Practical analysis for investment professionals
16 January 2019

Hiring and Firing Portfolio Managers: Process and Outcomes

Robert G. Hagstrom, CFA, is the author of Warren Buffett: Inside the Ultimate Money Mind. He recently sat for a Take 15 Podcast interview with Lauren Foster, “Warren Buffett and the ‘Money Mind.’”


The Logic of Investment Failure

At the beginning of each new year, financial advisers and their clients step back and evaluate the performance of portfolio managers. Statements tally the percentage return of different strategies compared to relative benchmarks. Those that outperformed are ranked at the top while those that underperformed sit at the bottom.

The science of evaluating portfolio managers and then determining who to keep and who to send packing is straightforward — or so you would think. But the evidence remains financial advisers and their clients continue to make the same decision mistakes over and over.

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Generally speaking, we know those portfolio managers who post top-decile performance in one year rarely repeat while those at the bottom of the decile often rebound with better future results. However, there are instances when some poor-performing portfolio managers remain subpar, thus reminding us all that “polling does not replace thinking,” as Warren Buffett quipped.

Since performance results  outcomes — of top-performing portfolio managers vary from time to time, it is well understood that those in charge of selecting managers gain better insights by analyzing their process. If a portfolio manager continues to implement the same process that produced the results that attracted the decision maker in the first place, logic should dictate no changes are necessary. But of course, in financial markets, logic does not always prevail.

Truth be told, decision makers who are charged with selecting portfolio managers do care about outcomes, as they should. But far too often, decision makers become obsessed in their quest for superior returns each and every year. In doing so, they place outcomes above processes, which inevitably leads to problems down the road.

Once decision makers allow short-term outcomes to become paramount in how they think about managers, they inevitably place their portfolios in harm’s way. Becoming a performance chaser leads to buying a strategy only after it works and avoiding strategies that have lagged. In the investment world, buying only the short-term winners seldom works over the long term.

Ad for Manager Selection by Scott D. Stewart, CFA

The slippery slope of only selecting portfolio managers with good short-term outcomes often means decision makers lack a good understanding of the process that drove the results. We know there are instances when a bad process can lead to a good short-term outcome. But any thoughtful person would instantly recognize this was nothing but “dumb luck.” Conversely, we know there are occasions when a good process can lead to bad short-term results.

So how should decision makers ultimately position themselves to to think about manager selection?

  1. Recognize investing is a probabilistic exercise. And with any probabilistic situation, success requires developing a disciplined process.
  2. Acknowledge that an excellent process will yield bad results some of the time.
  3. The best practitioners in all probabilistic fields not only focus on process, but appreciate the role time has in delivering outcomes.

Robert Rubin, the former US Treasury Secretary, said it best:

“Any individual decisions can be badly thought through, and yet be successful, or exceedingly well thought through, but be unsuccessful. But overtime, more thoughtful decision-making will lead to better results, and more thoughtful decision-making can be encouraged by evaluating on how well they were made rather than an outcome.”

Financial Analysts Journal Current Issue Tile

Evaluating good investment performance is not just tabulating outcomes but understanding how a portfolio manager‘s process ultimately delivers the long-term results clients seek.

By focusing exclusively on short-term outcomes, investors are ultimately led astray.

This, we believe, is one of the principal reasons why so many individuals are unsuccessful investors.

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EquityCompass Investment Management LLC, is a wholly owned subsidiary and affiliated SEC registered investment advisor of Stifel Financial Corp.

This material is for informational purposes only and is not intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any financial instrument or any offer if investment advisory services. Any forecasts contained herein are for illustrative purposes only and are not to be relied upon as advice or interpreted as a recommendation.

All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author’s employer.

Image credit: ©Getty Images/ erhui1979


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About the Author(s)
Robert G. Hagstrom, CFA

Robert G. Hagstrom, CFA, joined EquityCompass as a senior portfolio manager in 2014 and launched the Global Leaders Portfolio that same year. He serves as chair of the Investment Management Committee for Stifel Asset Management. Hagstrom has more than 30 years of investment experience. Prior to joining EquityCompass, he was the chief investment strategist of Legg Mason Investment Counsel, and before that the portfolio manager of the growth equity strategy at Legg Mason Capital Management where he managed over $7 billion in assets. Hagstrom was the recipient of “Honorable Mention” as Morningstar’s US Equity Manager of the Year in 2007. He has also served as president and chief investment officer of Legg Mason Focus Capital, general partner of Focus Capital Advisory, and principal at Lloyd, Leith & Sawin. Hagstrom is the author of nine investment books, including the New York Times bestseller The Warren Buffett Way. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Villanova University and is a member of CFA Institute and the CFA Society of Philadelphia.

1 thought on “Hiring and Firing Portfolio Managers: Process and Outcomes”

  1. Rod T. says:

    In your 2001 book, the Essential Buffett; Timeless Principles for the New Economy, a book which I have enjoyed. I am curious on how you derived the discount factor in Table 4.2? In year 1 the factor is 0.9174 and there is a different factor for each successive year, which would be expected. The text does not explain the derivation of this factor that I can find. Note 38 on page 259 references year 10??

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