Motley Fool Money - The Fundamentals of Financial Data, with Tom Gardner and Ayal Cusner
Episode Date: January 22, 2022Understanding the math can help you weather the storm as a stock investor. Ayal Cusner, Investing AI & Automation lead at The Motley Fool, joins CEO and co-founder Tom Gardner to talk about the data t...hat can give you more peace of mind when the market goes sideways. In this episode they discuss: - The math behind stock volatility - The fundamentals of owning growth-oriented companies - The potential long-term rewards of going on stock investing’s wild ride To learn more: How to Calculate Volatility of a Stock - https://www.fool.com/investing/how-to-invest/stocks/how-to-calculate-stock-volatility/ Understanding Portfolio Diversification - https://www.fool.com/investing/how-to-invest/portfolio-diversification/ Host: Tom Gardner Guest: Ayal Cusner Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Rick Engdahl, Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So, they're reinvesting, and there's a lot of debate about whether they're going to succeed
or not. So their stock, like Netflix, is rising and falling dramatically. Netflix's up more than
500 times since coming public, but its stock fell more than 70 percent, five separate times.
If you want those amazing returns, you've got to go on a wild ride.
I'm Chris Hill, and that was Motley Fool CEO, Tom Gardner. This episode of Motley Fool Money,
it's all about the math in your investing journey. But don't worry, you will not need
a calculator. Iall Kuzner heads up our investing AI and automation team. And today he's joining
Tom to talk about numbers, including why it's a benefit to understand the math behind diversification,
what the historical data can teach us all about a stock market downturn, and a fundamental
advantage that investors like you and me have over Wall Street firms. It's only natural to
think that an individual investor like you would have no hope whatsoever of outperforming professional
investors. They work with teams of analysts. They manage billions of dollars, and some of them
wield automated trading platforms powered by sophisticated algorithms with the capability and even
legal clearance to actually step in front of your trades, buy before you, then sell those
shares to you, taking a lick off your ice cream cone in the process. You can't win. No chance.
And yet, many individual investors systematically outperform the market decade after decade.
It's just as Peter Lynch, the former head of Fidelity Magellan, who generated over 25% per year
at that fund. It's just as Peter Lynch said would happen that individuals have a genuine
long-term advantage as investors. But in order to win consistently throughout our lives
and to go well beyond just a lucky stock or two, we as investors need to understand the basic
numbers of how to win. It's like a sport or a game or a puzzle or a problem set. There are some
basic numbers that explain how that is won or lost, how you are correct or incorrect in your
approach, and those numbers are actually relatively simple, more like fifth grade math than
Greek alpha numerics. And that's where we find ourselves here in the third of our four classes,
designed to help you invest successfully forever, the Motley Fool Way.
And we are guided by our visiting instructor, Ayal Kusner, the team lead of investment intelligence
across all fools, the universe over Ayal.
Thanks for being here today.
Thank you for having me, Tom.
Let's talk about the first thing that I think many investors encounter that shocks them when they invest,
and that is volatility.
We may be accustomed to making the first purchase.
of an apartment, let's say. And we don't quote the price of our apartment with any frequency. We don't
have any idea whether that apartment is worth more or less a year after we have made that purchase.
But when we invest in the stock market, we're getting information every second, every minute,
every day, every hour as frequently as we want to know what it's worth now versus what it was
worth yesterday at this time. We can find that out. So let's start with the basic data around
volatility and how to understand that as investors.
Let's do it. Before I get into the numbers, I should probably mention that learning about
volatility for me when I first started about investing was a big eye-opener because I came from
engineering. I thought that the world works very much like a formula, where you put something
in and you get something out. You put something in, you get something out. And if something
fails, maybe that's a problem, but we shouldn't expect that to happen. When I came over to learn
about investing, I had some hard realities to take in because I was looking for,
equations for everything like we have in engineering. And what I learned is that in many cases,
investing is like a coin toss. And in every case, if you can be right, say, two-thirds of the time,
75% of the time, you're Warren Buffett. That was a big shock to me, and it required me to
recalibrate. So I'm hoping that after we go through the data, everyone who's interested in having
that sort of experience can walk away feelings similarly. Volatility is part and part
parcel for investing. There's a source of the volatility that we have to come to terms with.
And I'll ask you a question, Tom. Do you know where the source of volatility comes from?
Why are stocks risky?
Human emotion?
That is exactly correct. Human emotion. Processing of information, uncertainty.
And specifically, when it comes to stocks as an asset class, it's uncertainty about the unique
characteristics that makes stocks different from any other asset class, and that is growth.
volatility really does come from hopes of growth and the risk of achieving that growth.
And the reason why that's important is because if you understand that volatility goes hand-in-hand
with growth, you'll understand why we need to lean into volatility in order to get the kinds of
returns that we're all searching for in this problem.
So with that, let's go ahead and jump in and start setting some bounds.
Right off the bat, volatility is something that a typical stock will demonstrate at a level
of about 30 to 40% per year.
And so when we're talking about volatility, 30%, for example,
what that means is that a stock has a decent chance of being up either 30% or down 30%
over the course of a year.
If we want to know how likely those outcomes are, we can think of a typical bell curve
or normal distribution.
And what that would tell us is a stock with a volatility of 30%, would see those performance
outcomes about two-thirds of the time. So if you're holding for a year, this year, holding for
another year next year, another year next year, it's probably safe to think that about two of
those three years, you're going to see swings in your portfolio that hit those 30% up or 30%
downbans for a stock that's got a 30% volatility. And there's some interesting math about
how that happens. It doesn't quite increase at the rate that the time,
goes on for. So, if you wait one year and see 20%, you won't necessarily see 100% volatility
to your portfolio on a five-year basis. But you should expect that volatility to increase
as you hold longer, because you're just allowing for more time for stocks to move up and down
and kind of get further away from wherever they started in your portfolio.
So if I put $10,000 into an S&P 500 index fund for five years, I shouldn't be surprised
if at some point during that five-year period, I'm down 25%.
You should expect to be down 25% at some point.
And actually, if we take a look at the performance of the S&P 500 over the last 30 years,
we look at every year's performance over the last 32 years is what I'm staring at here,
we can see that on average, the S&P has returned 12% per year, which is actually a little
better than the long-term history of the market.
and we know that the market has done very well for us over the last few decades.
If we look at the maximum drawdown in that year,
which is how far the S&P fell from its highest point in every year,
down to its lowest point,
we see that on average, that drawdown is about 14% per year.
So we can expect in a given year,
what we've experienced over the past year is about 12% return per year,
with that pain that you feel, when you go from being at the top of the world to being at the bottom,
about 14%. Putting that all together, if you like the feeling of making about 8, 10, 12% return on your investment each year,
you kind of got to get used to that feeling of losing about 14% at some point over that year.
And that's the average number. So you should really expect and brace yourself for big drops at some
point of time. It's part of playing the game. That's a little bit of the roller coaster ride that we all
know we all experience as investors. Any long-term investor knows this, and newer investors need to
understand this. And thank you for that. Now, let's take a second factor. We've talked about
volatility. How about time? We've talked about within a year, and we talked a little bit about
five years, but stretch it out and explain to us what happens when we think as investors over a one-day
period, a one-year period, a five-year, one decade, two decades. What happens to volatility and
performance as we look at it over different periods of time.
As we mentioned, volatility and performance kind of go hand in hand.
There are almost two sides of the same coin.
And when we think about the time that we hold stocks and what that means for the volatility
we're going to experience and the opportunities that we're going to stand to benefit from,
what we see is the more time you're willing to take, the more volatility you'll experience.
But the more likelihood that you'll actually make money over that time period, and conversely,
If you want to spend less time in the market, you will experience less volatility your portfolio
because you're in the game less.
You're not staked.
But at the same time, you stand to make a lot less money.
To put some numbers around that, your odds of making money, if you hold the S&B 500 for a day,
57% of all days were positive days going all the way back to 1928.
And that's kind of like a coin flip, right?
We want to do much better than 57% outperformance in our performance.
our portfolio or positive gains in our portfolio over the long term, if we are willing to
hold 20 years, that number goes to 96 percent historically.
You basically go from a coin flip odds at making money to essentially guarantee.
The trade-off is you have to be willing to hold the market for a longer period of time,
which means you have to take risk and you have to experience volatility.
Let's weave in a second variable, or a third variable, we've got length of time, and then we've
We've got plus or minus, make money or lose money over a day, all the way forward to 20 years.
Now let's talk about the size of the gains available to you within a day versus a 20-year
or a 10-year or a five-year return.
This is the most beautiful thing about investing, really.
It's not simply that your odds move from random to near guarantee.
It's that the size of the returns move from infinitesimely small and meaningless to transformative.
Exactly, Tom. So if you're willing to hold longer and experience more volatility, not only will you increase your odds of making money, which might be important to some investors who aren't comfortable taking as much risk, but you also earn more gains over that time. So if you're willing to hold longer, you could double your portfolio in five years. There's no way you'll be able to double your portfolio in five days, let's say.
You even factor in taxes and you start to see the impossibility of winning over the short term
versus the high probability efficiency and also the reduction of anxiety, which we'll be
talking about in next week's class with Morgan Housel, author of The Psychology of Money,
how do we relax our mind in our central nervous system?
And it's not going to happen when we compress and force all of our attention into the
here and now and the high hopes for low volatility and high returns in the short-term.
term. It just doesn't happen. Let's talk about allocation aisle and the different types of stocks.
Now we know how to assess volatility. We've got a good basic number there. And we've got,
oh, okay, the time horizon matters. I have a much greater chance of making money the longer
I hold and a much greater chance of making significantly more money if I hold. Now, how about
the difference in the types of stocks that we put into a portfolio?
That really is starting to get to the key of becoming a great investor, is understanding
understanding that stocks are different. They're different in idiosyncratic ways. That's a big word
for meaning ways that are just specific to them. Every company's got a different CEO. Every company is
trying to do different things. Every company's got a different set of almost personal circumstances.
But then there are a lot of common factors between stocks that are common sources of risk.
And the better you get at identifying those common sources of risk, the better you'll get at removing
them from your portfolio with proper diversification. That's really where you start to see the benefits
because one of the only free lunches we get in investing is the opportunity to reduce the risk
of our investments by diversifying our bets. That is not only, and when we say it's a free lunch,
what we're actually saying is the market is expecting us to take advantage of it. The way that the
stocks are priced in the market are based on an expectation that all market, that all market is,
participants have, that those who go out to build portfolios off of those stocks are going
to do it in a way that efficiently reduces risk.
The sources of those risks are many.
They start from very common source of risk.
There's a risk that every stock shares, and it's the risk of being a stock and being subject
to exposure to the economy.
It's very hard to diversify that risk.
The way we diversify that risk is by putting cash in our price.
portfolio. That's generally how we do it. But then there are other risks that we want to make sure
we do a good job of accounting for. And we do that by having proper portfolio allocation. So we can
look at a lot of risks that are linked to industry effects or certain investing styles that might
be popular in certain areas, less popular to other areas. What we try to do there is build the best
portfolio that balances those risks to our liking so that when one part of our portfolio
Ziggs, another part might zag in just the right way. We don't have to think too much about it.
All we really have to do is understand that companies are fundamentally different, and they're
exposed to different opportunities and different risks. And we want to make sure that we span our
portfolio with all those risks, because by taking lots of risk but doing in a diversified way,
the total portfolio is going to come together and give us a great risk return profile.
We're going to close this class with a conversation about the Motley Foolway.
what we've learned from the data of our investment performance going back a decade, two decades more.
Company's been in existence for almost 30 years, and we've been investing throughout and learning from our members,
meeting management teams, learning from our mistakes, and we've gathered that information into a methodology that we share with our members.
And that really forms around a couple key factors, like the number of stocks to achieve diversification,
the length of time that we think that these should be held in order to put the odds of making money
and compounding that money to significant amounts.
How long do you have to hold it for?
How many do you have to hold?
And what might the journey look like along the way?
What will the highs and lows look like?
So put it all together for us in a motley full plan, if you're.
will, about how to think about what is a diversified portfolio, what is the right time horizon,
and how high will the highs and how low will the lows be along the way?
So when we look at the stocks that we like to recommend, the Motley Fool, we see a couple
unique characteristics. We see that they tend to be much more focused on achieving growth.
And we love that because that tells us that they're really shooting for capturing as much
market share as they can. It lets us know that they're capable and encouraged.
to go out there and become the biggest companies that they can be.
What that means for us, though, is that we also have to expect that they're going to come with high volatility.
And what that means for the portfolios that we would want to build with the stocks that we tend to favor,
that diversification is more important than what we would be recommending for an average stock portfolio.
And I would even go so far as to say, if you were just going to buy one stock,
you probably shouldn't buy a stock that we like.
You should buy a nice stable stock that already looks like a portfolio.
It's probably got a portfolio of products.
It might be a utility company.
And that's what the data shows.
B. Hathaway B shares.
There you go.
You've got candy.
You've got insurance.
You've got railroads.
You've got Apple.
You've got a lot of Apple.
You've got a portfolio in that one company.
Exactly.
But the trick here is if you are willing to diversify, if you're willing to buy more stocks,
that allows you the opportunity to go.
by riskier stocks, find the riskier stocks that have great businesses, great growth potential,
but the market is still trying to figure out what may become of them. Many other investors
might be reluctant to invest in those stocks. If you're willing to diversify and hold for the
long term, that is going to be the surest path of success that you can rely on. Of course,
you're going to have volatility in that scenario. I cannot recommend anything. I wish I could.
I wish I could offer some solution that would deliver great performance without volatility.
What I would offer instead is, if you're comfortable taking the volatility, the gains over the long term should definitely be more than worth it.
So when we look at the data going back almost 20 years across our membership services, what we find is that a member who had purchased 25 stocks or more and held them for five years had a 98% likelihood of a
profitable results. So that moved that one day near coin flip to a five-year, very high likelihood
of a positive return, but it required 25 different investments. And many of those investments,
the Motley-Foolway, are growth-oriented, reinvesting their business. They have an R&D line
line that's filled up on the income statement because they are trying to find the new solutions
of the future and to win large market opportunities. So they're reinvesting, and there's a lot of
debate about whether they're going to succeed or not. So their stock, like Netflix, is rising and
falling dramatically. Netflix's up more than 500 times since coming public, but its stock fell more
than 70 percent, five separate times. So if you want those amazing returns, you've got to go on a
wild ride with the stock price while that business is performing, carving out a new market
that didn't exist before. And so 25 stocks, five plus years and of volatility that we shouldn't
be surprised if the portfolio is down 15 or 20 percent in any given year en route to stretching
that time horizon out and putting the odds in our favor of a profitable return. What would
you change about that, if anything? Honestly, I think those are pretty good rules to abide by
as you're building a portfolio. And every unique situation might be a little different. 25
stocks might be more than enough diversification for one type of portfolio, but not for another.
What I would encourage everybody to do in that situation is to think about the constituent companies in your portfolio and ask yourself if you think they're really competing for something unique.
And if you could see them at some point being a market leader, because if you fill a portfolio with a bunch of companies that individually are very risky, but also individually could become market leaders in their own respects, you are going to make sure that you're building that diversified portfolio.
I don't know if there's a data-driven process that can even capture how much diversification
you're getting from taking that approach.
The other thing that I would encourage everybody to focus on, if they're willing to take
this approach of buying very volatile stocks, but making sure that they diversify them, making
sure they're great-quality companies, first and foremost, that come with high volatility
because of a lot of uncertainty about what their features might be.
The reason that I would recommend doing that is because if you're willing to do that, play
a diversified long game focused on individual companies as opposed to a short-term trading-based
strategy focused on stock price movements, what you will be able to do is rely on lots of
data about the fundamentals of companies, looking at their cash flows, their profits, and
their real fundamental operating risks, instead of having to focus on the volatility of the
What you'll get out of that is a portfolio, stocks that are very volatile, but whose businesses
are rock solid, especially when you diversify across all of them.
And it's amazing what you see when you roll up the cash flows of companies, and you look
at how smooth those are in a diversified portfolio when you pick stocks that we like.
Compared to the volatility of those stocks, that makes me feel really comfortable continuing,
holding those stocks and investing in that philosophy, often to the future, because I feel like
I can rely less on the stock price chart that's full of squiggles and a lot more on the fundamental
analysis that we do here at the Motley Fool to identify great companies that are going to live on.
I, Al, thank you so much for classroom number three, discussion of the underlying numbers,
the data that can guide us how to win the game, a very consequential game, the game of Investing,
and our pursuit of financial independence in our lives.
And I guess what I close with is a reflection on how hard it can be for someone who starts
as an investor and gets hit with that volatility without the expectation or preparation.
And that's one of the fundamental things we want to do at the Motley Fool for everyone who's
coming into the marketplace, whether you've been at it actively trading or you've never
bought a stock before, to actually open all of our eyes to the benefits of long-term investment.
We heard today about the beauty of moving.
from a random result in the short term to result with much higher probability over the long term.
And not just a higher probability, a much larger gain over the long term, particularly when you
defer taxes over the long term. And you actually reduce anxiety because you can start to follow,
as IEL says, the business performance, the cash flows. And those stock prices are flipping all
over the place. And that portfolio will move relatively wildly within any given year or three or five-year
period. But when you stretch that out as a lifelong investor into rising companies,
that could someday become market leaders and you diversify across them and add capital along the way,
you almost, you are moving the probabilities so far in your favor of becoming financially independent in your life.
And we've seen it since starting The Motley Fool in 1993.
And this all leads into our fourth class next Saturday with Morgan Housel,
the author of The Psychology of Money, who's going to help us make sure that we've got our emotions in check,
and we can take advantage of these numbers and these philosophical printings.
principles of why we invest, how we invest, how to have a plan behind all of our decisions,
and then the numbers that can help us win.
Iyal Kusner, thank you so much for all the insights this week.
We'll be back in the classroom next Saturday with Morgan Housel.
Full on.
That's all for today, but coming up tomorrow, a conversation for any investor looking to dip
their toes into the waters of Bitcoin and cryptocurrency.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about, and the Motley Fool
may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear.
I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see you tomorrow.
