I think this article really misses the point that Burry was making, which is that if the indexs see a sell off they won't find the liquidity in the market to cash out their positions and will drive the market down.
This article seems to focus on all of the upsides of indexing, which are all true. However, those upsides don't negate the risk that is being pointed to.
Agreed. Burry seems to be getting a lot of responses but almost none of them seem to have actually listened to what he said (or even read the article). There is real risk from the index-matching synthetic techniques that these funds are using.
What if my index fund is actually just buying and holding the underlying stock as opposed to just a price tracking entity? In that case not taker for my fund = no taker for the underlying stock right? Will this not have the liquidity risk that Bury mentions?
The index fund is holding the underlying stock, largely. The challenge is that if say 5% of their fund holders sell their shares in the fund, the fund has to sell the underlying stock to generate the cash to pay out. Most funds have a rule in their documents that if you are a large fundholder (holding 1% or more of the fund) and you sell, they can hand you stocks directly rather than selling them and giving you cash, but that doesn't work it it's tens of thousands of small fund holders selling.
So? They sell others buy. If I hear there is a squeeze and have cash I'll throw it in: who wouldn't? It's never the case that x٪ of the market can exit at once regardless of how it is owned.
"If I hear there is a squeeze and have cash I'll throw it in:"
For how many billions will you buy? And why did you not throw it in in 2008?
"who wouldn't?"
People who are leveraged?
"It's never the case that x٪ of the market can exit at once regardless of how it is owned."
You may not have heard it. But this is called a stock market crash. One is expected soon. So enjoy the ride and keep your money dry that you can "throw it in"
Source? In the jurisdictions I'm familiar with, synthetic ETFs come with special warnings (even in the fund name), and they're definitely not the majority.
> What if my index fund is actually just buying and holding the underlying stock as opposed to just a price tracking entity? In that case not taker for my fund = no taker for the underlying stock right? Will this not have the liquidity risk that Bury mentions?
In any crisis, the people who get really screwed are those who decide they have to sell, at any price. Instant liquidity - by whichever route - gets really expensive. An actively managed fund can at least decide which assets to sell to meet redemptions, holding those it thinks are undervalued at the moment. Whereas an index fund is effectively exposed to a crisis anywhere in the market.
I think that was certainly a more interesting point compared to "who will do price discovery", which seems to be something that would likely find an equilibrium.
This article does mention it, but pretty briefly.
It'd be interesting to hear from people more familiar with the details of how all this works... perhaps there are some in the initial thread, but I haven't had time to skim it all: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20877700
Not the author, but I think the article indirectly talks about the liquidity in the markets being far higher than it has been in the past.
Further, if there is a stampede for the exits, there still have to be buyers on the other side of the sellers. Those buyers will undoubtably include active managers along with those indexers with different time horizons and/or braver constitutions. Both will likely be rewarded for their patience.
> if there is a stampede for the exits, there still have to be buyers on the other side of the sellers
That is a key point in the debate. I do not see that above is necessarily true. Say a price of a low volume stock X is driven down below fundamentals just because index funds have to sell 1% of holdings and cannot find enough buyers for X. While price of X might be irrational fund managers might not be able to act on it because there would be a worry that it may go lower still if selling extends.
Could next round get X removed from index? delisted? "The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent" is not an empty worry. My 2c.
So what? Let the weak long positions panic and sell at the bottom. Everyone else gets a few years of discount prices to buy. The hardest hit will be those who are leveraged and arguably deserve to get hosed for taking that much risk.
If you don’t have to meet a margin call, you can ride out a crisis; if you’ve got cash in reserve, you can profit from it.
Presuming you are saving for later. Besides a margin call, you might want to exit for, buying a house, going into retirement, covering a period between jobs, or to deal with a medical emergency.
Doing that during a crisis hurts. This risk diminishes the value of investments as a safety cushion.
> Besides a margin call, you might want to exit for, buying a house, going into retirement, covering a period between jobs, or to deal with a medical emergency.
In all of those scenarios you should not be in stocks/equities in the first place. If there is a possibility of needing cash with-in the next 5 years, that money should be in either bonds or term deposits.
One's downpayment, first/next few retirement years' income, and emergency fund(s) should not be in equities.
After 1989 it took the Nikkei more than a decade to finds its bottom (and then another bottom in 2009) and it hasn't recovered since. How many years of "discount buying" are you planning in?
Systemic risk. If a ton of smaller companies see their shares plummet all at the same time, there might be repercussions for the economy as a whole. It’s true that individual investors might be able to ride it out (and the same was true in 2008).
How would they lose liquidity? Authorized participants [0] are always in the market for ETFs. If an ETF share price is crashing out of line with the index it tracks, they will step in and buy shares, swap them with the ETF issuer for the shares of the underlying stock in the index, and sell those shares for an arbitrage profit.
Even if one of the underlying stocks becomes illiquid, a big enough price divergence on all of the other liquid stocks would make it profitable to eat the loss or hold the illiquid ones (risky, but remember, there are many authorized participants competing with each other so if there is some way to make an easy arbitrage profit, they will find a way). You'd basically need the entire market to become illiquid.
OK, but in that case is there a distinction between index funds and actively managed funds? Is this a risk that index funds are uniquely exposed to?
Also, another thing to keep in mind is that this only affects people who are trying to sell at the bottom. Buy and hold investors care little for liquidity issues during a crash.
> in that case is there a distinction between index funds and actively managed funds?
Yes. Active managers can choose what to sell based on prevailing market conditions. Index funds must sell across the board. That could involve getting hosed on names in a short-term squeeze.
> this only affects people who are trying to sell at the bottom
There are lots of index funds. For a broad-market fund, you're probably right--a patient investor can ride out the bloodshed. For leveraged or specialized funds, on the other hand, a rout could permanently impair the portfolio.
Equity market collapses, furthermore, have a habit of transmitting into the real economy. A sustained downturn could impair funding conditions, which in turn could affect the fundamental characteristics of a portfolio.
There are some escape clauses in Vanguard's index funds:
The fund may temporarily depart from its normal investment policies and strategies when doing so is believed to be in the fund’s best interest. ... Vanguard funds can postpone payment of redemption proceeds for up to seven calendar days.
And a lot of index fund investors are buy-and-hold so it's unclear if a recession would even cause a liquidity / redemption crisis.
> And a lot of index fund investors are buy-and-hold
But index funds themselves aren't. They have to sell stock when units are destroyed and vice versa. In addition to other factors, this can result in weird tax effects as well as tracking error to the index.
1) To track the actual index, index funds must continually rebalance their portfolio. In a liquidity pause they may not be able to do this, thereby becoming a non-index fund. Actively managed funds have the portfolio they have -- unless they're defrauding the public somehow. An index fund that becomes a non-index fund would fall in this latter category.
2) The index (not the funds) is assumed to reflect all the information that can be used to make some money by arbitrage. This process is referred as "price discovery". But in a liquidity pause, price discovery grinds to a halt. Actively managed funds have their own idea of what are the fundamental prices beyond what the public leaderboard says; their price discovery is not beholden to the existence of a liquidity market. Actually -- if the market goes for years with very low liquidity, it becomes more likely that people who, say, are shorting Herbalife for fundamental reasons, have more knowledge than the index. In this way the index is like an AI that can become starved for data.
Burry's point wasn't that the ETFs would lose liquidity, but rather than the lightly-traded names in the index would.
If the index instruments have a lot more liquidity than the underlying names, then that means they won't be able to gracefully absorb the liquidity shocks from an unwind in the index.
Here's some back of the envelope calculations. Between SPY, IVV, and VOO alone, there's $500 billion in S&P 500 index ETFs. Consider if an unwind event leads to 20% of index assets being redeemed in a single day. That's $100 billion from the above ETFs alone.
Now consider a typical thinly traded single-name stock like Chubb Limited (symbol CB). CB makes up 0.3% of the S&P 500 by weight. So in the hypothetical scenario above, the APs would have to collectively sell $300 million worth of CB in a single day. Chubb's entire ADV is only $238 million.
Trying to sell more than 100% of a stock's ADV in a single day is guaranteed to produce huge market impact. The current liquidity providers in CB almost certainly cannot absorb that amount of trading volume all in one direction. In that scenario, Chubb's stock might fall by 20%, for something that had nothing to do with the company itself.
I think the overall point is that a lot of single-name stocks nowadays don't really have much of an individual market. Names like TSLA, FB or TEVA definitely have a robust market with a lot of traders still focused on company specifics. But a lot of the more boring, lower volatility, mid-cap stocks (like CB) mostly just trade along with the index nowadays. If there are technicals related to index capital flows, stocks like that are going to get taken for a ride.
This is a really good explanation, but you would think market forces would kick in. If a company drops 20% (or even 3%!) from an event that doesn't effect the business itself, you're going to get smart money buying. I'd have a hard time believing some niche hedge fund somewhere wouldn't make a killing off this by providing liquidity.
This is under the assumption that there will be capital available to flow, if there isn't because of a truly bad scenario, yes it's a downward spiral, but it will take quite an event to get us to that point.
The "smart money" would start buying, but I imagine the concern is that as passive instruments become the majority of the market, there wouldn't be a deep enough pool of assets held by "smart money" to provide offsetting liquidity in the way you describe.
But wouldn't this reach some sort of equilibrium point?
IE if a smart person with a lot of money think there is no "smart money" left, wouldn't (s)he just start their own smart money hedge fund to provide / do this?
If nobody is left to do thing X AND thing X is basically guaranteed profit, isn't it natural for people to step in and do thing X?
I know next to nothing about investing, but I thought the article said that passive instruments are a very small portion of the market...and also that in house indexing has always been a thing.
But doesn't it seem like that, as total ownership of the market shifts towards passives, higher returns would be driven by funds running active strategies such as these, thus making them more attractive investments? It seems like this sort of thing chases an equilibrium.
> I'd have a hard time believing some niche hedge fund somewhere wouldn't make a killing off this by providing liquidity.
Typically the opportunists here would be stat-arb hedge funds. They bread and butter of their strategy is to isolate the non-explainable ("idiosyncratic") movement in single name stocks, then bet on that factor mean-reverting.
E.g. if Microsoft goes down 0.5%, but the market's up 1%, and the tech stocks are up 1.2%, and various other factors that move Microsoft don't explain it being down. Then they'll bet that the movement is driven by random noise, and buy Microsoft, betting that it will re-converge with where it's expected to be. They'll also use various techniques to isolate whether idiosyncratic movements are likely driven by company specific factors or market noise. Like NLP on a newsfeed to look to see if there are any breaking stories, or tracking recent analyst revisions on the stock.
Suffice to say that stat-arb funds in this day and age are very very good at this. In a liquidity unwind event, the signals stat-arb traders use would absolutely be lighting up. The biggest question would be whether stat-arb funds in aggregate have enough capital to counter the absolutely humongous flows that a potential index fund unwinding would release.
Another complicating wrinkle is that most stat-arb desks are no longer independent hedge funds, but units within larger multi-strategy funds (like Two Sigma or Millennium). There's good and bad. The good is that if there's all of a sudden massive opportunity the multi-strat fund can quickly reallocate more capital to the stat-arb desk.
The bad part is that stat-arb desks may be unwound due to arbitrary contagion in other parts of the market. If the multi-strat fund sees a big loss in another unit, it may pull capital from the stat-arb desk to meet margin calls or redemptions. For example this happened in August 2007 [0]. The subprime mortgage market blew up, then all of a sudden a bunch of esoteric stocks started behaving crazy for the next weeks. And that was largely because multistrat funds were pulling capital to meet margin calls on their mortgage portfolio.
Doesn't the "circuit breaker" process on the stock exchange exist for this scenario? To give people time to line up buyers when there is a sudden unexpected repricing?
yes, possibly. but i think that may feed back into some weirdness for the index funds
"i'm supposed to sell 500m of this small stock but i only got to sell 300m before it was frozen out...now my basket of holdings is slightly off from the actual index...hopefully i can rectify it tomorrow..."
Yes, if indexes sell off any many times their average daily volume that means components will as well. That's fine. If something happens where people are selling the S&P 500 down 20% in a single trading session (the full day circuit breaker limit) there should be chaos amongst the components because shit has hit the fan. Savvy players will scoop up deals, most people will do nothing and life will move on.
No, I think in such a scenario active investors would wind up getting just as whalloped as passive investors. By definition active investors in aggregate have the same average exposure as cap-weighted indexers to any given stock.
Arguably, after the crash they might be able to take advantage of the opportunity. If they concentrate into the stocks with the biggest price displacements, then as those stocks return to normal, they may make up some or all of their initial losses. Passive indexers can't do this, because they don't have the mandate to deviate from their pre-defined allocations.
But I think the broader issue is that excessive amounts of indexing present potential systematic risks for everybody. Burry's hypothesis is more relevant for policymakers than it is for investors.
As an individual, long-term buy-and-hold investor, low-cost index funds are without question the best option for investing. The problem is behavior that's rational on an individual level, may produce irrational results at the collective level.
I'm not sure I stated my question clearly enough. I'm not asking whether active funds would fare better than index funds in a downturn, though it's interesting to hear.
I'm asking for a comparison of two scenariors. In the index fund scenario, we're in the world where index funds represent a large and growing chunk of the market. In the active funds scenario, index funds aren't a thing. Why is it that in the active funds scenario, what you're describing in the previous post doesn't happen? Why doesn't a 20% marketwide downturn cause chaos in these smaller stocks? Is it because there would be higher volumes if those stocks were held by active funds? Or because the active funds wouldn't hold stocks like that?
Basically, I'm asking for a comparison of the scenario you described with what happens in a no-index world, because I can't quite think through the difference myself.
The difference is hypothetical, because if enough people exit the active fund, even if the fund manager thinks it's a folly, eventually they have to sell whatever makes up the fund, and eventually those sells will push prices down. That's why crashes are fast and hard.
Yes in theory the manager can try to alter the composition of the fund by selling the stocks that are still going strong. But why would they? That just exposes them to known hazards even more.
So, probably the active funds will be the first ones to drop the small stocks first in a crash.
That's an interesting point. While it's definitely true that any major unwind of that size will disrupt the market, there's some reasons to believe an ecosystem dominated by active investors would do better.
First as mentioned before, active investors have discretion. There's strong reason to believe that as the sell-off's happening that they'd move into the most dislocated stocks. That acts as kind of a negative feedback loop. It wouldn't stop a market-wide selloff, but would keep things more balanced between single-name stocks vis-a-vis the rigid rules governing passive index managers.
Second, by definition active funds are more differentiated from one another. Passive indexing produces a mono-culture with analogous ecological risks to what we see in nature. The typical active fund only holds about 50 positions at any given time. So, on the whole while active investors in aggregate hold 0.3% of their portfolios in Chubb, at an individual level most funds hold zero. And some minority may hold 1%, 5%, 10% or more of their assets in Chubb. So if one fund fails, that's less likely to spread contagion to every other fund in the universe.
In that type of unwind scenario, some funds will do pretty decently, and some funds will do horribly. But the point is there will be a dispersion of results. That makes the market as a whole more robust. Panicking investors are more likely to re-allocate their capital from the bad funds to the good funds, rather than pull all their out in a flight to quality.
When I actively managed money for mutual funds, we had limits on both total % ownership and how many days of volume we could own. We were small cap growth, so sometimes we could be stopped from owning as much of a company as we wanted because it was too illquid. Passive doesn't care - it buys what it needs to replicate the returns of the underlying.
Also, it's well known that if a hedge fund (or mutual fund) is in trouble, they sell more of what they CAN rather than what they want. That's one reason why we always knew who else owned the stocks we did.
Index funds have no leeway here. They need to sell - whether there is liquidity available or not.
My gut is, there will be much less liquidity available during the next crisis than you'd expect. A lot of "non passive" investment is quant driven, which ends up becoming very homogenous in nature across different firms. Many also have momentum factors in play, where they buy short term positive momentum and sell the reverse. Once again,vthey don't have a lot of leeway for humans to say "this market is different".
> Even if one of the underlying stocks becomes illiquid
Burry’s money quote in the original Bloomberg article was on limited liquidity for a largish number of stocks - over a 1,000 stocks in Russell 2,000 weren’t traded heavily (by his benchmark).
> Liquidity is not a huge problem for index funds. But, Ben, what if everyone rushes to the exits all at once? Index funds and ETFs are going to cause a massive crash!
> When an index fund investor sells, they’re technically selling their holdings in direct proportion to their weighting in the index. So there is literally no market impact.
> > When an index fund investor sells, they’re technically selling their holdings in direct proportion to their weighting in the index. So there is literally no market impact.
Yeah, I wanted to highlight that that's not true. Of course there is a market impact, it'll go down. The author might have wanted to say that there is no differential market impact, ie all shares would go down to the same extent (so that there is no impact, say, on capital allocation), but even that is not necessarily true, it clearly depends on the homogeneity (or lack thereof) of the liquidity/elasticity on the other side of those trades.
Right, but consider that the sub-prime mortgage market was a tiny portion of the overall mortgage market in 2007.
Derivatives written against sub-prime holdings tipped the balance when the fan was hit. There are tons of derivatives written against the indices, thus indirectly against those funds.
No, not against those funds. Pass a royal decree that banishes all index funds from the face of the earth. The tons of derivatives written against the indices remain, unchanged.
Those derivatives might be "somewhat in the neighborhood of the funds" or something, but it's not analogous to mortgages.
>Derivatives written against sub-prime holdings tipped the balance when the fan was hit
There's a bit more nuance to it: those derivatives were a problem because a substantial proportion of them were concentrated in a single, widely-connected, entity (AIG).
The derivative market as a whole nets to zero; for every loser there is a winner.
There was the little problem of how sub-prime debt got whitewashed and turned into Aaa rated paper by the ratings agencies. All those sub-prime tranches, had they been correctly rated, would not have had such a magnifying effect. It was because of packaged bonds containing multiple tranches that couldn't be priced at anything but $0. Also, the interest bearing portions of loans were split into different bonds, further complicating matters.
There wasn't (and still isn't) a mark-to-market in bonds. Many bonds aren't priced until bought/sold, e.g. illiquid.
> "Liquidity is not a huge problem for index funds" -no market impact to sell (v dubious if you ask me), unlevered.
If you're talking about index mutual funds, then the author is just plain wrong. Any open-ended fund offering daily liquidity will trade, and therefore produce market impact, to meet its daily redemptions.
If you're only talking about ETFs, then this is technically correct. Besides the occasional index re-constitution, unlevered index ETFs don't do any trading. However it's definitely not true that there's no market impact. As the fund grows (or shrinks) the shares just don't magically appear in the portfolio. Somebody has to go out and buy (or sell) those shares, and like any trading volume, that creates market impact.
The mechanism that ETFs actually use is something called "Authorized Participants" (or APs for short). Basically market makers have the right to create or redeem shares in the ETF. To create new shares, they go out and buy all the stocks in the index, then hand a basket over to the ETF fund manager, who then hands back new shares of the equivalent value. And to destroy shares, the AP hand over shares in the ETF, and the fund manager hands back a basket of shares from the index.
If there's high demand for investors to own the ETF, that'll push up the ETF's stock price. As the price rises relative to the index value, APs will detect an arbitrage opportunity. They'll go out and buy the basket of stocks in the index at a cheaper price, then create new ETF shares at the richer price, and pocket the difference. Vice versa if there's demand from investors to exit the ETF.
The mechanism keeps the ETF price closely pegged to the index, because the further out of line it gets the more arbitrageur activity pushes it back in line. While also flexibly satisfying investors' specific demand for the ETF at any given time. Basically it delegates the role of trading from the fund manager, who usually doesn't have any special expertise in trading, to highly specialized trading firms and market makers.
However, as you can clearly see, market impact most definitely exists. If a flurry of investors rush to enter or exit an ETF, then a huge amount of trading has to be done to create or redeem the shares. Just because the APs create this trading impact, instead of the fund itself, is a distinction without a difference. The underlying stocks in the index are subject to market impact.
>If a flurry of investors rush to enter or exit an ETF, then a huge amount of trading has to be done to create or redeem the shares. Just because the APs create this trading impact, instead of the fund itself, is a distinction without a difference. The underlying stocks in the index are subject to market impact.
But the trading isn't the cause of the market impact, it's the redemptions that occur first, and force the trading. There had to have been economic or financial reasons for those redemptions to occur. The fact that when everyone tries to sell at one, there's aren't enough buyers is a story of the ages. That ETFs will suffer the same consequences in a run is hardly unique to them as financial assets.
Right? I don’t see what the fuss is about. If the argument boils down to “price and liquidity will drop in a sell-off”, well that’s basically a law of nature. I don’t see why index funds are a special case.
I don’t know if this comment will enforce or counter what your saying, but It seems relevant.
There is already a very well known liquidity problem with index funds that track S&P500. Since stocks come and go from this list, index fund managers need to be very careful about how they buy and share these stocks so as not to greatly effect their prices, and cost the fund too much money.
So index funds already have a pretty big effect in markets. I suspect some of the stretegies used for these events will be similar to how managers mitigate short term mass enters and exits in a fund.
My bigger suspicion in general with index fund mass selling though, is that while they are meant to track the market over the mid to long term, they are actually priced seperate from the market, and this seperate pricing means that if there’s a mass sell off, then fund share prices fall, and others have incentive to buy them at a discount. Eventually both index and benchmark prices reach equilibrium. Maybe there’s total havoc in the market in the meantime, but this mechanism will mitigate it to some degree.
I think they talk about it but didn't add up to a rebuttal or challenge of Burry's liquidity point. <
I think they claim is that their is a lot of "dumb money" holding indexed products that are likely to sell all at once when things turn south. By the structure of these funds, their will be large selling pressure on the underlying stocks and a good chunk of them don't have the liquidity to support that pressure. That doesn't mean their will be a metldown, just that prices will tank very hard and a lot of people will lose a lot of money + the economic effects that has I don't understand.
I was hoping the original article would tear that reasoning down, and while it did touch on various mechanisms it didn't give a cohesive thesis as to why that is wrong.
What would said dumb money be holding if not index funds? Single name blue chips? What would the blue chip holders do in the counterfactual world where there is a big downturn?
Perhaps there will be greater correlation between names in a downturn, but then again, factor-based investing might offset some of that.
Liquidity can be a very serious problem for open ended funds and they have to keep cash on had to meet redemptions unlike closed ended funds like investment trusts.
No, it's cash in and cash out. That's the entire point of an ETF, that it's very easy to buy and sell yet still tracking something complex.
Imagine if you'd invested in the Russel 3000 index, which aims at tracking the entire US stock market. If the ETF manager transferred the securities as you exited you'd now have to manually sell 3000 securities across many markets. The ETF has tools and processes for this, you don't. You pay them a fee for the convenience of not having to deal with the underlying assets.
Another example would be something like the iShares gold or iShares silver ETF. They hold precious metals in a secure vault on your behalf, for a fee. You probably don't want a delivery from an armored truck every time you exit the ETF! :)
ETFs are trade on exchanges for cash, but the fund manager is not involved in that. You simply sell your ETF shares to another buyer. Redemptions are something different that only "authorized participants" can do, and as far as I know the ETF share is traded (or actually destroyed) for the underlying securities in that case.
Exactly. The article, starting with the title, is pompous and overconfident. Burry made the unanswered point that in a sell-off large index funds will have to dump their smaller holdings at large discounts. We have never had a market crash with passive holdings this large (and consolidated in a small handful of funds)-- we're in unprecedented times. Burry's point is entirely plausible. And although that it wouldn't immediately cause a problem for investors who don't sell (price is not value), the newly discount-price firms may struggle immensely in terms of raising new capital and financing.
> Burry made the unanswered point that in a sell-off large index funds will have to dump their smaller holdings at large discounts.
First, I think he didn't made that point very clearly. Second, why would they be sold at a larger discount than larger holdings? It is all in proportion - they own less and sell less of the smaller holdings.
(There are issues conceivable where you have a liquidity mismatch (bonds, real estate), but I haven't seen a solid elaboration of that point. It's the good old "people worry about bond market liquidity" meme that Mark Levine pokes fun at in his Bloomberg Column "Money Stuff".)
The idea that we've never had a market correction with passive holdings at current levels is accurate. It also was an accurate statement in 2008, and it also applies to foreigners and mutual funds now, both of which have increased their holdings of equities over time and both of which have substantially greater holdings than index funds.
There are also a lot more liquidity providers than there were in the past, no? I know there are concerns that the high-frequency traders will turn off the computers in a crash, but if the index funds have to sell their small holdings at a deep discount, that’s an opportunity for someone to step in and buy them on the cheap.
I guess there are more legitimate concerns for funds that hold bonds or real estate or other less-liquid assets. But the solution to that is just, don’t put yourself in a position where you have to liquidate those funds in a crunch.
The high frequency traders I know of are market makers. They want to make money by buying and immediately selling stock. Earning a spread, but never having an actual position.
For them, the prospect of holding a stock that is undervalued by 10% for a few days is not good.
Other forms of algorithmic trading might still step in though.
The fundamental problem he seems to be pointing at is that notional replicating portfolios can work like an engineering marvel in good times and become inoperable in bad (liquidity) times.
There were many elements to the CDO crisis -- including bad faith by the rating agencies and a prolonged asset-price mania much beyond this stock-market rally. The simpler metaphor is the emission of vanilla stock options. In principle, a bank is only able to offer options because he has the ability to replicate it and neutralize his risk. But if market conditions diverge from the asset replication model, then boom you get LTCM.
> The fundamental problem he seems to be pointing at is that notional replicating portfolios can work like an engineering marvel in good times and become inoperable in bad (liquidity) times.
He is confused. That was the problem with the synthetic OTC instruments that he used which nearly tripped his winning position because no one wanted to actually trade with them. And even that was largely the case because he was buying not even CDOs but synthetic instruments that were derivatives of the CDOs.
Index funds on the other hand own the shares in companies that publicly trade where the market markers must provide liquidity hence a single trade at +/- 10% will not only move the quote but would trigger other buyers and sellers to decide to want to play.
By symmetry, shouldn't the rapid growth of index funds imply the funds have paid inflated premiums to buy illiquid stocks? I suppose the 'bubble' claim is that they have, but that this is invisible because it has inflated the price of the underlying stocks as well so we still see the index funds priced the same as the underlying stocks.
At least for exchange-traded funds, it would seem that you don't have to actually destroy units of the ETF in the case of a sell-off. The ETF units would just sell at lower prices, just like when there is a 'sell off' of any stock - there are always equal numbers of buyers and sellers, you don't destroy units, you just move the price lower.
With index funds where you have an account directly with vanguard or whoever instead of buying units on an exchange, I'm not sure how it works in a sell-off. Perhaps they sell shares in the individual stocks, or perhaps they just try to sell off your shares bundled together by issuing more ETF units. I don't know what they do, but it seems like there are a bunch of options that should mean they don't have to sell off illiquid stocks on command.
I'm not sure. Happy to be enlightened. As much as I think about it, my intuition seems to consistently say that it's impossible for index funds to be broken in any meaningful way that's any different from the market itself or some sector thereof being in a bubble.
And ignores the current example of the neil woodford equity income fund.
This is a smaller example the liquidity problem that Mr Burry was making - it would much worse if a market crash did this to the realy realy big index funds.
> if the indexs see a sell off they won't find the liquidity in the market to cash out their positions and will drive the market down
When investors sell that amount, it doesn't matter whether they hold the underlying assets directly, or via index funds or ETFs, or via actively managed funds. The market will go down. So, which part of the problem is uniquely due to index funds?
Burry hasn't made that point very clear.
There might be issues with (liquid) index funds that give exposure to inherently less liquid assets, such as bonds or real estate. There might also be issues with index funds that do not hold the assets themselves, but replicate the exposure synthetically by entering a swap with a third party, giving rise to tracking error, counterparts credit risk, etc.
However, as I said, Burry hasn't enunciated these concerns very cogently (at least in the extracts quoted by Bloomberg). This article here does nothing to address those concerns.
They aren't required to sell, unless fund-holders are selling their ETFs.
If those fund-holders were owning the stocks directly, instead of ETFs... Those same fund-holders would be... Selling their stocks. Causing the exact same downward price pressures.
If I sell my ETF, the AP buys it from me, and gets to redeem it for a basket of shares of fixed proportion.
Suppose stock X gets 1% in that basket. The issue is if stock X happens to be very illiquid, the APs selling stock X could drive down the price.
In a non ETF, managers could decide to relatively slow down the sale of X, to prevent crashing the price. However, in an index fund the mechanism dictates all stocks are sold in the same proportion.
An evil mirror universe twin of you, instead of owning an ETF, owns a bunch of shares of APPL, a bunch of shares of GOOGL, a bunch of shares of stock X.
If you are panicked, and are selling your ETF, your evil twin is panicked, and selling all their stocks.
This causes the exact same downwards pressure on the market.
I don't buy an ETF because I want someone to do financial malarkey with my money. I buy it because I want to own stocks, and I can't be assed to deal with my own brokerage account. Besides the convenience aspect, there is zero difference between the two.
Everyone thinks they will be smart about their panic-selling when a market crash hits, but the reality is, most of them won't be... And the decision you should be making is not when to sell, but 'how much to buy'.
The argument is that the automation at scale that ETFs bring to the table changes the game qualitatively. How many people would really buy and sell thousands of individual stocks in a correlated fashion if this infrastructure didn’t exist?
No, they'd have a dozen individual stocks that they would own, and when you combine fifty million people, each owning a dozen individual stocks, you'd get a pretty accurate proxy for the S&P 500.
They'd still follow the same herd mentality that they would, had they owned ETFs.
Yes, but strategies change in a crash. It's possible no one learned from the 2015 flash crash, but I bet a lot of smart funds out there are ready for one. If a dumb AP is going to put out a crazy price someone is going to be there to snap it up.
But people would see that the best bid is too low, so they would hold that part of their portfolio. (Because there's no point in realizing that huge loss.)
Just the fact that the author chose to call Michael Burry's well thought out premise "silly" - tells you most of what you need to know about what is being pitched in the article. I've never seen Burry say anything that qualified as silly, even when a premise of his doesn't play out as dramatically as predicted. Silly is entirely contrary to his personality and analysis, it's attempting to lead the reader and argue via ridicule (where did we see that before?).
This is the way it felt to me, too. The author seems to be cherry picking some incomplete statements from Burry's article and tries to make them sound ridiculous, and sometimes resort to adjectives rather than arguments.
I am not a specialist and would love to read an informed analysis and counters to Burry's article. I was hoping that this is what the author tried (as the title suggests), but to me he fell far short of that goal. My 2c.
>* if the indexs see a sell off they won't find the liquidity in the market to cash out their positions and will drive the market down.*
What is unique about no liquidity during a sell-off driving markets down? It's the definition of a sell-off. The fact there's no liquidity is what drives down the market in every sell-off.
It's important to distinguish market cap based indexes and other asset class indexes. Small and micro-caps are notoriously hard to trade but mega-caps typically have much higher liquidity. There is a much higher chance of a micro-cap passive fund having a liquidity problem then a market cap index fund.
That is fundamentally how markets work. If everyone sells and no one buys then prices are going down. Whether you are using an active or passive fund or pick stocks yourself doesn't matter.
I wonder what the breakdown is within the index ETFs on what money is in 401ks, Roth, institutional investor, etc. If a big portiton of it is retirement accounts those aren't moving much anyways.
Umm, if there's a stock market crash, triggering investors to panic-sell their shares, what difference does it make that I'm selling off my Vanguard ETF, or my personal, non-ETF stock holdings?
I'm still driving the price down, causing other holdouts to sell off, driving the price further down. It's the definition of a market crash.
The people using index funds generally don't think about their portfolios—which is the whole point of them. It's probably the cocaine-fueled traders that are causing all the ruckus.
I believe index funds are a good investment strategy, but at the same time we shouldn’t get defensive when people criticize them, and call a thoughtful critique “silly”. In fact I would like to hear more intelligent criticism of index funds, and thoughts around preparing for a hypothetical world in which index funds were overrated, not less.
How might we notice that index funds were becoming overrated? Perhaps the rise of hedge funds which consistently outperformed index funds? Is that happening?
What should we do if index funds became overrated? Move our money into a medium-size number of stocks, like 30 of them, to essentially do our own index selection? Or moving out of stocks entirely?
Thinking about questions like this without attacking criticism as “silly” is IMO a better way to minimize risk.
> We’re just seeing a shift from closet indexing to ETFs and other index funds en masse now that investors have wisened up.
So active managers are copying the indexes.
> Index fund investors are simply buying what the active investors have laid out for them.
But indexes buy what the active managers pick.
The author appears to be confused as to who is the tail and who is the dog. Maybe this is resolved by saying some active managers do price discovery, but most are just copycats. It's not clear though.
For the record I think index funds are still the best choice for a retail investor, and the article is mostly true. Namely
> Many of the worries about indexing really boil down to career risk in the asset management space.
Some of the arguments seem to be hasty and not well presented though.
As I read it, the word bubble in the Burry interview was really just used for clickbait purposes - his argument wasn't so much that index funds are overvalued, it was that there's opportunity in small caps because they're underrepresented in index funds, and everyone else is investing in index funds.
I don't think so (although bubble is clearly a loaded term). As I understand it, the other part of Burry's argument is that the passive funds distort the market such that if there's a rush for the door there wouldn't be sufficient liquidity to prevent a crash.
The Bloomberg article mixed Bury's words and the author's words quite a bit, and I'm beginning to wonder if the whole reason we're having this discussion is because some important nuance was lost.
It's hard to see why Mom and Pop buy and hold index investors should care about the liquidity risk Bury talks about...market cap weighted funds will be fine in the long run because the ratio of each underlying stock to a fund share will be constant through the temporary price fluctuations...so no money is lost if the price crashes and then comes back to the same sport shortly after.
Perhaps there are other market participants who are leveraged and would find themselves insolvent if indexes cause a liquidity problem? I just don't see how the fund investors themselves would be hurt if underlying stock prices went out of whack for an afternoon.
I agree with your views, but anecdotally, my worry is about how many of those Mom and Pop investors bought the index funds specifically because the index funds have recently performed well; and of that faction, how much of the capital allocated to index funds was pulled from other sources, causing those sources to fall in value?
The data would also support that on a dollar-weighted basis, most index fund investors are not really buying-and-holding:
"Turnover rates for two of the most popular ETFs are higher than 3500%(!), an average holding period of about a week. That is dozens of times greater than the trading liquidity of even its most liquid constituents"
> his argument wasn't so much that index funds are overvalued, it was that there's opportunity in small caps because they're underrepresented in index funds, and everyone else is investing in index funds.
Which index fund though? If you're talking about VOO, which follows the S&P500, maybe. If you're talking about VTI (CRSP US Total Market Index), probably less so.
Well inasmuch as he's talking generally about index funds and where money is going, he's going to be talking about the major ones, like those that track the S&P.
The dig at "Active Management" feels like it detracts from the article, but I guess they're playing a bit to the audience.
What I found a little more concerning is their glossing over of the liquidity risks. If everyone wants to sell an index, then at some point that index needs to liquidate shares (proportionally). Those shares won't have uniform demand, which is going to cause both price fluctuations (drops) which affect the value of the index. The fun part here too is that this can play some havoc with market-cap weighted indexes, which now need to adjust their holding %'s.
No they don't. Let's suppose we have A Corp and B Corp both 50٪ of the total market and A Corps price and hence market cap falls by 50٪, making it 33٪ of the total market. The holdings of a fund haven't changed but the exposure still equals the market.
He is saying when people exit and index sells all their stocks equal to current market cap rankings that the opposite side of trade buy demand for all those won’t be equal. Bad stocks may go down further than solid companies. A shift in value vs growth preferences caused by the downturn itself could be the cause of that. The entire index and all holdings would then HAVE to readjust for this discrepancy and lead to more forced selling of bad stocks and buying of solid companies creating more liquidity crisis.
His point about the increase in volume leading to price discovery is laughable. More algos than ever are trading with each other on the subsecond scale but that means nothing for long term equity values. With the rise of index tracking there are fewer than ever investors actively positioning themselves against a standard indexed allocation by picking good and selling bad stocks. Indexing is riding the boat buying everything in equal components due to market cap weight.
Does this guy not see the contradictions in his own argument? He simultaneously believes that active funds are doing a fine job of price discovery AND that managers at active funds who deviate too much from their (passive) benchmark are likely to be fired.
Also he jumps around Burry's arguments by focusing on liquidity and in AAPL and FB. Burry's whole point is about less liquid components at the bottom of indices which are getting dragged upward by a lack of price discovery and inclusion in widespread passive funds. Since they're market-cap weighted, this would have a cyclical component, more passive purchases -> higher market cap -> higher weighting in passive indices -> more passive purchases. This would result in another cyclical component where that cycle causes: passive fund outperformance -> increased investing in passive funds -> passive fund outperformance.
Then in an event where people start liquidating there is no one there to purchase those stocks and they've been dramatically overvalued anyways so their price gets crushed. This is specifically why Burry likes small cap active.
If you pay attention to finance discussion on this board then you've definitely heard the phrase: “The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.” The argument here is that irrationality has persisted long enough to crush most 'rational' price discoverers.
>Do you know what didn’t cause the Great Depression or Japan stock market crash or 1987 crash or 1973-74 bear market? Index funds. Index funds also weren’t around for the South Sea bubble in the 1700s. Do you know what did cause these bubbles and subsequent crashes? Human nature.
Imagine doing this but replacing 'index funds' with mortgage CDOs.
Look I'm not even saying Burry is right but the absolute inability of the finance commentariat to actually address what he's saying is giving him more credence.
I believe this is related to the rise in buybacks where price fundamentals no longer matter, only goal for companies is to get the largest market cap as possible ignoring long term risks in order to attract an increasing flow of passive money being poured into the markets.
If an index selloff could cause a drop in underlying stock price, wouldn't we see this effect when stocks are relegated from various indexes? Does this effect exist?
Reminder: "index funds" are also managed by humans. For example, all stocks in the S&P 500 are chosen by Standard & Poors. Stocks are added and removed as they see fit based on various criteria such as profitability, float, market cap, &c. The only things that I can see that truly differentiate S&P from other active managers are that they
(a) have very little skin in the game.
(b) they get to make decisions about what other people have to do with their money
(c) they tend to recommend more stocks with less turnover than typical active managers
(d) they tell the public ahead of time what will be bought or sold, so traders get to buy/sell ahead of time
(e) their actions are relatively predictable, thanks to a long history of sticking to their stated goals.
The S&P 500 is basically a group of largest established 500 market cap stocks traded in the US proportioned to market cap. There is no active management determining price and weights here.
There are certain criteria, see [1] or [2] for a summary. They need to be publicly traded for sufficient time, have sufficient free float, be profitable, etc.
Yep. So, you don't just own the top 500 stocks by market cap. You own a set of stocks that resemble that idea, but are in fact still choices made by S&P. Also notice that stocks don't immediately get dropped when they fall below that criteria; there's a buffer for how bad they have to get to be dropped. Additionally, the rules governing these choices are free to change at any time. For example, whether stocks with split voting shares should qualify is still a discussion.
Let's also not forget Hacker News's favorite law: Goodhart's Law. The S&P has performed wonderfully well when it was observed as an index. But now that it's a target, the world will change around it.
It’s a huge stretch to say the S&P 500 isn’t the current top 500 stocks by market cap just because they don’t include several recent IPOs and have discretion to exclude stocks based on potential stock manipulation. These are very rare cases that have little affect on the overall index. In time (not instantly) they add large established companies. Proportions are always weighted directly to market cap percentage. They’re not weighing some stocks higher than others like how an active manager would allocate.
Agree “beating the index” is quite a joke since that is the benchmark for fund performance and so much money is passive invested now. Matching the index performance is saying “our fund equities have appreciated on equal basis to how all others have”.
I think this idea of an index fund bubble makes a lot of sense in terms of metrics like economic efficiency. Investors are paying more money to buy stocks which provide less economic value per dollar invested... but low productivity and economic inefficiency doesn't mean low profits.
Indexed companies often have monopolies in their fields and can derive profits from rent seeking activities and lobbying for beneficial regulations so they don't need to be efficient in order to derive profits.
I don't buy the liquidity argument. Their mere existence creates liquidity. Two sides to every trade. Index fund "sell offs" will likely go to buyers of the same index fund shares but at a lower price.
Apple alone has $50 billion in cash that will flow into Vanguard if index funds hit a 50% plunge. Same with Buffet. Index funds may be bubble priced, but they don't suffer from a liquidity issue.
That is only true in a liquid market. I remember plenty of times in 2008 when some stocks went "no bid" and the price plummeted until circuit breakers cut in. Some very blue chip companies got hammered hard back then.
That's the whole concept of why stock traders need to beware the "crowded exit"--if everyone is trying to sell a the same time, the little guy is going to be holding the bag and can't get a fill on his order.
Coincidentally, this is when high frequency trading became lucrative.
Burry highlighted two simple truths of financial markets: people will buy shit they don't understand, and people who make financial products will try to earn a liquidity premium by transforming something illiquid to something liquid (which always blows up).
Most people (who I have met) who own passives have no idea what they are buying but are sure that buying passives makes them very smart. This blows up every time.
I also don't think Burry was making some bombastic claim about 100% of ETFs causing the end of civilisation. He was making a limited, reasonable claim about trends in markets. Yes, he generalised but, in my estimation, he has earned that right.
Simply, going from 0 to $300m+ earns you that right. Very few people have achieved that. Very few people have done it in the way he did (taking real risk). The views of a triggered financial adviser leeching off his clients don't hold as much weight (and shows all the self-awareness of a financial adviser to write a post implying they should).
I hate this kind of smart-ass top-level "ITT" comment that paints an entire discussion happening besides it with broad strokes.
If only one person does this I can call him names and downvote him. If there are two camps and both camps do this, people tribalize and everything goes meta. Then no further actual discussion can take place.
If you think it is "smart-ass", you don't understand what I am saying (or, more probably, what Burry is saying).
There are no "camps" here. The OP is trying to create a tribe (passive investors are cultish, so this is a very odd comment...I will assume an honest mistake) but that makes no sense on this topic (unless you are selling something, which he is).
The meta of my point is: people try this discussion over and over, it is always wrong, some things in finance are universal (because they have been happening for literally three hundred years).
What you appear to have missed is the part where I said: Burry is not making a "bombastic claim" about what will happen 100% of the time. In my experience, most people think this is what investing is about (the OP is certainly an example). It isn't. I am not making a bombastic claim.
The observation is, again, that: you have a lot of unsophisticated buyers and some non-zero amount of these products are about liquidity transformation. You can have a debate about this all you want but it isn't interesting or engaging to anyone but people who are unsophisticated (not 100% true in this case, Asness is a notable exception but he was an academic and it is mostly academics who take an interest).
My interest is limited to the fact that: it is astonishing how often this happens, and equally astonishing how fervently people will deny that it is happening again (although they are usually new converts).
Thanks for this -- your comment above about "transforming something illiquid to something liquid" and dcolkitt's post above explaining the possible consequences when indexed ETFs are substantially more liquid than many of the underlying securities really helped me understand the crux of Burry's argument. Are you aware of any academics that are studying this issue or modeling the risks?
Well, I suppose the literature around the liquidity premium relates to this topic. But liquidity is fairly simple (and drives the market cycle): liquidity is worthless in booms, and very valuable in busts.
But something to note here too: most measures of historical returns do not look at liquidity either. I am in the UK, and I know there is research (I can't find it atm) showing that before 1970s, trading costs were significant. Historical returns rarely reflect that. Nor do they reflect the fact that most people before 1970 probably couldn't own any asset other than govt bonds (or that most banks were forced to own them too).
So I would say the issues with indexes are two-fold. First, they will fail if they are built on illiquid securities (recent example here is also Neil Woodford's implosion). Second, they are often predicated on historical returns that are, in any non-academic/practical sense, fictional.
Another reply is Horizon Kinetics...apart from GMO, they are the only investment manager whose letters I actually read. And on ETFs, they have written a lot.
My beef is with your form (starting a meta comment thread to shit on the ongoing discussion rather than engaging with the discussion). I actually agree very closely with your views.
Again, I did engage with the discussion. You just seem to think it is irrelevant.
I am actively disinterested in all the nonsense around population share of active/passive or whatever the Twitterati are bleating about. I have seen enough of these situations to just not care anymore about anything other than the two things I mentioned.
"Most people (who I have met) who own passives have no idea what they are buying but are sure that buying passives makes them very smart. This blows up every time."
I can't say about the first part, but economically speaking, they are very smart. The alternatives are higher fees and lower results.
"Simply, going from 0 to $300m+ earns you that right. Very few people have achieved that."
You mean the guy who explicitly wants to raise the price of small caps (which conveniently have low volumes)?
I think someday we will think that index funds were pernicious but we don't understand entirely why yet.
If you believe, for instance, that there is an "S&P 500" bubble then there is difficulty turning that into an investable thesis. The S&P 500 is about 80% of the valuation of the stock market. If the S&P 500 pops, then relatively the other 20% of the market will go up, but how much can it go up?
The most harmful effect we know now of the passive funds is that they have a strong incentive (when they vote their shares) to discourage competition. If they own both AT&T and Verizon they would rather both of these be profitable at the expense of consumers rather than work hard to gain market share for one or the other.
> Yes, index investors are free riders, but this is the way most markets work. We don’t go to the grocery store to bid on prices of oranges against one another to set an equilibrium. The market does that for us.
Actually, our behavior does shape the price of oranges. If we go to the store and they're less expensive, then we are more likely to buy them. The analogy breaks down because he's comparing indexes and oranges, not stock indexes and food indexes. Imagine if 14% of people went to the grocery, picked up a sack of pre-selected items that were best sellers last week -- all in the name of efficiency and reducing overhead. That would be quite weird indeed, and some people would point out that if enough people did this it would create market inefficiencies and potentially cause a glut or crash of certain food prices.
Sure, when I buy a crate of wine, or a box of chocolates.
Stretching the analogy somewhat but I think the point still stands that it doesn't require the entire market to actively invest to keep everything priced very close to the same price they would be if index funds didn't exist.
We bid on a basket of groceries by choosing a store to shop at though. The price of oranges is mostly immaterial when compared to the greater pricing of the collection of goods purchased in a single trip. This is why loss leaders make sense. They entice you in w/ a distorted price and then recoup the loss across your basket.
> * We bid on a basket of groceries by choosing a store to shop at though*
I'm not sure I agree with this. Most grocery stores stock the same food, so it's not as if going to Lucky instead of Safeway shapes what you can/will get. You're right that if you go for particular sale items, you're more likely to get those. But does that have a basket-level impact? I'm not sure it does. Also, consider that when you go to a grocery store, you probably purchase about .05% of the items they sell. It's not like we go to Safeway and buy most of the things they sell there.
As others have noted, there's a lot here that isn't relevant to Burry's argument, but this seems like the key rebuttal to me:
Active funds literally own the market. When you buy an index fund of the total stock market, you are literally buying the stock market in proportion to the shares held by all active investors. If you sum up the collective holdings of active managers, what you basically get is a market-cap-weighted index. Index fund investors are simply buying what the active investors have laid out for them.
I don't have the knowledge to evaluate this statement, but to me, it undermines Burry's point that passive investing distorts prices.
And this bit that he quotes from someone else expands on the point:
The use of price signals by those who played no role in setting them may be capitalism’s most important feature. That most of us and most of our dollars don’t have to pick stocks, or to price air conditioners, is a great benefit and taking advantage of it makes us honest smart capitalists, not commissars.
As I understand it, Burry's argument is that index funds distort prices because capital is being allocated in an automated and uniform way, instead of being allocated according to the expertise of a diverse, success-weighted group of investors who are motivated to make intelligent and informed decisions. At some point the difference between the index-fund-driven prices and the "true" prices according to informed opinion will become obvious, and investors will attempt to flee index funds, popping the bubble. The rebuttal in this argument is that active investors are still controlling the market because index funds mirror their activity. We will never reach a state where people will rush to "escape" from the index funds to actively managed funds, because index funds will always approximate the aggregate opinion of the actively managed funds.
This accords with my naive idea of how index funds work, but I don't know if they actually do work that way, so I can't evaluate the soundness of either argument.
> Index fund investors are simply buying what the active investors have laid out for them.
That works until it doesn't. If passive becomes big enough, the indices themselves will be the ones steering the ship. The active managers won't be significant enough to sway the indices.
I heard this analogy on a podcast (I think it was Invest Like the Best): Indices are like a drunk person, and active managers are like the sober friend guiding the drunk home. But if the drunk becomes 10x the size of the sober friend, the friend is no longer strong enough to be a guide.
If passive funds get big enough to dwarf active management, they eventually will be the ones steering the market, and active investors will be noise at that point. In that scenario, I'm not sure what happens, but it seems that indexing would become more like a Ponsi scheme.
As I understand it, the index funds aren't drunk and aimless, forced in a certain direction as a side effect of the trades of active investors. They are intentionally and methodically following the active investors.
This "evil zombie index fund" trope seems to imply that index managers just continue to blindly buy the stocks in the index regardless of events, falsely inflating the value of companies. If a company is unable to generate cashflow from its underlying business, this will quickly become evident because it will be unable to pay its creditors and employees. It could take advantage of its "inflated value" by issuing shares to generate cash, but this would then obviously begin diluting the stock and cause the price to fall, the "zombie indexes" wouldn't simply continue to price it at a constant value. I.e. price discovery will happen, just perhaps not as quickly as an active analyst monitoring the stock would do it.
> When an index fund investor sells, they’re technically selling their holdings in direct proportion to their weighting in the index. So there is literally no market impact.
Correct me if I’m wrong but isn’t there a well known price premium for stocks included in major index funds? As I understand it, the most popular indexes target a few companies, thus index funds that track them funnel a disproportionate volume of demand to those companies causing a price premium.
It’s stands to reason that if a sudden outflow of money from index funds occurred, that price premium would swing the equal and opposite direction.
>isn’t there a well known price premium for stocks included in major index funds?
Maybe the premium is for being in the index, which the index fund dutifully reacts to. There are only 100 places in the FTSE100 so it is seen as significant. The current news about a major UK high street retailer is that it dropped out of this index, implying it's the beginning of its end. https://www.google.com/search?q=marks+and+spencers&tbm=nws
I've asked this question before and consistently failed to get a clear answer - why is there any deviation between index fund weighting and market cap?
To some extent, I'm sure the definition of a "public" company comes into play. Not all stocks are traded in all exchanges, so you could include stocks only listed on one exchange.
Then there's the practice of many index funds picking the top N stocks by market cap. This seems like a backwards practice to me. The small cap stocks should be limited in weight by... their small market cap.
Then there are other hairy factors. Even out of the stocks in an index, it seems that weight does not correspond to capitalization. The reason seems to be some historical drivel. While I can understand that is the way it is, I fail to understand why it should be that way.
Why should an equities index fund be anything other than public companies proportional to their size? If people prefer large cap or small cap, then those variations should be offered as special boutique products. But it seems that we have it backwards, where the default offering is based on arbitrary non-proportional weights, and with a cutoff restricting it to large cap.
>The small cap stocks should be limited in weight by... their small market cap.
A lot of index funds include small caps nowadays. Not all of them because it's more difficult to track 4000 versus 500 stocks. Also the more popular indexes have usually been around for a long time and have fewer constituents.
>it seems that weight does not correspond to capitalization
Pretty much all index funds invest in the public float and it makes sense:
> The value of the Dow is not a weighted arithmetic mean[5] and does not represent its component companies' market capitalization, but rather the sum of the price of one share of stock for each component company. The sum is corrected by a factor which changes whenever one of the component stocks has a stock split or stock dividend, so as to generate a consistent value for the index.[6]. It is not an accurate representation of the US market or total market.[7][8][9]
It mentions "consistent value", but that's over time. You can be misrepresented in weightings but still consistent over time.
Basing the weightings on the stock price sounds royally stupid... if I'm even reading that correctly. But maybe this insanity is just the DOW?
It's also the first one I grab for, because it's the first one that media reports on.
Why shouldn't there be lots of kinds of indexes? There are certainly ones like you describe. In practice it just doesn't matter, the large companies are so much larger that adding even thousands of tiny companies doesn't move the needle.
VTI is Vanguard's total stock market ETF which works like what you suggest. It has 3,606 stocks, year-to-date it's up 18.82%. Compare that to Vanguard's S&P 500 ETF VOO which is up 19.03%.
When a company hits its stride and is large enough to really make it difference it will join the S&P 500. I guess if there were a lot more than 500 companies that you should own there would be a problem, but we're not there currently.
If you want exposure to small caps it's much more efficient to own an index of small caps. Their performance has seriously lagged in recent times though, so just owning VOO has been the way to go for a long time.
IMO the real issue is amount of cash available for investment and the lack of investable assets[1].
If i were king for a day I'd legislate a low bar that required the equities to be listed so that both the insiders cannot be barred from liquidity and so that the investing public can access those parts of the economy.
I believe what’s missing from the recent analyses of beta/index investing is that alpha continues to lag when in theory stock pickers should be able to find more mispriced assets. Although volatility around earnings (which serve as valuation reset) has generally increased. Unprecedented bull market and 3/4 of investable wealth now pooling into passives funds simply cannot be overcome. What it does provide is significantly asymmetrical opportunities shorting single stocks.
It doesn't seem silly at all. I agree with Michael Burry; I think passive investing is a bubble -- by definition. If you spent $10 million to make a cafe in your small hometown, you would never get that money back for the obvious reason that you could simply never sell that much coffee. The fundamentals aren't there.
So if you invest in "all coffee shops" or "all shops in my hometown", you're not looking at fundamentals, you're investing to invest. And, by definition, (assuming all shops are priced correctly) you're artificially inflating.
If someone invests across a group of stocks, it's because "the market always goes up over time." And if enough people believe that then it can be true for a very, very long period. But eventually it becomes your $10 million coffee shop. It's a bubble. And even a bubble that lasts decades will eventually pop.
There are always active investors who could take advantage of this valuation mismatch and bet for/against specific companies that they think are undervalued/overvalued and make money. Eventually this valuation mismatch would show up in their P/L statement and balance sheet. Passive investing freeloads on active investors - in a sense. That's all it is and I for one think it's great.
Investing in a whole sector isn’t any less of an investment. You still have to believe in coffee as something that will return in the long time. You’re just trading risk for softer returns than if you were to take a gamble on one specific shop.
I'm a little confused about the point about index funds being a small percentage of assets, when there are constantly articles like "Passive investing automatically tracking indexes now controls nearly half the US stock market."
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/03/19/passive-investing-now-contro...
His graph shows an arrow pointed at the small sliver on ETFs, but that isn't necessarily the same as passive investing which would include a lot of mutual funds.
In these times I'm looking at more conservative "passive investments" such as interest bearing accounts, FDIC insured. With Twitter posts resulting in large swings in the market, I declare "market manipulation" by those with large numbers of followers.
"When an index fund investor sells, they’re technically selling their holdings in direct proportion to their weighting in the index. So there is literally no market impact."
Have to take the rest of the article with several grains of salt after reading this. Even if the index was spread against all stocks it would have an impact. It implies that you can only move money around the market, not take it out of the market altogether.
199 comments
[ 2.3 ms ] story [ 274 ms ] threadThis article seems to focus on all of the upsides of indexing, which are all true. However, those upsides don't negate the risk that is being pointed to.
"who wouldn't?" People who are leveraged?
"It's never the case that x٪ of the market can exit at once regardless of how it is owned." You may not have heard it. But this is called a stock market crash. One is expected soon. So enjoy the ride and keep your money dry that you can "throw it in"
What is special about an ETF, that makes this situation any worse?
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/markets/101415/4-best-...
In any crisis, the people who get really screwed are those who decide they have to sell, at any price. Instant liquidity - by whichever route - gets really expensive. An actively managed fund can at least decide which assets to sell to meet redemptions, holding those it thinks are undervalued at the moment. Whereas an index fund is effectively exposed to a crisis anywhere in the market.
This article does mention it, but pretty briefly.
It'd be interesting to hear from people more familiar with the details of how all this works... perhaps there are some in the initial thread, but I haven't had time to skim it all: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20877700
Further, if there is a stampede for the exits, there still have to be buyers on the other side of the sellers. Those buyers will undoubtably include active managers along with those indexers with different time horizons and/or braver constitutions. Both will likely be rewarded for their patience.
That is a key point in the debate. I do not see that above is necessarily true. Say a price of a low volume stock X is driven down below fundamentals just because index funds have to sell 1% of holdings and cannot find enough buyers for X. While price of X might be irrational fund managers might not be able to act on it because there would be a worry that it may go lower still if selling extends.
Could next round get X removed from index? delisted? "The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent" is not an empty worry. My 2c.
So what? Let the weak long positions panic and sell at the bottom. Everyone else gets a few years of discount prices to buy. The hardest hit will be those who are leveraged and arguably deserve to get hosed for taking that much risk.
If you don’t have to meet a margin call, you can ride out a crisis; if you’ve got cash in reserve, you can profit from it.
Doing that during a crisis hurts. This risk diminishes the value of investments as a safety cushion.
[0] https://advisors.vanguard.com/iippdf/pdfs/FS540.pdf
In all of those scenarios you should not be in stocks/equities in the first place. If there is a possibility of needing cash with-in the next 5 years, that money should be in either bonds or term deposits.
One's downpayment, first/next few retirement years' income, and emergency fund(s) should not be in equities.
Even if one of the underlying stocks becomes illiquid, a big enough price divergence on all of the other liquid stocks would make it profitable to eat the loss or hold the illiquid ones (risky, but remember, there are many authorized participants competing with each other so if there is some way to make an easy arbitrage profit, they will find a way). You'd basically need the entire market to become illiquid.
[0]: https://www.investopedia.com/terms/a/authorizedparticipant.a...
Which came dramatically close to happening in 2008, see, e.g. [0].
[0] http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~sternfin/pschnabl/kacperczyk_sch...
Yes. It has happened before.
Also, another thing to keep in mind is that this only affects people who are trying to sell at the bottom. Buy and hold investors care little for liquidity issues during a crash.
Yes. Active managers can choose what to sell based on prevailing market conditions. Index funds must sell across the board. That could involve getting hosed on names in a short-term squeeze.
> this only affects people who are trying to sell at the bottom
There are lots of index funds. For a broad-market fund, you're probably right--a patient investor can ride out the bloodshed. For leveraged or specialized funds, on the other hand, a rout could permanently impair the portfolio.
Equity market collapses, furthermore, have a habit of transmitting into the real economy. A sustained downturn could impair funding conditions, which in turn could affect the fundamental characteristics of a portfolio.
The fund may temporarily depart from its normal investment policies and strategies when doing so is believed to be in the fund’s best interest. ... Vanguard funds can postpone payment of redemption proceeds for up to seven calendar days.
And a lot of index fund investors are buy-and-hold so it's unclear if a recession would even cause a liquidity / redemption crisis.
But index funds themselves aren't. They have to sell stock when units are destroyed and vice versa. In addition to other factors, this can result in weird tax effects as well as tracking error to the index.
1) To track the actual index, index funds must continually rebalance their portfolio. In a liquidity pause they may not be able to do this, thereby becoming a non-index fund. Actively managed funds have the portfolio they have -- unless they're defrauding the public somehow. An index fund that becomes a non-index fund would fall in this latter category.
2) The index (not the funds) is assumed to reflect all the information that can be used to make some money by arbitrage. This process is referred as "price discovery". But in a liquidity pause, price discovery grinds to a halt. Actively managed funds have their own idea of what are the fundamental prices beyond what the public leaderboard says; their price discovery is not beholden to the existence of a liquidity market. Actually -- if the market goes for years with very low liquidity, it becomes more likely that people who, say, are shorting Herbalife for fundamental reasons, have more knowledge than the index. In this way the index is like an AI that can become starved for data.
If the index instruments have a lot more liquidity than the underlying names, then that means they won't be able to gracefully absorb the liquidity shocks from an unwind in the index.
Here's some back of the envelope calculations. Between SPY, IVV, and VOO alone, there's $500 billion in S&P 500 index ETFs. Consider if an unwind event leads to 20% of index assets being redeemed in a single day. That's $100 billion from the above ETFs alone.
Now consider a typical thinly traded single-name stock like Chubb Limited (symbol CB). CB makes up 0.3% of the S&P 500 by weight. So in the hypothetical scenario above, the APs would have to collectively sell $300 million worth of CB in a single day. Chubb's entire ADV is only $238 million.
Trying to sell more than 100% of a stock's ADV in a single day is guaranteed to produce huge market impact. The current liquidity providers in CB almost certainly cannot absorb that amount of trading volume all in one direction. In that scenario, Chubb's stock might fall by 20%, for something that had nothing to do with the company itself.
I think the overall point is that a lot of single-name stocks nowadays don't really have much of an individual market. Names like TSLA, FB or TEVA definitely have a robust market with a lot of traders still focused on company specifics. But a lot of the more boring, lower volatility, mid-cap stocks (like CB) mostly just trade along with the index nowadays. If there are technicals related to index capital flows, stocks like that are going to get taken for a ride.
[1] https://www.etf.com/channels/sp-500-etfs [2] https://www.slickcharts.com/sp500 [3] https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/CB?p=CB
This is under the assumption that there will be capital available to flow, if there isn't because of a truly bad scenario, yes it's a downward spiral, but it will take quite an event to get us to that point.
IE if a smart person with a lot of money think there is no "smart money" left, wouldn't (s)he just start their own smart money hedge fund to provide / do this?
If nobody is left to do thing X AND thing X is basically guaranteed profit, isn't it natural for people to step in and do thing X?
Typically the opportunists here would be stat-arb hedge funds. They bread and butter of their strategy is to isolate the non-explainable ("idiosyncratic") movement in single name stocks, then bet on that factor mean-reverting.
E.g. if Microsoft goes down 0.5%, but the market's up 1%, and the tech stocks are up 1.2%, and various other factors that move Microsoft don't explain it being down. Then they'll bet that the movement is driven by random noise, and buy Microsoft, betting that it will re-converge with where it's expected to be. They'll also use various techniques to isolate whether idiosyncratic movements are likely driven by company specific factors or market noise. Like NLP on a newsfeed to look to see if there are any breaking stories, or tracking recent analyst revisions on the stock.
Suffice to say that stat-arb funds in this day and age are very very good at this. In a liquidity unwind event, the signals stat-arb traders use would absolutely be lighting up. The biggest question would be whether stat-arb funds in aggregate have enough capital to counter the absolutely humongous flows that a potential index fund unwinding would release.
Another complicating wrinkle is that most stat-arb desks are no longer independent hedge funds, but units within larger multi-strategy funds (like Two Sigma or Millennium). There's good and bad. The good is that if there's all of a sudden massive opportunity the multi-strat fund can quickly reallocate more capital to the stat-arb desk.
The bad part is that stat-arb desks may be unwound due to arbitrary contagion in other parts of the market. If the multi-strat fund sees a big loss in another unit, it may pull capital from the stat-arb desk to meet margin calls or redemptions. For example this happened in August 2007 [0]. The subprime mortgage market blew up, then all of a sudden a bunch of esoteric stocks started behaving crazy for the next weeks. And that was largely because multistrat funds were pulling capital to meet margin calls on their mortgage portfolio.
[0] http://web.mit.edu/Alo/www/Papers/august07.pdf
"i'm supposed to sell 500m of this small stock but i only got to sell 300m before it was frozen out...now my basket of holdings is slightly off from the actual index...hopefully i can rectify it tomorrow..."
Arguably, after the crash they might be able to take advantage of the opportunity. If they concentrate into the stocks with the biggest price displacements, then as those stocks return to normal, they may make up some or all of their initial losses. Passive indexers can't do this, because they don't have the mandate to deviate from their pre-defined allocations.
But I think the broader issue is that excessive amounts of indexing present potential systematic risks for everybody. Burry's hypothesis is more relevant for policymakers than it is for investors.
As an individual, long-term buy-and-hold investor, low-cost index funds are without question the best option for investing. The problem is behavior that's rational on an individual level, may produce irrational results at the collective level.
I'm asking for a comparison of two scenariors. In the index fund scenario, we're in the world where index funds represent a large and growing chunk of the market. In the active funds scenario, index funds aren't a thing. Why is it that in the active funds scenario, what you're describing in the previous post doesn't happen? Why doesn't a 20% marketwide downturn cause chaos in these smaller stocks? Is it because there would be higher volumes if those stocks were held by active funds? Or because the active funds wouldn't hold stocks like that?
Basically, I'm asking for a comparison of the scenario you described with what happens in a no-index world, because I can't quite think through the difference myself.
Yes in theory the manager can try to alter the composition of the fund by selling the stocks that are still going strong. But why would they? That just exposes them to known hazards even more.
So, probably the active funds will be the first ones to drop the small stocks first in a crash.
First as mentioned before, active investors have discretion. There's strong reason to believe that as the sell-off's happening that they'd move into the most dislocated stocks. That acts as kind of a negative feedback loop. It wouldn't stop a market-wide selloff, but would keep things more balanced between single-name stocks vis-a-vis the rigid rules governing passive index managers.
Second, by definition active funds are more differentiated from one another. Passive indexing produces a mono-culture with analogous ecological risks to what we see in nature. The typical active fund only holds about 50 positions at any given time. So, on the whole while active investors in aggregate hold 0.3% of their portfolios in Chubb, at an individual level most funds hold zero. And some minority may hold 1%, 5%, 10% or more of their assets in Chubb. So if one fund fails, that's less likely to spread contagion to every other fund in the universe.
In that type of unwind scenario, some funds will do pretty decently, and some funds will do horribly. But the point is there will be a dispersion of results. That makes the market as a whole more robust. Panicking investors are more likely to re-allocate their capital from the bad funds to the good funds, rather than pull all their out in a flight to quality.
Burry’s money quote in the original Bloomberg article was on limited liquidity for a largish number of stocks - over a 1,000 stocks in Russell 2,000 weren’t traded heavily (by his benchmark).
> Liquidity is not a huge problem for index funds. But, Ben, what if everyone rushes to the exits all at once? Index funds and ETFs are going to cause a massive crash!
> When an index fund investor sells, they’re technically selling their holdings in direct proportion to their weighting in the index. So there is literally no market impact.
Yeah, I wanted to highlight that that's not true. Of course there is a market impact, it'll go down. The author might have wanted to say that there is no differential market impact, ie all shares would go down to the same extent (so that there is no impact, say, on capital allocation), but even that is not necessarily true, it clearly depends on the homogeneity (or lack thereof) of the liquidity/elasticity on the other side of those trades.
* "The tail is not wagging the dog" - index funds are a relatively small percentage of total share ownership.
* "Benchmark huggers have always been around" - owning ~the index was not started with index funds.
* "Active funds literally own the market" - the sum of portfolios of non-index funds ends up having the same profile.
* "Price discovery is a cop-out" - relatively small part of the trading volume.
* "Liquidity is not a huge problem for index funds" -no market impact to sell (v dubious if you ask me), unlevered.
* "Humans matter more than fund structures" - the absence of index funds did not prevent bubbles/crashes.
You can disagree with those points (I do with some of them) but that's a large part of the article.
Derivatives written against sub-prime holdings tipped the balance when the fan was hit. There are tons of derivatives written against the indices, thus indirectly against those funds.
Those derivatives might be "somewhat in the neighborhood of the funds" or something, but it's not analogous to mortgages.
There's a bit more nuance to it: those derivatives were a problem because a substantial proportion of them were concentrated in a single, widely-connected, entity (AIG).
The derivative market as a whole nets to zero; for every loser there is a winner.
There wasn't (and still isn't) a mark-to-market in bonds. Many bonds aren't priced until bought/sold, e.g. illiquid.
If you're talking about index mutual funds, then the author is just plain wrong. Any open-ended fund offering daily liquidity will trade, and therefore produce market impact, to meet its daily redemptions.
If you're only talking about ETFs, then this is technically correct. Besides the occasional index re-constitution, unlevered index ETFs don't do any trading. However it's definitely not true that there's no market impact. As the fund grows (or shrinks) the shares just don't magically appear in the portfolio. Somebody has to go out and buy (or sell) those shares, and like any trading volume, that creates market impact.
The mechanism that ETFs actually use is something called "Authorized Participants" (or APs for short). Basically market makers have the right to create or redeem shares in the ETF. To create new shares, they go out and buy all the stocks in the index, then hand a basket over to the ETF fund manager, who then hands back new shares of the equivalent value. And to destroy shares, the AP hand over shares in the ETF, and the fund manager hands back a basket of shares from the index.
If there's high demand for investors to own the ETF, that'll push up the ETF's stock price. As the price rises relative to the index value, APs will detect an arbitrage opportunity. They'll go out and buy the basket of stocks in the index at a cheaper price, then create new ETF shares at the richer price, and pocket the difference. Vice versa if there's demand from investors to exit the ETF.
The mechanism keeps the ETF price closely pegged to the index, because the further out of line it gets the more arbitrageur activity pushes it back in line. While also flexibly satisfying investors' specific demand for the ETF at any given time. Basically it delegates the role of trading from the fund manager, who usually doesn't have any special expertise in trading, to highly specialized trading firms and market makers.
However, as you can clearly see, market impact most definitely exists. If a flurry of investors rush to enter or exit an ETF, then a huge amount of trading has to be done to create or redeem the shares. Just because the APs create this trading impact, instead of the fund itself, is a distinction without a difference. The underlying stocks in the index are subject to market impact.
But the trading isn't the cause of the market impact, it's the redemptions that occur first, and force the trading. There had to have been economic or financial reasons for those redemptions to occur. The fact that when everyone tries to sell at one, there's aren't enough buyers is a story of the ages. That ETFs will suffer the same consequences in a run is hardly unique to them as financial assets.
There is already a very well known liquidity problem with index funds that track S&P500. Since stocks come and go from this list, index fund managers need to be very careful about how they buy and share these stocks so as not to greatly effect their prices, and cost the fund too much money.
So index funds already have a pretty big effect in markets. I suspect some of the stretegies used for these events will be similar to how managers mitigate short term mass enters and exits in a fund.
My bigger suspicion in general with index fund mass selling though, is that while they are meant to track the market over the mid to long term, they are actually priced seperate from the market, and this seperate pricing means that if there’s a mass sell off, then fund share prices fall, and others have incentive to buy them at a discount. Eventually both index and benchmark prices reach equilibrium. Maybe there’s total havoc in the market in the meantime, but this mechanism will mitigate it to some degree.
But the position is serious when enterprise becomes the bubble on a whirlpool of speculation.
When the capital development of a country becomes a by-product of the activities of a casino, the job is likely to be ill-done.
(John Maynard Keynes, General Theory, Chapter 12, page 142 in the Google Book edition)
I think they claim is that their is a lot of "dumb money" holding indexed products that are likely to sell all at once when things turn south. By the structure of these funds, their will be large selling pressure on the underlying stocks and a good chunk of them don't have the liquidity to support that pressure. That doesn't mean their will be a metldown, just that prices will tank very hard and a lot of people will lose a lot of money + the economic effects that has I don't understand.
I was hoping the original article would tear that reasoning down, and while it did touch on various mechanisms it didn't give a cohesive thesis as to why that is wrong.
There is no evidence for this. During the 2000-2002 and 2008-2009 index funds actually saw higher inflows:
* https://www.etfstrategy.com/three-reasons-why-indexing-and-e...
Perhaps there will be greater correlation between names in a downturn, but then again, factor-based investing might offset some of that.
Imagine if you'd invested in the Russel 3000 index, which aims at tracking the entire US stock market. If the ETF manager transferred the securities as you exited you'd now have to manually sell 3000 securities across many markets. The ETF has tools and processes for this, you don't. You pay them a fee for the convenience of not having to deal with the underlying assets.
Another example would be something like the iShares gold or iShares silver ETF. They hold precious metals in a secure vault on your behalf, for a fee. You probably don't want a delivery from an armored truck every time you exit the ETF! :)
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/r/redemption-mechanism.as...
First, I think he didn't made that point very clearly. Second, why would they be sold at a larger discount than larger holdings? It is all in proportion - they own less and sell less of the smaller holdings.
(There are issues conceivable where you have a liquidity mismatch (bonds, real estate), but I haven't seen a solid elaboration of that point. It's the good old "people worry about bond market liquidity" meme that Mark Levine pokes fun at in his Bloomberg Column "Money Stuff".)
His argument there AIUI was that the daily volume is not in proportion.
Will be interesting to watch the next market crash.
https://awealthofcommonsense.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/...
I guess there are more legitimate concerns for funds that hold bonds or real estate or other less-liquid assets. But the solution to that is just, don’t put yourself in a position where you have to liquidate those funds in a crunch.
Other forms of algorithmic trading might still step in though.
The fundamental problem he seems to be pointing at is that notional replicating portfolios can work like an engineering marvel in good times and become inoperable in bad (liquidity) times.
There were many elements to the CDO crisis -- including bad faith by the rating agencies and a prolonged asset-price mania much beyond this stock-market rally. The simpler metaphor is the emission of vanilla stock options. In principle, a bank is only able to offer options because he has the ability to replicate it and neutralize his risk. But if market conditions diverge from the asset replication model, then boom you get LTCM.
He is confused. That was the problem with the synthetic OTC instruments that he used which nearly tripped his winning position because no one wanted to actually trade with them. And even that was largely the case because he was buying not even CDOs but synthetic instruments that were derivatives of the CDOs.
Index funds on the other hand own the shares in companies that publicly trade where the market markers must provide liquidity hence a single trade at +/- 10% will not only move the quote but would trigger other buyers and sellers to decide to want to play.
At least for exchange-traded funds, it would seem that you don't have to actually destroy units of the ETF in the case of a sell-off. The ETF units would just sell at lower prices, just like when there is a 'sell off' of any stock - there are always equal numbers of buyers and sellers, you don't destroy units, you just move the price lower.
With index funds where you have an account directly with vanguard or whoever instead of buying units on an exchange, I'm not sure how it works in a sell-off. Perhaps they sell shares in the individual stocks, or perhaps they just try to sell off your shares bundled together by issuing more ETF units. I don't know what they do, but it seems like there are a bunch of options that should mean they don't have to sell off illiquid stocks on command.
I'm not sure. Happy to be enlightened. As much as I think about it, my intuition seems to consistently say that it's impossible for index funds to be broken in any meaningful way that's any different from the market itself or some sector thereof being in a bubble.
This is a smaller example the liquidity problem that Mr Burry was making - it would much worse if a market crash did this to the realy realy big index funds.
When investors sell that amount, it doesn't matter whether they hold the underlying assets directly, or via index funds or ETFs, or via actively managed funds. The market will go down. So, which part of the problem is uniquely due to index funds?
Burry hasn't made that point very clear.
There might be issues with (liquid) index funds that give exposure to inherently less liquid assets, such as bonds or real estate. There might also be issues with index funds that do not hold the assets themselves, but replicate the exposure synthetically by entering a swap with a third party, giving rise to tracking error, counterparts credit risk, etc.
However, as I said, Burry hasn't enunciated these concerns very cogently (at least in the extracts quoted by Bloomberg). This article here does nothing to address those concerns.
If those fund-holders were owning the stocks directly, instead of ETFs... Those same fund-holders would be... Selling their stocks. Causing the exact same downward price pressures.
Suppose stock X gets 1% in that basket. The issue is if stock X happens to be very illiquid, the APs selling stock X could drive down the price.
In a non ETF, managers could decide to relatively slow down the sale of X, to prevent crashing the price. However, in an index fund the mechanism dictates all stocks are sold in the same proportion.
If you are panicked, and are selling your ETF, your evil twin is panicked, and selling all their stocks.
This causes the exact same downwards pressure on the market.
I don't buy an ETF because I want someone to do financial malarkey with my money. I buy it because I want to own stocks, and I can't be assed to deal with my own brokerage account. Besides the convenience aspect, there is zero difference between the two.
Moreover, if my evil twin a) owned a managed fund or b) sold in a slightly smarter way, then they would lose less on X due to liquidity.
Moreover, the hit on Xs price also has a slight hit on the ETF value. Hence there is a small positive feedback loop.
They'd still follow the same herd mentality that they would, had they owned ETFs.
A large number of investors leaving the market will see a sell off no matter what vehicle they're in.
I am not a specialist and would love to read an informed analysis and counters to Burry's article. I was hoping that this is what the author tried (as the title suggests), but to me he fell far short of that goal. My 2c.
What is unique about no liquidity during a sell-off driving markets down? It's the definition of a sell-off. The fact there's no liquidity is what drives down the market in every sell-off.
Like my parents did in 2008/9, and I didn't think to caution them not to. Ugggg...
I'm still driving the price down, causing other holdouts to sell off, driving the price further down. It's the definition of a market crash.
* https://www.etfstrategy.com/three-reasons-why-indexing-and-e...
See also Vanguard's (biased) opinion:
* https://www.vanguardcanada.ca/individual/articles/education-...
The people using index funds generally don't think about their portfolios—which is the whole point of them. It's probably the cocaine-fueled traders that are causing all the ruckus.
How might we notice that index funds were becoming overrated? Perhaps the rise of hedge funds which consistently outperformed index funds? Is that happening?
What should we do if index funds became overrated? Move our money into a medium-size number of stocks, like 30 of them, to essentially do our own index selection? Or moving out of stocks entirely?
Thinking about questions like this without attacking criticism as “silly” is IMO a better way to minimize risk.
> We’re just seeing a shift from closet indexing to ETFs and other index funds en masse now that investors have wisened up.
So active managers are copying the indexes.
> Index fund investors are simply buying what the active investors have laid out for them.
But indexes buy what the active managers pick.
The author appears to be confused as to who is the tail and who is the dog. Maybe this is resolved by saying some active managers do price discovery, but most are just copycats. It's not clear though.
For the record I think index funds are still the best choice for a retail investor, and the article is mostly true. Namely
> Many of the worries about indexing really boil down to career risk in the asset management space.
Some of the arguments seem to be hasty and not well presented though.
> > We’re just seeing a shift from closet indexing to ETFs and other index funds en masse now that investors have wisened up.
Some active managers used to (clandestinely more or less) copy the indexes, but investors move away from active managers into passive funds.
The prices are determined on the margin, by the remaining active investors. That's all consistent.
> index funds are still the best choice for a retail investor
Yes, index funds or index-linked ETFs. Agreed.
It's hard to see why Mom and Pop buy and hold index investors should care about the liquidity risk Bury talks about...market cap weighted funds will be fine in the long run because the ratio of each underlying stock to a fund share will be constant through the temporary price fluctuations...so no money is lost if the price crashes and then comes back to the same sport shortly after.
Perhaps there are other market participants who are leveraged and would find themselves insolvent if indexes cause a liquidity problem? I just don't see how the fund investors themselves would be hurt if underlying stock prices went out of whack for an afternoon.
The data would also support that on a dollar-weighted basis, most index fund investors are not really buying-and-holding:
"Turnover rates for two of the most popular ETFs are higher than 3500%(!), an average holding period of about a week. That is dozens of times greater than the trading liquidity of even its most liquid constituents"
http://www.grantspub.com/files/presentations/Grant's%20Confe...
Which index fund though? If you're talking about VOO, which follows the S&P500, maybe. If you're talking about VTI (CRSP US Total Market Index), probably less so.
See also Russell 3000 and Wilshire 5000.
* https://www.marketwatch.com/story/vanguard-thinks-its-own-em...
VTI has become the third ETF to pass US$ 100B in assets:
* https://www.cnbc.com/2018/09/11/most-investors-choose-sp-500...
SPY (a competitor to VOO) is the biggest though, and it follows S&P 500.
What I found a little more concerning is their glossing over of the liquidity risks. If everyone wants to sell an index, then at some point that index needs to liquidate shares (proportionally). Those shares won't have uniform demand, which is going to cause both price fluctuations (drops) which affect the value of the index. The fun part here too is that this can play some havoc with market-cap weighted indexes, which now need to adjust their holding %'s.
Also he jumps around Burry's arguments by focusing on liquidity and in AAPL and FB. Burry's whole point is about less liquid components at the bottom of indices which are getting dragged upward by a lack of price discovery and inclusion in widespread passive funds. Since they're market-cap weighted, this would have a cyclical component, more passive purchases -> higher market cap -> higher weighting in passive indices -> more passive purchases. This would result in another cyclical component where that cycle causes: passive fund outperformance -> increased investing in passive funds -> passive fund outperformance.
Then in an event where people start liquidating there is no one there to purchase those stocks and they've been dramatically overvalued anyways so their price gets crushed. This is specifically why Burry likes small cap active.
If you pay attention to finance discussion on this board then you've definitely heard the phrase: “The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.” The argument here is that irrationality has persisted long enough to crush most 'rational' price discoverers.
>Do you know what didn’t cause the Great Depression or Japan stock market crash or 1987 crash or 1973-74 bear market? Index funds. Index funds also weren’t around for the South Sea bubble in the 1700s. Do you know what did cause these bubbles and subsequent crashes? Human nature.
Imagine doing this but replacing 'index funds' with mortgage CDOs.
Look I'm not even saying Burry is right but the absolute inability of the finance commentariat to actually address what he's saying is giving him more credence.
(a) have very little skin in the game.
(b) they get to make decisions about what other people have to do with their money
(c) they tend to recommend more stocks with less turnover than typical active managers
(d) they tell the public ahead of time what will be bought or sold, so traders get to buy/sell ahead of time
(e) their actions are relatively predictable, thanks to a long history of sticking to their stated goals.
See [3] for example on why Tesla isn't.
[1] https://us.spindices.com/documents/methodologies/methodology...
[2] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%26P_500_Index#Selection_cr...
[3] https://seekingalpha.com/article/4088016-will-tesla-join-s-a...
Let's also not forget Hacker News's favorite law: Goodhart's Law. The S&P has performed wonderfully well when it was observed as an index. But now that it's a target, the world will change around it.
Agree “beating the index” is quite a joke since that is the benchmark for fund performance and so much money is passive invested now. Matching the index performance is saying “our fund equities have appreciated on equal basis to how all others have”.
That said, for all practical purposes it is basically the 500 largest companies.
Apple alone has $50 billion in cash that will flow into Vanguard if index funds hit a 50% plunge. Same with Buffet. Index funds may be bubble priced, but they don't suffer from a liquidity issue.
That's the whole concept of why stock traders need to beware the "crowded exit"--if everyone is trying to sell a the same time, the little guy is going to be holding the bag and can't get a fill on his order.
Coincidentally, this is when high frequency trading became lucrative.
Burry highlighted two simple truths of financial markets: people will buy shit they don't understand, and people who make financial products will try to earn a liquidity premium by transforming something illiquid to something liquid (which always blows up).
Most people (who I have met) who own passives have no idea what they are buying but are sure that buying passives makes them very smart. This blows up every time.
I also don't think Burry was making some bombastic claim about 100% of ETFs causing the end of civilisation. He was making a limited, reasonable claim about trends in markets. Yes, he generalised but, in my estimation, he has earned that right.
Simply, going from 0 to $300m+ earns you that right. Very few people have achieved that. Very few people have done it in the way he did (taking real risk). The views of a triggered financial adviser leeching off his clients don't hold as much weight (and shows all the self-awareness of a financial adviser to write a post implying they should).
If only one person does this I can call him names and downvote him. If there are two camps and both camps do this, people tribalize and everything goes meta. Then no further actual discussion can take place.
There are no "camps" here. The OP is trying to create a tribe (passive investors are cultish, so this is a very odd comment...I will assume an honest mistake) but that makes no sense on this topic (unless you are selling something, which he is).
The meta of my point is: people try this discussion over and over, it is always wrong, some things in finance are universal (because they have been happening for literally three hundred years).
What you appear to have missed is the part where I said: Burry is not making a "bombastic claim" about what will happen 100% of the time. In my experience, most people think this is what investing is about (the OP is certainly an example). It isn't. I am not making a bombastic claim.
The observation is, again, that: you have a lot of unsophisticated buyers and some non-zero amount of these products are about liquidity transformation. You can have a debate about this all you want but it isn't interesting or engaging to anyone but people who are unsophisticated (not 100% true in this case, Asness is a notable exception but he was an academic and it is mostly academics who take an interest).
My interest is limited to the fact that: it is astonishing how often this happens, and equally astonishing how fervently people will deny that it is happening again (although they are usually new converts).
https://horizonkinetics.com/commentary-type/under-the-hood-i...
But something to note here too: most measures of historical returns do not look at liquidity either. I am in the UK, and I know there is research (I can't find it atm) showing that before 1970s, trading costs were significant. Historical returns rarely reflect that. Nor do they reflect the fact that most people before 1970 probably couldn't own any asset other than govt bonds (or that most banks were forced to own them too).
So I would say the issues with indexes are two-fold. First, they will fail if they are built on illiquid securities (recent example here is also Neil Woodford's implosion). Second, they are often predicated on historical returns that are, in any non-academic/practical sense, fictional.
Another reply is Horizon Kinetics...apart from GMO, they are the only investment manager whose letters I actually read. And on ETFs, they have written a lot.
I am actively disinterested in all the nonsense around population share of active/passive or whatever the Twitterati are bleating about. I have seen enough of these situations to just not care anymore about anything other than the two things I mentioned.
I can't say about the first part, but economically speaking, they are very smart. The alternatives are higher fees and lower results.
"Simply, going from 0 to $300m+ earns you that right. Very few people have achieved that."
You mean the guy who explicitly wants to raise the price of small caps (which conveniently have low volumes)?
If you believe, for instance, that there is an "S&P 500" bubble then there is difficulty turning that into an investable thesis. The S&P 500 is about 80% of the valuation of the stock market. If the S&P 500 pops, then relatively the other 20% of the market will go up, but how much can it go up?
The most harmful effect we know now of the passive funds is that they have a strong incentive (when they vote their shares) to discourage competition. If they own both AT&T and Verizon they would rather both of these be profitable at the expense of consumers rather than work hard to gain market share for one or the other.
Actually, our behavior does shape the price of oranges. If we go to the store and they're less expensive, then we are more likely to buy them. The analogy breaks down because he's comparing indexes and oranges, not stock indexes and food indexes. Imagine if 14% of people went to the grocery, picked up a sack of pre-selected items that were best sellers last week -- all in the name of efficiency and reducing overhead. That would be quite weird indeed, and some people would point out that if enough people did this it would create market inefficiencies and potentially cause a glut or crash of certain food prices.
It doesn't make sense, you aren't going to use any of those products, you don't even care what most of them are.
Stretching the analogy somewhat but I think the point still stands that it doesn't require the entire market to actively invest to keep everything priced very close to the same price they would be if index funds didn't exist.
I'm not sure I agree with this. Most grocery stores stock the same food, so it's not as if going to Lucky instead of Safeway shapes what you can/will get. You're right that if you go for particular sale items, you're more likely to get those. But does that have a basket-level impact? I'm not sure it does. Also, consider that when you go to a grocery store, you probably purchase about .05% of the items they sell. It's not like we go to Safeway and buy most of the things they sell there.
Active funds literally own the market. When you buy an index fund of the total stock market, you are literally buying the stock market in proportion to the shares held by all active investors. If you sum up the collective holdings of active managers, what you basically get is a market-cap-weighted index. Index fund investors are simply buying what the active investors have laid out for them.
I don't have the knowledge to evaluate this statement, but to me, it undermines Burry's point that passive investing distorts prices.
And this bit that he quotes from someone else expands on the point:
The use of price signals by those who played no role in setting them may be capitalism’s most important feature. That most of us and most of our dollars don’t have to pick stocks, or to price air conditioners, is a great benefit and taking advantage of it makes us honest smart capitalists, not commissars.
As I understand it, Burry's argument is that index funds distort prices because capital is being allocated in an automated and uniform way, instead of being allocated according to the expertise of a diverse, success-weighted group of investors who are motivated to make intelligent and informed decisions. At some point the difference between the index-fund-driven prices and the "true" prices according to informed opinion will become obvious, and investors will attempt to flee index funds, popping the bubble. The rebuttal in this argument is that active investors are still controlling the market because index funds mirror their activity. We will never reach a state where people will rush to "escape" from the index funds to actively managed funds, because index funds will always approximate the aggregate opinion of the actively managed funds.
This accords with my naive idea of how index funds work, but I don't know if they actually do work that way, so I can't evaluate the soundness of either argument.
That works until it doesn't. If passive becomes big enough, the indices themselves will be the ones steering the ship. The active managers won't be significant enough to sway the indices.
I heard this analogy on a podcast (I think it was Invest Like the Best): Indices are like a drunk person, and active managers are like the sober friend guiding the drunk home. But if the drunk becomes 10x the size of the sober friend, the friend is no longer strong enough to be a guide.
If passive funds get big enough to dwarf active management, they eventually will be the ones steering the market, and active investors will be noise at that point. In that scenario, I'm not sure what happens, but it seems that indexing would become more like a Ponsi scheme.
This "evil zombie index fund" trope seems to imply that index managers just continue to blindly buy the stocks in the index regardless of events, falsely inflating the value of companies. If a company is unable to generate cashflow from its underlying business, this will quickly become evident because it will be unable to pay its creditors and employees. It could take advantage of its "inflated value" by issuing shares to generate cash, but this would then obviously begin diluting the stock and cause the price to fall, the "zombie indexes" wouldn't simply continue to price it at a constant value. I.e. price discovery will happen, just perhaps not as quickly as an active analyst monitoring the stock would do it.
Correct me if I’m wrong but isn’t there a well known price premium for stocks included in major index funds? As I understand it, the most popular indexes target a few companies, thus index funds that track them funnel a disproportionate volume of demand to those companies causing a price premium.
It’s stands to reason that if a sudden outflow of money from index funds occurred, that price premium would swing the equal and opposite direction.
Maybe the premium is for being in the index, which the index fund dutifully reacts to. There are only 100 places in the FTSE100 so it is seen as significant. The current news about a major UK high street retailer is that it dropped out of this index, implying it's the beginning of its end. https://www.google.com/search?q=marks+and+spencers&tbm=nws
To some extent, I'm sure the definition of a "public" company comes into play. Not all stocks are traded in all exchanges, so you could include stocks only listed on one exchange.
Then there's the practice of many index funds picking the top N stocks by market cap. This seems like a backwards practice to me. The small cap stocks should be limited in weight by... their small market cap.
Then there are other hairy factors. Even out of the stocks in an index, it seems that weight does not correspond to capitalization. The reason seems to be some historical drivel. While I can understand that is the way it is, I fail to understand why it should be that way.
Why should an equities index fund be anything other than public companies proportional to their size? If people prefer large cap or small cap, then those variations should be offered as special boutique products. But it seems that we have it backwards, where the default offering is based on arbitrary non-proportional weights, and with a cutoff restricting it to large cap.
A lot of index funds include small caps nowadays. Not all of them because it's more difficult to track 4000 versus 500 stocks. Also the more popular indexes have usually been around for a long time and have fewer constituents.
>it seems that weight does not correspond to capitalization
Pretty much all index funds invest in the public float and it makes sense:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_float
Where I was coming from was...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dow_Jones_Industrial_Average
> The value of the Dow is not a weighted arithmetic mean[5] and does not represent its component companies' market capitalization, but rather the sum of the price of one share of stock for each component company. The sum is corrected by a factor which changes whenever one of the component stocks has a stock split or stock dividend, so as to generate a consistent value for the index.[6]. It is not an accurate representation of the US market or total market.[7][8][9]
It mentions "consistent value", but that's over time. You can be misrepresented in weightings but still consistent over time.
Basing the weightings on the stock price sounds royally stupid... if I'm even reading that correctly. But maybe this insanity is just the DOW?
It's also the first one I grab for, because it's the first one that media reports on.
VTI is Vanguard's total stock market ETF which works like what you suggest. It has 3,606 stocks, year-to-date it's up 18.82%. Compare that to Vanguard's S&P 500 ETF VOO which is up 19.03%.
When a company hits its stride and is large enough to really make it difference it will join the S&P 500. I guess if there were a lot more than 500 companies that you should own there would be a problem, but we're not there currently.
If you want exposure to small caps it's much more efficient to own an index of small caps. Their performance has seriously lagged in recent times though, so just owning VOO has been the way to go for a long time.
If i were king for a day I'd legislate a low bar that required the equities to be listed so that both the insiders cannot be barred from liquidity and so that the investing public can access those parts of the economy.
[1]: https://personal.vanguard.com/pdf/ISGPCA.pdf
So if you invest in "all coffee shops" or "all shops in my hometown", you're not looking at fundamentals, you're investing to invest. And, by definition, (assuming all shops are priced correctly) you're artificially inflating.
If someone invests across a group of stocks, it's because "the market always goes up over time." And if enough people believe that then it can be true for a very, very long period. But eventually it becomes your $10 million coffee shop. It's a bubble. And even a bubble that lasts decades will eventually pop.
His graph shows an arrow pointed at the small sliver on ETFs, but that isn't necessarily the same as passive investing which would include a lot of mutual funds.
Have to take the rest of the article with several grains of salt after reading this. Even if the index was spread against all stocks it would have an impact. It implies that you can only move money around the market, not take it out of the market altogether.