2019 Calendar Review and, at last … some quality

Slack Investor’s in-depth reviews of performance are done at the end of the Australian financial year (30 June) – but a brief look at how things went in calendar year 2019 is in order. It has been a great year for the share investor. Roger Montgomery reports that the Australian All Ordinaries Accumulation Index delivered a return of 24.0% in calendar 2019 – more than double long-term average annual total return. Other World Index yearly changes for 2019 (without dividends) are listed below.

Indicies% Change
Australian All Ordinaries19.10%
S&P 50028.90%
Nasdaq35.20%
Nikkei 22518.20%
FTSE 10012.10%

Quality Street

Slack Investor puts a bit of time into initial stock selection. Before entry to the Slack portfolio, I comb the company universe for high Return on Equity stocks that have low debt and a proven track record of increasing dividends. Delighted to report that a couple of Australian ETF’s have recently emerged that do a similar thing, using parallel principles to the great Benjamin Graham in selecting quality stocks – automatically!

BetaShares Global Quality Leaders ETF – QLTY

QLTY provides access to the 150 highest quality global companies (ex-Australia) based on a combined ranking of four key factors – return on equity, debt-to-capital, cash flow generation ability and earnings stability.

VanEck Vectors MSCI World ex Australia Quality ETF – QUAL

QUAL has a similar objective screening process, to fill its stock register. Companies must have a high return on equity, stable annual earnings growth, and low financial leverage. 

There are common elements to the top 10 holdings for each ETF. Companies like Apple, Visa, Facebook and Alphabet feature on both registers. Either of these ETF’s would be a great addition to a portfolio but Slack Investor would lean towards BetaShares QLTY because of their slightly less expensive management costs (0.35% vs 0.40%). Past results indicate there is outperformance attached to this “quality” approach.

My only criticism is that both ETF’s have quality filters that do not seem take into account how expensive the stock is. When Slack Investor researches stocks, I usually dismiss a company if the forecast earnings (+2 years) produce a PE that is over 40. With QUAL and QLTY, it is quality first, regardless of price. I am mollified slightly by the determination that, in the past,

MSCI World Quality Index traditionally has its strongest relative performance during economic downturns

From Van Eck Whitepaper

Sometimes people ask me what stocks to buy – and I seldom have a good answer for them – particularly if they are just starting out on the path of buying shares and their portfolio carries the risk of just one or two stocks. These two ETF’s have given Slack Investor an easy answer.

  • Instant Diversification – International exposure
  • Access to high growth companies with a good track record of increased earnings
  • Rules based stock selection – no ‘active manager’ fees -this should keep expenses low ~ 0.4% … but could be lower!

The early results are not bad either with Morningstar listing one-year performance for 2019 for QUAL and QLTY at 35.8% and 34.5%, respectively.

These sort of products might just put Slack Investor out of a job!

December 2019 – End of Month Update … and the decade of asset appreciation

Apologies for the late post this month – just returned from holidays. Slack Investor remains IN for Australian index shares, the US Index S&P 500 and the FTSE 100.  The Slack Investor followed overseas markets had strong monthly rises. The FTSE100 (+2.7%) probably due to the resolution of the British Election; and the S&P500 (+2.9%) had good employment data and their economy is going OK. I add these comments as a bit of mindless speculation in hindsight. The ASX200 (-2.4%) did not do so well in December … not sure why … but (please insert your own reason here). Might be what the great leg-spinner Shane Warne calls “Natural Variation”.

The Federal Reserve bank of Cleveland have the probability of a US recession within the next year at 27.0%. This has been steadily reducing since a peak at 41% four months ago. The current value exceeds the Slack Investor threshold of 20% and my monthly stop losses for Index funds are still “switched ON”

All Index pages and charts  have been updated to reflect the monthly changes – (ASX IndexUK IndexUS Index) and the quarterly updates to the Slack Portfolio are also recalculated.

The ‘Twenty Tens’s – You should have been here!

This was quite a decade with lots of stuff happening. Popular Mechanics has identified 10 bad trends that have developed since 2010. Number one of their list of things we want to leave behind is “Science Denial” A perplexing trend that is encouraged by the internet and the desire to find “news” sources that reflect your own opinions. Slack investor would hope the 2020’s see a return to rationality – but is not too optimistic.

On the investing scene, the 2010’s were a great time to own assets. After the GFC in 2008/9 there has been a substantial return on most asset classes. This has been led by the US Market which used to be known as the “nation of ideas”

The last 15 years by investment class from Vanguard Australia. After the 2008/9 world recession there has been a remarkable recovery in all asset classes – though cash has lagged behind. This positive trend for over 10 years is very unusual.

The US economy is still going OK, but they have been encouraged by the historical low interest rates and tax cuts. The US (and most other developed countries) has recently lapsed into political tribalism. There has also been Trump’s sanctions on world trade. In the background, there has been a change in the balance of world growth. In terms of global growth, China, India, Indonesia, Russia and Brazil will account for over half of all global growth through to 2024.

It has been a great investment decade but there are always economic cycles and shifts in world economic balance. The 2019 calendar year has also been a beauty – more on this next post. Slack Investor remains on board the investment train … but cautious.