Re: MachineGhost's Research Resort
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2016 2:54 pm
As a journalist, I NEVER reveal my sources. Why do you want to know?Kbg wrote:Where did you get these?
Permanent Portfolio Forum
https://www.gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/
https://www.gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=7497
As a journalist, I NEVER reveal my sources. Why do you want to know?Kbg wrote:Where did you get these?
MachineGhost wrote:As a journalist, I NEVER reveal my sources. Why do you want to know?Kbg wrote:Where did you get these?
Very cool. They're rolling a out a line of commission-free factor ETF's:MangoMan wrote:Fidelity has a new momentum ETF [ticker: FDMO] that trades commission free on their platform.https://screener.fidelity.com/ftgw/etf/ ... mbols=FDMOObjective
The fund seeks to provide investment returns that correspond, before fees and expenses, generally to the performance of the Fidelity U.S. Momentum Factor IndexSM. Normally investing at least 80% of assets in securities included in the Fidelity U.S. Momentum Factor Index, which is designed to reflect the performance of stocks of large and mid-capitalization U.S. companies that exhibit positive momentum signals.
I have modified the above modified Wealth Pyramid levels to be in the below order and weights to take into account both time-in-market and intrinsic risk:MachineGhost wrote:For all those who wondered, below is my Prosperity allocation. It is a diversified mix of strategies, holding period lengths, risks and returns.
Here's a short rundown of how RAFI Commodity works... they equal weight Metal, Energy and Hard/Softs sectors. Then for the individual commodities within each sector they use the 5-year average volume to determine the base weights. Then they combine implied roll yield and momentum to adjust those base weights to deal with the normal conundrum of negative momentum with backwardation (positive roll yield) and positve momentum with contango (negative roll yield). And lastly, they use various criteria to decide where on the futures contract curve to actually purchase so they're not gamed/arbitraged by front-runners. It is also long-only so there is actually a correlation with inflation. Basically, the index fixes all of the flaws that have plaqued the first generation of managed future funds to date.The Elkhorn Fundamental Commodity Strategy ETF is an actively-managed ETF that seeks to provide investment returns that are highly correlated to the Dow Jones RAFI® Commodity Index by investing in exchange-traded commodity futures contracts and other commodity-linked instruments. The Dow Jones RAFI® Commodity Index offers an alternative beta strategy that uses price momentum and roll yield to outperform the broad market. The ETF is designed to be a fundamental factor-weighted, broad-market commodity strategy with a modified dynamic roll. The fund's assets will also be invested in a short duration portfolio of highly liquid, high quality bonds to collateralize exposure and target a total return which exceeds that of the Dow Jones RAFI® Commodity Index.
http://www.marketwired.com/press-releas ... 160317.htm
That is cheap for a managed futures strategy. The first gen ones were around upper 1% to lower 2%. Managed futures are great because they're like gold in that they have a persistent negative correlation to stocks and bonds. Without knowing about the PP, wise investors would use stock, bonds and managed futures via CTA's. Now you don't need the CTA and their expensive 2%/20% fees.MangoMan wrote:Sounds like an interesting model, but the ETF has a really high ER at 0.75%.
But the "zero timing" price comes with stupendous drawdowns. How brassy are your balls for surviving a -50% MaxDD?Kbg wrote:Hmmm...a 2x PP is looking totally awesome to me. GTAA AGG is the only one close to a 2x's performance. Oh yeah, and zero timing required.
Put simply, current market conditions are associated with small potential returns and enormous latent risks across nearly every asset class. The combination of extreme valuations, weak prospective returns, and emerging risk-aversion suggests that market losses could unfold abruptly, creating an interconnected Rube Goldberg chain of consequences because of the steep leverage that investors and corporations have taken on in recent years. The image that comes to mind is that of speculators scrounging around on their hands and knees to pull a few pennies from the catch of a mousetrap whose hammer is tied to the lid of a box of angry bees and a switch that drops an anvil. Even if there are rewards in the short-run, the situation isn’t likely to end well.
http://hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc161010.htm
Hussman's been saying this for seven years now. And why did he have to mention Rube Goldberg anyway??MachineGhost wrote:But the "zero timing" price comes with stupendous drawdowns. How brassy are your balls for surviving a -50% MaxDD?Kbg wrote:Hmmm...a 2x PP is looking totally awesome to me. GTAA AGG is the only one close to a 2x's performance. Oh yeah, and zero timing required.
Put simply, current market conditions are associated with small potential returns and enormous latent risks across nearly every asset class. The combination of extreme valuations, weak prospective returns, and emerging risk-aversion suggests that market losses could unfold abruptly, creating an interconnected Rube Goldberg chain of consequences because of the steep leverage that investors and corporations have taken on in recent years. The image that comes to mind is that of speculators scrounging around on their hands and knees to pull a few pennies from the catch of a mousetrap whose hammer is tied to the lid of a box of angry bees and a switch that drops an anvil. Even if there are rewards in the short-run, the situation isn’t likely to end well.
http://hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc161010.htm
QEternity made a fool of everyone, that's for sure.Reub wrote:Hussman's been saying this for seven years now. And why did he have to mention Rube Goldberg anyway??