Author: Anu Heda

Best Blogs of the Week

What a week?  To me, it seems like more than 7 days ago when the global markets reacted to Standard & Poor’s downgrade.  With that historic event, there was significant blogging.  That fact is significant – asset managers are able to ramp up volume and timely blog posts related to market conditions.  Even 1 year ago, that probably was not possible.

I have four excellent posts this week, with Vanguard taking two spots.  All relate to the downgrade and subsequent market volatility.

  1. Vanguard – This post provides a bit of long-term perspective (as expected from Vanguard).
  2. Vanguard – The post re-introduces shortfall risk at just the right time to consider that before listening to media pundits panic.
  3. BlackRock – A nice post, easy FA-to-client sharing, that discusses the week’s volatility and some historical perspective.
  4. Wells Fargo – Single best title of the week is “No, this is not 2008 all over again.”

Best Blogs of the Week

We had to start this week’s best blogs with the best blog covering the S&P downgrade.  That blog belongs to Wells Fargo.  Additionally, there were two strong posts – one sharing many topics, the other clarifying just one.

  • Wells Fargo Advantage Funds – The author posts a bit about why downgrade and then covers consequences succinctly.
  • BlackRock – This post is the first in a monthly series covering the best of (obviously we have a soft spot) research and reading attributed to the iShares team.
  • Russell – What is the magic around quarter-end?  It seems like short-term bias at its worst and this post shares why quarter-end isn’t that important and how to discuss that with clients.

Best Blogs of the Week

This week’s posts do not include debt ceiling discussions, though that is the most important topic of the moment.  They do include easily shared content that advisors may value sending on to clients.

  1. Vanguard – Possibly the strongest language I’ve ever read on this blog; the author clearly thinks buying gold is a bad idea.
  2. BlackRock – This post applies a common, short-term  institutional investment approach – cash equitization – to retail and individual investors.
  3. American Century  – This post is the final of a four-part series dedicated to inflation.  The author presents a straightforward case on how inflationary trends may change in years to come.  (Also, the author used commodity intensity – a great term.)

Best Blogs of the Week

This week’s list begins with a topic on everyone’s mind: the national debt.  Additionally, we found two interesting blog posts that comment on the S&P (very differently).

  1. Wells Fargo – This post covers the concept of sustainability – who much debt can the US manage?
  2. BlackRock – The author makes a compelling case to consider Mega Caps (larges 100 of the S&P) and why they may be set for higher returns than the broader index.
  3. Virtus – Unlike the prior case, this post uses technical data to show how “directionless” the S&P is this month.

 

Living Inside the Box

Large corporate culture conditions us (in the American business community) to strive for “thinking outside-the-box.”  When was the last time you were brought into a conference room and told, “Ok, we’re going to think outside-the-box?”  My money is on this happening to you at least once in 2011.  There’s nothing inherently wrong with outside-the-box.  It speaks to some desire for differentiating a product, service, or process.  In marketing initiatives, there’s often a desire to have out-of-the-box communications.

Through recent FA and institutional investor interviews, I’m learning the value for investment managers to communicate inside-the-box.  Consider the box as strategy, asset class, or categorization a fund (or fund family) is matched to.

Repeatedly, I hear advisors and institutional investors match strategy with fund family when discussing investment selection.  A frequent (and immediately delivered) comment sounds like this, “Well, for intermediate bond I’ll put a client in Pimco Total Return.  For equity exposure to the Pacific, I allocate to the Vanguard Pacific ETF.”  That’s not to say Vanguard or Pimco are dominant or superior to other providers.  What I ascertain is that those firms have defined their expertise in intermediate bond strategies and the Pacific Rim, respectively.  So much so, many advisors simplify their practices by matching those funds to those categories,

Perhaps this is a straightforward approach to consider.

  • Define your fund box – communicate how your clients should categorize your fund
  • Clarify how this box is important – answer (to all  prospects) why anyone should care about this box
  • Build a reputation – work day and night to communicate why your fund is great inside that box

Obviously this is easy to speak about and difficult to execute.  But with small steps and consistent input, you could evolve your target audience’s thinking to put your fund “inside-the-box” and hopefully keep it there.

This process (I use that loosely) seems to have worked for Warren  Buffet who defined his box as value investing (specifically the Graham and Dodd investing models), spoke for decades about the enduring principles of value investing, and then built his reputation as the world’s leader.