|

Magazine Issue:
July 6, 1998
How the Really Smart Money Invests
Nobel Prize winners entrust
their nest eggs to DFA, where investing is a science, not a spectator
sport.
Shawn Tully
uppose
you made a list of the smartest people alive in finance--those
who have done the most to advance our understanding of how the
stock market really works. Somewhere near the top you'd surely
place Eugene Fama of the University of Chicago, the leading champion
of the efficient-market theory and a favorite to win a Nobel
Prize one day. You'd obviously want to include Merton Miller
of Chicago, who earned a Nobel by analyzing the effect of a corporation's
capital structure on its stock price, and Myron Scholes of Stanford,
who won his Nobel by explaining the pricing of options. You'd
also pencil in Fama's collaborator Kenneth French of MIT, as
well as consultant Roger Ibbotson and master data cruncher Rex
Sinquefield, who together compiled the most trusted record of
stock market returns going back to 1926.
What would you give to
know how these titans invest their own money? Well, don't give
too much, because all you have to do is look at the funds of
one Santa Monica money management firm, Dimensional Fund Advisors.
Sinquefield and partner David Booth, both former students of
Fama, founded DFA and now run the funds. Fama and French map
out many of the investment strategies (and earn royalties for
doing so). Miller, Scholes, and Ibbotson are directors. All except
Miller, who believes directors should not invest in their own
funds, have large chunks of their own money in DFA.
If you want to invest
like these giants, however, you may have to check one of your
most cherished investment notions at the door. Unlike any other
money management firm, DFA insists that each of its funds follow
a strategy based on rigorous academic research. And for the past
three decades that research has squarely challenged the industry's
fundamental assumption--namely, that a stock picker, given enough
smarts and enough research, can consistently beat the market.
To the Über-intellects at DFA, the genius stock picker is
a myth. "I'd compare stock pickers to astrologers,"
says Fama. "But I don't want to bad-mouth the astrologers."
Such talk may seem harsh
in these stock-mad days--when top mutual fund managers are as
celebrated as sports stars--but DFA has the numbers to back it
up. Sinquefield and Booth will be happy to share the reams of
academic research supporting the theory that stocks are, with
a few exceptions, an efficient market, in which prices fairly
reflect all available information and stock pickers can't really
add much value. They can also point to the wildfire spread of
indexing among professional and retail investors, an investment
strategy they helped pioneer.
Sinquefield and Booth
might also bring up the success of their own firm. After being
hooted at by Wall Street 20 years ago, the pair today manage
$29 billion in 22 funds, making their firm the ninth-largest
institutional fund manager in the country. The client list includes
the pension funds of PepsiCo, BellSouth, and the state of California,
and the endowment of Stanford University. The firm is also the
most popular choice of the mutual fund industry's fastest-growing
retail distribution channel, fee-only financial planners. (If
you want to invest your own money in DFA funds, you'll need to
go through one of them.) DFA collects fees averaging about a
quarter of a percent on that asset base, for a gross of some
$70 million a year. Which pretty much disposes of the notion
that ivory-tower ideas never make you rich.
If nothing else, DFA's
success is a measure of how deeply the once thorny theories of
academic finance have taken hold in mainstream investment practice.
And that is due in no small part to the two founders' own tireless
proselytizing. Sinquefield and Booth met in 1971 at the University
of Chicago Graduate School of Business. Booth, a Ph.D. candidate,
was grading papers and advising students in Fama's finance course.
Sinquefield, an MBA student, regularly bombarded Booth with doctorate-sized
questions. Both were already ardent believers in the efficient-market
hypothesis, a theory that Fama first espoused in his Ph.D. thesis
in 1964 and elaborated on in subsequent articles and academic
confabs. Booth, a blond, Midwestern computer jock, came
across Fama's thesis as a master's
candidate in computer sciences at the University of Kansas. Dazzled
by Fama's intellectual footwork, he gave up his IBMs to move
to Chicago and study under Fama.
For Sinquefield, it was
a case of one theology replacing another. Raised from age 7 in
Saint Vincent's Catholic orphanage in St. Louis, he earned his
keep there making beds and waiting on tables. He went on to study
for the priesthood but left the seminary after three years. Sinquefield
first encountered Fama's theories at the University of Chicago
and, like Booth, had an epiphany. "It reminded me of studying
Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas," he says. "The theories
were so ordered and logical."
he
object of their devotion, Eugene Fama, is a blunt, brilliant
rebel, the scion of a working-class Boston family, whose greatest
love is upsetting the status quo. As restless physically as he
is mentally, Fama is a fanatic tennis player and athlete who
rises at dawn to work out in his basement to blaring Wagner operas.
On visits to DFA's California headquarters, he wears a special
beeper that goes off whenever the wind is right for windsurfing.
Once alerted, the 59-year-old Fama packs up his sailboard and
heads for the beach--or if he's stuck in a meeting, he exhorts
the participants to hurry up. Although considered a front-runner
for a Nobel, Fama refuses to shed his curmudgeonly ways, even
to compete for the prize. When well-wishers gently suggested
that he might help his chances by chatting up the Nobel committee,
his response was pure Fama: "If they come over here, I'll
chat, but I'm not dragging my behind over to Sweden."
While other thinkers had
long questioned whether stock prices were really predictable,
Fama's work gave the efficient-market hypothesis its most rigorous
intellectual grounding (as well as its name). Fama argued that
the stock market is a matchless information-processing machine,
whose participants collectively price shares correctly and instantaneously.
Unlike the market portrayed in mutual fund advertisements and
personal-finance magazines, it is not a place where the smartest
managers outwit the less smart. Instead, the market is so full
of well-trained, well-motivated investors avidly gathering information
and acting on it that not even Nobel Prize winners can hope to
beat it consistently. Sure, some managers will outpace the market
for a few years, but it is impossible to prove that those runs
are more than just sheer chance.
The efficient-market theory
still raises hackles on Wall Street, for obvious reasons. But
in academia the debate is all but over, and among pension fund
fiduciaries Fama's theories are now so accepted that an estimated
24% of the trillions of dollars in pension assets is invested
in index funds.
When Sinquefield and Booth
joined the work force after leaving Chicago, however, the efficient
market was a revolutionary idea. While working as a trust officer
at American National Bank in Chicago, Sinquefield evaluated the
bank's money managers and discovered just what Fama had predicted:
Funds that actively pick large-company stocks collectively do
no better than the S&P--worse, in fact, once you count their
fees of 0.5 to 1.5 percentage points a year. Why not create a
fund that simply tracked the index? asked Sinquefield. As long
as fees were low, it would be all but certain of beating most
professional stock pickers over time.
The new concept was the
ultimate hard sell. "You think John the Baptist had it tough!"
recalls Sinquefield. But he finally persuaded New York Telephone
to invest in an S&P 500 fund if American National started
one. So in 1975 Sinquefield and American National launched the
first index fund to mimic the S&P. (Or maybe the second--Wells
Fargo, which came out with a similar fund at the same time, claims
it got there first.)
Meanwhile, at investment
firm A.G. Becker in New York City, Booth was advising pension
fund managers on where to put their money. He noticed that almost
all the managers invested in big companies. Booth pleaded to
start a small-cap index fund, but his colleagues guffawed at
his presentation. "They were saying, 'Don't let the door
hit you on the way out,' " recalls Booth. The next day Booth
started DFA in his Brooklyn apartment, ripping out the sauna
to put in a Quotron machine.
As Booth began looking
for clients, another of Fama's graduate students, Rolf Banz,
was researching the performance of small stocks vs.
large.
Banz's research proved for the first time what most professional
investors take for granted today: that small-cap stocks produce
higher returns than big ones over long periods. The reasoning
is pretty straightforward. Smaller companies are riskier than
larger companies and have a higher cost of capital. No one would
invest except in expectation of earning a commensurately higher
return.
Sinquefield, who had been
following Banz's research, immediately proposed a small-cap index
fund at American National. The bank nixed the idea. By coincidence,
Booth called shortly afterward to say his fledgling firm was
hatching a product just like the one Sinquefield's employer had
deep-sixed. Sinquefield quit his job and joined Booth. DFA was
in business.
In keeping with Banz's
research, the fund would own all the stocks that made up the
smallest two deciles, measured by market capitalization, of the
companies on the New York Stock Exchange. (The name, the 9-10
fund, derives from the two deciles.) True efficient-market believers,
Sinquefield and Booth made no effort to sort the winners from
the dogs among the fund's holdings. Thus, there would be no research
department or celebrity money managers, and costs could be held
to a modest half percentage point, a third of what the average
small-cap fund charges today. The result was a fund with the
efficiency of an S&P indexer but the promise of higher returns
in the long run.
One of DFA's first moves
was to recruit Fama, Miller, Scholes, and Ibbotson as advisers.
Fama was delighted with the idea of a fund based on his principles.
"In class he kept telling us that the efficient-market theory
was the most practical thing we'd ever learn," recalls Booth.
"I think Rex and I were the only people who believed him."
Over the years Wall Street firms, including Goldman Sachs, have
tried to lure Fama away, but he always refused to leave his brainchild.
At first things went splendidly.
From July 1982 to mid-1983, DFA's small-cap fund gained nearly
100%, and pension funds rushed to sign up. Then Sinquefield and
Booth experienced a corollary of Banz's research: When small
stocks fall, they fall harder than big ones. From 1984 to 1990,
small caps went through the worst seven years in their history,
returning just 2.6% a year, vs. 14.7% for the S&P. "At
least it discouraged the competition," muses Booth.
hat
saved DFA during this period was that Sinquefield and Booth had
not overpromised when selling the fund. They never told clients
that small stocks would outpace big ones in any given period,
even one lasting seven years. They did pledge that DFA would
beat most competing small-cap funds, saddled as they were by
high fees. And so it did: All small-cap funds underperformed
the S&P, but DFA did better than most. Moreover, since the
small-stock dry spell ended in late 1990, the 9-10 fund has waxed
the S&P 500, the Russell 2000 small-stock index, and the
average small-company mutual fund.
Then as now, DFA owed
much of its outperformance to a fierce attention to costs. After
all, in an efficient market, costs are the one thing you can
control. In addition to charging low management fees, DFA gains
on the competition by sharp trading. Part of its advantage is
size: As the nation's largest market maker in small caps, DFA
is the first stop for active managers desperate to buy or sell
blocks of small stocks. Says Robert Deere, the head of trading:
"We make it as painful for them as possible."
While the 9-10 fund remained
a moderate success, it took another breakthrough by Fama to really
push DFA into the big time. The study, conducted with Kenneth
French, then of Yale, confirmed Banz's small-stock effect but
also showed convincingly that the lower the company's ratio of
price to book value, the higher its subsequent stock performance
tended to be. No other measures had nearly as much predictive
power--not earnings growth, price/earnings, or volatility. While
"value" managers such as Warren Buffett and Michael
Price had long maintained that it was smarter to buy companies
when they were out of favor--thus trading at low price-to-book
ratios--Fama and French proved the point with statistical rigor.
According to Fama and French's most recent data, downtrodden
"value" stocks have outpaced high price-to-book growth
stocks annually by an average of 15.5% to 11% over the past 34
years.
What makes the numbers
so dramatic is that growth stocks--the Coca-Colas and Gillettes--are
inevitably the most highly regarded issues, with the most predictable
earnings streams. The only problem is that you have to pay for
that reliability. That leaves less room for future appreciation.
Value stocks, by contrast, have low prices but big upside potential.
They have to offer investors higher return to compensate for
the extra risk of owning them, just as Kmart must offer higher
rates to sell its bonds than Wal-Mart. In a way, the value effect
is similar to the small-stock effect: Bigger risk pays off, in
aggregate, with higher returns. In fact, small stocks that also
trade at low price-to-book ratios provided the best results of
all in Fama and French's study, returning an annual 20.2% over
70 years, eight points more than big growth stocks.
DFA was quick to launch
a small- and a large-cap value fund based on Fama and French's
research. The funds buy only stocks that fall into low price-to-book
deciles, and they make no attempt to distinguish "better"
value stocks from worse ones. Partly on the strength of Fama's
research, the two funds have proved enormously popular and now
contain some $8 billion. One believer is Robert Boldt of Calpers,
which invests $1.7 billion with DFA. "I'm convinced the
value effect is real," says Boldt. "You have to expect
higher returns for investing in beaten-down companies."
With a certain amount
of academic prudence, the DFA sages are careful to warn that
their research is no substitute for a balanced investment plan.
They don't, for example, recommend that you invest only in small-cap
and value stocks; the two strategies sometimes badly underperform.
For stability, they recommend holding about 45% of your equities
in an S&P index fund.
None of that diminishes
their evangelical--some would say arrogant--attachment to their
strategies. The zealots at DFA believe that their methods have
not only the weight of evidence behind them but also the force
of history. "Today the only people who don't think markets
work are the North Koreans, the Cubans, and the stock pickers,"
says Sinquefield.
Who could argue, given
all the brainpower at DFA? Still, hope springs eternal in investors'
hearts. The temptation to try to pick the next Microsoft or Peter
Lynch is--let's face it--pretty hard to overcome. And besides,
at least one DFA giant thinks it's okay to indulge such guilty
pleasures as long as you recognize them for what they are. "I
choose a few stocks myself," says Nobel laureate Merton
Miller. "But I do it strictly for entertainment." |