Featured entries from our Journal

Details Are Part of Our Difference

Embracing the Evidence at Anheuser-Busch – Mid 1980s

529 Best Practices

David Booth on How to Choose an Advisor

The One Minute Audio Clip You Need to Hear

Habitat for Humanity

Habitat For Humanity Group Build
Click picture to enlarge and view names.

On Friday, August 15th, our team met in St. Louis to attend a Habitat for Humanity build at 12128 Trampe Heights Lane. We extend our thanks to a friend of the firm, John Castagno, for the invitation and also for serving as house leader during our build. We enjoyed the opportunity to learn some new skills, and we were proud to further Habitat’s efforts to create housing for someone in need.

Habitat For Humanity St. Louis is an impressive organization with over 350 homes in the St. Louis area. Everything in the process is guided by thoughtful planning—from thoroughly vetting homeowners to energy-efficient designs that make living in their homes more affordable. Visit their website to learn more about Habitat’s work.

The Decline and Fall of Fund Managers

Friends and clients of our firm know that we’ve been singing the same evidence-based refrain for many years, so it is a pleasure to see when the major financial media joins in our song. In the Sunday, August 22nd issue of The Wall Street Journal, Jason Zweig concludes that the old-fashioned, active fund manager is dead. Anyone with that job description is best served looking for new employment.

Jason bases his piece on a recent submission by Charles Ellis to the Financial Analysts Journal, The Rise and Fall of Performance Investing (subscription required). Here’s an excerpt from the summary of Ellis’ article:

As acceptance of indexing grows, clients and managers have an opportunity to stop focusing on price discovery (which has made our markets so efficient) and refocus on values discovery, whereby investment professionals can help investors achieve good performance by structuring an appropriate, long-term investment program and staying with it.

So where will the active managers land next? Today, there are only a few hundred thousand financial advisors for tens of millions of investors. Ellis asks, “Who better to fill the insatiable demand for financial advisers than former portfolio managers who know firsthand how hard it is to beat the market?”

Click here to read Jason Zweig’s WSJ piece (subscription required).

The LongView Process | Step 2: Planning

Recall from last month that Hill Investment Group has a defined process to introduce prospective clients to our firm and take them through the first 45 days as a new client. We call it The LongView Process. Last month I discussed Stage 1: Discovery, and now I’ll dig into Stage 2: Planning.

PLANNING
The Planning meeting begins with a review of everything that we captured in Discovery. Since then, we’ve translated your life into a Family Profile Map that categorizes everything with specific topic areas: goals, family, financials, etc. Once we’ve agreed that we have an accurate understanding of your family and finances, our team then walks through an outline of the transition, new allocation, and other improvements to be made.

One of the key topics you’ll understand clearly after the Planning meeting is what makes our philosophy on investing so different. We strive for after-tax, risk-adjusted, global market returns that few people actually get. Let’s pick that last sentence apart.

  • “After-tax” returns are most important because we all pay taxes. No one can pay tuition or retire on pre-tax income. Our approach is highly sensitive to taxes.
  • “Risk adjusted” means that we design a portfolio that reflects your willingness, ability, and need to take investment risk. We will do this by coupling your intangible desire to meet your goals with detailed modeling to paint a picture of potential outcomes…not just a single number.
  • “Global” means that the typical equity portion of our portfolios reaches worldwide with approximately 12,000 underlying equities in the United States, Europe, Asia, and Emerging Markets.
  • “Market Returns” means that your portfolio is designed to reflect the market with a tilt to value and small securities. We are not trying to beat the market. Rather, we are trying to build a portfolio that emphasizes those persistent and robust factors as identified in academic journals—those that have shown to outperform a typical market index like the S&P 500 over long periods of time (10, 20, 30+ years).
  • “That few people actually get” means working with Hill will help you close The Behavior Gap. Simply put, individual investors tend to significantly underperform the market over time because of poor behavior. Driven by fear, they sell at market bottoms and subsequently (driven by greed) buy back into the market at its high—the exact opposite of what defines long-term investment success.

The takeaways are 1.) a clear understanding of your before & after, 2.) a well-documented summary of your personal and financial circumstances, and 3.) a deeper understanding of what makes our approach different. With these in hand, you are well situated to decide whether we’re the perfect fit.

Click here to read a detailed summary of the entire process.

Featured entries from our Journal

Details Are Part of Our Difference

Embracing the Evidence at Anheuser-Busch – Mid 1980s

529 Best Practices

David Booth on How to Choose an Advisor

The One Minute Audio Clip You Need to Hear

Hill Investment Group