Share investors require the patience to let companies implement long-term plans, says Bob Van Munster

In the wealth management industry we  constantly advocate the need for investors to take a long-term view – we have even
written about this many times ourselves
in this column. Sadly though, many
continue to focus on the  short term -
and it’s not just investors or day traders
either. This behaviour is widespread from professional investors, to analysts, corporations  and even fund managers – either by their own doing or just the sheer pressure of others.

Working in the funds management industry I see this behaviour every day; and like the
other  investor behaviours we have
explored in previous articles, it’s not
necessarily a rational or healthy  approach.

In this article we look at how “short-termism” can not only impact investor returns, but can  ultimately be detrimental to long-term
economic growth. Investors chasing the
next big stock  phenomenon, hoping to
make a quick capital gain; companies
facing constant pressure to meet  analysts’
profit expectations; and fund managers being
increasingly scrutinised for their short-term performance, are all damaging behaviours. Indeed, they run counter to the underlying premise of investing in shares in the first
place, with the majority of Australian
share funds having an investment time
horizon of three to five-plus years.

Short-termism – the evidence

As a participant in the investment industry for more than 35 years, I have been observing  the increasing focus on the short term from a variety of aspects – from a shareholder
investing on behalf of our clients, and
as a fund manager being constantly
scrutinised for performance by the
industry.

I have observed a marked
increase in the level of short-termism
in the market in recent years, as  evidenced
by higher turnover in the sharemarket, shorter
tenures for CEOs, and remuneration  packages
for senior management that have a heavy
bent towards short-term performance.

I
see this behaviour at its strongest during company reporting season. The last reporting season in February was a particularly
enlightening one, where we saw a high
level of “fast  money” looking for a
turnaround in company  performance and
profitability, which exited quickly if
reality fell short of expectations. This included companies that reported a lift in profit, but which still disappointed.

Qantas was a case in point. It returned a good result for the first half of the year
(it delivered a profit while most
airlines languished in the red), has
worked at rationalising the business, and
is well positioned to take advantage of the expected increase in travel as the global economy gains momentum. But the market was expecting more of that positive outlook to be delivered  now. When the company didn’t increase its  guidance for its full-year profit, the stock
fell 12  per cent in a week. Nothing had changed, except that the
analysts had forecast  a linear recovery
and were disappointed. The company’s
advice that price increases take some time
to flow through to higher revenues should have been heeded. With no change to the longer term fundamentals the stock slowly recovered its losses over the next month or so.

This “fast money” trend, where investors are looking to make quick gains, is not new and
we expect it to continue for some time
yet. Similarly, we expect the average
holding period for stocks to continue
the decline that has now been in place
for several years.

During the last
reporting season there was an unusually
high level of turnover in the sharemarket across all sectors, which is an indicator of the average holding period
of stocks. Indicative numbers show that
the Australian sharemarket, which has a
market capitalisation of around $1.3  trillion
and an annual turnover of around $1.430 trillion,
effectively turns itself over every nine months. This compares with every 15 months just four years ago; and roughly every two
years, 12 years ago. Those companies
that have high turnover in their shares
make it very difficult for  management to
have confidence in implementing long-term
investment plans.

This trend for a lower
average holding period is also evident
overseas. In the US, the average  holding
period for stocks on the New York Stock Exchange
has progressively fallen over the past  70
years. In the 1940s the average stock holding period was around 10 years. By the 1970s this had fallen to six years; but by the late
2000s this had fallen to just six
months. There are a number of reasons
for this decline; however, there is clearly
a trend for investors to turnover their stocks
much more frequently.

This trend was
further evidenced by a fall in the
holding period for US mutual funds. In a
paper written by John C Bogle, founder and former chairman of The Vanguard Group, in the Financial Analysts Journal in 2005, he commented that the average holding period for mutual funds in the 1950s was 10 years, but by 2004 it had fallen to around four years. Gone are
the days when investors bought funds for
the long haul. Bogle cited the plethora
of managed funds in all shapes, sizes
and sectors now available to  investors
as one of the reasons for the higher turnover.

Similarly in Australia, investors have an
incredible array of managed funds to
choose from. Each time an investor
switches from one fund to the next, they
are more than likely paying the price in
one form or another – namely transaction costs – which perhaps unbeknown to them could be having an impact on their net returns.

Corporates feeling the pressure

Companies are feeling the pressure of this short-term focus on their profits, especially
by  analysts. Each reporting period there
are high  expectations for companies to
deliver on their profit forecasts – not
for the next financial year, but the
next six months.

Analysts are
increasingly expecting companies to not
just meet, but exceed their expectations. If they don’t, then the share price suffers. This constant pressure for companies to
exceed short-term profit expectations
means that often long-term investment
can be sacrificed. Cost cutting to the
muscle is a reflection of companies making
short-term gains for long-term pain.

The
danger here is that companies are less willing
to invest for the long term, as the pay-off period is too lengthy for a market obsessed with short-term earnings results. This is not
beneficial  for a company’s growth or
indeed the economy.

One way management
are getting around this dilemma is to
participate in private equity deals,
rather than staying listed (or listing) on the stock exchange. One example of this was Myer. In June 2006 retailing giant Myer was sold to a private equity (PE) group led by
Texas Pacific Group and which also
included the Myer family and company
management. The PE group implemented
significant changes, including updating
the look of the stores, new IT systems, changing
the store-card and loyalty program and
the management reward system. By going private,
company management were able to make changes
and turn the company around.  While the
company may have been able to make these changes if they had remained a public company,  the market would have punished them severely.

According to Myer CEO Bernie Brookes, “Because you are no longer a public company,
the focus of your communication on the
changes can be internal; ie, your own
staff – you don’t have  to explain
yourself again and again to a stream of
financial analysts or shareholders.” He also stated, “We don’t need to ‘sugar-coat things’, we can make smart financial decisions that have long-term benefits, and the owners are
sophisticated enough to understand and
endorse that approach.”

The PE group paid $1.4 billion for Myer and it was subsequently floated on the Australian Stock Exchange in September 2009 for a value  of $2.3 billion – delivering them a very
handsome return of 64 per cent.

Fund managers under scrutiny

Fund managers too are feeling the pinch, with an increasing focus on their short-term
performance. The release of the
performance tables by various research
houses, and accompanying media reports
about which fund manager was ranked
number one over the previous month, are testimony
to this behaviour.

The constant focus on
short-term performance runs counter to the investment
philosophy for many fund managers and is
also contradictory to the investment
objective of share funds, which tend to
have investment horizons of three to
five-plus years.

At Tyndall Investments,
we adopt a threeyear view and look
beyond the market “noise” to find
intrinsic value in stocks. This can mean our share portfolios may underperform in the short term as we buy certain stocks as they
continue to fall, remaining steadfast in
stocks we believe will  outperform over
the long term.

However, our disciplined
approach is generally  rewarded with
strong long-term outperformance  when the
market re-bounds and re-focuses on a
company’s fundamentals and long-term growth
prospects. A good example of this occurred
during the recent global financial crisis when many cyclical stocks were sold down heavily and represented exceptional value, providing good buying opportunities for value managers.

Unlike the tech boom, where optimism fuelled demand for growth stocks, this time pessimism fuelled demand for defensive and “safe” stocks. Investors were prepared to pay
a premium for stocks in sectors such as
healthcare and consumer staples. As an
intrinsic value  manager, we recognised
that cyclical stocks represented  excellent
value compared to defensives,  with the
price-to-earnings spread between the  two
widening to extreme levels (see chart 2). Accordingly, taking a three-year view, we positioned the portfolio to benefit from an expected
market upturn.

While we did experience short-term
underperformance on some of these
stocks, as fear remained supreme, our
strategy did pay off with cyclical
stocks subsequently bouncing back in March
and April 2009 (as evidenced by the narrowing in the P/E spread in chart 2) as investor confidence returned.

This pressure to outperform in the short term can mean some fund managers may be reluctant to make investments in stocks that don’t pay off for a few years. This of course
can lead to some active managers being
accused of being index huggers – which
is not what investors are paying for.

The short-term focus can also mean fund managers can be terminated too early in the cycle. Research by Goyal and Wahal (2004) on the hiring and firing of fund managers by US pension funds between 1994 and 2003, showed that fund managers are fired at the wrong
point in the cycle, with excess returns
of the fired fund managers usually
turning positive after being fired. They
concluded that if the pension plans had
stayed with the fired investment managers, their excess returns would have been similar to those from the newly hired managers.

David Gonski, chairman of the Australian Securities Exchange and chancellor of the University of New South Wales, believes the
way fund managers are continually
monitored and graded is one of the
biggest reasons for the market’s short-term
focus, summing up the situation succinctly
stating: “We judge investment managers on
their ability to perform well in the short term, which is crazy since many of these managers are funding whole-of-life situations.” Gonski went as far to say that short-termism
actually contributed to the global
financial crisis, with the ready supply
of cheap credit and the constant pressure
to produce quick profits substantially weakening
company balance sheets.

The focus on the
short term is indeed an issue for
investors, companies and fund managers alike,
either of their own making or because of
pressure from gatekeepers and influencers. This behaviour is not beneficial for any party and directly contradicts the purpose of
investing. It represents a complete
mismatch with each party’s goals -
whether it is an individual’s investment objective, a company’s long-term business plan or a fund manager’s performance objective.

Shares are a long-term investment, not only because of their volatile nature, but
primarily because their intrinsic value
(as opposed to their  market value) is a
function of their future longterm  earnings
and cash flows.

In order to grow and
reward their shareholders with dividends
and capital growth, companies need to
invest in their business, which can
involve projects that run for many years.
Companies need to have confidence that they
can implement these long-term strategies; and investors and analysts need to have patience to let these projects run and deliver
long-term benefits to shareholders.

Bob Van Munster is head of equities for Tyndall Investment Management

Join the discussion