A series of shorts
don’t make a long

It is easy for long-term investors to avoid short termism, and the solution lies in avoiding momentum and conducting risk analysis using cash flows – not market pricing.

“Diversification is a joke. Diversification and risk analysis relies on pricing, but pricing is distorted because it’s driven by momentum,” says Paul Woolley, chairman of the Paul Woolley Centre for Dysfunctional Markets at the London School of Economics.

Woolley, whose centre has set out the not-so-small task of rewriting finance theory, says the efficient-market hypothesis rests on the premise that prices are always right, no matter whether the time frame is short or long.

Rethinking models

But Woolley and his team, led by centre director, Dimitri Vayanos (pictured below), can show for the first time in a formal model that the long term is not equal to a succession of individual short terms.Vayanos-Dimitri-150x150

“We’ve cracked the issue of the short term in a formal model. We can show that it is optimal to use momentum or ride the trends if your horizon is short, but if it is long term then use fundamental values and look at cash flows,” he says.

Woolley says that if markets have momentum then maybe it does pay to ride that in the short term, but investors should recognise they are forgoing long-term returns by taking that course of action.

Sponsored Content

“Anything designed to make you concerned with minimising risks and maximising returns in the short term will drive you to momentum because fundamental value investing requires patience,” he says. “It is better for long-term investors to ignore the index.”

Instead he says the benchmark for the whole fund should be real global GDP plus local inflation.

Momentum is growing

Woolley’s career has spanned academia and the private sector, but while living through the tech bubble as a partner of GMO the question around momentum played on his mind.

“The tech bubble was a big turning point for me. Everyone was acting in their own best interest, it was a disaster.”

He retired from GMO in 2006 and still had many ideas to pursue so funded and formed the centre at the London School of Economics, with affiliates in Sydney and Toulouse.

“I had spent a lot of my career exploiting the mispricing of markets, and I wanted to spend time explaining them, the causes of them, and mitigating what I thought was dysfunctional,” he says.

Since then Woolley and his team have been challenging academic theory and the strategy implications of that.

“The prevailing finance theory is why the world’s economy is such a mess,” he says.

While there has been some resistance to the challenge of looking at an alternative paradigm, particularly by academics, ironically “momentum” is growing and the centre will hold a summer school in June for PhD students in dysfunctional finance.

It has also had some intrigue with policy makers and, he says, the theory has had traction with the IMF, Bank of England and the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills in the UK government.

It can’t explain

Perhaps one of the more significant advancements of the argument came from the G30 last month which said in its paper, Long-term finance and economic growth, that national regulators and international bodies such as the IMF and Financial Stability Board should draw up best-practice guidelines for investors with long-term liabilities or horizons.

If this is acted on, it will have “profound implications” for the investment industry and for investment returns, Woolley says, highlighting that the main obstacle is one of terminology and definition.

It is important to recognise, he says, that short-termism is not just a holding period and that long-termism does not equal buy and hold. Rather, the distinction is the investor’s choice between the two basic investment strategies of momentum trading and fundamental investing.

The problem for investors, he says, is that the damage this can cause has not been fully explained, because the theory doesn’t allow it, hence his mission to rewrite the very basis of the discussion.

“The rewriting has to come first. The prevailing theory of efficient markets is a dangerous core belief which is misleading everyone. That competition ensures prices are always right and markets are self-stabilising is not a good starting point to explain why prices are distorted,” he says.

By way of contrast, he points to the natural sciences: in physics, for example, there are assumptions of zero gravity or friction but to build machines, you assume situations when those conditions are not met.

“In finance the theory translates directly to practice and working with, for example, perfect competition, is useless and dangerous. The efficient-market theory can’t explain, for example, momentum – it’s the unexplained anomaly.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Over the industry? Change it

The pension and funds management industry is self-serving. There are too many players, there’s too much jargon, too much leakage and too much patting each other on the back. And that’s not just my opinion: the results of a 12-month research project, across 60 countries and more than 3000 investors concur. The research by State

Bit of a bubble in the property pool

In a landmark project, the £11-billion ($17.5-billion) Greater Manchester Pension Fund (GMPF), a scheme for 10 local councils and hundreds of small regional employers including schools and charities, will invest in a series of residential housing projects with local authorities. Lauded as a completely new way of funding house building in the city, Manchester council

Inversion therapy:
the investor as benchmark

The pension and funds management industry needs to redefine performance to an absolute return measure, according to The Influential Investor: How Investor Behaviour is Redefining Performance, a paper that is the result of 12 months of research with more than 3000 investors and investment providers across 68 countries. The report, which sought to uncover the

Will Christmas be the final blow for Spain’s Social Security Reserve Fund?

The Spanish Social Security Reserve Fund is set to be depleted by another €7 billion ($9.05 billion) before the end of 2012, according to IESE Business School pension expert, Javier Diaz Gimenez. The $90-billion fund has already been asked by the government for $3.8 billion, which is likely to go towards a raise in state

Fiduciaries’ top concern is US gridlock

Endowments and foundations in the United States are more concerned with the US political and fiscal gridlock than the uncertainty caused by the European debt crisis, according to a survey of non-profit organisations by Mercer Hammond. Partner at Mercer Hammond, Russ LaMore, says the US situation dominated the global macroeconomic concerns of these investors, followed

UK’s NAPF conference focuses on three issues

The agenda at the United Kingdom’s National Association of Pension Funds (NAPF) annual shindig in Liverpool’s Echo Arena on the banks of the Mersey couldn’t have been broader. From early analysis of auto-enrolment, the biggest shake-up of the industry in a generation and just days old, to life expectancy, Britain’s role in the European Union,

Previous