Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 53,770
I genuinely think that over a longer period you will do spectacularly worse than the market.
I'm showing my age, but it reminds me of when I last had a full-time job, now over a decade ago. I had to certify whether companies I was advising would be able to stay in business for the next 30, 40, 50 years to meet their liabilities. My young colleagues did myriads of spreadsheet calculations, Monte Carlo simulations, the lot, projecting all sorts of possible futures for the company. It was my job to integrate their calculations with what I knew of the business from my interactions with the Board and senior managers. I invariably found that the insights gained from understanding the mind of the CEO, the continuity and quality of the top management team, the consistency of the strategy and its execution from quarter to quarter, year to year, were far more important than all the spreadsheets and financial projections in the world in determining the company's ability to survive in the long-term.for example what are your 2025 projections for total electric car sales, average sale price, Tesla market share %, net profit margin, etc. etc.
According to Vanguard, the probability of a 10-stock portfolio outperforming the broader market is 34.5%.I would have thought it would be 50/50.
Sarenco I have before rubbished this Vanguard analysis but let me try again.According to Vanguard, the probability of a 10-stock portfolio outperforming the broader market is 34.5%.
You would have to hold over 500 stocks to get to a 50/50 coin toss.
https://www.vanguardinvestments.se/documents/institutional/increase-odds-of-owning-less-stock-that-drive-returns.pdf
To be fair, the Vanguard simulations ignore transaction costs and management fees.
Do you know something about my state of senility that my nearest and dearest are afraid to tell me? I presume you know the theory that, if I just sit on my hands and do nothing (which is my default mode) then the expectation is that I will do exactly the same as the market. I would 'genuinely' love to know why you think I will do 'spectacularly worse than the market'.
Hi Gordon
If I trade shares regularly, I will do worse than the market because the costs will eat into my profits.
But if I buy and hold a portfolio of 10 shares, I will do differently from the market.
I might perform better and I might perform worse. But I can't see why I should expect to do worse? I would have thought it would be 50/50.
The only reason I can think of might be the argument that all of the returns come from 2% of the shares. So it's less likely that if I have 10 shares I will have one of them. Is that your argument?
Brendan
Hi Gordon
I agree that none of us can pick systematically pick winners. But by that criterion, surely Colm can't systematically pick losers either? (If you think he can, then you should short his buys and buy his shorts)
So the expected return should be the same as the market. He is as likely to outperform as to underperform.
Brendan
So the likelihood of picking 10 winning stocks at random from a menu of more than 10,000 publicly traded stocks globally seems pretty small. On the other hand, the likelihood of picking 10 losers seems pretty high.
Could you rephrase that in English that we can all understand?but as the majority of stocks have positive beta
If you pick a stock at random you have the exact same expectation as the whole market. Of course if you pick the whole market your returns will vary between -10% and + 20% whilst if you pick 1 stock it will be between -30% and + 40%.I'm really not equipped to debate actuarial models, assumptions, etc.
So I will rely on common sense.
It would be obvious to a blind man that the bulk of historic stock market returns are attributable to a very small minority of stocks (Exxon, Apple, etc).
So the likelihood of picking 10 winning stocks at random from a menu of more than 10,000 publicly traded stocks globally seems pretty small. On the other hand, the likelihood of picking 10 losers seems pretty high.
Once you accept that a small minority of stocks are "super performers" then it seems obvious to me that your chances of picking "winners" increases as you add stocks to your portfolio. Conversely, the more concentrated the portfolio, the greater the odds of missing out on the winners.
In other words, the distribution of returns is not symmetrical - there are far more "losers" than "winners". It's not a 50/50 bet.
Of course, market cap matters. Pick the 10 biggest stocks in the U.S. market by market cap and you can be pretty sure that you won't be a million miles off the S&P500 after 10 years.
It certainly needs some defining since the average beta is 1 by definition, and a negative beta would be truly bizarreCould you rephrase that in English that we can all understand?
In other words, what do you mean by "majority", "beta" and "generally"?
If you pick a stock at random you have the exact same expectation as the whole market. Of course if you pick the whole market your returns will vary between -10% and + 20% whilst if you pick 1 stock it will be between -30% and + 40%.
That makes no sense at all.
the distribution of stock returns is not symmetrical - there are far more losers than winners.
Ok so we have a market of 99 stocks which will lose everything and a single stock which will jump to 200. My expectation when holding the whole market is to double my money. a priori I have the exact same expectation if I just pick a stock at random.But picking a single stock at random is not a simple coin toss. That's really the point.
The probability that you will pick a loser is far higher than the probability that you will pick a winner.
Again, the distribution of stock returns is not symmetrical - there are far more losers than winners. It's not a 50/50 bet.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?