Practical analysis for investment professionals
11 August 2013

The Importance of Turnover in Picking Managers

Posted In: Economics

Most of my posts end with a question to our readers. I ask questions not only to promote a dialog, but more importantly to learn from some pretty smart people who regularly read these posts. Last week, one of the long-term members of this community sent me a series of thoughtful questions. One of the questions was, “When you conduct your analysis of funds and managers, how important is portfolio turnover in your calculation?” In effect, he is asking if turnover rates matter.

When an investment analyst is asked this type of question, you should not be surprised that the answer is, “Yes and no with an explanation.”

A Compliance Invention Misused

The earliest use of the term “turnover rate” was by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in required prospectus disclosure. (Because I hope to be visiting our British friends shortly, I need to distinguish between the U.S. use of the term and the United Kingdom’s use of “turnover” as a synonym for “sales.”) The SEC’s prospectus requirement was not designed as a selection tool to pick funds. The purpose of the calculation is to spot excessive churning of a portfolio to generate what used to be valuable brokerage commissions. This purpose becomes clearer when you understand how the rate is calculated: The smaller of either aggregate purchases or sales is divided by the monthly average of total net assets. Now you have learned more than you ever wanted to know about turnover rates.

Turnover is a Good Place to Start Asking Questions

Portfolio turnover is an important place to start, but perhaps more important is personnel turnover, which I will discuss further below. In terms of portfolio turnover data, when I talk with portfolio managers I ask the following questions:

  • On balance, are they selling losers or winners?
  • What is the average length of time before transacting?
  • Is the average length of time different for the winners and losers?
  • Do they do any post-transaction analysis to determine in the following six or twelve months whether the decision was a good one?
  • In general, what did the transactions do to the portfolio?
  • How does the current turnover rate compare with those in the past, and does this have any particular significance?

There are other questions that are then asked about the research behind particular positions in the portfolio. However, if the portfolio manager (PM) does not have answers to most of the turnover questions above, I find it difficult to have the requisite confidence in the fund for it to be owned by my clients.

There is an important caveat about turnover rates that needs to be recognized: They seem to be rising, meaning that the weighted average in the portfolio is being held for a shorter period of time. One of the reasons for this is the consultants’/selectors’ “Three Year Fallacy.” Under normal conditions, three years is only a portion of an investment cycle. Four years fits closer to the historical trends and normally contains a U.S. presidential cycle. Actually, the command economies have favored a five year period for their planning. I personally prefer a ten year period, which would give ample time for a recovery from a management mistake. Enough of the numerology — the real reason for the intermediaries to focus on three years is that it is the shortest period in which they can earn a new fee for a search to replace a poorly performing manager. (Often there is a substantial relative performance recovery after a three-year period. This could be caused by redemptions that are forcing the PM to sell, and often he/she sells some positions that didn’t do as well as expected in the recovery.)

There is a second and more structurally dangerous factor causing turnover rates to rise. I have been on non-profit investment committees that are doing a good job meeting the twenty-or-more-years need for funding. They invest for the long term and review their performance intensively once a year (and sometimes quarterly). Because of the long-term nature of their tasks, they will put up with a number of underperforming periods before they switch investments. That period of disappointment might last five years. Today, we have the ability to get publicly traded portfolio performance monthly, weekly, daily, and perhaps even hourly. If it took 20 quarterly observations for the long-term manager to finally terminate a fund, the same number of unhappy reports could occur in a month of twenty trading days — or a year and eight months, if monthly numbers are the trigger.

Hopefully owners of accounts in funds and/or individual securities will be mature enough not to be solely driven by performance numbers and will pay attention to what is happening within the portfolio and within the investment organization.

The Important Turnover Report: Personnel

In our meetings with various fund groups we are sensing many more portfolio managers being switched than what we have seen in the past. The same trend is also being noted by Citywire outside of the United States, where at the current rate by year-end over 1000 portfolio managers will be replaced. Several U.S. organizations that have been remarkably stable for years are now experiencing portfolio manager turnover. Some of this may be due to financial or psychic compensation or, in a number of instances, performance problems. In some cases these changes are not disclosed. What is definitely not disclosed is the turnover in analysts. Only at a recent face-to-face meeting with a PM did we learn about a reduction in the number of analysts in the office. (Interesting enough, the PM believes that it could help improve the quality of investment research and decisions.)

The turnover of senior officers in a firm is important to me. Recent turnover of CFOs has caught my attention, as these are not just bookkeepers but play critical roles in developing and carrying out corporate strategies. Rarely do we see announcements of critical changes on the trading desks at institutions. For many funds that have a high portfolio turnover and/or invest in small or micro-caps, the traders can add great value. This also true in the fixed income and credit markets.

Is Turnover Important?

Yes, the context of the turnover in the portfolio and in the organization is important, but the number itself can be misleading.

How Do You View Turnover?

Please let me know privately or publicly.

I am looking forward to seeing some of you in London in September.

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All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author’s employer.

About the Author(s)
A. Michael Lipper, CFA

A. Michael Lipper, CFA, is president of Lipper Advisory Services, Inc., a firm providing money management services for wealthy families, retirement plans and charitable organizations. A former president of the New York Society of Security Analysts, he created the Lipper Growth Fund Index, the first of today’s global array of Lipper Indexes, averages and performance analyses for mutual funds. After selling his company to Reuters in 1998, Lipper has focused his energy on managing the investments of his clients and his family. His first book, Money Wise: How to Create, Grow and Preserve Your Wealth, was published by St. Martin's Press. Lipper’s unique perspectives on world markets and their implications have been posted weekly on his blog since August, 2008.

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