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  • - All right, folks, you might want to sit down for this one.

  • One of the most common arguments that I hear

  • against index investing is Warren Buffett.

  • He is the centerpiece of many discussions

  • on stock picking, value investing, and dividend investing.

  • If stock picking doesn't work,

  • then why has Warren Buffett been so successful?

  • Warren Buffett loves dividend paying stocks.

  • Warren Buffett says that diversification

  • is protection against ignorance.

  • Buffett is a wealth of wisdom, knowledge, and experience.

  • He has also truly been one of the greatest investors

  • in modern history, based on his track record.

  • These are facts that cannot be disputed.

  • However, both Buffett's wisdom and his success

  • are often taken out of context

  • to support the idea that stock picking

  • is a smart investing strategy.

  • I'm Ben Felix, Portfolio Manager at PWL Capital.

  • In this episode of Common Sense Investing,

  • I'm going to tell you why Warren Buffett

  • is not a reason to pick stocks.

  • (bright music)

  • Fortunately for us, Warren Buffett documents his thoughts

  • on many topics in detail

  • in Berkshire Hathaway's annual letter to shareholders.

  • Let's start with Buffett's view on index investing.

  • As much as stock pickers

  • use Buffett as an argument for stock picking,

  • Buffett himself has long been a proponent

  • of investing in index funds.

  • In the 1996 letter to shareholders,

  • Buffett offered some investment advice.

  • Quote,

  • "Let me add a few thoughts about your own investments.

  • Most investors, both institutional and individual,

  • will find that the best way to own common stocks

  • is through an index fund that charges minimal fees.

  • Those following this path are sure

  • to beat the net results, after fees and expenses,

  • delivered by the great majority

  • of investment professionals."

  • In the 2013 letter,

  • Buffett explained the goal of the non-professional investor

  • should not be to pick winners.

  • Neither he nor his helpers,

  • Buffett is referring to stockbrokers

  • and high-fee fund managers,

  • can do that.

  • But should rather be to own a cross-section of businesses

  • that in aggregate are bound to do well.

  • A low cost S&P 500 index fund will achieve this goal.

  • That's a pretty clear message.

  • Now, I know what many of you might be thinking.

  • That only applies to non-professional investors.

  • If you dedicate enough time to it,

  • maybe you can be a professional too.

  • Let me offer some commentary

  • that Buffett does not mention in his letter.

  • There have been many academic studies

  • on professional investor's

  • ability to generate superior results.

  • I'll give you two of my favorite

  • and some quick quotes from their conclusions.

  • Mark Carhartt's 1997 paper

  • on persistence in mutual fund performance found, quote,

  • "The results do not support the existence

  • of skilled or informed mutual fund portfolio managers."

  • In their 2010 paper,

  • luck versus skill

  • in the cross-section of mutual fund returns,

  • Eugene Fama and Ken French concluded

  • through statistical analysis

  • that few funds produce benchmark-adjusted expected returns

  • sufficient cover their costs.

  • Suffice it to say

  • that even professional investors

  • have a tremendous amount of trouble

  • producing consistent risk-adjusted results

  • in excess of their benchmark.

  • Also in the 2013 shareholder letter,

  • Buffett goes on to explain

  • that investing in index funds is not enough.

  • You also need to maintain a disciplined approach.

  • Buffett concludes that with discipline,

  • the "know-nothing" investor

  • who both diversifies and keeps his costs minimal

  • is virtually certain to get satisfactory results.

  • Indeed, the unsophisticated investor

  • who is realistic about his shortcomings

  • is likely to obtain better long-term results

  • than the knowledgeable professional

  • who is blind to even a single weakness.

  • I don't know about you,

  • but I am far more comfortable managing my own investments

  • based on the assumption that I'm a know-nothing investor,

  • rather than assuming that I'm a knowledgeable professional

  • without blindness to even a single weakness.

  • Buffett also seems to think

  • that it is unlikely to find a knowledgeable professional

  • without blindness to even a single weakness.

  • Again, in the 2013 letter, Buffett gives us some insight

  • into how his estate assets

  • will be managed for the better it have his wife.

  • Quote,

  • "My money, I should add, is where my mouth is.

  • What I advise here is essentially identical

  • to certain instructions I've laid out in my will.

  • One bequest provides that cash will be delivered

  • to a trustee for my wife's benefit.

  • My advice to the trustee could not be more simple.

  • Put 10% of the cash in short-term government bonds

  • and 90% in a very low cost S&P 500 index fund.

  • I believe that trust's long-term results from this policy

  • will be superior to those attained by most investors

  • whether pension funds, institutions, or individuals

  • who employ high-fee managers."

  • Buffett similarly put his money where his mouth was

  • when he made a bet against Ted Seides

  • who was at the time the co-manager of Protege Partners,

  • a fund of hedge funds.

  • The bet was that Ted could not pick

  • five funds of hedge funds

  • that would beat Buffett's

  • Vanguard S&P index fund over 10 years.

  • The wager was not small either.

  • It was a $1 million bet.

  • Buffett won the bet in 2017 by a lot.

  • In his 2016 letter,

  • Buffett explained the many reasons that he was confident

  • that he would win the bet.

  • This is a quote from Buffett's initial challenge

  • to hedge fund managers.

  • "A lot of very smart people

  • set out to do better than an average in securities markets.

  • Call them active investors.

  • Their opposites, passive investors,

  • will by definition do about average.

  • In aggregate, their positions will more or less approximate

  • those of an index fund.

  • Therefore, the balance of the universe,

  • the active investors,

  • must do about average as well.

  • However, these investors will incur far greater costs.

  • So, on balance, their aggregate results after these costs

  • will be worse than those of the passive investors."

  • Buffett does add though

  • that some active investors will do well over time.

  • He explains, quote,

  • "There are, of course, some skilled individuals

  • who are highly likely to outperform the S&P

  • over long stretches.

  • In my lifetime, though, I've identified early on

  • only 10 or so professionals

  • that I expected would accomplish this feat."

  • Buffett's comment about early on is important.

  • It's very easy to identify a successful active investor

  • after they've been successful.

  • The real challenge is identifying

  • before they've been successful.

  • While Buffett believes

  • that there are some skilled investors out there,

  • he has only met 10 in his lifetime.

  • This speaks to the massive odds

  • that are against any active investor

  • and what I would call the overconfidence

  • of anyone who believes themselves to be

  • one of these extremely rare few.

  • Buffett concluded this section of the 2016 letter with this.

  • "The bottom line.

  • When trillions of dollars are managed

  • by Wall Streeters charging high fees,

  • it will usually be the managers who reap outsides profits,

  • not the clients.

  • Both large and small investors

  • should stick with low cost index funds.

  • Okay, I think you get the message.

  • Buffett thinks that you should probably invest

  • in index funds

  • unless you're one of the extremely rare few

  • that might have a chance at beating the market.

  • But I mean, come on,

  • are you really one of those rare few?

  • One of the other ones common discussions

  • that Buffett gets thrown into is dividend investing.

  • People seem to think

  • that Buffett is a strong believer in dividend investing

  • because Berkshire Hathaway owns a lot of companies

  • that pay dividends.

  • In Berkshire's 2012 letter,

  • Buffett explained in detail why he does not care

  • whether or not a company pays a dividend.

  • I won't recite the whole thing,

  • but Buffett walks through the math to explain

  • why any investor could easily, based on the numbers,

  • prefer a company that does not pay a dividend.

  • If you wanna see the math,

  • it's on page 19 of the 2012 letter.

  • But my point here is that Buffett clearly understands

  • that a great business may or may not pay a dividend.

  • Buffett himself has made the policy decision

  • for Berkshire Hathaway

  • to return capital to shareholders

  • through share repurchases as opposed to dividends.

  • Finally, I have to touch on one of the discussions

  • that Buffett is most often thrown into.

  • If markets are efficient,

  • how can we Warren Buffett have beaten the market

  • for such a long period of time?

  • This is a really good question.

  • It was answered in a 2018 paper

  • in The Financial Analyst Journal titled Buffett's Alpha.

  • In the paper,

  • the authors set out to explain Buffett's past performance

  • in terms of exposure to known factors.

  • A factor is a characteristic of a stock or bond

  • that consistently explains higher average returns

  • through exposure to certain types of risk.

  • For example, value stocks tend to have

  • higher average returns than growth stocks

  • because they are generally riskier.

  • Based on this type of information,

  • if an investment professional generates higher returns

  • by maintaining consistent exposure to value stocks,

  • they are not demonstrating skill.

  • An index fund can replicate their results.

  • Value is one factor,

  • but there have been many others observed in the data.

  • The authors of Buffett's Alpha

  • find that accounting for exposure to the market beta,

  • size, value, momentum, betting against beta,

  • quality, and leverage factors

  • explains a large part of Buffett's past performance.

  • In other words, accounting for the general tendency

  • of high quality, safe, and cheap stocks to outperform

  • can explain much of Buffett's performance.

  • In fact, controlling for these factors

  • makes Buffett's Alpha,

  • or his ability as a manager to produce returns

  • in excess of the risk taken through factor exposure,

  • statistically insignificant.

  • This is an important finding.

  • The authors were able to show that Buffett's success

  • has not been due to his superior stock picking abilities,

  • but to his implementation of a factor investing strategy.

  • I am not saying that Buffett is not a genius.

  • He is.

  • He intuitively discovered factor investing

  • decades before the academic literature caught up.

  • The reality for an investor today, though,

  • is that we do know that the factors exist.

  • It is not by stock picking then,

  • but by maintaining consistent exposure to the factors

  • that brought Buffett so much success

  • that will bring you anywhere near Buffett's track record.

  • This is a huge argument against stock picking,

  • which this paper showed

  • does not explain Buffett's performance,

  • and in favor of factor investing,

  • which can be largely accomplished using index funds.

  • In fact, you are much less likely

  • to get consistent factor exposure through stock picking

  • due to the specific risk of each company.

  • The analysis in this paper shows us

  • that based on our

  • current understanding of financial markets,

  • Buffett's past performance can be recreated systematically

  • without the Oracle of Omaha at the helm.

  • This makes it even less likely than previously thought

  • to recreate Buffett's success

  • by traditional fundamental analysis and security selection.

  • If you take Buffett's advice,

  • you should not be a stock picker

  • unless you have a tremendous

  • amount of confidence in your abilities.

  • And even then, you have to go into it with the understanding

  • that your confidence is highly likely to be unfounded.

  • If you do wish to replicate Buffett's results,

  • you are more likely to do so

  • by maintaining exposure to the factors

  • that Buffett intuitively took advantage of,

  • than by trying to mimic his stock picking process.

  • Do you think that you can replicate

  • Warren Buffett's results?

  • Tell me about it in the comments.

  • Thanks for watching.

  • My name is Ben Felix of PWL Capital,

  • and this is Common Sense Investing.

  • If you enjoyed this video,

  • please share it with someone

  • who you think would benefit from the information.

  • Don't forget,

  • if you have run out

  • of Common Sense Investing videos to watch,

  • you can tune in to weekly episodes

  • of the Rational Reminder Podcast

  • wherever you get your podcasts.

  • (bright music)

- All right, folks, you might want to sit down for this one.

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