Embrace The Stink Bomb
Not many money management firms spend time talking about maligned asset classes, and most clients don’t ask about them. To lose half of my readers right now, let me make a bull case for commodities. This one should be lonely.
We have a real stinker, a shunned exchange-traded fund (ETF), even though it shows up at the top of its category since its launch almost 10 years ago. The WisdomTree Continuous Commodity Index Fund (GCC) has lost an annualized 5.1% since its inception on January 25, 2008, or 38.7% cumulatively. Even that showing was enough to put it at the top of the heap among the five diversified commodity ETFs that have been around that long. Yet a relative performance like that can leave much to be desired.
Get ready for WisdomTree’s “Stinker Study.”
Contrarians: Grab the Stink Bomb
Using indexes representing U.S. large caps, U.S. mid-caps, U.S. small caps, international developed stocks, U.S. high-yield bonds, U.S. core bonds and commodities,1 we assessed various asset class rotation strategies based on trailing five-year returns.
Each year, the investor could look back at the performance of the preceding five years and go “all in” on the index that had the best run, the second-best run and so on.
The truly independent-minded would look at the bottom of the list and allocate to the Stinker—the one that had the worst last five years of the lot. At the end of the year, the process is repeated. Figure 1 shows the results for January 31, 1997, through March 31, 2017.
Figure 1: Asset Class “Stinker” Study
(Click on image to enlarge)
Loved Darlings vs. Stinkers
Woeful performance by the top performing “Loved Darling” is particularly notable. The investor who chased the darling of the previous five years every year witnessed subsequent annual returns of just 4.49%, more than 2 percentage points south of a strategy that simply put an equal allocation in all seven asset classes.
Contrast that with the experience of the investor who had the courage to buy the Stinker: returns came in at 9.02% annually for more than 20 years. That came with an annualized standard deviation of just 11.96%, lower than all of the equity indexes because aggregate bonds came up four times (at the end of 1996, 1997, 2006 and 2007). That also got some contrarians into bonds on December 31, 2007, a fortuitous move when Lehman collapsed in 2008.
The Stinker Strategy managed to have the lowest drawdown and downside risk with the highest Sharpe ratio and highest information ratio of any of the rotation strategies.
But the Stink Got Stinkier
The Stinker Strategy posted annual gains for 16 of 17 calendar years to the end of 2013, but unfortunately it picked up commodities for both 2014 and 2015—and those were woeful years for the asset class.2
In retrospect, we know that the Stinker Strategy made a series of great calls —for example, showing net gains during the 2000–2002 comeuppance in equity markets. The strategy also posted a 5.2% return during the year of Lehman’s collapse because it liked bonds, while it transitioned to U.S. stocks for 2009, benefiting from the sharp rally (figure 2).
Figure 2: The Stinker Strategy through the Years
(Click on image to enlarge)
(Click on image to enlarge)
Now it gets philosophical. Either the Stinker Strategy itself is a stinker because it has given false hope to commodities in recent years or recent years of struggle have been an aberration, sure to come sooner or later in any two-decade run. Either way, the Stinker Strategy identified commodities as a contrarian play at the end of 2013, and the asset class just kept grinding lower. If the asset class was hated then, it may be hated more now.
GCC: If Ever There Was a Stinker
The WisdomTree Continuous Commodities Index ETF (GCC) has a simple strategy: it takes 17 commodities, everything from corn to platinum to lean hogs, and invests equally in each of them. There is no major exposure to any particular commodity, no riding oil from triple digits down to $28 per barrel, at least not to the extent that oil represents anything more than 1/17th of the portfolio.
Aside from a brief bounce higher in the 2009–2010 recovery, commodities haven’t had much love since the go-go years of the so-called “commodities supercycle,” which ended a half generation ago. No surprise then that, as of March 31, 2017, the “order of finish,” from Loved Darling to Stinker, was U.S. Large Caps, U.S. Mid-Caps, U.S. Small Caps, U.S. High Yield, International Developed Stocks, Aggregate Bonds and Commodities.
Few clients ask about GCC, and that’s because it’s a total stinker.
It’s a true contrarian’s dream.
Disclosure: Neither WisdomTree Investments, Inc., nor its affiliates, nor Foreside Fund Services, LLC, or its affiliates provide tax advice. All references to tax matters or information provided ...
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