Friday, October 23, 2020

Goldman Fined And Claws Back Compensation

Goldman Sachs agreed to pay a $2.3 billion fine and disgorge $600 million in profits related to the Malaysian 1MDB scandal. Goldman employees bribed foreign officials and aided fund officials in misappropriating money from the fund. One Goldman banker has already pled guilty to criminal charges and another has his case still pending. Goldman has also clawed back $174 million in bonuses and reduced salaries from individuals involved in the scandal and their supervisors.

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

An Interview With Eugene Fama

Recently, an interview with Nobel laureate Eugene Fama, who laid the foundation for the efficient markets hypothesis, was published by The Market/NZZ. The wide-ranging interview covers topics from the problems with growing government debt, stock market bubbles, the efficient markets hypothesis versus behavioral investing, the reason for negative oil prices, and negative interest rates. Professor Fama also discusses his belief that the power of central banks is much more limited than many believe. The interview is definitely worth a read.

Big Bang Goes Off Smoothly

It appears that the "big bang" over the past weekend went relatively smoothly. The big bang was the transition from LIBOR to the Secured Overnight Funding Rate (SOFR) for exchange-traded swaps at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. The LIBOR scandal in 2012 caused regulators and market participants alike to search for another reference interest rate that was less susceptible to manipulation. In the U.S., SOFR has become that reference interest rate.

Universities And Pensions Underperform

We recently discussed the underperformance of Harvard's endowment fund, but it appears that Harvard is not alone. A recent article shows that the endowment funds of major universities have underperformed the market by abut 1.6 percent per year. What is so interesting about that 1.6 percent? That is the average management fee paid by the endowment funds! In other words, the overall investment performance is the same as the market, but once fees are accounted for, performance lags the market. Of course, public pension funds have performed slightly better, only underperforming the market by about 1 percent.

Thursday, October 15, 2020

SRI Hits Oil Companies

It appears that socially responsible investing (SRI) is affecting at least some oil companies. Five of the largest six banks have decided that they will no longer finance drilling projects in the Artic. As renewable energy becomes more widely used, oil and gas reserves may become less valuable. At the same time, since bank financing appears to be drying up, financing for the industry becomes more difficult to obtain.

Friday, October 9, 2020

Market Trounces Harvard

 

So how hard is it to beat the market? From 1993 to 2008, the portfolio managers of Harvard’s endowment fund beat the S&P 500 by almost five percent per year. A major contributor to that performance was a hugely successful investment in timber. Since then, things have not been so rosy (or even Crimson). Using the analysis in the article, the Harvard endowment fund has underperformed a blended portfolio of stocks and bonds by one percent per year over the past 20 years. Based on the current endowment value of $42 billion, this means the endowment potentially lost out on $420 million in growth per year, or roughly $8.4 billion dollars of growth over this period. It is tough for the best and brightest to beat the market.