Notes From An Active Investor: My Re-Opening Bet With A Positive Long-Term Story

 | Jan 17, 2022 10:01

Active investing has become a dirty word over the past ten years.

Study after study shows that actively managed funds have consistently underperformed their benchmarks, especially when it comes to stocks.

2021 was no different. 90% of actively managed equity funds benchmarked to the S&P 500 underperformed the index. This is why the migration of money out of actively managed funds into passive vehicles like ETFs is showing no signs of slowdown.

If it has become impossible to beat the market, why should you bother listening to me, or any so-called professional pundits for that matter, about how to how to invest your money?

A good question.

Maybe because, when it comes to the markets, I have been right more often than I've been wrong.

You can google the big calls I have made in my 20-year career on Wall Street, but if I were you, I wouldn't waste my time on that. A strategist is only as good as his calls today. Past returns are not a guarantee of future results. In the market, every day is a new day.

More important should be how good my calls have been recently.

Four months ago, I started writing for this site plus I concurrently post my calls on my personal site .

On Oct. 21, I recommended buying Pfizer (NYSE:PFE).

On Nov. 12, I recommended buying the iPath® Series B S&P 500® VIX Short-Term Futures™ ETN (NYSE:VXX) and shorting the iShares TIPS Bond ETF (NYSE:TIP) and also predicted that financials would outperform tech.

On Dec. 10, I recommended buying Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM).

You can easily check that these trades did well, and in some cases, very well. Plus, from my perspective, perhaps more importantly, they did well for the reasons I thought they would.

h2 Macro Themes, Solid Fundamentals, Straightforward Business Models/h2

So what's my edge, you may ask?

This bring us back to the question of why alpha is disappearing from active investing, especially in equities.

In my view, it's a skills mismatch. While most professional equity fund managers focus their efforts on analyzing the individual companies in their investment universe, the performance of the share price of these companies is increasingly driven by macro considerations that have little to do with what these companies are doing on their own.

My edge is that I am a macro economist-strategist. My focus is on predicting the macro themes that drive markets. In case you are wondering, because I don’t look at companies too closely, I tend to choose only stocks of companies with solid fundamentals and easy-to-understand business models to express my macro views.

Now that you know a little more about my process, let’s talk about my favorite investment at the moment, Carnival Corporation (NYSE:CCL), the global cruise line operator.

Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now