Frequently Asked Questions
HOW DOES INVESTING FOR CATHOLICS BENEFIT INVESTORS?
Investing for Catholics provides investors with the education and the ability to significantly improve their risk-adjusted returns by investing in globally diversified portfolios of passively managed no load index mutual funds that are screened for Catholic values. This allows investors to earn market rates of return and be completely peaceful—at the same time.
Wall Street and most of the financial services industry preys upon our instincts which respond to two very visceral human emotions — fear and greed. We hurt when we lose money that we invested with an expectation for fast growth. And, we get frustrated when we hear others describe the seemingly effortless fortunes that they garnered through a lucky stock or fund pick.
Most investors get mired in the wanting and the fear, and fail to realize that no one can consistently pick the next winning stock or fund manager and that recent past performance is a function of luck, and luck is not a repeatable skill. The obedience to the transitory hopes and fears diverts us away from the far more deeply meaningful aspects of life. And, these emotions don’t do us any good. In fact, they deprive us of the market’s superior returns that are available if we simply buy, hold and rebalance a risk-appropriate portfolio of market index funds.
A study by Dalbar, Quantitative Analysis of Investor Behavior, was released at in March 2009. It concluded that during the 20 years from 1989 through 2008, the average stock fund investor earned returns of only 1.87% per year, while the S&P 500 returned 8.42% per year, and a globally diversified small-value tilted index portfolio would have earned 9.21%. The reason for this incredible underperformance is that investors respond to these two visceral emotions, they worry, they panic, and they capitulate. These results are a vivid reminder of what Thomas Merton said, "The tighter you squeeze, the less you have."
We see these same outcomes in the institutional investing world. The study "Absence of Value: An Analysis of Investment Allocation Decisions by Institutional Plan Sponsors" appeared in the November/December 2009 issue of the Financial Analysts Journal, the depth and scope of which is surely to impact the manner in which institutional investors make investment decisions. The study covered 80,000 annual returns over 22 years of institutional investment decisions, and concluded, "much like individual investors who seem to switch mutual funds at the wrong time, institutional investors do not appear to create value from their investment decisions. In fact, the study estimates that over $170 billion was lost over the period examined," and that is before transaction costs and consultant fees are considered!
HOW DOES INVESTING FOR CATHOLICS GO ABOUT RESEARCHING ORGANIZATIONS TO MAKE SURE THAT THEIR BUSINESS PRACTICES ARE IN LINE WITH CATHOLIC VALUES?
The rules for the Social Screens implemented by the IFA SRI Index Portfolios are carried out through a series of analyses and a subsequent filtering process that is implemented through a third-party fund screener. The exercise is to start with a universe that includes all companies with respect to a particular index, anything from a U.S. Large Cap, to an emerging markets small cap index, and then apply a filter to disqualify those that are not in keeping with the rules of the Socially Responsible screens. The criteria for justifying that a particular company remains as part of the IFA SRI Index Portfolio is based on an objective measure of the level of the company’s involvement in a particular business or industry that has been identified as untenable from a values perspective.
The third-party fund screener applies the screen, and monitors – on an ongoing basis -- all companies in the Portfolio, and those on its list of possibilities for inclusion, to ensure that not only they qualify initially for inclusion, but that they remain qualified for inclusion. If something occurs within the company, say an acquisition, a new product, or a merger-- then the company’s qualification for inclusion has to be "re-earned", so to speak, and the process for inclusion starts all over.
WHAT ARE SOME BUSINESS PRACTICES THAT WOULD DISQUALIFY AN INVESTMENT FROM THE INVESTING FOR CATHOLICS PROGRAM?
By setting an objective measure or level of involvement, the Socially Responsible Portfolios are expected to reflect the same risk and return metrics of the indexes they track, while eliminating the companies that operate in a manner that is counter to Catholic values.
IFA SRI Index Portfolios are screened to exclude:
- Companies that earn at least 20% of their total business revenue through the production and/or sale of military weapons and/or weapons of mass destruction
- Companies that are engaged in certain for-profit business activities in or with the Republic of Sudan
- Companies that earn at least 15% of their total business revenue through the production and/or sale of tobacco or alcohol products
- Companies that earn at least 20% of their total business revenue from gambling activities
- Companies that directly participate in abortions
- Companies that manufacture pharmaceuticals, abortive agents, or contraceptives
- Companies that earn at least 15% of their total business revenue from publishing or selling pornographic materials
- Companies that are for-profit healthcare providers
- Companies whose operations have had major recent controversies relating to child labor infractions in the U.S. or abroad
- Conduct stem cell research with cells derived from human embryos or human fetal tissue
- Use fetal cell lines in the development of vaccines and other biologics, such as therapeutic proteins or gene therapy products
- Develop or produce products for scientific research specifically on embryonic or fetal stem cells, such as technology that isolates or regulates the growth and proliferation of stem cells
DO CATHOLICS HAVE TO GIVE UP THE PROSPECT OF MAKING MONEY IF THEY CHOOSE TO INVEST ACCORDING TO THEIR VALUES?
You really can do well by doing good. IFA SRI Index Portfolios are designed to track market indexes over long periods of time. In short periods, we expect there will be tracking differences between the non-filtered Index Portfolios and the Socially Responsible strategies, but over long periods of time we expect them to track the traditional Index Portfolios very closely.
INVESTING FOR CATHOLICS FACILITATES ACTIVE OWNERSHIP COMBINED WITH PASSIVE INVESTING. WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?
First, let's define what we mean by "passive investing." Passive investing means that we don’t try to pick stocks, or fund managers or try to time the markets. Such activities fall under the category of active investing—which has shown not only to add no value, but as another recent study pointed out— most frequently detracts value from a portfolio. Knowing this, we advise investors to avoid the "prediction addiction" and choose instead to buy, hold and rebalance a globally diversified, risk-appropriate index portfolio that is in keeping with the rules of construction for each index fund, and hold onto it no matter what. That is the passive part. The active ownership part of the IFA SRI Index Portfolios has to do with the ongoing fund screening and monitoring process which ensures that companies approved as being Socially Responsible remain that way or are removed from the portfolio, and that an ongoing search and screening process continues to identify new companies for potential inclusion or exclusion from the portfolios.
Financial
Theory
If
everyone followed an indexing strategy would markets still be efficient?
Rex
Sinquefield
This question
has come up repeatedly ever since indexed strategies first appeared in the mid
1970s. Critics of indexing assert that markets would be less efficient if all
investors adopted a market-fund investment approach. One can accept this
theoretical viewpoint and still embrace indexing with enthusiasm.
If the
adoption of indexed strategies became so pervasive that market efficiency were
impaired, it would be a self-correcting process. Mispriced securities would
create opportunities for investors to earn profits in excess of their research
costs, and their activity would drive prices back to equilibrium levels. We will
never know how much information and liquidity are required for an efficient
market. Markets for consumer durables such as homes or autos appear to be at
least reasonably efficient, despite very poor liquidity, high search costs, and
the absence of perfectly fungible assets. This behavior suggests a shift to
passive investing would have to be very pronounced to have any effect on market
efficiency.
Even if all
professional investment managers adopted a passive approach, other market
participants would continue to provide price-setting information. Sources of
such information could include corporate stock buybacks, acquisitions, and the
investment activities of officers, employees, competitors, and suppliers.
Despite the
impressive commercial success of indexed investing strategies over the last
twenty-five years, they still represent only a fraction of total stock market
wealth.
Isn’t the
success of indexing in recent years mostly due to a "self-fulfilling prophecy"?
Index funds appear to push up prices of a handful of big company stocks simply
because they're included in the S&P 500 index.
Some critics
of indexing assert that mechanical buying from index funds creates a
"self-reinforcing trend" in a handful of large company stocks and that their
price behavior is dictated by cash inflows to index managers, not fundamental
business conditions at the underlying companies.
Evidence to
support this assertion is difficult to find. A more plausible explanation of
pricing suggests it is the active money managers who dictate prices to indexers,
not the other way around. As an example, an analysis of trading activity in
General Electric Corp. stock* (the largest component of the S&P 500 index) found
that programmed buying from index funds in January 1997 accounted for
approximately 1.3% of total GE monthly trading volume. The notion that 1.3% of
trading attributable to passive investors possessing no useful information
determines the price-discovery process for the remaining 98.7% of market
participants is far-fetched.
Advocates of
the "self-fulfilling" viewpoint must also confront a wide disparity in
performance of individual issues. If the behavior of large company stocks is
primarily attributable to passive investors buying without regard to fundamental
developments, it is difficult to explain why Coca-Cola shares appreciated only
0.5% in 1998 while Wal-Mart Stores soared 106.5%.
*Strategic
Insight Mutual Fund Overview February 1997
What is
CRSP?
CRSP
("crisp") is an acronym for the Center for Research in Security Prices at the
University of Chicago. Established in 1960 with a grant from Merrill Lynch &
Co., the center undertook a massive data-gathering project to answer the
question "how have stocks performed over the long term?" Under the direction of
James Lorie, Ph.D., a professor of business administration, and Lawrence Fisher,
associate professor of finance, a database of both price and dividend
information was compiled for all common stocks listed on the NYSE beginning in
1926. Over two million bits of information were entered onto magnetic tape, and
the commercial computers then becoming available calculated total returns. The
results were published in a landmark article in the Journal of
Business in January 1964. The center continues to add data on a
regular basis, and with a $180,000 grant from Dimensional Fund Advisors in 1984,
added data from NASDAQ markets starting in January 1972. The CRSP data files
have been an essential tool in the study of capital markets by an entire
generation of financial economists.
U.S. Equities
Why does
Dimensional use a ratio of book value to market value to construct portfolios
for the value strategies? Book value appears to be increasingly
unimportant in assessing stocks as investors attach greater significance to
off-balance sheet assets such as technological expertise or brand recognition.
The goal is to distinguish
between companies with high and low investor expectations; using market price
relative to some fundamental economic measure effectively captures these
differences. There is no magic associated with book value; research shows that
screening on other fundamental measures such as cash flow, earnings, or
dividends produces similar results. Book value appears to do the best job in
explaining differences in average returns over time between growth and value
stocks, but the current reliance on book value does not preclude future
refinements in screening techniques.
Dimensional’s small company strategies employ a "patient buyer" trading strategy
to purchase blocks of thinly-traded stocks at a discount. What happens if
Dimensional gets a large redemption? Won’t it face the same transaction cost
problem trying to sell these stocks?
It would be difficult to
manage our small cap portfolios cost-effectively if they were subject to large
and unexpected redemptions. Unlike conventional mutual funds accessible by the
general public, Dimensional strategies have been developed exclusively for a
limited number of professional investors such as corporate pension plans, state
governments and registered investment advisors. We work closely with clients to
identify significant cash inflows or outflows in advance in order to minimize
overall portfolio transaction costs. Although it has never occurred, the
Portfolios are permitted to make redemption payments by a distribution of
portfolio securities in lieu of cash (see DFA Investment Dimensions Group Inc.
prospectus dated March 30, 1999, page 54).
What is a
reasonable expectation for portfolio turnover in the various strategies?
A portfolio such as U.S.
Large Company will have relatively low turnover since companies in the S&P 500
index which it attempts to track are replaced infrequently. Turnover is
generally higher for strategies focusing on the small capitalization or value
dimensions of the equity market. In order to maintain the desired small cap or
value characteristics, stocks are sold as they move out of a pre-determined
buy/hold range.
Annual Portfolio Turnover as of 12/31/2007
(from Morningstar ®) |
|
U.S. Large Company |
13% |
|
U.S. Large Cap Value |
9% |
|
U.S. Small Cap |
21% |
|
U.S. Targeted Value |
9% |
International Equities
Why is
dividend reinvestment required for all Dimensional international stock
Portfolios?
Paying dividends in
additional shares rather than cash is intended to reduce portfolio expenses,
thus enhancing investment returns. Transaction costs are relatively high in some
international markets – bank custody fees alone are $90 per trade in Spain, for
example. Paying cash dividends at a specific time each year would either require
the fund to set aside cash for future dividend payments (thus remaining
underinvested in equities) or sell securities to raise cash, incurring
transaction costs.
Fixed Income
Why do
Dimensional fixed income funds have annual portfolio turnover of 100% - 200% in
some years? This appears inconsistent with a passive strategy.
Dimensional’s fixed income
approach is "passive" in one sense – it involves no interest rate or economic
forecasting – but is "active" in implementation. Research conducted by Eugene
Fama at the University of Chicago suggests a shifting-maturity strategy that
targets segments of the yield curve with the highest expected return can add
value relative to a conventional indexed approach. The optimal maturity targets
are constantly reviewed using information provided in the yield curve, and
transactions are made if the increase in expected return exceeds the cost of
making the trade. Annual portfolio turnover in excess of 100% is not unusual. An
important element of the shifting maturity strategy is a focus exclusively on
short-term instruments with the highest credit quality. These issues are very
liquid, and can be traded at very low cost.
Click to read more on Dimensional´s Fixed Income Strategies.
Why does
Dimensional offer a global fixed income strategy but no international-only fixed
income strategy? Shouldn’t the allocation decision between domestic and
international fixed income be made by the advisor?
Dimensional’s global fixed
income strategy reflects our view that the sole purpose of fixed income in a
balanced account is to dampen the volatility of equities. Returns for a U.S.
investor in non-dollar denominated securities are determined by a combination of
changes in foreign currency exchange rates and the return on the underlying
fixed income securities. The return component attributable to fluctuating
exchange rates frequently exceeds that of the fixed income securities by a wide
margin. The additional volatility attributable to the currency fluctuations
defeats the purpose of holding fixed income securities.
If one could predict future
changes in foreign exchange rates, it would be possible to engage in selective
hedging activity in an effort to improve the reward-to-volatility
characteristics. There is little evidence, however, that active managers are
able to extract excess returns from foreign exchange trading with any
consistency.
As a result, Dimensional
employs foreign currency forward contracts to hedge exchange rate risk at
all times. High-grade securities from eight major international
bond markets (Australia, Canada, Denmark, Euro, Japan, Sweden, U.K. and U.S.)
are placed in competition with each other. Non-dollar denominated assets are
purchased only when their expected returns (net of all hedging costs)
exceed those of comparable U.S. instruments. No more than 30% of portfolio
assets can be invested in any single country outside the U.S. It is not unusual
for the portfolio to own issues from major multinationals such as G.E.,
Hewlett-Packard, or McDonald’s in several different currencies.
By eliminating both the
potential profit and loss from currency movements, the strategy eliminates the
greatest source of risk in a global bond portfolio. The increased
diversification provided by owning securities in multiple bond markets suggests
it is appropriate to consider using Dimensional’s global strategy as a
substitute, not just a companion, for a U.S-only approach.
Why
doesn’t Dimensional offer portfolios investing in mortgage-backed securities,
convertible bonds, or high yield debt?
Dimensional believes that
five factors explain the vast majority of returns in diversified portfolios
(market, size, and value for equities; term risk and default risk for fixed
income). They also appear to explain the behavior of hybrid asset classes
such as high yield bonds or convertible securities. In general, the behavior of
these asset classes can be captured more reliably and at lower cost by using
some combination of structured equity strategies combined with high-grade
short-term fixed income securities.
Balanced Strategies
If
academic research demonstrates that value stocks have higher returns than growth
stocks or market portfolios over time, why not put 100% of the equity allocation
in value stocks?
For investors who define risk
solely as the variability of returns, such a strategy might be appropriate.
Whether such investors actually exist is debatable. Most investors are
probably sensitive to the risk of being different from the market, even if
overall variability is no higher. Value stocks do not outperform market
portfolios regularly or predictably - if they did, they would not be riskier. To
the extent an investor is likely to be disappointed with performance that
differs from a market portfolio, a tilt toward value stocks should be undertaken
cautiously. Source: DFA