海角大神

海角大神 / Text

If you live by the sword investors, remember you die by it, too

The impressive luck of one hedge fund manager has The Reformed Broker reminding investors that the stated return should never be the focal point - it should always be a question of "how was this return produced."

By Joshua M. Brown, Guest blogger

I want to call attention to something that I think is a really important lesson for investors and, to a lesser extent, traders.聽 The first quarter of this year was an absolute risk-on extravaganza for US stocks.聽 Not only did raw beta (the S&P 500) give you a 12% howyadoing, some of the most horrid and risky stocks were able to deliver more than double that return (Bank of America, anyone? Netflix! etc).

And if you were running a pedal-to-the-metal book of holdings in that atmosphere - and picked a few of the standouts while concentrating in them heavily, you had one hell of a quarter.聽 No one exemplified this concept better than hedge fund manager Whitney Tilson of T2 Partners.

This was from his March investor letter (as relayed by Business Insider):

26% in Q1 is outstanding no matter which way you slice it.聽 Tilson had a tough 2011 but came into the beginning of the year very strong.聽 But for investors looking at this quarterly performance, the stated return should NEVER be the focal point - it should always be a question of "how was this return produced."聽 Now we know the answer - it was produced by taking aggressively-sized positions in a collection of volatile, out-of-favor "value" names in the context of a junk rally, a from-worst-to-first meltup that saw last year's losers benefit from a cessation of year-end shelling selling.

I like Whitney, always have.聽 He is more forthcoming than almost any other hedge fund manager I can think of, admits his losses and is never shy about laying out his investment theses in public forums, essentially availing himself to the critiques of a million armchair portfolio managers around the world.聽 I give him credit for that and I respect the amount of homework he does on each of his ideas.

But we have to talk about the consequences of not knowing the "how" and only paying attention to a portfolio's stated return in a given period.聽 Here's how Whitney fared in May with his strategy and stockpicking (via ValueWalk):

Now for a hedge fund manager, this is perfectly acceptable, big risk alongside the prospects of even bigger rewards.聽 Volatility being just a distraction and risk management being virtually non-existent here (how else can you explain having positions down almost 40%?).

But is this an acceptable strategy for you?聽 Is this level of volatility worthwhile?

The next time you are told of an eye-popping track record or rate of return, roll your tongue back up into your mouth and ask the following question:

"But how were those returns produced?"

Most strategies aren't successful in all market climates and very few outliers are repeatable in the investment management world (ask the folks who piled into Paulson's hedge fund in 2010).

Live by the sword, die by the sword.聽 Tilson is a swordsman.