News & Analysis
Wall Street Mulls Suicide by Tactical Allocation
Not Going Tactical Could Pose Real Business Risks, Advisors Fear ... Following the twin market implosions of the past decade—first tech, then real estate—many retail financial advisors are looking for more tactical, meaning active, asset allocation solutions for client portfolios to dampen volatility, improve total returns and avoid market catastrophes. At least some of them fear that if they don't dramatically change the way they allocate client portfolios, moving away from traditional buy-and-hold investing strategies, they could lose clients. So say a handful of advisors and an investing expert. Things could get especially bad if another bear market hits, says Ron Carson, founder and CEO of Carson Wealth Management Group. "[Investors] are hanging on by a thread right now, and I don't think they're going to forgive." – Registered Rep
Dominant Social Theme: We need to show you new ways of investing, though we don't want to.
Free-Market Analysis: Is it time for Wall Street to fall on the ceremonial sword of tactical asset allocation? In the long-term, this is the only strategy that works, but for the last ten years – as for much of the rest of last century – Wall Street has proven impervious to its blandishments and even conspired to withhold the strategy from investors.
The reason is simple. To suggest tactical asset allocation (and to explain it properly) one actually has to grapple with some of the fundamental issues of the modern, Western monetary economy. The big firms that most Wall Street and "independent" brokers work for would rather chew their own (figurative) arms off than engage in these discussions.
Yes, the idea of explaining that modern central banks are a kind of Ponzi scheme that collapse every 15 or 20 years and that gold and silver are historically valid money metals is not the kind of palaver that Wall Street's bosses want to engage in.
Of course, they should engage in it because every couple of decades millions of people who have bought into the Wall Street investment paradigm are stripped of their hard-earned assets – assets that are not going to return to people in their 60s or 70s.
Of course, the defenders of the Wall Street paradigm will explain that brokers are not wedded to stocks but when the stock market is sputtering, fixed income instruments are recommended. There is only trouble with this sort of strategy – in a REAL money metals bull such as what we have today, bonds likely don't perform much better than stocks.
Corporate bonds aren't apt to perform well because companies generally are in the doldrums. As far as Treasuries go, well ... savvy Wall Streeters know darn well that central banks will keep interest low during a bad "bear" market. Thus money becomes cheap, devaluing the bonds that people are holding if they want to sell them. (And many may have to sell because of hard times.)
In looking over the wreckage of the modern financial industry, one must almost inescapably come to a conclusion that a kind of crime has been committed. For a decade now, US stock markets have moved down, sideways and occasionally up. But the carnage is much worse than has been reported.
Stock market averages are summaries of overall performance and not representative of individual stocks. Mutual funds and other formally regulated entities have been savaged by the bull market in money metals – just as they were degraded back in the 1970s.
To argue that Wall Street's collective memory does not extend back some 40 years is a non-starter, in our view. The collective brain-trust that inhabits Wall Street knows exactly how the modern economy works. It's their business to know.
"They" knew back in the early 2000s what was going to happen. If a bunch of disorganized bloggers could predict it, so could Wall Street's top brains. In fact, knowing what was going on, Wall Street collectively made the decision to HIDE it.
How did they do this? The way they always do. They kept talking up the regular investments – stocks, bonds and even real estate. They kept referring to Modern Portfolio Theory and to the benefits of "buy and hold." The persuasiveness of Wall Street's money salesmen collectively cost American consumers trillions.
People listened to their brokers and held down, down, down ... Down until many of them were wiped out. And still they held! They were told that if they held on long enough the market would "come back." This was just a lie, and continues to be a lie. Consumer-driven stock markets are probably NOT coming back, or not for many more years, because the business cycle won't allow it.
This is another kind of crime committed by Wall Street. The determination not to provide consumers with the valid essentials of Austrian economics leaves people defenseless. The additional layers of regulatory supervision give people the idea that investing is essentially riskless. Maybe a few percentage points may be lost but they'll make it up in the long run.
But as we have pointed out in the past, US consumers in particular have been subject to a kind of "Dreamtime." Central banking itself producers this Dreamtime because the over-printing of money-from-nothing creates euphorias that can last for years, even decades (on and off). People get the idea that the good times will never end, and that they financial geniuses because their decisions are working out.
In reality, in our humble view (and we know this is not a mainstream perception) it is all a cold-blooded hustle. A vicious deception. The gray-suited technocratic thugs that push this sort of financial, money-from-nothing crack are ruining households and bankrupting families with the same malicious efficiency as that wielded by a bloody shooting war.
The carnage in terms of broken lives is similar – and death from financial dislocation may come more slowly, but perhaps in some sense even more agonizingly. Ask someone who has lost his job, house and family if he is enjoying life – or wishes to die – and the answer may well tend toward the latter.
And make no mistake. The Dreamtime myth that one could "save" for retirement is just that. It is a kind of obscene joke for many middle and even upper middle class people who have been eviscerated by this decade-long bear bull-metals business cycle. Here's some more from the article:
A Natixis Investor Insights Study found that 63 percent of investors are now paying more attention to risk than ever before. If the market nose-dives, advisors are going to want to have a different story to tell. They can't just tell clients to hang on and wait it out like many of them did in 2008.
Meanwhile, clients are expressing specific interest in tactical solutions. "Clients have a very hard time [increasing their equity exposure] because of the experiences that they've been through the last few years, and if you can find something that's a little more tactical, then it's little more palatable to a client today," said Don Phillips, managing director of Morningstar. "You can have the greatest paper results in the world, but if your clients don't stay on board, it's all for naught."
According to a survey by Cerulli Associates, the number of FAs using either a pure tactical allocation or strategic allocation with a tactical overlay is now at 61 percent, up 8.3 percent from 2010. A Jefferson National survey from September 2011 found that 75.5 percent of advisors believe that active portfolio managers can outperform an index over the long term. In Jefferson National's 2010 survey, 66 percent of advisors said clients were more confident with a tactical asset management strategy, while only 34 percent said clients were more confident with a traditional buy- and-hold strategy.
Cerulli defines pure tactical allocation as the advisor's ability to alter a client allocation without any preset bounds based on forward-looking market expectations. Under a strategic allocation with a tactical overlay, the advisor starts with a long-term client allocation, but makes short-term deviations from the long-term strategic weights to capture alpha or move away from risk, Cerulli says ...
"I think that the fact that we had these two big blowups in short sequence, I do think it poses a challenge where we really do have one more shot at this," said Lee Munson, chief investment officer of Portfolio, an RIA, and author of Rigged Money: Beating Wall Street at Its Own Game. "And we are, in a sense, fighting for the soul of the U.S. investor."
Darn right, Wall Street is fighting for the "soul" of the US investor! And likely Wall Street is going to lose just as it did back in the 1930s and 1940s. People don't know anything about the history of Wall Street because it's been hidden – on purpose, in our view. But that's what happened – not that they like to talk about it.
But here at the Daily Bell, our elves spent about a decade investigating the "money business" and we know full well how it was set up. Things were so bad in the 1950s that the NYSE organized "road shows" to convince people to invest in stocks. It wasn't an act of charity, either.
Wall Street is merely one arm of the massively tentacled Money Power that resides in the City of London with outposts in Washington, the Vatican and Tel Aviv. The factions may fight among each other but at the end of the day they have the same goals and use the same facility to realize their goal of world government – run by them.
The facility, of course, is central banking. It is a central banking Dreamtime that has infected the world, especially the Western world, especially America, which has been a target of Money Power for 300 years. People have been tricked into believing that government can provide social services, that political "leaders" can "create" jobs, that a massive military is necessary to keep them "safe."
None of it is true. The Anglosphere power elite seems to have spun this fantasy based on access apparently to hundreds of trillions of central-banking paper dollars. This allowed them to reshape the world with such massive trickery that not until recently – thanks to what we call the Internet Reformation – has the truth gradually been revealed.
And now, like an alcoholic facing the next day's horrible hangover, Wall Street faces the unappetizing task of explaining to investors that "tactical" asset allocation is preferable to bankruptcy. The only trouble is that to explain it – to REALLy explain it – is to participate in an educative process that will eventually fuel additional dislike (hatred, more likely) for the "money business," especially in America where the nonsense is most advanced.
To explain tactical asset allocation properly, Wall Street brokers will have to explain the essential destructive nature of central banking. They will have to clue in their hapless clients to the idea that stocks are basically a manipulated monetary medium – and that the modern "stock" would likely not exist without central banking.
They will have to explain that government bonds are not really much more trustworthy in the long run than corporate ones. They will have to explain that for huge chunks of time – up to several decades − the idea of buying and holdings stocks, even blue chip stocks, is a recipe for slow bankruptcy.
And finally, the real "topper" – if they are any good, they will likely have to explain that at some point in the future (perhaps the near future) buying horrible, little gold and silver mining juniors may be the surest way to wealth.
That's because as the business cycle turns the money mania continually commences. First physical gold and silver are bid up and then paper metals and finally mining stocks and junior miners. It has nothing to do with the VALUE of junior mining stocks, only with the mania of the incipient blow off.
Now, the chances of your average broker explaining to his clients WHY they should consider buying junior mining stocks is probably fairly low. And if they DO explain, the chances are they won't really come clean. Two reasons: One, they likely don't fully understand themselves, and two, they certainly don't want to admit that the entire business is a racket and that they work for facility of that racketeering element.
Conclusion: We will end with the point we made in this article's title. For Wall Street's intrepid money men to tell the truth about the money business and the advantages of tailoring one's portfolio to the business cycle, one has to ADMIT there is a business cycle and that, as the Austrians have explained, it is a FUNCTION of central banking. And then when the inevitable questions come − Why do we need a money business that facilitates this rotten system and its ruinous central banks? − the answer will be ...
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Posted by Dilence Sogwood on 12/30/11 11:20 AM
I know you dislike "stock" valuations, but your blanket assumptions are the same assumptions about which I just wrote my tome.
Let's more broadly apply the term equities, so I can make a point...
You are arguing against the ownership of productive capacity (at least until a your own policy goal has been achieved.) How will you own any productive asset after your policy goal has been achieved?
Posted by Dilence Sogwood on 12/30/11 10:15 AM
There is nothing wrong with securitized ownership of assets. The ability to buy and sell ownership interests in productive assets greatly helps determine value and allocate capital throughout the economy. Furthermore, securities allow ownership to be widespread across many clienteles, including those who have no ability to own a whole asset of production. Here we have a benefit of scale and diversification.
However, the concept of diversification brings the academics into the mix. In an effort to apply pseudo-science to a qualitative world, the "social scientists" have built a number of accepted and widely applied simplistic models, which mainly rely on the assumption of normal distributions (or another fantasy-world distribution).
All of these financial models are simplistic. They get called "complex" either because they sting together several simplistic models, involve the use of differential equations, or both (CDO models). The computional result is like the result of a scale when a doctor weighs a patient. None of the models tell you what is going to happen next, but to continue the metaphor, there is nothing wrong with knowing how much the patient weighs.
The problem arises when these data-points become the decision nodes. Not only do investors use the information in lieu of qualitative research and decision-making, but academics build models on top of data sets generated by other academics. The best -and most dangerous- example of this is the set theory paradox displayed by the conclusions "performance attribution" researchers. Nearly all conclude that "asset allocation" (selecting industries or asset classes) is far more important than "security selection" (selecting individual assets based on highly specific and idiosyncratic information). This conclusion has been widely used to argue that investors should not pay managers to perform in-depth research; neither should they stick to assets they understand in great detail, because research shows that is not important.
The fallacy is that in order to choose the correct sector, you must understand the consituents of the sector, which requires security selection.
An important, and incorrect, assumption is that all assets or the same category are of equal quality, but let's ignore that for a moment.
The huge danger is that people end up casually throwing money at things they can only describe as "stocks," or "real estate." People largely do not think about the specific assets they are investing in, and they are taught to refuse quality research.
Who implements the money throwing? Sometimes is a consultant/allocator type like your buddy Schiff. They throw a lot of aggregate money, and their incessent speaches on asset allocation make me sick. However, the big 401k & pension managers throw the most people's money by headcount (the middle class). I challenge you to log into your 401k website and see whether they push asset class allocation or security selection. It's all a dumbing down.
Reply from The Daily Bell
You make good points as always, but you know we disagree ...
We will believe in stock-picking and the stock market in aggregate once central banks stop printing the phony money that props it up.
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Posted by Kriss Robin on 12/29/11 05:32 AM
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A number of memes should be out there.
Posted by Danny B on 12/28/11 10:33 PM
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Posted by amanfromMars on 12/28/11 01:34 PM
The following is something very well known in Daily Bell circles, [and is just a small section in an informative read] but it is always nice to hear of it being know and widely shared elsewhere too, so that stealthy intelligent services can remove and replace the blighted 1% which threatens lifelong hardship and poverty on the 99%, with those special forces taking over control of 1% assets as legitimate prize booty for them to graciously dispense to most grateful subjects, for that is an inevitability in these fabulous times whenever intelligence networks can network their master plans so transparently openly around the world in an instant. .
[blockquote]Couple this with the fact that those at the top of the corporate pyramid, the CEOs and executive officers, are paid far more than the typical employee. In 1965, the average CEO made around 24 times what the average worker made. By 2007, this figure had rocketed to 300 times the average wage.6 In 2009, the average income of a CEO at an S&P 500 corporation was more than $8 million a year.
So, when large corporations organize to impose their agenda on the policymaking machinery in Washington, ultimately they're doing to so to benefit the economically privileged members at the top of the income spectrum. The people who control this country are the same individuals who control big business. Specifically, I'm talking about men like David and Charles Koch. I'm also referring to men like Lloyd Blankfein.
This state of affairs highlights the reality that the true decision makers in our society aren't the elected officials. Hence this section's opening quote. The command and control messages that manage the political rootkit originate from outside the Beltway. They filter in from corner offices in Manhattan and boardrooms at blue chip corporations.
Decisions get passed down through informal back channels, and are then transmitted to our political machinery by well-funded non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and lobbying groups. Our governing institutions in DC are merely a conduit for elite power. Our elected officials are lightning rods that distract our attention away from the relatively small economically privileged groups that pull the strings.
In the minds of the corporate elite, who regularly jump from one continent to the next over the course of a week, the concept of a nation-state is a remnant of history. In their minds, governments exist to support their business operations and enable corporate interests to follow their drive to increase shareholder value. Hence, antiquated notions of patriotism or national identity get thrown out of the window.
It goes without saying that these same corporate interests will vehemently deny the scope of their influence in Washington. They'll claim that (with homage to Ayn Rand) it's their Galt-like superiority that accounts for the economic chasm that has appeared. I suspect this is because they recognize that their current sway over the political domain is, strictly speaking, culturally illegitimate, not to mention that ifthey came out and openly admitted that they were running the show, the rest of us might actually do something about it. [/blockquote] ... ... .. Click to view link
Posted by amanfromMars on 12/28/11 10:21 AM
To imagine that anyone really smart in the virtual field plays by a set of restrictive rules rather than deriving the regulations and self-regulating and self-actuating themselves so that they will achieve absolute control of everything for themselves and their very dear friends and lovers, is probably quite delusional, which is certainly heavier than extremely naive.
That which provides the most wonderfully creative and subversively disruptive information for intelligence is the new king rat/top dog, and to be able and enabled to supply it in a never-ending positively reinforcing and sustainable stream with overwhelming extremes is ... ... ... .. well, Novel Future Transparent Source, of course, akin in AI to Immaculate Sees.
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Posted by Col on 12/28/11 10:10 AM
Let the system die & see them go Postal.
Posted by amanfromMars on 12/28/11 04:27 AM
That's because as the business cycle turns the money mania continually commences. First physical gold and silver are bid up and then paper metals and finally mining stocks and junior miners. It has nothing to do with the VALUE of junior mining stocks, only with the mania of the incipient blow off."
And even that is just another manipulated market artificially created to part investors from their accumulated wealth for nothing in return of value. Another ponzi bubble to burst and prove the serial idiocy and lazy greed of man and reinforce DB Staff Report's ... .. "Conclusion: We will end with the point we made in this article's title. For Wall Street's intrepid money men to tell the truth about the money business and the advantages of tailoring one's portfolio to the business cycle, one has to ADMIT there is a business cycle and that, as the Austrians have explained, it is a FUNCTION of central banking. And then when the inevitable questions come - Why do we need a money business that facilitates this rotten system and its ruinous central banks? - the answer will be ... "
Who needs in an Enlightened Future and 21st Century InterNetworking, the Folly of Financial Fools in Great IntelAIgent Games and SMART Plays ... ... . which are probably two of those new really creative and virtually edutaining sectors which the markets brokers could/should be investing their distressed investor portfolios in. Choose the Right Source Asset there, and the returns are guaranteed astronomical, and there are not many GIGS Players able to deliver that certainty with Command and Control of Virtual Reality, I'd wager. Precious Few indeed.
Posted by Danny B on 12/27/11 09:48 PM
I want to hear the manager heap praise on the SEC, CFTC and justice dept.
I want to hear the manager explain why HIS strategy will work better here than it did in Japan.
I want to hear the manager explain that HIS investment strategy will save the investor from any bad possibilities;
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I'd like to hear the manager claim that the investor is safe from the total saturation of corruption;
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I'd also like to hear the manager explain that central banks are safe and nothing to worry about.
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"Buy and hold" has long been dead. Jim Rogers says that investing is dead.
I'd like to hear where a portfolio manage explains that stocks will go up even when workforce-participation is going down.
This would make for interesting drama.
Posted by john the simple on 12/27/11 04:28 PM
know thyself
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Posted by Iapetus on 12/27/11 02:41 PM
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A number of memes should be out there.
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Posted by Joe on 12/27/11 11:57 AM

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