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Here's a statement of the obvious: The opinions expressed here are those of the participants, not those of the Mutual Fund Observer. We cannot vouch for the accuracy or appropriateness of any of it, though we do encourage civility and good humor.
  • Surprises in portfolio
    Old_Skeet's three best year-to-date fund performers through January 18, 2019 are MFS New Discovery Value Fund (NDVAX) +10.22% ... Pimco Commodities Strategy Plus Fund (PCLAX) +9.78% ... and, Principal Small/Mid Cap Dividend Fund (PMDAX) +9.39% which are all found in the growth area of my portfolio. In compairson, an equal weighted S&P 500 Index Fund (VADAX) that I follow (and generally use as an equity spiff fund) is up +8.09% while a cap weighted 500 Index fund (OGEAX) that I also follow is up 6.62%. In addition, my All Weather 20/40/40 master portfolio is up just short of 4% while its bogey the Lipper Balanced Index is up 3.3%. Unless we get into a protracted stock market decline I'm not looking for my master portfolio to continue to outperform the Lipper Balanced Index although I find it interesting that it currently is outperforming it since stocks have been on a recent uptrend so far this year. The portfolio's outperformace is due in part to the strong performace of its hybrid income sleeve which is also the largest sleeve within the portfolio, at about 25%, and it is up 4.4% (ytd). Not surprising, the poorest performing sleeve within my portfolio, not counting my demand cash sleeve, has been my investment cash sleeve which is up 0.1%.
  • Surprises in portfolio
    PRDSX +8.73% Small growth, a quant fund.
    My other equity funds are bunched, up a bit more than +5%.
    PRIDX, VEIRX, PRWCX.
    Bonds: PTIAX holding about even. PRSNX +0.87%.
  • STATX - what am I missing?
    Here are some additional clarifications:
    1. A syndicate can be a group of borrowers and/or a group of lenders; there is even a loan syndication association which created rules on how to manage a syndication : https://www.lsta.org/
    2. Repo, Reverse Repo and Securities lending are ALL very similar in essence, here are the evidences:
    3. Accounting rules which recognize the similarity - The accounting standard board called FASB recognizes that similarity in their FIN 41 clarification, see Note #2 at the bottom of page number FIN41-2: https://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/Document_C/DocumentPage?cid=1175801626916&acceptedDisclaimer=true
    "For purposes of this Interpretation, a REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENT (reverse repo) refers to a transaction that is accounted for as a collateralized lending in which a buyer-lender buys securities with an agreement to resell them to the seller-borrower at a stated price plus interest at a specified date or in specified circumstances. The “receivable” under a reverse repurchase agreement refers to the amount due from the seller-borrower for the repurchase of the securities from the buyer-lender. IN CERTAIN INDUSTRIES, THE TERMINOLOGY IN REVERSED; THAT IS, ENTITIES IN THOSE INDUSTRIES REFFER TO THIS TYPE OF AGREEMENT AS REPO".
    4. Legal wording of the agreement – all those agreements (Repo, Reverse Repo and Securities lending ) are standardized agreements created by SIFMA and are very similar in their essence : https://www.sifma.org/resources/general/mra-gmra-msla-and-msftas/
    Those legal agreements and the legal opinions supporting them are the protections that all of the industry uses, including the fund, this is a standardized market in which everyone uses the same legal agreements therefore everyone has the same legal protections no matter the size of the entity.
    If you feel more comfortable with a brand name you should go over there, this discussion is interesting but no one is trying to make anyone invest in this fund.
  • STATX - what am I missing?
    "As the name of the counterparties clearly states these are SYNDICATIONS"
    Minor item first, I guess. A SYNDICATE is a group acting together for a purpose; in the financial arena that's often a group of lenders coordinating a sizeable loan, or a group of actors facilitating (underwriting) the new issue of a security. In this context, SYNDICATEs are generally temporary (unlike the LLC here).
    https://financial-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/syndicate
    In contrast, a SYNDICATION is the act of forming a SYNDICATE, or (often in the media context) an act of distributing (selling) something (such as a news column) to multiple buyers (who are not themselves a SYNDICATE).
    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/syndication
    King Features Syndicate is a SYNDICATION company in the business of putting out content in SYNDICATION. Just as Zeitgeist Films is a distribution company that is in the film distribution business. "Syndication", "distribution", these are attributive nouns; as used, they're not standalone nouns.
    You might have been thinking about SYNDICATE desks, though there's no mention of "desk" in the company names.
    Really, though, if we're going to read stuff into names, what should we make of the management company New York Alaska ETF Management LLC? This company has never managed an ETF.
    Though it tried; it filed in 2015 first to manage the "1-3 Month Liquidity Bonds ETF", which later that year was apparently renamed "1-3 Month Enhanced Short Duration ETF". It was to have traded under the ticker TBIL. Apparently it gave up the ghost at the end of 2016; last filing appears to have been 12/26/16.
    https://sec.report/CIK/0001627597
    In the meantime (mid 2016), it proposed offering essentially a clone in open end form, called "1-3 Month Enhanced Short Duration Fund". It wanted to use the ticker BILLX, but the SEC felt that this sounded like a MMF. Ultimately this evolved into what you know and love as the "Enhanced Ultra Short Duration Mutual Fund", STATX.
    " I called up the fund, asked them questions and they explained it all to me and gave me a lot of info on this Repo and Securities lending industry. ... iShares, which is one of the biggest fund managers in the world, actually does the same thing ... [see] [a link to an article on securities lending]"
    This may be the most disconcerting statement so far. The fund is conflating reverse repurchase agreements with securities lending.
    While they look very similar, they're quite different. I'll try to illustrate with an analogy.
    I own a house. I give you use of the house for a fee. (In real estate terms, I'd be leasing it to you.) You can use the house as you wish (e.g. sublease it), so long as you pay me the rental fee and return it to me as we agree upon.
    I own a house. I need cash, so I turn it over to a third party as collateral (via a deed of trust), you give me cash, and I sign a promissory note that says I'll pay you back with interest. This use of third party trustee and promissory note is the way "mortgages" are effected in many western states.
    Notice that either way, you get the house, I get cash to use. In the first, I'm "lending" you the use of the house and making a profit on the rent. In the second, I'm borrowing money and putting up the house as collateral. You're the one making the money here.
    I own some securities. I give you the use of those securities (lending them to you, perhaps so that you can sell them short, who knows?). You pay me "rent" for the use of the securities. That's what iShares does, that's what most funds do to make money. It's how Vanguard sometimes manages to beat the indexes it's tracking, in spite of its expenses. We're talking relatively small amounts here (i.e. barely enough to cover index funds' costs).
    I own some securities. I need cash. I sell sell them to you (effectively giving you collateral for the money you "lend" me). We make an agreement that I will give you back the cash with interest (i.e. repurchase the securities for a higher price) at an agreed upon time. What we've made is a repurchase agreement.
    Notice that either way, you get the securities, I get the cash to use. In the first, I'm lending you the use of the securities and making a profit on the "rent". In the second, I'm effectively borrowing money and putting up the securities as collateral. You're the one making money here.
    Two very different arrangements despite superficial similarities. The fact that you were told that these are the same I find quite disturbing. I begin to understand how Mona could have been told that the fund accrues dividends daily.
    Here's Vanguard's paper on how it lends securities. A key takeaway is on p. 6 - all the measures that Vanguard takes to minimize risk in these transactions. They include limiting the amount of loans to any one counterparty. I have faith in Barclays as well. What's New York Alaska ETF Managment doing to protect your investment?
  • Here Is A Serious Income Alternative To High-Yield
    The initial asset allocation and holdings information for this new fund is now available at M*. M* has it pigeon holed as 50 to 70% equity. So far, its far short of that. The description in the prospectus had made me wonder how they came up with that designation. Anyway, here is the asset allocation info:
    Cash 26.00%
    US Stocks 12.54%
    Non US Stocks -0.20%
    Bonds 61.03%
    Other 0.64%
    As of 12/31/2018
  • STATX - what am I missing?
    Yes, I have invested in this fund and before I did I called up the fund, asked them questions and they explained it all to me and gave me a lot of info on this Repo and Securities lending industry
    For example:
    iShares, which is one of the biggest fund managers in the world, actually does the same thing that they do under the fund symbol:”SHV” (and StateStreet does it under : “BIL”) but the majority of the enhanced returns that they generate go to IShares and StateStreet following the 2013 victoy iShares had against two pension funds that sued them for taking those profits, read this article:
    http://www.securitieslendingtimes.com/securitieslendingnews/article.php?article_id=218875
  • Clarkston Select Fund is "hard" closed
    No real reason whatsoever to invest in the fund.
    Fund management will announce the benefit of the reorganization in its shareholder proxy vote. Poor performance and lack of assets have hindered the fund to grow.
    https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1558107/000139834418017599/fp0037575_497.htm
  • Clarkston Select Fund is "hard" closed
    To effect a merger.
    https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1558107/000139834418018590/fp0037914_n14.htm
    January 27, 2019
    Dear Shareholder:
    On behalf of the Board of Trustees of ALPS Series Trust (the “Trust”), we are pleased to invite you, as a shareholder of the Clarkston Select Fund, to a Special Meeting of Shareholders to be held on March 13, 2019, at 10:00 a.m., Mountain Time, at the offices of the Trust at 1290 Broadway, Suite 1100, Denver, Colorado 80203.
    At the Special Meeting, you will be asked to approve two proposals.
    Proposal 1: Proposed Agreement and Plan of Reorganization
    Under an Agreement and Plan of Reorganization, the Clarkston Select Fund (the “Selling Fund”) will be reorganized into the Clarkston Fund (the “Acquiring Fund”) subject to shareholder approval (the “Reorganization”).
  • STATX - what am I missing?
    A quick note on your numbers, and then a longer discussion of reverse repos.
    From fact sheet: 0.40% ER + 3.96% yield = 4.36% gross return
    70% Treasuries @ 2.4% + 30% @ 7.5% = 3.93%
    (I agree with you that 2.4% is a reasonable guesstimate for 3 mo. Treasuries; I just picked up some at that rate.)
    A minor point, but one needs a 9% return on the reverse repos to achieve the 4.36% gross return from the fact sheet.
    Either I don't understand repurchase agreements, or the descriptions in the fund docs are weird. If the latter is true, is it something that should give anyone pause. If the former is true, then I should still personally decline to invest, as I don't believe in investing in things I don't fundamentally understand.
    My understanding of a repurchase agreement is that the owner of a security, in need of cash, temporarily sells a security for the cash along with making an agreement to repurchase the security at a higher value. Typically overnight. A transaction equivalent to a collateralized loan, and a net cost to the borrower. That is, the borrowing side sells the security, to be repurchased later.
    From the other party's perspective, it is a lender of cash, the buyer of a security, to be sold later with the higher sale price treated as imputed interest. That's a reverse repo.
    Here's the best page I've been able to find that explains this (including 1.5 min video):
    https://www.investopedia.com/terms/r/reverserepurchaseagreement.asp
    For the party selling the security (and agreeing to repurchase it in the future) it is a repurchase agreement (RP) or repo; for the party on the other end of the transaction (buying the security and agreeing to sell in the future) it is a reverse repurchase agreement (RRP) or reverse repo.
    The reason I'm making such a big deal over this is that the fact sheet says that "the fund purchases securities as either lender or borrower with the agreement to sell them at a higher price". It's saying that whether the fund is a borrower (repurchase agreement) or a lender (reverse repo), the fund first buys and then sells. That contradicts my description of a repo (sell first, then buy), as well as Investopedia's.
    This matters because it is claiming that in both repos and reverse repos, it makes money by buying the security and reselling it at a higher amount. Both sides of an agreement can't be buying first.
    Let's look at the prospectus. Under risks of a reverse repo (p. 6), it describes a transaction where it first sells the security (one risk is being unable to timely repurchase "the securities sold by the fund.") I think it has got repos and reverse repos backward in the risk sections, but my point here is that one of them involves the fund selling first, then repurchasing, again contradicting the fact sheet's wording.
    You write about the cash flow as reducing volatility. What the prospectus says: "Leverage Risk: Leverage risk is the risk that certain transactions of the Fund, including the Fund’s use of reverse repurchase agreements, will give rise to leverage, causing the Fund’s shares to be more volatile than if they had not been leveraged."
    Let's stop right there. This fund is 30% in reverse repos, which it describes as leverage. Short term (overnight) or not, a 30% leveraged fund is not my idea of a low risk fund.
    Reading on in the prospectus, we finally get to a full paragraph where it explains how it uses the term "reverse repurchase agreement":
    In a typical reverse repurchase agreement, the Fund enters into a contract with a counterparty under which (i) the Fund sells securities for cash or cash equivalents to the counterparty, and (ii) the Fund agrees to repurchase the securities at an agreed-upon price, date and interest payment. Reverse repurchase agreements provide the Fund with a source of liquidity that can be invested elsewhere for no more than six days and/or earn income at either fixed or floating (variable) interest rates and fees. While a reverse repurchase agreement has legal characteristics of both a sale and a secured transaction, economically it functions as a loan from the counterparty to the Fund, in which the securities purchased by the counterparty serve as collateral for the loan.
    So it seems that rather than generating income (as the fact sheet states) by selling back securities at a higher price, reverse repos actually incur borrowing costs for the cash the fund gets. Then how does it make money?
    The correct way to answer this question is to say that it invests the cash in something that pays a higher rate than its borrowing cost. That is, after all, a conventional way of making money with borrowed cash. See, e.g. this document describing government uses of reverse repos (two basic uses - meeting short term cash flow needs, and investing in higher-yielding instruments).
    http://www.gfoa.org/ensuring-safety-reverse-repurchase-agreements
    Instead, here's how the fund says it makes money on this borrowed cash (from the June 30, 2018 semiannual report):
    There are many existing examples that borrowers earn profit in spite of their borrowing activity for example: Banks borrow money via selling deposits and then charging high fees for additional activities related to the deposit including they charging high fees for allowing deposit buyer (the bank’s lender) to make payments (incoming and outgoing) from and to the deposit therefore, the bank actually profits a lot more than the cost it pays for the borrowing since the added commissions turn the borrowing activity into a profitable activity. In the Fund’s case, the fund charges additional fees that turn its borrowing activity into profits by charging fees for allowing its counterparties to substitute the proceeds (collateral) it receives for reasons such as substituting collateral durations.
    The fees the fund is charging aren't the 7.5% that you suggested, nor the 9% that I came up with. The semiannual statement reports that the fund is charging a 13.0% "fee rate", at least if I'm reading this part of the statement correctly.
    When I see 13% being charged to counterparties for what sounds like "allowing" them to serve as the counterparty in a repurchase agreement (i.e. purchase short term Treasuries so that these securities show on their books overnight), I really wonder about the safety of these agreements.
    Maybe I've read most of this wrong - I'm just picking it up as I go along. If so, as I said at the top, that just means I personally don't understand enough to invest in this. At the very least, it suggests looking deeper into the counterparties for these agreements, which amount to 30% of the assets of the fund.
    I just did a fast search on the first of the two counterparties, Institutional Syndication LLC. It turns out that the other counterparty, North American Liquidity Resources LLC is the same compny, renamed. Quickly too, since the company was just organized in 2017.
    It was formed in 2017 (STATX commenced operations April 13, 2017), organized in Nevada (not unusual, after Delaware, Nevada is a popular place to organize companies), run out of Staten Island, with the same address as that of its executive officer.
    https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1721520/000172152017000004/xslFormDX01/primary_doc.xml
    The executive officer is no longer registered as an investment adviser representative, but had worked (from 1/2015 to 11/2016) at New York Alaska ETF, which you may recognize as the management company of STATX.
    https://adviserinfo.sec.gov/Individual/4522455 (click on detailed report pdf link for full report)
    According to this page, he was formerly their Chief Compliance Officer and Chief Investment Officer.
    https://relationshipscience.com/person/victor-amadeo-chilelli-jr-194903034
    None of this is intended to imply that there is anything improper with the reverse repos. It's just the information that came up when I searched on these companies and officer.
  • huh and hmm, from ~3p on today, google has DJIA around 200 points higher than what it is
    Of course I did, and do. And over the entire last 90min-plus, moment to moment and finally at the end of the session, the google data for djia was 150-250 points higher than reality. Period. Thought it was weird, and in my experience unique (online since like 1996 and tracking before that through other means), and so I posted. Alas.
  • STATX - what am I missing?
    Here are some additional clarifying facts that appear on the fund’s website that provide an answer to your question:
    The Fund creates a higher return by conducting Securities lending, Repurchase & Reverse Repurchase agreements ; this clarification appears in the fund fact sheet: http://www.tbil.co/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Mutual-Fund-Fund-Fact-Sheet-Final-01.11.19.pdf , it states in the Investment Approach part: “IN ORDER TO INCREASE INCOME, the fund is permitted to enter into fixed/variable interest rate Securities lending, Repurchase & Reverse Repurchase agreements”.
    Additionally, in the fund’s website, under the ARTICLES Tab ( http://www.tbil.co/articles/ ), you have a lot of info about the Repo market (the market in which you trade Repurchase agreements and Reverse Repurchase agreements), those articles are from sources such as Bloomberg, Risk Magazine and Securities Lending Times are very interesting since they show that Mutual Funds are ETFs are slowly entering into these markets in order to earn better returns, here are two examples of those articles from the Fund’s ARTICLES Tab ( http://www.tbil.co/articles/ ):
    ETFs OFFERING TASTY SEC LENDING RETURNS:
    http://www.securitieslendingtimes.com/securitieslendingnews/article.php?article_id=220699#.V4e3fcLfOHu
    REPO RATE HITS 7.25% ON YEAR-END VOLATILITY:
    https://www.risk.net/derivatives/6263606/repo-rate-hits-725-on-year-end-volatility?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=RN.Derivatives.RL.EU.A.U&utm_source=RN.DCM.Editors_Updates&im_amfcid=2376027&im_amfmdf=150a592b1a6f2ca496ab241b389d87b9
    If you look at the fund’s fact sheet, you can also see that the fund’s major holdings is a blended portfolio of US treasuries & Reverse Repo transactions which jointly earned a net return of between 3.5% - 4.00% annually since the fund earns for example 7.5% on its Reverse Repo trades and 2.4% on its treasury bills; all the manager needs to do is to daily adjust the composition of the allocation between those holdings to create a blended return of 3.5%-4.00% annually.
    That good return also acts as a cushion that absorbs the low price volatility of US treasury bills which the fund holds therefore, created a nice steady increase in value of the fund of about 1 cent per day which over 365 days accumulates to $3.65 annually which is 3.65% per every $100 which is the price of each fund unit.
  • huh and hmm, from ~3p on today, google has DJIA around 200 points higher than what it is
    Attention to detail please! The Dow was never up anywhere near 499 points today, You got the close right at 24706.35 but the +499 points is from the Wednesday close.

    Right. So why was the djia data feed for google combining two days? It says it's for today, one day. I mean, do it again, put in djia at google.com. Then do it at yahoo.com.
    A first.
    What kind of 'attention to detail' were you thinking of?
    Obviously you don’t monitor the markets intraday. Nothing wrong with that. I would guess the vast majority here don’t either.
  • huh and hmm, from ~3p on today, google has DJIA around 200 points higher than what it is
    Attention to detail please! The Dow was never up anywhere near 499 points today, You got the close right at 24706.35 but the +499 points is from the Wednesday close.
    Right. So why was the djia data feed for google combining two days? It says it's for today, one day. I mean, do it again, put in djia at google.com. Then do it at yahoo.com.
    A first.
    What kind of 'attention to detail' were you thinking of?
  • huh and hmm, from ~3p on today, google has DJIA around 200 points higher than what it is
    Attention to detail please! The Dow was never up anywhere near 499 points today, You got the close right at 24706.35 but the +499 points is from the Wednesday close.
  • huh and hmm, from ~3p on today, google has DJIA around 200 points higher than what it is
    this IS the close, numbnuts
    Market Summary > Dow Jones Industrial Average
    INDEXDJX: .DJI
    24,706.35 +499.19 (2.06%)
  • Clarkston Select Fund is "hard" closed
    https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1558107/000139834419000860/fp0038702_497.htm
    497 1 fp0038702_497.htm
    ALPS Series Trust
    Clarkston Select Fund
    (the “Fund”)
    Supplement dated January 18, 2019
    to the Prospectus and Statement of Additional Information dated January 29, 2018, as supplemented
    Notice to Close the Clarkston Select Fund
    Effective January 28, 2019, the Fund is closed to investment by new and existing shareholders. However, the ability to redeem Fund shares remains unchanged.
    INVESTORS SHOULD RETAIN THIS SUPPLEMENT FOR FUTURE REFERENCE
  • Grandeur Peak reopens some of its funds with restrictions
    If you believe the GMO 7-year forecasts, along with many of the other pundits, emerging markets is the place to be for the next 5-10 years relative to other asset classes; so I would expect the Grandeur Peak funds to do well since they are heavy on emerging markets. Only time will tell, I'm not unloading mine just yet!
  • STATX - what am I missing?
    Even older funds may not gather many assets if they don't market themselves. See BRUFX - 35 years old, $500M, not available through any brokerage. (But it does offer an HSA - talk about a stealth product!)
  • The 6 Best Vanguard Index Funds for 2019 and Beyond
    “Investing icon Warren Buffett advises investors to stash 90% of their money in a Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index fund and keep the rest in short-term government bonds.”
    Anybody know what degree of truth this statement attributed to Buffet holds? I was aware that he shifted all or most of his retirement funds to something like that nearly a decade ago, in part, because he wanted to simplify things for his wife to manage after his death.
    If Buffet made such a statement directed at all investors (1) I’m not aware of it and (2) it would be preposterous advice because each individual’s situation is unique. If I had 90% of my retirement savings in the S&P 500 I’d be always on “pins & needles”, unable to sleep and, perhaps, standing out on a NYC ledge during one of those single-day thousand-point dips in the Dow.
    Back to Buffet - When people have amassed mega-millions it sometimes causes them to invest / view risk differently than most of us small-fry. Some avoid the risk of stocks completely and move into bonds, thinking they can survive the remainder of their lives on what they already have. Others, like Buffet, are content to go with the averages and remain heavily invested in equities.