Monday, April 21, 2008

Finally, "Real" Asset Allocation For Individuals

The famously successful asset allocation strategies of top investors and university endowments such as Yale have been the envy and goal of many sophisticated individual investors for years. Yale's endowment, for example, is up an astonishing 16.1% per year for the past 22 years, with remarkably low volatility, since current head David Swensen took over. Look at the Yale annual report and our blog summary "Yale and You" here to see how Yale does it.

But individual investors haven't been able to participate directly in such diverse and exclusive funds, and instead have had to (1) try to construct their own sophisticated asset allocation from the bottom-up, (2) hire professionals for enormous fees and scant accountability, or (3) settle for the badly inferior "life-cycle" funds that offer a simplistic mix of stocks vs bonds as individuals age.

Happily, today Vanguard announced its Managed Payout Funds, which will help individuals gain access to more of the true diversification benefits that professional asset allocators achieve. Vanguard will offer three funds containing not only U.S. stocks & bonds (which are often highly correlated and therefore far from optimal), but also international stocks, REITs, Treasury Inflation Protection Securities (TIPS), commodity-linked investments, and market-neutral equity funds. These additional asset classes have different return and correlation characteristics in comparison to U.S. stocks & bonds; institutional investors have been exploiting them for years to obtain higher returns and lower variability of returns year-to-year.

Vanguard will construct its Managed Payout portfolios to achieve closer-to-optimal portfolios (in a Markowitz sense) than most investors can achieve for themselves. The new funds will pay out a percentage each year to investors needing retirement income and (probably) better risk-adjusted returns than are widely available to them otherwise. Vanguard will re-balance each asset class regularly to accord with long-run allocation targets, something individual investors also fail to do. Astonishingly (though perhaps not for Vanguard), annual fees will be only 0.57-0.58%.

Of course, the new funds' reward/risk tradeoffs won't come close to the characteristics of the best institutional asset allocators, who beat market-averages within traditional asset classes, and push into private investments and emerging asset classes that Vanguard's public funds will not be able to incorporate. But Vanguard's Managed Payout product will open a new efficiency frontier to many individual investors.

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