Real yields on bonds have fallen, and
the prospects for capital gains are slim.
It is now clear, beyond the need even to present
statistics, that investors, both institutional and individual, public
and private, are turning increasingly to what are popularly called
"alternatives"-hedge funds, other expressions of portable alpha, real
estate, private equity, venture capital, managed futures and even more
exotic investment options.
Most explain this phenomenon by pointing to the
equity market crash between 2000 and 2002 and the widespread
disenchantment it created about conventional investment vehicles.
Doubtless those stock losses are a major factor, especially since the
disappointment on equities developed a cottage industry in research to
show that future equity returns could very well fall short of even the
conservative longer-term average equity returns of the past.
Less commented on but probably more significant is
the situation in fixed-income markets, especially the supposedly
lower-risk Treasuries, agencies and high-grade corporates. After years
in which investors were able to get adequate, even attractive real
returns with effectively no credit risk, these areas of fixed-income
markets now offer little yield or potential return, insufficient for
institutional investors to meet their actuarial assumptions or for
retail investors to meet their retirement goals. This change, more
fundamental than anything that has happened in equities, explains a
good part of the recent move toward alternatives and higher risk
generally. It speaks to which investment disciplines will gain assets
in the future and which will not.
Real Yields Shrink
Chart 1 tells a good part of the disappointing
fixed-income story. It shows the level of real short interest rates and
real longer-term yields going back for more than half a century. (The
figures are calculated by subtracting the annualized rate of change in
the consumer price index during that month from the prevailing interest
rate each month.) Whether the calculation uses three-month Treasury
bills or ten-year Treasury notes, the story is the same (and it is the
same if the calculation uses agencies or high-grade corporate bonds).
Between 1951 and 1979, real yields from fixed-income investments
remained relatively low, below 2% on bills and between 2% and 4% on the
notes. These real returns shot up in the early 1980s, and though they
came down gradually over the following 20 years, they remained high by
previous standards into the late 1990s. More recently, those real rates
have actually averaged a little lower than in the early years.
It should be clear from the attached charts how
tempting it was after 1980 to rely on high real rates and yields to
deliver investment income and performance. Compounding this temptation,
falling yields created a bonus of impressive capital gains in these
seemingly risk-free investments. The returns were clearly unusual in
light of the longer history, but still, investors, institutional and
individual, grew accustomed to these safe, easy returns, and set their
investment policies as if they could go on indefinitely. Based on such
returns, people made promises, implicit and explicit, about what kind
of retirement benefit a given asset base can provide-pensions to their
beneficiaries, financial advisors to their clients and individual
private investors to themselves.
But efficient markets do not let risk-free assets
pay high returns indefinitely. Now that game is over. Real yields have
come back down, and the probabilities of capital gains are slim.
Indeed, capital losses seem more likely. Investors, waking up to the
change, have returned to an older, established market maxim: To get
high returns, the investor must accept risk. It is hardly a surprise
that investors had to return to this investment basic. The real
surprise is how long the fixed-income "gravy train" lasted.
Surprised or not, it is now clear to individual and
institutional investors alike that they must adjust to the new
circumstance. Even those who vainly expect yields to return to the
highs of the 1980s and 1990s know that they cannot go on as before,
since such a rise in yields would necessarily involve capital losses on
existing fixed-income holdings. With only disappointing or at best
inadequate options available in these high-grade, fixed-income
instruments, investor needs for returns have brought them naturally to
a greater willingness to take on risk. It is the only way to make up
for that lost yield. The drift toward junk, convertibles, foreign
investing and alternatives is a natural outgrowth. Equities would
probably have gained, too, had they not disappointed so between 2000
and 2002 and even some in more recent years.
Fewer Opportunities To Add Value
But there is an added consideration in high-grade,
fixed-income investing that is also accelerating this trend. As Chart 2
shows, volatility in fixed-income markets has declined with the drop in
real yields. The chart shows the standard deviation of the ten-year
Treasury yield for rolling five-year periods since the mid-1950s. At
first, it would seem that this drop in volatility would lure investors
to the asset class. After all, lower volatility makes for more
predictable returns. But volatility is also essential for active
managers to find opportunities to add value, that is, provide alpha in
a portfolio. Without it, there is little they can do with active
management. The high volatility of the late 1970s and through most of
the 1980s provided just such opportunities. On top of high real yields
and the capital gains that accompanied the ongoing yield declines,
active managers could use this volatility to enhance returns still
further. They could trade along the yield curve, for example, or find
the many anomalies between on-the-run and off-the-run Treasuries that
developed in that environment. Those days could be described as a
golden era for active bond management.
Now this potential, too, is gone. Volatility has not
quite reverted back to levels of the 1950s and 1960s, but it has
dropped precipitously. There is no reason to expect a reversion
entirely to that earlier time, when active bond management scarcely
even existed. Still, the decline in volatility has stolen much of the
opportunity to add value. Along with the loss of real current yield,
this lost opportunity for active management has also forced investors,
at least those investors interested in robust returns, to move toward
riskier investments. There are, after all, still many opportunities for
bond managers to add value in more credit-sensitive areas of
fixed-income markets, junk, convertibles, municipals and foreign debt.
But this loss of opportunity in the Treasury, agency and high-grade
corporate area also has encouraged the move toward even more exotic
alternatives, which now attract funds that once sat comfortably in the
relative safety of Treasuries and similar instruments.
A Look Forward
With little reason to expect a major change in such
circumstances, it seems likely that investors of all stripes will
continue to seek riskier bonds and alternatives just to equal the
returns that were once easily procured in safer Treasuries and
high-grade paper. In many ways, the trend is neither surprising nor
distressing. It is, in fact, gratifying to see investment thinking
return to the well-established historical relationship between risk and
return. It was the anomalies of the 1980s and 1990s that distorted
matters, not today's reality. But fundamentally healthy as much of this
change is, there is one aspect of it that does give pause: Investors
might not realize all the risks they are taking to get returns in many
of today's less conventional alternatives-private equity, venture
capital, real estate and hedge funds, especially this last category.
It seems pretty clear with real estate, venture
capital and private equity that part of the trade-off for return is in
the loss of liquidity. These instruments tie up funds, sometimes for
extended periods, and do not have the developed secondary market
available in conventional stocks and bonds. In a rational world, they
should have to promise greater returns to attract funds. The balancing
of return and liquidity is, of course, an old business concept, even if
it is often neglected in the investment literature. Neither is this
liquidity consideration difficult to quantify as part of a general
assessment of portfolio risk. It is a reasonable trade-off if the
investor has no need for liquidity, which is often the case, especially
with younger pension funds and individuals.
There are, however, additional risks in real estate,
venture capital and private equity that are much harder to quantify.
Without a daily price quote, it is difficult to know their volatility
or the probability of default. Worse, the absence of frequent valuation
checks can tempt the investor-even the institutional investor-into a
complaisant belief that such holdings are more stable than other, more
conventional investments, when in fact it is simply harder to measure
their volatility. It is, of course, up to consultants to rectify this
problem for institutional investors and for financial advisors to do so
for individual investors. Many are working diligently on the problem.
But in the meantime, there is a risk that investors will assume
considerable unknown risk when they substitute such alternatives for
the lost risk-free return of earlier years.
Hedge funds present these problems in spades. Of
course, it is ridiculous to speak of hedge funds as though they were an
asset class. The only thing they have in common with each other is
their compensation scheme. Otherwise, their investment approaches could
not be more different one from the other. Some hedge funds fit nicely
into portable alpha schemes and some do not. Some hedge funds simply
build leverage on huge positions in risky investments. Especially
because hedge funds do not have the same rules of disclosure as other
sorts of managers, investors must press hard to know exactly where the
investment risk lies, press harder than many investors, consultants and
financial advisors do these days. Indeed, the enthusiasm for hedge
funds has given added reason for fear, as it seems to have convinced
many to exercise less due diligence than they would normally when, if
anything, the novelty of some approaches, the use of leverage and the
lack of reporting requirements demands more diligence.
No doubt against such a background, many who have
turned to alternatives-institutional and individual investors
alike-will suffer disappointments and outright losses. A disenchantment
will follow that will likely drive investors back toward more
conventional asset classes and techniques. If equities can improve on
their rather uneven record to date, they might hold some of those
assets. Much money will also stay, as it already has, in the more
credit-sensitive areas of fixed-income markets, junk, convertibles,
municipals and international. But if the quality parts of fixed-income
markets continue to offer low real yields and low volatility, as is
likely, some of those monies will inevitably flow back to that
amorphous class referred to as alternatives. At that time,
perhaps-hopefully-investors and their advisors will have a more
complete, sober picture of the characteristics, potentials, and risks
of these investments than they seem to have today.
Milton Ezrati is the senior economic
strategist and a partner at Lord Abbett and an affiliate of the Center
on Economic Growth at SUNY, Buffalo. This article is based on a talk
delivered to the Fifth Annual Public Pension Funds Summit at the Hyatt
Lake Las Vegas earlier this spring.