The Value of Patience

The study in this post by Craig L. Israelsen, Ph.D., seems to confirm that patience is not only a virtue, but it is a virtue that can prove to be profitable when one uses a buy-and-hold strategy.

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    The Value of Patience

    The Value of Patience

    Last summer, an article in “Financial Planning” magazine argued that patience may be the best diversifier for investors’ portfolios.*  The article’s author, Craig L. Israelsen, Ph.D., looked at the performance of a variety of hypothetical portfolios to measure the value of patience. Israelsen examined data over a period from 1970 to 2015, using several different sell trigger levels, and compared them to a benchmark of a traditional buy-and-hold strategy.  For his analysis, he established trigger levels ranging from +3%/-3% to +15%/-15%. As any seasoned advisor might expect, using an impatient sell trigger (e.g., +3%/-3%) led to inferior long-term returns versus the buy-and-hold strategy. What may be surprising is that the optimal sell trigger levels varied by asset class.

    The chart below details Israelsen’s results for a range of sell triggers for three asset classes, including the trading frequency each trigger would have required.

    46-Year Average Annualized Return and Number of Trades

    Monthly Loss/

    Gain Triggers

    -3%

    +3%

    -4%

    +4%

    -5%

    +5%

    -6%

    +6%

    -7%

    +7%

    -8%

    +8%

    -9%

    +9%

    -10%

    +10%

    -11%

    +11%

    -12%

    +12%

    -15%

    +15%

    Buy

    And

    Hold

    S&P 500 Index 8.53% 9.25% 10.24% 10.11% 10.32% 9.69% 10.48% 10.38% 8.19% 5.95% 9.97% 10.27%
    # of trades 92 68 54 48 38 34 24 20 17 15 4 0
    MSCI EAFE Index 8.74% 8.09% 8.44% 8.76% 8.93% 8.36% 7.26% 6.74% 7.25% 7.85% 8.70% 8.79%
    # of trades 108 90 70 56 47 39 31 31 25 17 9 0
    Goldman Sachs Commodity Index 10.71% 11.19% 11.38% 10.54% 10.39% 9.81% 9.44% 7.97% 7.66% 7.94% 8.82% 6.92
    # of trades 93 71 65 57 47 43 41 37 35 29 13 0

    Note:  Boldface numbers indicate outperformance of buy-and-hold strategy.

    As the chart indicates, there were several sell triggers for large cap U.S. equity that resulted in superior performance to that of the buy-and-hold approach, but only one trigger discipline that produced a better full-period return for developed non-U.S. stocks.  The commodity asset class told a different story in which more frequent trading and lower sell triggers translated generally into superior performance results. Israelsen’s analysis also found that the optimal sell triggers for the S&P 500 were -5% and +6.5%, producing an annualized return of 10.62%, or just 35 basis points higher than the buy-and-hold strategy.

    For the EAFE, the optimal triggers were -5% and +7.25%, which produced an average annualized return of 9.83%—more than 100 basis points better than the buy-and-hold approach.

    While the analysis did account for transaction costs, it does not reflect the tax costs that may come with the sale of investments.

    The study seems to confirm that patience is not only a virtue, but it is a virtue that can prove to be profitable.

    Source:

    *http://www.financial-planning.com/news/a-little-understood-alternative-asset-class

    See referenced disclosure (2) (3) at https://blog-dev.americanportfolios.com/disclosures/ 

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