravindra Koneru and Lex Zaharoff, is to be published in the summer edition of the Journal of Wealth Management.

Entitled “Modern Portfolio Theory’s Third Rail: Achieving Wealth Mobility through idiosyncratic risk”, it uses quantitative arguments to explore the idea of how to achieve a change in an investor’s relative wealth position in a society.

The authors conclude if an investment portfolio were limited to well-diversified portfolios lying along the efficient frontier, it would take close to a century to materially change the investor’s relative position.

This was analysed by looking at the data of different socio-economic groups in the US, their asset allocation and how long, and what extreme alterations, it would take to move a family into a different percentile band.

Families in the US were broken into percentiles of wealth.

“There is a long tail of being extremely wealth in the US, most people are worth nothing,” he says.

“We looked at the asset allocation of a 75th percentile family and a 90th percentile family, and it would take about 100 years for them to catch up. Wealth mobility doesn’t come from an aggressive asset allocation. It only comes from strategies.”

Further he concludes that the strategies to wealth mobility are: business owners (reinvesting in companies), finance, marriage and inheritance, and real estate.

The common features of all of these strategies are idiosyncratic risk and leverage, he says.

“Trying to create wealth, or in the case of institutions alpha, by deciding whether to put more in private equity or equities etc through asset allocation is a waste of time,” he says.

Instead he says investors should divide the management of their assets into three distinct buckets, and the dynamics of each are very different.

They are:

1.     The safety net, which holds the riskless assets

2.     The market portfolio, with risky assets

3.     The aspirational portfolio for wealth mobility, which contains idiosyncratic assets

“In the three-bucket framework the first is a safety net (which expects a zero return) such as asset liability matching, the diversified bucket is your normal diversified portfolio and then there is an aspirational bucket, which is wealth generation,” Chhabra says. “You can’t have this last bucket without leverage and idiosyncratic risk. If you don’t have leverage, forget about making wealth. This is not just risk allocation, survival just comes from number one bucket, short-term risk management, the number two market portfolio is not about meeting short-term cash flow, but equivalent to market rate of return or keeping up with your peer group. And number three is about true wealth creation.”

In the paper’s conclusion, it says modern portfolio theory points to the futility of idiosyncratic risk. Investors searching for above-market returns are directed to leverage the well-diversified market portfolio. However in the real world, leveraging the entire market portfolio is a risky and “often fool hardy strategy”.

Instead investors in the search of excess returns often become more aggressive during bull markets only to take on excessive losses as the market turns.

It says the authors have shown ‘the futility of a more aggressive asset allocation with regard to true wealth generation”.

And because wealth mobility is bi-directional investors would do better to create a strong safety net and a market portfolio, with a risk tolerance in turn with their life goals.

And the bi-directional aspect of wealth mobility also suggests that an individual or institution may be better off separating out the allocation to wealth creation from the rest of the portfolio, and explicitly recognising the risk of catastrophic capital loss associated with such a strategy.

In his presentation at the CFA Institute in Chicago he said it was important to structure this “third bucket’ properly as it involves a lot of leverage

“Because of idiosyncratic risk you must have an advantage otherwise you’re just market timing but your tactical asset allocation weights are not what’s going to make you wealthy,” he says.

Leave a Comment

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

As concerns in private credit mount, Colorado PERA CIO and COO Amy McGarrity says the pension fund isn’t seeing any strains in its growing allocation to the asset class, arguing that long-term investors are shielded from the risks because they can lock up their capital to weather market cycles.

Sort content by

France’s FRR ups risk in line with longer term investment horizon

Fonds de reserve pour les retraites (FRR), France’s €21 billion ($24 billion) pension reserve fund, has increased its weighting to equity in line with a new strategic asset allocation to reflect the investor's longer return horizon. It is also eyeing more unlisted assets including private equity, private debt and infrastructure.

University of California: Less is more and simple is better in investing

Jagdeep Singh Bachher, the CIO who oversees the University of California's $198 billion in pension and endowment assets, says that he wants to keep investment simple as the fund removed its hedge fund allocation completely, conceding "it’s not one of the things we are good at doing".

CalPERS finds continuity in climate of uncertainty

Investors are grappling with a multi-regime change that is manifesting in trade and geopolitical upheaval and a rise in real interest rates. But at a recent meeting, the CalPERS board heard that US equities remain top performers and the dollar, though weaker, is still historically strong and wil remain so.

GPIF pins active equity overhaul on ‘scientific’ manager selection

A quest for manager and fund strategy diversification has led the world's largest pension fund, Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund, to reach a decade-high allocation to active global stocks. Its active equity portfolio now consists of 103 funds, increasing fivefold compared to 2020 when it only invested in 20.

UPP: Canadian investor looks outside US markets

Canada's University Pension Plan is eyeing new risks and opportunities triggered by policies from the Trump administration, like additional taxes for US investments and a surge of public spending on defence and infrastructure in Germany. It is also fine-tuning its roster of active managers.

Alpha at North Dakota: Tracking error key to portfolio construction

The $8 billion North Dakota Department of Trust Lands is rolling out a core-satellite approach to portfolio construction in a bid to control tracking errors. But CIO Frank Mihail explains that in some asset classes like infrastructure, the process is more complicated.

Previous