Is It Time to Give Up on Active Management? CFA Society of Pittsburgh 3 rd Annual Endowments and Foundations Conference May 2015 Gregory Woodard Portfolio Strategist Manning & Napier Advisors, LLC (Manning & Napier) is governed under the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as an Investment Advisor under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. Unless otherwise noted, analysis is conducted by Manning & Napier. Unless otherwise noted, all figures are based in USD. Please see last page for disclosures.
Active vs Passive Performance Cycles Active Large Cap Equity Funds vs. S&P 500 1 Average Excess Returns Trailing One Year (1987-2014) 15 10 5 0-5 -10-15 1987 1988 1989 % Excess Return 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Active Strategies Tend to Outperform: When correlations among stocks are lower When market returns are broad (average stock performs similar to the benchmark) When fundamentals are driving returns (valuations, earnings, growth, etc.) During the early-to-mid bull phase and early bear market phase of a stock market cycle Passive Strategies Tend to Outperform: When correlations among stocks are higher When market returns are narrow (majority of stocks perform worse than the benchmark) When emotions are driving returns (fear, greed) During the speculative bullish phase of a stock market cycle or late in a bear market Source: Morningstar, Inc. Active large Cap Core Category is defined as all mutual funds categorized by Morningstar as a large Cap Growth, Large Cap Value, or Large Cap Blend. 2
Where Are We Today? Higher Correlations S&P 500 Constituents* Median Rolling 20 Day Correlation vs. S&P 500 1 Index (December 31, 1990 November 26, 2014) 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 12/90 08/93 04/96 12/98 08/01 04/04 12/06 08/09 03/12 11/14-0.2 Rolling 20 day Correlation During the fourth quarter of 2014 correlations among stocks rose to levels consistent with those seen during the speculative bull market of the late 1990s and the end of the bear market in 2002 during both environments, emotion (greed, then fear) tended to drive market returns. *Calculated by the daily returns for the individual constituents of the S&P 500 Index. Source: FactSet. 3
Where Are We Today? Narrower Market Breadth Percent of Stocks in Russell 3000 2 Lagging Largest 20 Stocks (Last Twelve Months) (December 31, 1994 September 30, 2014) 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 12/1/1994 6/1/1995 12/1/1995 6/1/1996 12/1/1996 6/1/1997 12/1/1997 6/1/1998 12/1/1998 6/1/1999 12/1/1999 6/1/2000 12/1/2000 6/1/2001 12/1/2001 6/1/2002 12/1/2002 6/1/2003 12/1/2003 6/1/2004 12/1/2004 6/1/2005 12/1/2005 6/1/2006 12/1/2006 6/1/2007 Russell 3000 Index 2 12/1/2007 6/1/2008 12/1/2008 6/1/2009 12/1/2009 6/1/2010 12/1/2010 6/1/2011 12/1/2011 6/1/2012 12/1/2012 6/1/2013 12/1/2013 NASDAQ Composite Index 3 Index Return 10.45% 13.40% Return of Average Stock 4.07% 1.11% Return of Median Stock 3.34% -0.21% 6/1/2014 Note: Includes stocks that were in the Index at the beginning of 2014 and price was available on 12/31/2014. Data shown is from 01/01/2014 12/31/2014. Returns are based off Price Index (Dividends Excluded). Source: FactSet Source: FactSet. 4
Is It Time to Give Up on Active Management? Given that: Active versus passive outperformance is cyclical and we are many years into a cycle where passive has outperformed There may be more potential opportunities going forward for: Lower correlations Broader market participation Stronger distinction between winners and losers In short, we would argue that now is the wrong time to give up on active management We are entering an economic environment where countries are beginning to decouple in terms of their position in the economic cycle, monetary policies, and stock market valuations 5
Divergences: Economic cycle, Monetary policies, and Stock Market Valuations Emerging Markets EuroZone U.S. Corporate Bonds U.S. Equities U.S. High Yield Bonds U.S. Treasury Bonds Bear Market Sustained period of negative market returns Increase Exposure Buy into Weakness Recovery Period from market bottom until prices rise to prior peak Increase Exposure at Slower Rate Bull Market Sustained period of positive market returns following recovery Decrease Exposure Sell into Strength Market Cycle Manning & Napier Equity Adjustments Active Management Allows for Adjustments Across Markets 6
Truly Active Managers Show Consistent Value Added Despite Changing Market Environments Relative Annualized Performance in Various Market Environments Time Period S&P 500 1 Return Excess Performance: Top Quartile Active Share Manager* Excess Performance: Below Median Active Share Manager* 1987 Bear Market (09/01/1987-11/30/1987) -29.58% -0.22% 1.01% 90s Bull Market (12/01/1987-03/31/2000) 19.51% -1.95% -1.67% Tech Bubble Drawdown (04/01/2000-09/30/2002) -20.56% 9.55% 1.45% Failed Recovery (10/01/2002-10/31/2007) 15.54% 1.72% -0.94% Credit Crisis Drawdown (11/01/2007-02/28/2009) -41.39% 0.96% 0.79% Current Bull Market (03/01/2009-12/31/2014) 21.87% -1.46% -1.45% Current U.S. Stock Market Cycle (04/01/2000-12/31/2014) 4.15% 3.09% -0.12% Active Share was developed by professors at the Yale School of Management and is presented in a study originally published in 2006; most recently updated in 2013** Active Share measures the difference between an investment manager's portfolio and the benchmark on a holdings basis A portfolio's active share will range between 0% and 100% 0% signifying that the portfolio is identical to the benchmark 100% signifying that the portfolio and benchmark have no common holdings A higher active share may signify a greater level of active management. Source: Morningstar, Inc Universe includes all U.S. domiciled open end mutual funds with a Morningstar Institutional Category of All-Cap Core, Giant Core, Large Core, Large Valuation-Sensitive Growth, or Large Relative Value. The oldest available share class of each fund was used. *Manning & Napier defines top quartile active share managers as managers that have an active share of approximately 88% or above, and below median active share managers as managers that have an active share of approximately 77% or below. ** Active Share and Mutual Fund Performance. Antti Petajisto. January 15, 2013. 7
The Real Risk of a Passive Approach in Today s Environment: Locking In Mediocrity 20% S&P 500 Ten Year Forward Annualized Total Return 15% 10% 5% 0% Model R-Squared: 65.7-5% Starting valuations versus subsequent long-term returns Relationship between S&P 500 Shiller CAPE and 10-year forward annualized total returns (January 1940 - December 2014) Ten year forward annualized total return: Expectation (point estimate): 5.1% Current CAPE: 27.1-10% 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 S&P 500 Shiller Cyclically Adjusted Price-to-Earnings (Shiller CAPE) Source: Robert Shiller (http://www.econ.yale.edu/~shiller/data.htm) Analysis: Manning & Napier Starting valuations today suggest that returns over the next ten years may annualize in the low single digits, implying that the market is unlikely to meet most investors objectives over the long run. 8
Conclusions Active versus passive management is largely a cyclical debate, with certain market conditions causing one to outperform the other over time Since the end of the financial crisis, market characteristics such as higher correlations, more narrow markets and non fundamentals-based drivers (e.g., search for yield, risk-on/risk-off sentiment) have led passive strategies to largely out perform We believe the current market environment argues for a more active approach as global economies become uncoupled in terms of economic growth, monetary policy and market valuations Active strategies attempt to take advantage of differing market opportunities, but investors must separate truly active managers from closet indexers The key risk of a passive equity strategy for long-term investors in today s environment is locking in mediocre return potential, given where valuations are today 9
Disclosures 2015 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved. The information contained herein: (1) is proprietary to Morningstar and/or its content providers; (2) may not be copied, adapted or distributed; and (3) is not warranted to be accurate, complete or timely. Neither Morningstar nor its content providers are responsible for any damages or losses arising from any use of this information, except where such damages or losses cannot be limited or excluded by law in your jurisdiction. Past financial performance is no guarantee of future results. 1 The S&P 500 Total Return Index (S&P 500) is an unmanaged, capitalization-weighted measure of 500 widely held common stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange, American Stock Exchange, and the Over-the-Counter market. The Index returns assume daily reinvestment of dividends and do not reflect any fees or expenses. S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, a subsidiary of the McGraw Hill Financial, Inc., is the publisher of various index based data products and services and has licensed certain of its products and services for use by Manning & Napier. All such content Copyright 2015 by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Neither S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, Dow Jones Trademark Holdings LLC, their affiliates nor their third party licensors make any representation or warranty, express or implied, as to the ability of any index to accurately represent the asset class or market sector that it purports to represent and none of these parties shall have any liability for any errors, omissions, or interruptions of any index or the data included therein. 2 The Russell 3000 Index is an unmanaged index that consists of 3,000 of the largest U.S. companies based on total market capitalization. The Index returns are based on a market capitalization-weighted average of relative price changes of the component stocks plus dividends whose reinvestments are compounded daily. The Index returns do not reflect any fees or expenses. 3 The NASDAQ Composite Index is a broad-based capitalization-weighted index of domestic and international based common type stocks listed in all three NASDAQ tiers: Global Select, Global Market and Capital Market. The NASDAQ Composite includes over 3,000 companies. The Index returns do not reflect any fees or expenses. Approved SMA-OTO049 (5/15) 10