Ebook400 pages4 hours
Delivering Alpha: Lessons from 30 Years of Outperforming Investment Benchmarks
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
3/5
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About this ebook
From a former World Bank Executive and renowned investor—a detailed roadmap to adding consistent, sustainable value to globally diversified portfolios
For many investors, alpha is akin to the Holy Grail. Risk-adjusted returns above benchmarks—alpha—are particularly challenging to achieve even with a sound strategy. Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg is an expert on alpha. Over the past four decades, she and her team consistently exceeded benchmarks and delivered appreciable value added on their investments.
In Delivering Alpha, she reveals the principles and methods employed in her investment strategies, along with insights drawn from her personal life. She shows how timing, market awareness, price, and relative value to the investor are critical drivers of effective investment decisions. Ochoa-Brillembourg also debunks common investment myths that often trip up both new and experienced investors.
Delivering Alpha provides practical advice on:
•Creating successful decision-making governance to reduce errors and correctly assign responsibilities and incentives
•Dealing thoughtfully and effectively with governance challenges
•Building the right policy portfolio, specifying desired allocations to each asset class
•Structuring asset classes and adding value-oriented or other opportunistic “tilts”
•Measuring and managing risks, avoiding common mistakes, and more
Light on theory and serious on practice, this book is the culmination of a lifetime’s experience from one of the most successful women in finance. It’s essential reading for investors looking to add sustainable value to globally diversified portfolios.
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Reviews for Delivering Alpha
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
3/5
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5In Delivering Alpha, Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg shares her experiences managing financial assets for several institutional and private clients over a three decade-long career. Structured as a series of topical discussions, the book attempts to answer the question: How should a money management operation be designed and managed so as to generate superior investment returns? Ochoa-Brillembourg seems to be well qualified for this task, having produced an enviable level of long-term outperformance in her own company. Indeed, many of her insights involving topics such as asset allocation strategy, trading alternative assets, and firm governance principles are very illuminating. On the other hand, the order of the discussion is repetitive, quite poorly organized (e.g., illiquidity risk is described in a number of chapters), and often superficial, which greatly limits the effectiveness of the project. The biggest impediment, however, is that she has not really made a clear-cut choice in her target audience—the board-level fiduciaries who manage the organization or the investment staff who manages the assets.Indicative of this expositional problem is the very loose way in which the central concept of alpha is defined. Simply put, alpha is the difference between the actual return a portfolio generates and the expected return it should have earned. Since the first term is measurable, calculating alpha really comes down to how expected returns are measured. Economists tend to specify a formal risk model (such as the CAPM) for this purpose, while practitioners typically use the return to a benchmark index (or series of indexes) or the average return generated by a peer group. The main difference between these approaches is that the former measures the risk of the portfolio very precisely—hence the notion that alpha is a risk-adjusted return—but may not represent a directly investable alternative. Conversely, comparing actual returns to those of a benchmark, which is often a viable alternative to the manager being evaluated, does not take investment risk into account explicitly. Unfortunately, both definitions of alpha are used interchangeably throughout the book, which makes it difficult to understand how a portfolio’s outperformance is supposed to be delivered. In fact, the text is largely silent on exactly how someone should design a portfolio to beat expected returns, although there are a few examples of macro-oriented trades the author made in the past to help her firm achieve its results. Essentially, alpha comes from two types of active decisions: tactically adjusting the asset class weights in the portfolio or selecting superior securities within those asset classes. This fact is acknowledged with the following statement near the end of the book: “The divergence between sentiment and fundamentals is the most reliable long-term source of alpha.” However, other than some occasional vague directives that one should consider investing whenever securities are misvalued, Ochoa-Brillembourg never really explains how we might make those assessments.Several other topic discussions are flawed as well; I’ll mention two here. The author begins the book with a consideration of something she calls “fit theory”, which is just of way of saying that investors should consider how any potential new investment will affect an existing portfolio. This is not a new concept and she does not provide enough detail for the reader to implement the rule-of-thumb formula she suggests. (In fact, the high-yield bond example she offers as an illustration is not helpful because the correlation coefficient necessary for the calculation would not have been available at the time of the investment.) Particularly surprising was the extremely limited coverage on the topic of how to select (or terminate) the outside managers who are responsible for actually investing the asset class-specific portfolios. This is crucial because for an institution that follows the “external manager” model, all of the alpha delivered by security selection will come from these outside agents. Despite stressing that her firm was a pioneer of what is by now an industry-standard approach, the author devotes just two very brief chapters (i.e., about five pages each) to this essential subject. Of course, Delivering Alpha also contains a lot of good information, even if those discussions are not necessarily integrated into a cohesive whole. Notable among these topics are the process for creating an investment policy statement, how to manage portfolio volatility, responsible employee compensation arrangements, and a company’s organization and culture. The problem, though, is that these insights appear somewhat randomly and they are often interspersed with other points that are either misplaced, redundant, or far too terse to be useful. Perhaps the best way to assess this volume’s potential impact is as follows: If you handed the book to both a trustee and a staff member at an institutional investment firm, would either find a sufficient amount of information to execute their fiduciary duties effectively (to say nothing of producing superior investment performance)? Sadly, I think that the answer to that question is very likely “no”. As such, despite containing many thought-provoking points, the work ultimately falls short of its intended goal.
Book preview
Delivering Alpha - Hilda Ochoa-Brillembourg
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