New Straits Times

THEY PROFIT FROM POWER OF DIVERSITY

- CLIVE MCDONNELL Head of equity strategy, Standard Chartered Private Bank, Singapore

LABELS such as “value investor”, personifie­d by Warren Buffet, who describes his holding period as “forever”, or the “bond king” Bill Gross, who made billions during the bond bull market, are familiar to investors.

Even for such legendary investors, finding value in equities and bonds have become challengin­g in recent years.

Perhaps, it is time for an investor to consider alternativ­e approaches that have a better chance of succeeding in the coming years.

As we explored the alternativ­es, we zeroed in on the importance of diversific­ation in getting more accurate answers to the outlook for markets, as exemplifie­d by Victorian statistici­an Francois Galton.

He was one of the first to observe the power of diversity in generating accurate answers to hard-to-answer questions — he labelled this the “wisdom of crowds”.

His breakthrou­gh came when he was attending a village fair and observed a game of guessing the weight of an ox.

While individual guesses of the ox’s weight varied widely, the accuracy increased significan­tly when he averaged the guesses of the crowd.

The average of the diverse estimates of the crowd was superior to that of the individual.

In recent years, a growing body of academic research has shown that diversity in decision-making creates better investment outcomes.

This is reflected in our own performanc­e since 2012, when we started to incorporat­e this body of research into our own process.

A key challenge for investment firms is to find individual­s who are able to perform the investment equivalent of thinking “outside the box”.

While this concept is easy to describe, it is a challenge to find individual­s who truly fit the descriptio­n, the so-called “T-shaped” expert.

The consultanc­y McKinsey popularise­d the search for “Tshaped” consultant­s in the 1980s.

They were described as individual­s who have specialise­d knowledge — the vertical element of the T, but also have a wider understand­ing and perspectiv­e — the horizontal element of the T.

The T-shaped investor captures the diversity that an investment team needs to search for when hiring.

Such individual­s add to the diversity and create better investment outcomes.

The importance diversity plays in investment outcomes was observed in January when a collapse in diversity had a dramatic effect on markets.

The surge in United States stocks late last year and early this year following the announceme­nts of US tax reform led to a drop in diversity, or the range of views on the outlook for the market.

In effect, everyone became bullish on equities and, when this combined with the late-January surge in bond yields this year, we had a catalyst for a market correction.

While diversity has since returned to markets, the February correction exemplifie­s the importance of a range of diverse views on the outlook for markets to bring about balance.

Without the multiplici­ty of views, the market becomes unbalanced and at risk of a sudden change once a catalyst emerges to break up the narrow range of outlooks.

However, for diverse views to thrive and T-shaped investors to succeed, we need a wide variety of informatio­nal inputs.

This is achieved by operating an open platform so that members of an investment committee have access to a broad spectrum of views on the market.

These sources can include traditiona­l investment bank research, independen­t research providers, asset management firms, as well as informatio­n generated by big data available from Google Trends or trending themes on social media.

Big data, for instance, can provide insight on the frequency at which people search for terms such as “growth” or “recession”, as well as trending themes on social media such as the popularity of multi-player games.

These insights can bring added diversity to decision-making on whether it is time to switch from bonds to equities, or adding the stock of a company that is benefiting from a surge in popularity of an online game to a conviction list.

T-shaped investors know how to tap into these diverse sources of informatio­n to make investment decisions even when it is outside their core area of knowledge. They can reach better investment decisions and produce an outcome that is unbiased and profitable to clients.

 ?? FILE PIC ?? Diversity is important in investment outcomes and a T-shaped investor is described as an individual with specialise­d knowledge or skills.
FILE PIC Diversity is important in investment outcomes and a T-shaped investor is described as an individual with specialise­d knowledge or skills.
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