2016 Report Card

February 1, 2017 Wyatt
2016 marked the first full calendar year for W. Swartz & Co., and by reaching that milestone I am able to review portfolios and give a report card for how portfolios did relative to their benchmarks.
Overall I can say that I am very pleased with how client portfolios performed.
Benchmark for stocks portfolios: Vanguard Total World Stock ETF (Ticker: VT): +8.51%
  • About the Benchmark: VT is an ideal benchmark for the world stock market. It is a global stock index fund that covers approximately 98% of the world’s investable market capitalization. About 50% of the fund’s portfolio is invested in U.S. stocks, 40% in international developed stocks, and the remaining 10% in emerging-market stocks.
Benchmark for fixed income portfolios: SPDR Bloomberg Barclays Aggregate Bond ETF (Ticker: BNDS): +2.37%
  • About the Benchmark: BNDS provides a measure of the performance of the U.S. dollar denominated investment grade bond market, which includes investment grade (must be Baa3/BBB- or higher using the middle rating of Moody’s Investor Service, Inc., Standard & Poor’s, and Fitch Inc.) government bonds, investment grade corporate bonds, mortgage pass through securities, commercial mortgage backed securities and asset backed securities that are publicly for sale in the United States.
BRAVO: +10.23% (after fees)
  • About this Portfolio: This portfolio is 100% stocks and used in accounts I manage where the client has below $100,000 allocated to stocks. It will mirror the WSTR portfolio in theme, but with fewer holdings.
  • Why the Outperformance?: The BRAVO portfolio performance was generally helped by opportune buying after cash had accumulated within the accounts. The majority of my clients that are invested in the BRAVO portfolio make contributions throughout the year. More than the individual holdings, client’s portfolios seem appear to have benefited from well-timed trades. Additionally, when a portfolio has less holdings and some of those holdings outperform the impact is greater than in a portfolio with more holdings.
  • Conclusion: Tactically timed trades can help lead to outperformance.
W. Swartz Total Return (WSTR): +6.8% (after fees)
  • About this Portfolio: This portfolio is 100% stocks and used in accounts I manage where the client has about $250,000 allocated to stocks. It is the flagship portfolio of W. Swartz & Co.
  • Why the Underperformance?: An underweight to emerging markets relative the benchmark. Historically emerging markets have underperformed developed markets in the late stages of bull markets & early stages of bear markets. While we cannot say how much longer this bull will run & past performance does not predict future performance it seems reasonable that this trend will play out again. I expect as sentiment in the markets improves & more money flows into stocks that chose dollars will gravitate towards seemingly more safe stocks of big blue chips in developed nations. Additionally I expect assets which are less broad & perceived riskier to underperform during the next bear market cycle. In markets it’s always better to be a bit early to the party than fashionably late.
CORE Fixed Income: +4.22% (after fees)
  • About this Portfolio:  This portfolio is 100% fixed income correlated securities. Meaning that it may not be invested in individual debt securities, but rather pools of debt securities in the form of ETFs &mutual funds. This portfolio uses the Barclays Aggregate Bond ETF as a benchmark.
  • Why the Outperformance? An overweight to high-yield & corporate bonds vs the benchmark led to considerable outperformance in fixed income portfolios for 2016. Moving forward in what is likely to be an environment where rates rise faster than in 2016 I expect lower duration bonds to be an important factor in fixed income portfolios.
Summary: In a world where average investors drastically underperform the asset classes they hold, I am excited to say that my clients achieved market like or better than market returns in their portfolios for 2016.
                                                                                                                                                Wyatt Swartz
2/1/2017