By JOHN F. WASIK
WHEN it comes to John Maynard Keynes and his economic theories, the economist has long been a lightning rod as tall as the Empire State Building. Yet examining his investment success is another matter, and far less prickly.
Although
this is a largely unknown side of his life, Keynes, while scourging
Wall Street and advocating public spending to create jobs, was creating
several fortunes by managing money. This part of his life should be of
great value to anyone interested in creating and managing wealth.
The
Keynes whom history knows best was the guiding light behind the many
New Deal job-creation programs and several Keynesian stimulus programs
since then, including the Obama stimulus plan of 2009. He was the
intellectual father of the Bretton Woods
postwar economic accords. He was also a bon vivant at the heart of the
quasi-bohemian Bloomsbury group, a patron of the arts and a philosopher.
While
he was extolling what eventually became known as “Keynesian economics,”
he was also managing money for himself, as well as King’s College at
Cambridge, his Bloomsbury friends and family, two British insurance
companies, and investment funds that we would call hedge funds today.
After
a few near-catastrophic market turns, he became one of the most
innovative investors ever, inspiring investors and economic thinkers
from Warren E. Buffett to Robert J. Shiller.
In researching a book on Keynes,
I was astounded to find that none of his many biographies contained
meaningful detail on his investment activities, although they were
fairly well known by the cognoscenti in London and New York during the
1920s and 1930s. What I found was that Keynes stumbled several times
before he succeeded — he was almost financially wiped out three separate
times — but he got back in the game and altered his thinking to build
wealth long term.
Most
of what Keynes did in terms of investment innovation has been
intricately documented by David Chambers, a professor at the Judge
School of Business at Cambridge, and Elroy Dimson, emeritus professor at
the London Business School. “Discovering a high degree of overlap with
his personal stock portfolio,” Professor Chambers notes, the two
researchers took an incisive look at Keynes’s portfolios at the King’s
College endowment he managed from 1922 to 1946, when he died.
What emerges from Professor Chambers and Professor Dimson’s research, published in a Journal of Economics Perspectives paper,
is a surprising portrait of an investment pioneer who started out as a
“top-down” manager relying upon macroeconomic predictions of the
economy’s movement and switched to become a “bottom-up” value investor
focused on finding solid companies that paid dividends and had
promising, long-term prospects.
Keynes
vaulted into professional investing with a cocksure insider’s attitude.
He had been an adviser to the British Treasury during World War I —
until he walked out of the Versailles Treaty talks. Although he
maintained and enhanced his Treasury and London financial district
connections, he would publicly denounce the Versailles reparations
forced upon Germany. Keynes correctly predicted that the treaty would
lead to catastrophic economic instability in Germany, which he detailed
in his classic “The Economic Consequences of the Peace.”
After
the war, Keynes speculated heavily in currencies, but lost most of his
capital in 1920 when several European currencies he was betting against
recovered. Undaunted, he broadened his portfolio to commodities and
eventually common stocks, which at the time was a rarity for
institutional investors, who preferred safe bonds and real estate.
Although
he was building wealth for his own account and the institutional funds
throughout the 1920s, he did not see the 1929 debacle coming and was
almost cleaned out again.
The
1929 crash and resulting Great Depression left Keynes intellectually
shellshocked, so he changed his strategy. Professor Chambers and
Professor Dimson discovered that sometime in the early 1930s he backed
away from short-term trades and commodities and focused on stocks. No
longer would he pay attention to overarching economic theories or
short-term sentiment: The “animal spirits” of the market’s unpredictable
pixies could not be trusted. He sensed that security prices were not
true indicators of company values.
”Keynes
anticipated Eugene Fama, the 2013 Nobel Economics Prize co-winner, in
that he clearly did not believe that stock prices must be good
indicators of fundamental value,” Professor Chambers said in a recent
email. “Consequently, there could be periods when the irrational
behavior of investors and what he called animal spirits play a
significant role in determining prices on both the upside and downside.”
Unlike
millions of modern investors, who latch onto every headline and
interview on business television shows to gauge market sentiment, Keynes
went about-face in the early to mid-1930s to concentrate on a company’s
“enterprise” value, which is also known as “book” or “breakup” value.
This intrinsic view of a company’s true worth stripped out the overly
emotional component that is often reflected in stock prices. As a
result, he often picked companies that had promising futures, but were
unloved at the time.
When
Keynes adopted his new investment strategy — which paralleled work by
Benjamin Graham, a Columbia University professor and mentor to Mr.
Buffett — he did quite well. Even with setbacks in 1929-30, 1937-38 and
the early years of World War II,
Keynes managed a 16 percent annualized return in the Cambridge
discretionary portfolio, which mirrored his other holdings. That
compares with 10.4 percent for a basket of British stocks over the same
period, Professor Chambers and Professor Dimson found.
More
important, Keynes staged some striking rebounds after two major
declines from 1929 to 1940. According to Professor Chambers and
Professor Dimson, although his Cambridge discretionary portfolio lagged
the British market by a cumulative 12 percent in 1930 from inception,
his performance rallied in the 1930s and ’40s and posted a 0.73
risk/return or Sharpe ratio during his tenure, compared with 0.49 for the British market.
Considering that Keynes was investing during some of the worst years in history, his returns are astounding. How did he do it?
In
addition to focusing on bargain-priced small and midsize stocks, Keynes
carefully evaluated managements. Could they prosper long term? Did they
have a plan for when the economy turned around? “I get more and more
convinced that the right method in investment is to put fairly large
sums into enterprises which one thinks one knows something about and in
the management of which one thoroughly believes,” Keynes wrote in 1934.
Shades
of Benjamin Graham and Warren Buffett, and the whole school of value
investing. Keynes also loved dividend payers, some of which were paying
up to 6 percent during the deflationary 1930s. His portfolios were full
of old-line companies in mining, railroads and shipping. Although they
were perhaps boring and suspect choices at the time, he bought more
shares when they became cheaper and predicted they would be worth more
when the general economy recovered.
Ultimately,
Keynes was vindicated, building wealth for all of his institutional
clients, and he built a personal fortune worth more than $30 million in
2013 dollars at the time of his death, which did not include a tally of
his extensive collection of artwork and rare manuscripts. Keynes was not
only an investment innovator, but one of the richest economists ever.
While
Keynes was most likely the recipient of price-sensitive information
during his career, it is hard to discern if he profited from it. Insider
trading was not broadly restricted in Britain until 1980. It is also
hard to pin down whether Keynes invested along the lines of his famous
economic theories, although it is clear that his investment activities
informed his view of economics.
Nevertheless,
one of Keynes’s most important insights was one that most investors
still ignore: A prudent plan does not include timing the market, but
focuses on long-term value and total return. It is a view that has not
only worked for millions of investors who now invest in index funds —
and do not time the market — but is also the foundation of a long-term
strategy.
Although
Keynes’s economic persona may still be the St. Sebastian of
intellectual debate, Keynesian investing has proved to be a solid way to
build wealth over time.
Was just reading up on keynesian economics for my assignment and happen to see this story. Interesting to know that one of the greatest economist is an investor himself with quite a good portfolio return. Warren buffet was also an economics graduate.
ReplyDeleteInvesting for wealth is never easy. See this important line in the article ....
ReplyDeleteKeynes stumbled several times before he succeeded — he was almost financially wiped out three separate times — but he got back in the game and altered his thinking to build wealth long term.
"but he got back in the game and altered his thinking to build wealth long term."
ReplyDeleteLong term is the key to building wealth.
Get rich quick can only happens with something like BIG SWEEP or for those who are blessed with "inheritance".
The worst case is get rich quick scheme will make you a bankrupt or landed you in "FOC Changi Hotel".
Keynes has given us the clue.
ReplyDeleteDo we want to work harder to become Trader or Investor?
In 1938, Keynes wrote his manifesto for sound investing using a concentrated, balanced portfolio. He proposed:
ReplyDeleteA careful selection of a few investments (or a few types of investment) having regard to their cheapness in relation to their probable actual and potential intrinsic value over a period of years ahead and in relation to alternative investments at the time;
A steadfast holding of these in fairly large units through thick and thin, perhaps for several years, until either they have fulfilled their promise or it is evident that they were purchased on a mistake;
A balanced investment position, i.e., a variety of risks in spite of individual holdings being large, and if possible, opposed risks.
His view of investing versus speculation was: “Investing is an activity of forecasting the yield over the life of the asset; speculation is the activity of forecasting the psychology of the market.”
Keynes came to view too much speculative activity as economically damaging, famously saying: “Speculators may do no harm as bubbles on a steady stream of enterprise. But the position is serious when enterprise becomes the bubble on a whirlpool of speculation. When the capital development of a country becomes a by-product of the activities of a casino, the job is likely to be ill-done.”
Keynes’s biographer, H.F. Harrod, summarised Keynes’s investing philosophy with the words:
“He selected investments with great care and boldly adhered to what he had chosen through evil days.”
Sources:
R.F. Harrod - The Life Of John Maynard Keynes, 1951