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How to Avoid Investment Marketing Clichés

Excess Returns

Monthly insights for investment marketing and sales professionals

September 2014

Clichés — words or phrases that have lost all meaning through overuse — undermine effective communication everywhere. At best, clichés convey a lack of original thought; at worst, they signal deception. Yet in the investment world, where companies want to be known for independent thinking and integrity, clichés abound. This issue of Excess Returns considers what clichés say about an investment firm and how investment companies can avoid them.

With best wishes,

Liz Hecht
Founder, Principal and Director of Research

Print a PDF of this newsletter

Volume 4 | Number 8

In This Issue

What Clichés Say About Your Company

Clichés and Deception

It’s Been Said Before

Alpha Partners is an investment marketing firm specializing in research and presentation strategy. Our goal is to create alpha (excess returns) by helping investment firms win, keep and diversify assets under management.

Alpha Partners LLC
435.615.6862

www.alphapartners.com

What Clichés Say About Your Company

I recently happened to see two back-to-back press conferences with two police chiefs working different criminal cases. The first Chief of Police was calm and factual in his presentation; when he said his officers were close to an arrest, I believed him. The second Chief of Police, in addition to overemphatic speech and body language, used a lot of clichés such as “raising the bar” and “above and beyond.” I immediately thought: “They’re in trouble. They’ve got nothing.”

Because that’s what clichés communicate: a lack of substance. While researching this article, I did a spot check of 10 prominent investment company websites. Within 10 seconds (yes, I timed my search), I was able to find at least one of the following lethal clichés:

•

Seasoned professionals

•

Global footprint

•

Proprietary research

•

Unparalleled client service

•

Singular focus

•

Passionate commitment

•

A comprehensive array

•

A collegial team

•

It’s in our DNA

•

In today’s complex global markets

Clichés — especially those characterized by unnecessary adjectives and unsubstantiated superlatives — only dramatize an investment manager’s inability to communicate true competitive advantages. Why then do so many firms rely on clichés to communicate? Why do they tell consultants and prospective investors that they are “unique” (itself a cliché) while using language identical to the language used by their competitors? Perhaps because they are not fully aware of the problem and its negative consequences.

How to Avoid Clichés

You can banish investment marketing clichés from your firm’s lexicon if you put these rules into practice:

Develop awareness of the language used by your competitors. The reason why many investment firms say the same things using the same language is that they lack awareness of how their competitors communicate. Thirty years ago, this might have been understandable. Today, given the availability of competitor information via the Internet, it’s inexcusable.

Avoid the urge to copy. The purpose of competitor awareness is to avoid imitation. So often, though, competitor awareness translates into copycat behavior. For more on the uses and abuses of competitor intelligence, see the November 2012 issue of Excess Returns.

Stick to facts — especially when describing your firm — and seek to provide regular weekend reading. The way I found all those clichés so quickly was by going straight to the sections entitled “Who We Are” or “Company Overview.” There are thousands of investment companies and they all — from the smallest financial advisory firm to the largest global multi-asset manager — sell the same thing: consistent returns, risk control, experience, research, discipline and so forth. It is difficult to find different language to describe the same thing. Over the years, the smartest investment companies have learned to streamline descriptions of their firm, relying on facts (size and tenure of the team, for example), seeking differentiation instead mainly through the caliber and consistency of their intellectual capital (articles, research papers, investment process documentation, investment commentary that provides genuine insight). Intellectual capital does not lie. Either it exists or it doesn’t and, if it does exist, its quality and frequency or lack thereof is evident. The firms that regularly produce high-quality research, essays and commentary are the firms that become weekend reading for investors, consultants and financial advisors. Clients and prospective clients thus experience your firm’s competitive advantages directly instead of merely being told about them.

Hire from within — or work only with communications experts who specialize in investment marketing. If a firm has hired an outside marketing firm to create their marketing materials, I can always tell right away if that outside firm understands the investment world. When such understanding is absent, the clichés tend to proliferate because the marketing firm’s cliché radar is less sensitive than it needs to be. Way back at the dawn of time, even I got excited when a firm told me that “research” was a competitive advantage; circa 10 years ago, I liked and used the phrase “It’s in our DNA.” The ability to identify and articulate original content — and the expertise required to dodge all the clichés — requires many years of experience in the field of investment marketing.

Write simply by avoiding unnecessary adjectives and superlatives. Simple language tends to be cliché proof. You can say, for example, that your firm is “focused” on something without saying that the firm is “singularly focused” or “laser-focused.”1 Whenever you use an adjective, ask if it is really necessary or if the message might be conveyed, minus the adjective, with more convincing simplicity and humility. Avoid unsubstantiated superlatives such as “unparalleled client service.” I have yet to meet a firm making such a claim with any substantiation in the form of, say, a regular survey of its clients.

Be specific and provide proof. Clichés are ineffective not only because they are widely used, but also because they rely on generalities. Using a phrase such as “raising the bar,” for example, has no meaning unless one understands what the bar is and precisely how it has become higher. A story rich with specific, concise, well-thought-out examples is a story unlikely to include a lot of clichés.

Sometimes an investment company professional will preface a statement of competitive advantage with “This may sound like a cliché, but …” The person then proceeds to launch a whopping cliché with a follow-on along the lines of “but we really do an exceptionally good job of understanding and monitoring the risk in our portfolios.” Don’t do this. Don’t give up so easily. Relying on clichés tells the world you lack original thought when the facts and details that define your business probably tell a much more interesting story.

Clichés and Deception

Investors increasingly are using linguistic analysis as a research tool, seeking to identify language that signals conviction, uncertainty or deception. There also is a growing body of academic research on the subject. When executives “start using a lot of jargon, it makes you wonder about believability,” says David Larcker, a professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Business who has studied deception on investor conference calls. Professor Larcker’s 2012 paper, “Detecting Deceptive Discussions in Conference Calls,” analyzes language clues to deception in the Q&A section of earnings calls.2

In her excellent book, Investing Between the Lines (profiled here in May 2014), L.J. Rittenhouse points to “six popular CEO clichés” in the 2000 Enron letter to shareholders: talented people, global presence, market knowledge, financial strength, leverage competitive advantages and significant value for our shareholders. “Not only do these clichés fail to inspire trust,” writes Ms. Rittenhouse, “they should cause a prudent investor to wonder what the company might be hiding.”

It’s Been Said Before

Consistent with its subtitle, A Guide to the Use and Abuse of Clichés, It’s Been Said Before by lexicographer Orin Hargraves addresses the distinction between frequent usage and cliché. Mr. Hargraves explains that he “scaled back his ambition as a cliché killer” early during his research based on the realization that some clichés facilitate understanding based on familiarity and also that the definition of a cliché is highly subjective.

“Significant value for our shareholders,” for example, noted in the prior article, might be considered less a cliché than a simple phrase essential for communication. Professor Larcker’s research paper, noted above, found that deceptive CEOs and CFOs were less likely to reference shareholder value: “We speculate that shareholder value and value creation words may be used less when deceptive executives are concerned about future litigation associated with their actions.”

Mr. Hargraves’ book serves as a well-researched, definitive reference guide for careful writers. Before you next use a phrase such as “strike a balance” or “stay the course,” you may wish to consult It’s Been Said Before.

1.

As documented by Bloomberg in the September 11, 2013 article, “‘Laser-Focused’ CEOs Proliferate as Jargon Infects Speech.”

2.

Written with Anastasia Zakolyukina of the Stanford Graduate School of Business and published in the Journal of Accounting Research.

Questions? Comments? Dissent? Click here.

Click here for other issues of Excess Returns.

© 2014 Alpha Partners LLC Alpha Partners LLC
Marketing for Excess Returns®
1062 Oakridge Road South | Park City, UT | 84098

You are receiving this newsletter as a member of the investment community. If you no longer wish to receive it, please respond to this email with “No More Penguins” in the subject line. To subscribe to this newsletter, send an email with your request to info@alphapartners.com. Your privacy is important to us. We will never rent, sell or share any information that you provide.

What Clichés Say About Your Company

Excess Returns

Monthly insights for investment marketing and sales professionals

September 2014

Clichés — words or phrases that have lost all meaning through overuse — undermine effective communication everywhere. At best, clichés convey a lack of original thought; at worst, they signal deception. Yet in the investment world, where companies want to be known for independent thinking and integrity, clichés abound. This issue of Excess Returns considers what clichés say about an investment firm and how investment companies can avoid them.

With best wishes,

Liz Hecht
Founder, Principal and Director of Research

Print a PDF of this newsletter

Volume 4 | Number 8

In This Issue

What Clichés Say About Your Company

Clichés and Deception

It’s Been Said Before

Alpha Partners is an investment marketing firm specializing in research and presentation strategy. Our goal is to create alpha (excess returns) by helping investment firms win, keep and diversify assets under management.

Alpha Partners LLC
435.615.6862

www.alphainvestmentmarketing.com

What Clichés Say About Your Company

I recently happened to see two back-to-back press conferences with two police chiefs working different criminal cases. The first Chief of Police was calm and factual in his presentation; when he said his officers were close to an arrest, I believed him. The second Chief of Police, in addition to overemphatic speech and body language, used a lot of clichés such as “raising the bar” and “above and beyond.” I immediately thought: “They’re in trouble. They’ve got nothing.”

Because that’s what clichés communicate: a lack of substance. While researching this article, I did a spot check of 10 prominent investment company websites. Within 10 seconds (yes, I timed my search), I was able to find at least one of the following lethal clichés:

•

Seasoned professionals

•

Global footprint

•

Proprietary research

•

Unparalleled client service

•

Singular focus

•

Passionate commitment

•

A comprehensive array

•

A collegial team

•

It’s in our DNA

•

In today’s complex global markets

Clichés — especially those characterized by unnecessary adjectives and unsubstantiated superlatives — only dramatize an investment manager’s inability to communicate true competitive advantages. Why then do so many firms rely on clichés to communicate? Why do they tell consultants and prospective investors that they are “unique” (itself a cliché) while using language identical to the language used by their competitors? Perhaps because they are not fully aware of the problem and its negative consequences.

How to Avoid Clichés

You can banish investment marketing clichés from your firm’s lexicon if you put these rules into practice:

Develop awareness of the language used by your competitors. The reason why many investment firms say the same things using the same language is that they lack awareness of how their competitors communicate. Thirty years ago, this might have been understandable. Today, given the availability of competitor information via the Internet, it’s inexcusable.

Avoid the urge to copy. The purpose of competitor awareness is to avoid imitation. So often, though, competitor awareness translates into copycat behavior. For more on the uses and abuses of competitor intelligence, see the November 2012 issue of Excess Returns.

Stick to facts — especially when describing your firm — and seek to provide regular weekend reading. The way I found all those clichés so quickly was by going straight to the sections entitled “Who We Are” or “Company Overview.” There are thousands of investment companies and they all — from the smallest financial advisory firm to the largest global multi-asset manager — sell the same thing: consistent returns, risk control, experience, research, discipline and so forth. It is difficult to find different language to describe the same thing. Over the years, the smartest investment companies have learned to streamline descriptions of their firm, relying on facts (size and tenure of the team, for example), seeking differentiation instead mainly through the caliber and consistency of their intellectual capital (articles, research papers, investment process documentation, investment commentary that provides genuine insight). Intellectual capital does not lie. Either it exists or it doesn’t and, if it does exist, its quality and frequency or lack thereof is evident. The firms that regularly produce high-quality research, essays and commentary are the firms that become weekend reading for investors, consultants and financial advisors. Clients and prospective clients thus experience your firm’s competitive advantages directly instead of merely being told about them.

Hire from within — or work only with communications experts who specialize in investment marketing. If a firm has hired an outside marketing firm to create their marketing materials, I can always tell right away if that outside firm understands the investment world. When such understanding is absent, the clichés tend to proliferate because the marketing firm’s cliché radar is less sensitive than it needs to be. Way back at the dawn of time, even I got excited when a firm told me that “research” was a competitive advantage; circa 10 years ago, I liked and used the phrase “It’s in our DNA.” The ability to identify and articulate original content — and the expertise required to dodge all the clichés — requires many years of experience in the field of investment marketing.

Write simply by avoiding unnecessary adjectives and superlatives. Simple language tends to be cliché proof. You can say, for example, that your firm is “focused” on something without saying that the firm is “singularly focused” or “laser-focused.”1 Whenever you use an adjective, ask if it is really necessary or if the message might be conveyed, minus the adjective, with more convincing simplicity and humility. Avoid unsubstantiated superlatives such as “unparalleled client service.” I have yet to meet a firm making such a claim with any substantiation in the form of, say, a regular survey of its clients.

Be specific and provide proof. Clichés are ineffective not only because they are widely used, but also because they rely on generalities. Using a phrase such as “raising the bar,” for example, has no meaning unless one understands what the bar is and precisely how it has become higher. A story rich with specific, concise, well-thought-out examples is a story unlikely to include a lot of clichés.

Sometimes an investment company professional will preface a statement of competitive advantage with “This may sound like a cliché, but …” The person then proceeds to launch a whopping cliché with a follow-on along the lines of “but we really do an exceptionally good job of understanding and monitoring the risk in our portfolios.” Don’t do this. Don’t give up so easily. Relying on clichés tells the world you lack original thought when the facts and details that define your business probably tell a much more interesting story.

Clichés and Deception

Investors increasingly are using linguistic analysis as a research tool, seeking to identify language that signals conviction, uncertainty or deception. There also is a growing body of academic research on the subject. When executives “start using a lot of jargon, it makes you wonder about believability,” says David Larcker, a professor at the Stanford Graduate School of Business who has studied deception on investor conference calls. Professor Larcker’s 2012 paper, “Detecting Deceptive Discussions in Conference Calls,” analyzes language clues to deception in the Q&A section of earnings calls.2

In her excellent book, Investing Between the Lines (profiled here in May 2014), L.J. Rittenhouse points to “six popular CEO clichés” in the 2000 Enron letter to shareholders: talented people, global presence, market knowledge, financial strength, leverage competitive advantages and significant value for our shareholders. “Not only do these clichés fail to inspire trust,” writes Ms. Rittenhouse, “they should cause a prudent investor to wonder what the company might be hiding.”

It’s Been Said Before

Consistent with its subtitle, A Guide to the Use and Abuse of Clichés, It’s Been Said Before by lexicographer Orin Hargraves addresses the distinction between frequent usage and cliché. Mr. Hargraves explains that he “scaled back his ambition as a cliché killer” early during his research based on the realization that some clichés facilitate understanding based on familiarity and also that the definition of a cliché is highly subjective.

“Significant value for our shareholders,” for example, noted in the prior article, might be considered less a cliché than a simple phrase essential for communication. Professor Larcker’s research paper, noted above, found that deceptive CEOs and CFOs were less likely to reference shareholder value: “We speculate that shareholder value and value creation words may be used less when deceptive executives are concerned about future litigation associated with their actions.”

Mr. Hargraves’ book serves as a well-researched, definitive reference guide for careful writers. Before you next use a phrase such as “strike a balance” or “stay the course,” you may wish to consult It’s Been Said Before.

1.

As documented by Bloomberg in the September 11, 2013 article, “‘Laser-Focused’ CEOs Proliferate as Jargon Infects Speech.”

2.

Written with Anastasia Zakolyukina of the Stanford Graduate School of Business and published in the Journal of Accounting Research.

Questions? Comments? Dissent? Click here.

Click here for other issues of Excess Returns.

© 2014 Alpha Partners LLC Alpha Partners LLC
Marketing for Excess Returns®
1062 Oakridge Road South | Park City, UT | 84098

You are receiving this newsletter as a member of the investment community. If you no longer wish to receive it, please respond to this email with “No More Penguins” in the subject line. To subscribe to this newsletter, send an email with your request to info@alphainvestmentmarketing.com. Your privacy is important to us. We will never rent, sell or share any information that you provide.

The Lessons of Investment Fraud

Excess Returns

Monthly insights for investment marketing and sales professionals

July-August 2014

Fraud is everywhere. You need only open your email on any given day to become a potential fraud victim. In the capital markets, the specter of fraud inspires fear and loathing among prospective investors and underscores the need for clarity and integrity in investment marketing. This issue of Excess Returns considers the investment marketing lessons we can learn from fraud.

With best wishes,

Liz Hecht
Founder, Principal and Director of Research

Print a PDF of this newsletter

 

Volume 4 | Number 7

In This Issue

The By-Products of Greed

Under the Mattress

Enough.

Alpha Partners is an investment marketing firm specializing in research and presentation strategy. Our goal is to create alpha (excess returns) by helping investment firms win, keep and diversify assets under management.

Alpha Partners LLC
435.615.6862

www.alphainvestmentmarketing.com

The By-Products of Greed

I have been indulging lately in my favorite guilty pleasure: watching back-to-back episodes of CNBC’s American Greed. This chronicle of white collar crime has all the fascinating predictability of Gordon Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares. In Kitchen Nightmares, the location may be different, but the plot is always the same: the kitchen is dirty, the employees do not get along, the menu is confusing, the decor is passé and the restaurant is on the brink of financial ruin … until Mr. Ramsay comes to the rescue.

In episode after episode, the plot of American Greed is also always the same: false guarantees are made, diversification is absent, the perpetrators live large and far beyond their means and gullible investors frequently lose everything they have. Only with investment fraud there is no Gordon Ramsay to the rescue. If they are caught, the perpetrators often go to jail, but this brings little solace to the victims. “At least she gets three hots and a cot [three hot meals a day and a bed],” laments one victim of a perpetrator in prison, “while I sometimes don’t know where my next meal is coming from.”

So what does all this have to do with sophisticated institutional investors? A lot, as it happens. Starting with Season 1 in 2007, the list of American Greed episodes includes the prominent CIO of a company that once managed institutional assets, CEOs of large public companies (Tyco, WorldCom and HealthSouth) and of course Bernard Madoff, who defrauded the 4,800 investors in his $64.8 billion hedge fund. Madoff’s investors inlcuded retired firefighters and schoolteachers as well as endowments, foundations and formerly well-regarded funds of hedge funds.

The Lessons of Fraud

From my perspective as an investor, investment marketer, student of fraud and potential future victim, I see several investment marketing lessons in all of this:

Be prepared to ask and answer questions about fraud. It is surprising that more RFPs and RFIs1 do not include explicit questions about fraud. Because, let’s face it, virtually any investment process, no matter how robust, remains vulnerable to misinformation and outright lies. Information can always be fake and the lawyers, accountants, fund managers and government regulators hired to protect investors sometimes fail to do so. If your firm practices fundamental, bottom-up research, how has your team’s hard work and experience protected your investors from fraud in the past? And what additional due diligence might your company have incorporated into the investment process to protect investors in the future? If yours is a quantitative investment strategy, how do the rules of portfolio diversification protect your clients? And if your process relies almost wholly upon information produced by other investment firms — as in a fund of funds, for example — how do you safeguard your investors against inaccurate reporting? The answers to these questions can reveal a potential process weakness, show the process to be particularly strong given superior due diligence or demonstrate skill based on good old-fashioned gut instinct.

Consider who your investors are and why they need the money. By becoming a student of fraud and its victims, one develops a better sense of who the end investors are and why serving them well matters. Fraud victims can include universities unable to provide the same number of scholarships as previously, foundations forced to close and municipal funds forced to scale back on critical services such as sanitation or road repair. People who lose their homes, who are forced to go back to dangerous physical work after having retired or who no longer have the money needed to provide special care to a sick child. People like Miriam Siegman, a Madoff victim, 65 years old and living on food stamps, who testified with great eloquence at Madoff’s sentencing: “Victims became the by-product of his [Madoff’s] greed. We are what is left over, the result of stunning indifference [on the part of] politicians and bureaucrats.”2

Develop a healthy respect for your firm’s compliance department. Early in my career, I used to dread meeting with legal and compliance teams because of the dampening effect legal concerns can have on marketing language. “Strong investment returns” become “solid investment returns” (whatever that means) and examples that clarify the investment process frequently are gutted, cut altogether or larded with incomprehensible footnotes. But if you become familiar with the misrepresentations of the world’s worst fraudsters, you begin to appreciate the critical role that compliance plays. If you want to have a better relationship with your firm’s compliance department and a better understanding of the need for transparency in reporting, studying fraud is a great place to start.

Avoid opulent displays. As any American Greed fan will tell you, the face of fraud is one of conspicuous consumption. Think Kenneth Lay consulting with Jeffrey Skilling on fabric swatches for Enron’s new corporate jet in the 2005 documentary, The Smartest Guys in the Room, or former Tyco CEO Dennis Kozlowski’s $6,000 shower curtain. And while the frugal among us have been taught to mistrust the trappings of wealth, most fraud victims are impressed by lavish spending, seeing it as a sign of success. “They were driving Hummers and wearing Italian suits,” says an American Greed victim describing her first meeting with the individuals who led her to financial ruin. The marketing lesson for investment companies is to project a physical image to the world that is formal and professional without ostentation.

Support investor education. In school, most of us were taught many things we would never again need to know. Courses on the basics of finance and investing, however, were notably absent from most high school and even college curricula. But one could argue that the future of the investment industry depends on preventing fraud, and one of the best forms of prevention is teaching investors to diversify and mistrust any form of guaranteed return.

Over the course of an average week, I typically receive fake solicitations from banks and credit card companies, fake tax notices and even fake notices to appear in court. I always dutifully report these while experiencing a sense of futility: the only follow-up I ever receive, if any, is a formulaic email. I once called the Utah Attorney General’s office to report a potential instance of fraud. The woman who took my call did not want to be bothered even pretending that she was concerned about my possibly being a fraud victim. In fact, she made fun of me (“Maybe you could file your own lawsuit,” she said, dripping with sarcasm).

I hung up feeling less angry than puzzled. But then I remembered how busy her office must have been at that time because the then-Attorney General of Utah was in the midst of being investigated for, yup, you guessed it: fraud.3

Under the Mattress

Every time the latest Wall Street scandal breaks, certain reluctant elderly investors in my family say to me “They are all a bunch of crooks and I am going to put all of my money under the mattress.” Whereupon I take a deep breath and explain, again, all the good things the capital markets have to offer and where we would all be without them. But then working against me there is the perception of Wall Street perpetuated by Hollywood. Who can forget Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort in The Wolf of Wall Street literally giving the finger to unsuspecting investors on the phone? And then of course there are the negative perceptions created not only by prominent fraudsters but also by the headlines about high-frequency trading, punitive surrender charges, the shortcomings of active management, inherent conflicts of interest and all the sad and sorry events of 2008.

A 2014 study by Merrill Lynch shows that my elderly Wall Street-averse family members are not alone in having become leery of the financial markets. Alarmingly, the Millennial generation appears to mistrust Wall Street as well. (“Alarmingly” because as baby boomers exit the markets, younger generations need to hold up the demand side of the equation.)

“It’s important to note,” states the Merrill Lynch report, “that according to our survey of young investors, the 2008 crisis itself didn’t directly cause the misgivings that Millennials have toward the financial services industry. Rather, the data suggest that the crisis merely confirmed the doubts that young people4 already had of Wall Street and financial services firms — doubts that have only been fanned by recent events and trends, from the Eurozone’s repeated credit emergencies and the U.S.’s fiscal tribulations, to Bernie Madoff and the ongoing controversies over high-frequency trading.” Says Adam Katz, an advisor with the firm’s Private Banking and Investment Group, “[the Millennials] have watched what’s gone on over the last decade, and they pretty much feel like they might as well put their money under the mattress.” Another recent UBS study similarly describes Millennials as being “skeptical about long-term investing” as the way to achieve their goals.

On the bright side (I am reluctant to end this article on such a depressing note), the Merrill study found that the next generation of investors is significantly more interested in using their money for social benefit, by investing consistent with their values and funding philanthropic ventures.

Enough.

I love the one word followed by a full stop title of this 2009 book by John C. Bogle, who founded the Vanguard 500 Index Fund in 1975. I also like the titles of its chapters. For example: “Too Much Speculation, Not Enough Investment” and “Too Much Complexity, Not Enough Simplicity.” In a world where fraud is fueled by excess, this book reminds us of all the forms of excess that, while not technically fraud, are inimical to the long-term financial health of investors. Mr. Bogle’s book is also an inspiring meditation on the need for economy and balance in all aspects of one’s life.

1.

RFPs and RFIs = Requests for Proposal and Requests for Information.

2.

From Tangled Webs: How False Statements Are Undermining America: From Martha Stewart to Bernie Madoff, by James B. Stewart.

3.

The former Attorney General of Utah, John Swallow, subsequently resigned and now may face criminal charges.

4.

The Merrill Lynch survey polled investors between the ages of 18 and 35.

Questions? Comments? Dissent? Click here.

Click here for other issues of Excess Returns.

© 2014 Alpha Partners LLC Alpha Partners LLC
Marketing for Excess Returns®
1062 Oakridge Road South | Park City, UT | 84098

You are receiving this newsletter as a member of the investment community. If you no longer wish to receive it, please respond to this email with “No More Penguins” in the subject line. To subscribe to this newsletter, send an email with your request to info@alphainvestmentmarketing.com. Your privacy is important to us. We will never rent, sell or share any information that you provide.

The Marketing Power of Investment Themes

Excess Returns

Monthly insights for investment marketing and sales professionals

June 2014

Whether one practices “thematic investing” or merely considers themes a potential avenue to new investment ideas, one thing is certain: investors like themes. This issue of Excess Returns explores the power of investment themes from a marketing standpoint.

With best wishes,

Liz Hecht
Founder, Principal and Director of Research

Print a PDF of this newsletter

Volume 4 | Number 6

In This Issue

Pigeonhole or Keyhole?

Thematic Investing

Investing from the Top Down

Alpha Partners is an investment marketing firm specializing in research and presentation strategy. Our goal is to create alpha (excess returns) by helping investment firms win, keep and diversify assets under management.

Alpha Partners LLC
435.615.6862

www.alphainvestmentmarketing.com

Pigeonhole or Keyhole?

I am a philosophical soul. So every time something weird happens to me, I look for a larger meaning.

A few years back I attended a meeting with a well-known chief investment officer for a large global firm. The goal of the meeting was to discuss examples of the investment process, the better to understand how a potential investment becomes a portfolio holding. The CIO’s examples failed to connect to the investment process stated in the presentation book (a common problem). I sought to get the discussion back on track by starting from the beginning. “What are some of the macroeconomic themes currently expressed in your portfolio?” I asked.

My question offended him. “I won’t tolerate your trying to pigeonhole me,” he responded. The firm’s marketing representative tried to help by observing that specific portfolio investments could not be neatly tied to macroeconomic themes. All of this left me feeling as if I had committed some form of giant gaffe.

“But,” I soldiered on, “the investment process in your presentation book explicitly starts with ‘Step 1: Define Macroeconomic Themes?'” (I also gently suggested that if he was uncomfortable identifying specific themes, perhaps he should revise Step 1 so as not to mention themes.)

“Now there you go again,” he said, “trying to pigeonhole me.”

This level of opposition to the concept of themes and the sheer weirdness of this exchange convinced me that more was afoot here than met the eye.

The Marketing Power of Investment Themes

Talking about the portfolio in terms of themes helps prospective investors understand the investment world from a big picture perspective, viewing the universe of potential investments in terms of how the world is changing for better or worse and how human enterprise is responding to such changes. By “themes” I mean long-term trends such as “Aging Baby Boomers,” “The Battle Against Climate Change” or “Efficiency and Automation.”

I am far more comfortable thinking of my own portfolio in terms of themes than in terms of factor, country and sector exposures. I want to know what those exposures are, sure, but they do not speak to my imagination. Accordingly, I think of a holding in GoPro as expressing a “Weekend Warriors” theme and a holding in Costco as representing “The Rise of the Frugal Consumer.”

Purely from a marketing standpoint, there are several reasons why themes have broad appeal with both individual and institutional investors:

Themes provide context. Investors don’t only want to know about general investment principles or this or that investment. They want a clear, rich, differentiated picture of how their investment manager views the world. Themes satisfy this basic human craving for context.

Themes are active and forward looking. According to “Thematic Investing: Variations on a Theme” by Martin Steward of Investment & Pensions Europe (IPE), theme-oriented investment firms such as Newton Investment Management argue that themes by definition focus on change, making a thematic approach “more robust than traditional economic forecasting or quantitative modeling, which are both so vulnerable to the fact that history cannot be used to predict the future.” In an article by its Thinking Ahead Group, Towers Watson notes that theme-based investing “stands in clear contrast to the more widely used approach of market capitalization investing, where it is implicitly assumed that past winners will continue to win, and therefore deserve more attention and weight in the portfolio.” In a recent Asset TV video, Tim Hodgson of Towers Watson observes that all investors are thematic, but some choose to be so “explicitly and deliberately” while others are thematic “implicitly and accidentally.” (I think of the many firms that were significantly more exposed to the subprime debacle than they thought because the categories of investment they used masked such exposure in a way that a thematic approach might have uncovered.)

Themes tell a story. The investment markets, notes IPE’s Mr. Steward, ultimately may be less about countries, regions, sectors and market caps than “the overarching narratives that hold all the pieces in place.” Thematic investors build their portfolios to reflect these overarching narratives.

Themes are different. Part of the reason I originally wanted to work in investments was that I saw investing as a discipline requiring broad-based knowledge of how the world works and how the world is changing. In my role today as an investment marketing specialist, I have come to pounce on any information about top-down perspective like a starving dog thrown a scrap of food. I have learned to expect nothing but “bottom up, bottom up, bottom up” and my ears are always alert to anything different. Themes, like some of the world’s greatest investors, are top down (which does not by definition mean a lack of focus on bottom-up decision factors such as balance sheets and business models).

There are many more reasons why investment themes make sense. Why then did this CIO react so negatively to a straightforward question about macroeconomic themes? I still don’t know, really. I do know that so-called “thematic investing” is active, differentiating and forward looking in a way that purely bottom-up approaches cannot emulate. Themes represent a keyhole — a view on how and why the world of investments is changing — not a pigeonhole.

Thematic Investing

In conducting Internet research for this issue, I came up empty when searching for “investment themes” but hit the mother lode with a search for “thematic investing.” For example, I found several investment firms that believe in thematic investing and organize their research efforts around the concept of themes.

While it has many proponents and practitioners, however, thematic investing is controversial for several reasons. Its results are difficult to measure. It is easier to attribute performance to index-defined measures such as factors, countries and sectors. Many professional investors also conflate “themes” with “trends” or “fads.” As one skeptical hedge fund blogger put it, “Themes are all about fads.” And of course some of the best investments will not necessarily fit any one theme. It strikes me, however, that regardless of whether one chooses to be a thematic investor or a classic bottom-up investor, themes are merely another useful tool in the tool kit. The way some write about thematic investing, it reminds me of conventional medical practitioners who completely disavow holistic approaches and vice versa. Why not use all available resources? Some of those who have written about thematic investing also seem to get hung up on whether to start with themes and move to specific investments or vice versa — when obviously the best place to start is wherever one has the good fortune to get a good idea.

The main thing cutting across such theoretical considerations is the simple fact that investors like themes. According to IPE, Russell Investment’s OpenWorld single-manager platform gives investors access to themes such as climate change, infrastructure or individual emerging markets because Russell could not respond to investor demand for such exposures “with the standard large-cap equity and aggregate bond multi-manager products.”

Investing from the Top Down

In Investing from the Top Down, Anthony Crescenzi argues that a macro approach is best suited to the global nature of today’s capital markets. Selected chapters explore the role of exchange traded funds in implementing diversified thematic views and specific economic indicators key to understanding global market themes. Mr. Crescenzi’s book provides much-needed context to investors regardless of whether their primary orientation is top down or bottom up. By demystifying the process of reading major economic indicators, the book provides useful macroeconomic guideposts suitable for individual and institutional investors.

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