Giant fund manager/brokerages like Vanguard and Fidelity have made fees front and center. Like Walmart, if you are the lowest cost provider and wield blue whale scale, you are going to compete on price. Competition has spurred a race to the bottom on fees. With many investment choices commoditized, the focus on fees has served customers well.
If I wanted to nit-pick, I might say investors don’t fully account for more opaque fees when choosing funds. These can swamp the management fees. Turnover, slippage costs, borrowing costs and abysmal sweep account rates all have significant impacts on net performance. These hidden costs are not easily reduced to a number that can be compared to a management fee. Hint: it’s a good place to search for how managers are able to drive fees to zero. But that’s a digression. I’m not especially interested in retail. Their financial advisors are doing a good job using steak and wine to box out the fund managers. There’s only so much fee to go around.
Allocators have a more difficult job. They devote teams to parsing alternative investments. A sea of private investments and complex hedge fund strategies. Within that context the allocators must construct portfolios that trade-off between tolerable risks and the probability of meeting their mandates.
The allocators rummage through a diverse mix of strategies each with their own mandates. Growth, wealth preservation, defensive, hedged alpha. A fund can be thought of as a payoff profile with an associated risk profile. A thoughtful allocator is crafting a portfolio like a builder. They want to know how the pieces interlock so the final product is useful and can withstand the eventual earthquake.
A builder cannot think of materials without considering cost. Wood might make for a better floor than vinyl but at what price would you accept the inferior material? When builders estimate their costs they must consider not only the materials, but transportation costs and how the cost of labor may vary with the time required to install the material.
So let’s go back to the allocators. If the menu they were choosing from wasn’t complicated enough, they must also evaluate the costs. This is a daunting topic. They face all the opaque costs the retail investors face. But since they are often investing in niche or custom strategies that are not necessarily under a public spotlight they have additional concerns. A basic due diligence process would review:
Unlike their retail counterparts, the professional investor’s day job is devoted to more than just investments but terms. Like our builder, this cannot be done faithfully without understanding the costs. Mutual funds sport fixed fees but complex investments often have incentive fees (a fee that is charged as a percentage of performance, sometimes with a hurdle) making them harder to evaluate. Regretfully, I suspect a meaningful segment of pros do not have a strong grasp on how fees affect their investments.
While it is challenging to price many of the features embedded in funds’ offering documents, there is little excuse for not understanding fees whether they are fixed or performance-based. After all, if you are an investor this is one of the most basic levers that affect your net performance and does not rely on having skills. It’s a classic high impact, easy to achieve objective. It’s the best box in that prioritization matrix that floats around consulting circles.
Let’s take a quick test.
You have a choice to invest in 2 funds that have identical strategies.
They have the same Sharpe ratio of .5
There are 2 differences between the funds. The fee structure and volatility.
| Fund A | Fund B | |
| Expected Return | 5% | 15% |
| Annual Volatility | 10% | 30% |
| Annual Fee | 1% | 2% |
Let’s assume the excess volatility is simply a result of leverage and that the leverage is free.
Which fund do you choose?
The correct way to think about this is to adjust the fee for volatility.
If you doubt that Fund B is cheaper from this reasoning you could simply sell Fund A and buy 1/3 as much of Fund B.
Let’s use real numbers. Suppose to had a $300,000 investment in Fund A. You would be paying 1% or $3,000 in fees.
Instead, invest $100,000 in fund B. Your expected annual return and volatility would remain the same, but you would only pay 2% of $100k in fees or $2,000. Same risk/reward for 2/3rd the price. Compound that.
I am not alone in this observation. From his book Leveraged Returns, Rob Carver echoes that a fund’s fees can only be discussed in context with its volatility:
I calculate all costs in risk-adjusted terms: as an annual proportion of target risk. For target risk of 15%/year and costs of 1.5%/year, your risk-adjusted costs are 1.5%/15% = 0.10. “This is how much of your gross Sharpe ratio will get eaten up by costs.
Allocators will often target lower vol products for the same fee when a higher vol fund would do. To be fee-efficient they should prefer that managers ran their strategies at a prudent maximum volatility. Optimally some point before they were overlevered or introduced possible path problems. There are many funds and CTAs that would just as easily target higher volatility for the same fee. Investors would be better off for 2 reasons:
As we saw in the Fund B example, it is more fee-efficient for vol targeting to be done at the allocation level not the fund level.
They would stop paying excess fees for a fund that had been forced to maintain large cash reserves since it was targeting a sub-optimal volatility. Why would an allocator be ok with paying fees for funds that are holding excessive t-bills?
If you are not convinced that investors’ preference for lower vol versions of strategies demonstrates a lack of fee numeracy then check out this podcast with allocator Chris Schindler. As an investor at the highly sophisticated Ontario Teachers Pension he witnessed firsthand the folly of his contemporaries’ thinking around fees. While mingling at conferences he would hear other investors bragging that they never pay fees above a certain threshold.
As we saw from our example, these brags are self-skewers, revealing how poorly these managers understood the relationships between fees and volatility. Not surprisingly, these very same managers would be invested in bond funds and paying optically low nominal fees. Sadly, once normalized for volatility, these fees proved to be punitively high.
This brings us to our next section. How would you like to pay for low volatility or defensive investments?
A Low Volatility Example
Let’s choose between 2 identical funds which only vary by the fee structure.
Both funds expect to return 5% and have a 5% volatility. Yes, a Sharpe ratio of 1.
Which fund do you choose?
A Large Cap Equity Example
This time let’s choose between funds that have SPX-like features
Both funds expect to return 7% and have a 16% volatility.
Which fund do you choose?
I wrote simulations to study the impact of fees on the test examples.
The universal setup:
Case 1: Low-volatility
Simulation parameters:
This chart plots the outperformance of the fixed fee return vs incentive fee return fund annually vs the return of the portfolio which they both own. The relative performance of the 2 funds is due to fees alone.
Observations
Case 2: Large Cap Equity Example
The universal setup remains the same.
We modify the simulation parameters:
Observations
Bonus Case: The High Volatility Fund
Finally I will show the output for a low Sharpe, high volatility fund.
The universal setup remains the same.
We modify the simulation parameters:
Observations
Fixed Fees
Incentive Fees
General
Fees need to be considered in light of the strategy. This requires being thoughtful to understand the levers. Unless you are comparing 2 SP500 index funds, it’s rarely as simple as comparing the headline fees. If we all agree that fees are not only critical components of long-term performance, while being one of the few things an allocator can control, then misunderstanding them is just negligent. A one size fee doesn’t fit all alternative investments so a one size rule for judging fees cannot also make sense. Compared to the difficulty of sourcing investments and crafting portfolios getting smart about fees is low-hanging fruit.
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Note on high watermarks and crystallization
Crystallization is the point in time when the manager determines and charges the performance fee. A fund’s high watermark (HWM) is set by the NAV from the most recent crystallization date.
For example, suppose the manager crystallizes the fee on Dec 31, 2019. If the fund’s NAV is $100 on that day, that establishes the HWM. Then on Dec 31, 2020 if the fund NAV is below $100, there is no performance fee charged. If the fund NAV reached $105 during the year but then dove to $95 the HWM is still $100. If the fund is worth $105 on Dec 31, 2020 then Fund B would charge $.50 or 10% on $5 (the difference between the crystallization price of $105 and the previous HWM of $100). Note the new HWM is technically $104.50, the after-fee price set on Dec 31, 2020.
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