BlackBox With Heart
Transcription
BlackBox With Heart
% THE DOW JONES BUSINESS AND FINANCIAL WEEKLY www.barrons.com JULY 16, 2007 $4.00 Talking With John Montgomery Founder and Chief Executive Bridgeway Funds BlackBox With Heart by Jonathan R. Laing Robert Seale for Barron’s WHILE MANY ON WALL STREET SINGLEmindedly worship Mammon, the same can’t be said for the 24-member mutualfund company Bridgeway Funds. On a recent morning, its founder and CEO, John Montgomery, spent much of a weekly employee meeting talking about a holocaust survivor he’d met on a recent trip to Great Britain and her inspiring tale of how she and her mother were rescued from near-certain death in an Austrian concentration camp by the providential arrival of Allied forces. Each year, Bridgeway gives half of its net profits to charities, ranging from community groups and a Haitian medical clinic to genocide relief organizations around the world. Last year, the total came to $8 million, with individual employees (called “partners”) being able to designate $20,000 gifts to charities they select. Says Montgomery: “We tell job applicants that, if they want to make millions right away, they should look elsewhere.” Yet the Bridgeway funds usually trounce their benchmarks. Montgomery’s philosophy of egalitarianism and antimaterialism extends to other aspects of Bridgeway, which currently manages $5.6 billion in assets. He limits his own annual compensation to seven times the level of his lowest-paid employee. “Executive compensation is way out of whack in this country, so we have our own system to reduce any possible animosity in the firm,” the lanky 52-year-old says during an interview at the company’s headquarters in a bank building in Houston, near the Rice University campus. 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Standardized Performance as of 6/30/07 Average Annual Return 1 Qtr 1 Year 3 Year 5 Year 10 Year BRAGX – before taxes 8.31% 10.79% 15.61% 15.91% 18.67% Since Inception (8/5/1994) 20.74% - after taxes on distribution 9.17% 14.40% 15.18% 17.16% 19.33% - after taxes on distribution and sale of fund shares 8.83% 13.27% 13.87% 16.09% 18.34% Morningstar Ranking vs. Mid-Cap Growth Funds 727 of 983 150 of 814 58 of 662 BRUSX – before taxes 4.12% - after taxes on distribution - after taxes on distribution and sale of fund shares 9.12% 16.49% 24.08% 20.21% 22.26% 6.07% 13.40% 20.89% 17.35% 19.79% 19.26% 9.74% 13.70% 20.34% 16.86% 610 of 791 34 of 645 2 of 533 3 of 231 1 Qtr 1 Year 3 Year 5 Year 10 Year 11.14% 16.68% 17.90% 15.31% -- Morningstar Ranking vs. Small-Cap Growth Funds Average Annual Return BRAIX – before taxes 2 of 269 Since Inception (10/31/2001) 13.90% - after taxes on distribution 16.32% 17.64% 15.16% 13.77% - after taxes on distribution and sale of fund shares 11.23% 15.48% 13.45% 12.23% 542 of 983 54 of 814 93 of 662 Morningstar Ranking vs. Mid-Cap Growth Funds Expense Ratios: BRAGX – 1.58%, BRAIX – 1.12%, BRUSX – 1.09%. Performance data quoted represents past performance and is no guarantee of future results. Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data quoted. Investment return and principal value will fluctuate so that an investor's shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than original cost. For the most recent month end performance, please visit our website at www.bridgeway.com or call 800-661-3550. Periods of less than one year are not annualized. Morningstar ranks funds in various fund categories by making comparative calculations using total returns. “We tell job applicants that if they want to make millions right away, they should look elsewhere, but if they want to make a real difference in life, this is the place. Look, we make decent money here—more than enough for our people to have a spiritually satisfying life.” Likewise, investors appear to get a more than a fair shake from Bridgeway’s mutual funds, which impose no loads or 12b-1 fees. And Bridgeway employees have a strong reason for wanting the funds to succeed. Each staff member is a shareholder and the firm prohibits investment team members from investing in domestic equities elsewhere. Management fees and other fund expenses are below industry averages. And the fees have a substantial performance component, ensuring that Bridgeway is rewarded for beating the market and punished for trailing it. A mistake in how the firm calculated performance fees led to a 2004 regulatory settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission, under which the company agreed to pay $4.4 million in fees, plus interest, to investors in three of its funds. Yet that hasn’t deterred fundrater Morningstar from consistently giving Bridgeway high marks on steward- Bridgeway Aggressive Investors 2 800-661-3550 Total Returns* 1-Yr 3-Yr 5-Yr Aggr Investors 2 S&P 500 16.68% 20.58 17.90% 11.67 % Of Top 10 Holdings Ticker Portf** Big Lots Guess? BIG 5.0% 15.31% 10.71 Industry Retail Apparel GES 3.5 McDermott Int’l MDR 3.0 Eng & Const Crocs 3.0 Footwear CROX America Movil AMX 2.9 Telecom Avnet AVT 2.8 Electronics Varian Semi VSEA 2.6 Semicond Apple AAPL 2.5 Computers Bristol-Myers BMY 2.2 Drugs Tidewater TDY 2.0 Drilling Serv Total: 29.5 ship, both before and after the affair. Bridgeway is quick to close funds to new investors, forgoing additional profit when cash flows threaten to make the 2 funds unwieldy. In addition, the company strives to hold down trading costs and keep its funds tax-efficient, even though some have annual portfolio turnover rates exceeding 100%. Bridgeway is also one of the few fund groups to rely solely on computer models, rather than a phalanx of high-priced security analysts and managers, to pick stocks. “Ours is a quantitative approach that not only takes a lot of cost out of the process, but also much of the emotionalism that so often trips up individual and institutional investors alike,” Montgomery says. Bridgeway’s black-box, or quantitative, approach seems to have worked since the company was launched in 1994. Since then, all 11 of its funds have beaten the indexes against which they’re measured— some spectacularly so. For example, the multi-cap Bridgeway Aggressive Investors 1 Fund ($373 million in assets) has notched an average annual return of 20.74% since its inception in September 1994 through this year’s second quarter, compared with average annual returns of 11.6% for the Standard & Poor’s 500 index in the same span. The Bridgeway Ultra-Small Company Fund ($140 million in assets) has produced average annual returns of Asks Montgomery: “Isn’t what goes on in the head of a fabled mutual-fund manager, like Fidelity’s Peter Lynch, as much a black box as our models?” 22.26% during the same period, around 5.5 percentage points better than its benchmark, Chicago’s Center for Research in Securities Prices Index, which measures the performance of the smallest 10th of companies on the Big Board, Amex and Nasdaq. The 10-year record of Aggressive Investors 1 (ticker: BRAGX) puts it second among 269 mid-cap growth funds tracked by Morningstar. Ultra-Small Company (BRUSX) finished third out of 231 smallcap growth funds in Morningstar’s database. Montgomery’s path to a career in money management was anything but direct. He started out as a transportation engineer, after earning engineering degrees at Swarthmore College and graduate school at MIT. The vocation satisfied his do-gooder impulses. “Some studies have showed that grinding commutes and poor public transportation have almost as negative an impact on personal happiness as the strain of children taking care of a parent suffering from dementia,” he observes. His engineering work also accustomed him to applying statistics and advanced mathematics to such esoterica as optimizing bus schedules and predicting traffic flows. Montgomery insists that it wasn’t that much of an intellectual leap to developing similar computer models to capture the behavior of another complex system —the stock market. He began using models to invest for his own account in 1982 after inheriting a modest legacy upon the death of his father. That same year, he also enrolled in Harvard’s MBA program to learn more about business and investing. There, he claims to have had an epiphany in a finance class: In the main, investors—especially bright Harvard MBA students—don’t consistently beat the market, because they’re both too cocksure and too prone to emotional swings. They lack the iron discipline of rationality and careful diversification of risk that black-box investing can provide. Yet, after realizing this, he didn’t really consider quitting his day job at the Houston Metropolitan Transport System—until the early 1990s, when his accountant, wowed by the trading profits showing up on Montgomery’s stock returns, year after year, asked Montgomery to manage his own retirement account. It took Montgomery until 1993 to incorporate, and another year to start his first funds, which he operated out of a tiny corner office in a strip mall across the street from the current Bridgeway offices. Bridgeway initially proved a hard slog, attracting just $10 million in its first two years. Then, Mutual Funds magazine highlighted the lights-out performance of Ultra-Small Company, which returned 39.84% in 1995 and 29.74% in 1996. The article spurred some 10,000 requests for fund prospectuses, and money began pouring in. To this day, to hold down expenses for existing shareholders, Bridgeway does little marketing. In line with its philosophy—You found us; we didn’t sell you— Bridgeway gets new business mainly via word-of-mouth, unsolicited news articles like the one you are reading, and favorable mention in databases. Institutions don’t give Bridgeway much money. The exception: the socially conscious Calvert Fund family, for which the company subadvises on $1.6 billion of small- and large-cap funds. If Bridgeway’s quant philosophy isn’t a complete conversation-stopper with pension funds and the like, it certainly is an inhibitor. As Montgomery observes with bemusement: “It’s something of a mystery to me, given our record, why our technique is greeted with so much skepticism. Isn’t what goes on inside the head of a fabled mutual-fund manager, like Fidelity’s Peter Lynch, as much a black box as our models? At least if something were to happen to me, our models would just keep on cranking.” Bridgeway follows 3,500 stocks, ranging from behemoths like General Electric down to micro and ultra-small names. All are ranked according to their price potential, employing a clutch of propri- 3 etary computer models looking at different characteristics. Portfolios are then cobbled together from the top finishers in different models to assure diversification in the stocks’ attributes, sectors and risk characteristics. The composition of the 16 different models that Bridgeway uses are, not surprisingly, closely guarded secrets. Montgomery doesn’t want to be front-run or slip-streamed by nosy rivals. “All I can say is that our models have multiple variables and different factor weightings,” he comments. Some idea of the company’s methodology can be gleaned, however, from factors that Bridgeway has tried unsuccessfully to model and back-test. He avers, for example, that insider trading data is overrated in delineating the future direction of stocks. There’s a perceptible “January effect” boosting small-cap stocks, but transaction costs limit the phenomenon’s profit potential. And, he adds, noise in the data makes shifts in economic growth or Fed policy moves all but impossible to model. Likewise, Bridgeway has never found much value in using moving averages to measure stock-price momentum. And merely culling picks from stocks with low price-to-earnings ratios doesn’t work unless growth potential factors are spooned in. Bridgeway’s multi-cap, “go-anywhere” Aggressive Investors I Fund and its larger near-clone, the $651 million Bridgeway Aggressive Investors 2 (BRAIX), are run with stocks selected from six different models. One is purely technical, measuring how stocks have acted in terms of price and volume changes. Three other models are biased toward growth stocks trying to glean future trends from past growth in earnings, cash flow, book value and the like. Yet in one of the growth models, value looms important. “We call this one our ‘growth at a reasonable price’ model,” says Montgomery. Finally, two pure-value-stock models are employed. He also talks excitedly about a new “contrarian” model that the firm is rolling out. It’s designed to uncover stocks that have been unfairly beaten to a pulp. Last year, Bridgeway’s models seemed to short-circuit. Aggressive Investors 1 and 2 underperformed the S&P 500 by 8.68 and 10.35 percentage points, respectively. Montgomery minces few words about the debacle, noting ruefully that only one of the Aggressive Investors fund models—a value measure—per-formed well. Yet, as he points out, Bridgeway has recovered nicely from other down periods, such as the back-to-back years of 1997 and 1998, when Aggressive Investors 1 faltered. Then there was a six-month period in 1998 in which Ultra-Small Company was torched for a 50% loss. In both cases, the funds roared back to lay waste to their respective indexes. And in both cases, some patience was needed. “I have a high tolerance to bad periods and sleep quite well. We try to counsel our fund investors to have a long-term time horizon of at least three years, and it just pains me that some of our clients sold out late last year, rather than hanging around,” Montgomery muses. Indeed that would’ve been good advice. This year, through July 9, Aggressive Investors 2 was up 21.38%, almost triple the S&P’s 7.5% advance. The argument could be made that Bridgeway’s success arises in part from the presence of small- and mid-cap stocks even in larger-cap funds like Aggressive Investors. In a market in which smaller stocks have outperformed so dramatically since 2000, that undoubtedly provided a boost. The median stock-market value of Aggressive Investors 2’s portfolio in 2002 was just half of its current level, $9.7 billion. Large-cap stocks then made up less than 25% of the total portfolio; today, they account for more than 46%. The fund was able to capture the curl of the small-stock surge. At the same time, its performance also hints that, perhaps, bigcaps finally are back. In addition, the models kept Aggressive Investors 1 from crashing and burning in the post-2000 collapse of the Bubble Market after the fund had returned 120.62% during the 1999 blow-off. Over the following three years, it not only avoided the Nasdaq’s 75% death dive, but also annually outpaced the S&P. “During 1999, the models made us pare our tech positions from two-thirds to about a third of the portfolio,” Montgomery recalls. “As a result, we were one of only three members of the triple-digitreturn club of 1999 to beat the S&P each of the following bear market years.” The larger Aggressive Investors 2 fund’s latest top 10 holdings (as of March 31) reflect the models eclectic selections. Montgomery isn’t one for personal flash. He still lives in a modest four-bedroom home just three blocks from his office. What he likes to call his “yacht” is a second-hand 15-foot boat that he keeps stored near Galveston Island. “In the end, it’s not the size of the bank account that counts but the love and relationships that one achieves in life,” he observes. A worthy sentiment, to be sure. And one that many of Bridgeway’s investors would endorse, even as their bank accounts expand. n Before investing you should carefully consider the Funds’ investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. This and other information is in the prospectus, a copy of which may be obtained by calling 1-800-661-3550 or visiting the Fund’s website. Please read the prospectus carefully before you invest. ©2007 Morningstar, Inc. All Rights Reserved. The information contained herein: (1) is proprietary to Morningstar and/or its content providers; (2) may not be copied or distributed; and (3) is not warranted to be accurate, complete or timely. Neither Morningstar nor its content providers are responsible for any damages or losses arising from any use of this information. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Market volatility can significantly impact short-term performance. The Ultra-Small Company and Aggressive Investors Funds are subject to above average market risk (volatility) and are not an appropriate investment for short-term investors. Investments in smaller companies generally carry greater risk than is customarily associated with larger companies for various reasons such as narrower markets, limited financial resources and less liquid stock. In addition, the Aggressive Investors Funds may exhibit added volatility due to investment techniques such as use of futures, options and leverage. Total return figures include the reinvestment of dividends and capital gains. Holdings are subject to change without notice. The S&P 500 Index is a broad-based, unmanaged measurement of the stock market, based on the average performance, over any given period, of 500 widely held common stocks. The CRSP Cap-Based Portfolio10 Index (CRSP 10 INDEX) is an unmanaged index of roughly 1,800 ultra-small companies compiled by the Center for Research in Security Prices. Both indexes assume that all dividends are reinvested. It is not possible to invest directly in an index. The Fund is distributed by Foreside Fund Services, LLC, which is not affiliated with Bridgeway Capital Management, Inc. or any other affiliate.