Are women better than men?
A recent report by consultants Rothstein Kass suggests that
over the last five years, up to 31st December of last year, hedge and
alternative funds run by female managers outperformed those run by men. In 2012
alone, women achieved returns almost 6% higher than men, with a return of just
under 9%. Yet, the report states there are only around 100 female hedge or
alternative fund managers globally. Also, women tend to run smaller mandates
than men and are given less opportunity to take on more senior roles.
Nevertheless, there have been some notable women managing funds, such as: Abby
Joseph Cohen at Goldman Sachs, Fidelity’s Abby Johnson, Carol Galley - formerly
of Mercury Asset Management and regarded as ‘the most powerful woman in The City
of London’ in the 1990s - and Nicola Horlick, founder and principal at Bramdean,
which specializes in women clients. Additionally, Meredith Whitney is largely
credited with producing outstanding research on sub-prime mortgage exposures
which alerted her ex-colleague, John Paulson, bringing him spectacular gains and
worldwide fame in the Global Financial Crisis.
Among the portfolio managers recommended by MBMG, Ruffer’s senior team is almost
25% women, while MitonOptimal’s Head of International Portfolio Management is
Joanne Baynham, who manages or co-manages five of their main mandates. Added to
that, Edouard Carmignac has named his daughter Maxime to one day lead his
business.
Rothstein Kass’ report makes the point that the limited number of female
investment managers is a self-fulfilling supply issue - there are few
opportunities given to women to manage funds. Therefore, there are few
opportunities for them to develop track records and make their names, resulting
in the fact that there are very few leading women fund managers. Given this
situation, there is no incentive to give opportunities to women to manage funds.
And so on, ad infinitum.
Meredith Jones of Rothstein Kass believes that women managers outperform men
because they are more capable managers of risk. She also suggests that women are
often restricted, as mentioned above, to smaller mandates, which tend to
outperform their larger equivalents; thus women are at a statistical advantage
in fund performance.
I am not convinced by either of these theories. To me, it is perhaps just so
much more difficult, even in the 21st century, for women fund managers to find
opportunities that only the very best rise to the top, whereas men with more
mediocre capabilities are given client funds to manage. Maybe women are not
innately better at managing money but perhaps the investment world gives
opportunities to a far greater mediocrity of male investment managers that are
denied to all except the very best women.
It is not only women who outperform their male counterparts, however. In The
Observer’s 2012 stock-picking challenge, a ginger cat called Orlando also
outperformed a group of professional male equity managers and some students in
choosing the overall five best-performing companies from the FTSE All-Share
index. He picked his stocks by throwing his toy mouse at a grid of numbers
representing constituent FTSE companies and generated a 10.84% return, more than
three times better than the professionals.
It could well be that cats make better managers than male or female humans.
However, a more rational conclusion is that stock-picking is highly random,
generating little Alpha or outperformance. Investors should instead concentrate
on 90% of returns that come form asset allocation (i.e. whether or not to invest
in stocks at all), rather than fund selection - choosing particular stocks to
invest in.
Generating returns by asset allocation is a proven skill, whereas generating
them by stock-picking is, in most cases, a myth. Thus, as recent data shows, an
ever-increasing proportion of equity methods are made through passive strategies
rather than active ones. At MBMG, we find that replicating a stock index through
an Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) or Contract for Difference (CFD) allows us to
focus on asset allocation, which drives 90% of differences between portfolios.
The key lesson from Orlando’s story is that not only is stock-picking largely
irrelevant, it is also now practically impossible. The vital conclusion from the
Rothstein Kass report is that investors need to seek out the best portfolio
managers, male or female, and ignore the mediocrity of the herd. Mediocrity in
investment management may be a manly make preserve but excellence is limited to
very few women - and very few men, too.
The above data and research was compiled from sources
believed to be reliable. However, neither MBMG International Ltd nor its
officers can accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the
above article nor bear any responsibility for any losses achieved as a
result of any actions taken or not taken as a consequence of reading the
above article. For more information please contact Graham Macdonald on
[email protected] |