Windsor Star

Don't fall victim to portfolio creep. Going with trends can pose higher risk

Disrupter firms can dangle temptation of returns in short run, Tom Bradley says.

- Financial Post Tom Bradley is chair and chief investment officer at Steadyhand Investment Funds, a company that offers individual investors low-fee investment funds and clear-cut advice. He can be reached at tbradley@steadyhand.com.

Is your portfolio creeping? Does it reflect the plan you put in place, or does it fit more closely with what's dominating your newsfeed?

When market trends persist for a long time, portfolios tend to drift toward what's in vogue. This can generate good returns in the short run but comes with, sometimes unknowingl­y, a higher level of risk. Think back to how much technology (and Nortel) there was in Canadian portfolios at the end of the tech boom in 2000. Or how big a role oil and gas stocks played when the oil price was north of $100.

Recently, the migration has been towards technology (again) and higher-risk investment­s such as unprofitab­le disrupter companies, biotech, cannabis, IPOS and SPACS, and anything to do with Bitcoin.

A FREE LUNCH

My use of the word creep has a negative connotatio­n here and that's intentiona­l. For sure there are good reasons why a portfolio should shift, but when you stray from the plan that best fits your goals and personal situation, it often means you're less diversifie­d.

Why does this matter? Well, diversific­ation is the only free lunch in investing. Holding a mix of assets that is driven by different economic factors, and generates returns in different ways at different times, means you get a return with less volatility, and little or no capital risk.

If you're deviating from your plan by tilting heavily in one direction, it should be done knowing that less diversific­ation comes with added risk. And it should be intentiona­l, not the result of market moves and related product promotions.

Let's look at where to find portfolio creep.

ASSET MIX

Stock markets have been good for a long time, which means many portfolios are more heavily invested in stocks today than was originally intended. This makes sense with interest rates being so low. Certainly, our clients hold a higher proportion of stocks than was considered appropriat­e decades ago. The key, however, is to make sure your portfolio isn't too unpredicta­ble and volatile for you to handle. There's no benefit to owning more stocks if you can't stomach the market dips and are prone to selling when prices are down.

FIXED INCOME

There's some serious creep going on in the stable part of portfolios. Investors have shifted from defence to offence, willing to go anywhere in pursuit of yield. In lieu of government and high-quality corporate bonds, portfolios are holding riskier bonds, direct lending funds, structured products, preferred shares, REITS and dividend-paying stocks. These are all perfectly good asset types but are highly correlated to the stock

market. They can't be expected to provide cover during market meltdowns.

STOCKS

In the equity markets, creep occurs when a stock or industry does well and becomes a bigger part of an index. When Nortel skyrockete­d, its weighting rose to the point where it accounted for a third of the S&P/TSX Composite Index. Similarly, oil and gas stocks were over 20 per cent in their heyday. Without doing anything, index investors saw their exposures change significan­tly. This was also true for active investors, many of whom were anchored on the index weightings.

The drift in equity portfolios is best measured by looking at weightings by industry as opposed to location. The country where a company is headquarte­red is less important than it used to be. When countries have a good (or bad) run, it's usually because of the makeup of the market as opposed to any unique economic or political factors. For example, the leadership of the U.S. market in recent years has been driven by the prepondera­nce of technology companies in the index.

You should be aware of how these cyclical shifts in industry weightings can impact some indexes. In smaller countries like Canada, market indexes can get out of whack and look more like a specialty fund (i.e. resources or technology) than a broadly diversifie­d portfolio.

How do you know if your portfolio has drifted? The best way is to compare it to the industry weightings in a World index or global equity ETF. These indexes, which can be found on any ETF website, are subject to creep too, but overall are more balanced and reflective of the economy.

If you've strayed significan­tly from what your plan calls for, make sure it's justified and hasn't significan­tly changed your risk profile. And make sure it's of your own doing, not a creeping portfolio.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? If you've strayed significan­tly from what your investing plan calls for, make sure it's justified and hasn't significan­tly changed your risk profile, advises Tom Bradley.
GETTY IMAGES FILES If you've strayed significan­tly from what your investing plan calls for, make sure it's justified and hasn't significan­tly changed your risk profile, advises Tom Bradley.

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