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I'm writing to share a column that appeared in today's Wall
Street Journal that was devoted exclusively to Yeske Buie's
investment philosophy. Not every detail was exactly as we
might have liked (for example, the columnist makes it sound like we
time the real estate market, which we assuredly do not) but we
believe Ms. Anand did a good job of capturing the key elements of
our approach, which incudes a focus on global diversification,
disciplined rebalancing, and cost control.
A Return
to Real Estate
With property prices
having fallen around the world, this financial advisor sees
opportunity in a global realty fund
By Shefali Anand
Individuals looking to dip their toes into real-estate securities
should consider buying a mutual fund that invests both in the U.S.
and abroad, says Dave Yeske, a financial planner in San Francisco.
When buying risky assets like real estate, it's best to spread your
bets across companies and countries, he says.
"We don't believe investing solely in the U.S.
gives us enough diversification," says Mr. Yeske. Since late July,
he has been buying a global real-estate fund for clients, to which
he dedicates 4% to 6% of their portfolios.
In this column, we ask prominent financial advisers who use
mutual funds and exchange-traded funds to share model portfolios
with us. Mr. Yeske, 52 years old, founded financial-planning firm
Yeske & Co. in 1990 and last year merged it with Financial
Planning Group of Vienna, Va., to form Yeske Buie. Mr. Yeske is a
former chairman of the Financial Planning Association and is an
instructor of financial planning at Golden Gate University in San
Francisco. Yeske Buie manages about $300 million for some 200
clients, primarily individuals.
In late 2006, Mr. Yeske sold U.S. real-estate securities held by
his clients, after they had nearly tripled in price. "It was seeming
very expensive," he says. Since the bust in the housing market that
began in 2007, these
securities have fallen dramatically. The MSCI U.S. REIT Index, an
index of real-estate investment trusts, lost 38% in 2008, following
a 17% decline in 2007. The market has come back this year, with the
MSCI index up about 13% through Oct. 1.
REITs are entities that invest in different kinds of real estate
or real-estate-related assets, including shopping centers, office
buildings, hotels, and mortgages secured by real estate.
Despite this year's rebound, many investors and advisers remain
cautious on real estate, fearing that there could be further
declines. In the U.S., for instance, it's not clear yet that the
housing market has bottomed, and the
commercial real-estate market is still deteriorating.
"It might have further to fall, I don't know," says Mr. Yeske.
But given the low prices after the market's decline, he says he
feels comfortable buying now.
Also, he notes that in the past few years a number of funds have
popped up that invest in both U.S. and foreign real estate, giving
him more global choices. Indeed, two-thirds of the 30-odd global
real-estate mutual funds on the market now were launched after 2006,
according to fund research firm Morningstar Inc.
To decide which investments to buy for clients and how to manage
them, Mr. Yeske relies heavily on academic research. "We won't do
anything that's not grounded in science," he says.
One investing tenet that Mr. Yeske followed throughout the market
downturn is rebalancing. Essentially, this involves adding money to
investments that are losing value while selling those that are doing
well. Since most asset classes were losing value last year, Mr.
Yeske typically was adding to those investments that were losing
more than others, mostly stocks.
That was in contrast to some other advisers, who held off buying
stocks last year because they feared further declines.
Around two years ago, Mr. Yeske tweaked his approach, and started
rebalancing only when an asset class moves 20% away from its target
allocation, as opposed to the more commonly used range of 10%, to
avoid too much short-term trading. "Look frequently but trade
infrequently," says Mr. Yeske, who usually looks at the value of
client portfolios every two weeks.
Since last year, Mr. Yeske has rebalanced client portfolios four
times, including the most recent round in August. Last fall and
earlier this year, he was buying small stocks and "value" stocks,
which are considered cheap based on prices and earnings. He notes
that since the market bottom on March 9, large-cap value and
small-company stocks have risen more than some of the other stock
classes, such as fast-growing or "growth" companies. From March 9
through Oct. 1, for instance, the Russell 1000 Value Index rose 59%,
versus 49% for the Russell 1000 Growth Index.
Here Mr. Yeske shares a model portfolio for clients in
retirement, who make up a third of his firm's clientele.
U.S. STOCKS: The portfolio's 33% U.S.-stock allocation is
invested mostly in value stocks and small stocks. That's based on
studies by economists Eugene Fama and Kenneth French that concluded
that over long periods, value stocks tend to have better returns
than growth companies. These studies also show that small stocks,
which are riskier than large-company stocks, tend to outperform the
latter over the long run.
To make these and other investments, Mr. Yeske and his team rely
primarily on funds offered by Dimensional Fund Advisors Inc. DFA
uses computer models to identify securities to buy within certain
parameters, such as small value stocks. Its investing philosophy is
based on Fama-French research, so a number of DFA funds are biased
toward value and small stocks. The funds' turnover and trading costs
are typically quite low, like those of index-tracking funds.
"DFA [funds] represent the best blend of both passive and
active," says Mr. Yeske.
When creating client portfolios, Mr. Yeske typically starts by
using a fund that provides broad stock-market exposure and then adds
funds that focus on value stocks. So for allocation to large stocks,
he invests 7% of assets each in the iShares S&P 500 Index ETF,
tracking the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index, and DFA U.S.
Large Cap Value.
For an allocation of 5% to medium-size companies, Mr. Yeske uses
the iShares Russell Midcap Value Index ETF. Finally, 7% each is
invested in DFA U.S. Small Cap Value and DFA U.S. Micro Cap. "Small
caps exhibit higher returns in the long term; in the short term,
they provide diversification benefit," says Mr. Yeske.
FOREIGN STOCKS: In recent months, Yeske Buie
advisers have increased the portfolio's allocation to foreign
stocks, to make it equal to the U.S.-stock allocation of 33%.
The advisers say there's no evidence to show that there's any
benefit in investing more money in one region of the world than
another. "Those kind of judgment calls are wrong as much as they're
right," says Mr. Yeske. By keeping their geographic allocation
neutral, he says, they are able to draw from a broader universe of
value and small-company stocks.
Like the U.S. allocation, the foreign portion is tilted toward
value and small stocks. There is a 7% allocation to the Vanguard
Total International Stock Index fund, which invests in stocks around
the world and provides the portfolio's only exposure to emerging
markets like China and India. Another 7% is dedicated to DFA
International Value, which buys large-company value stocks of
developed countries.
There is a 5% allocation to WisdomTree International MidCap
Dividend, and 7% each goes to DFA International Small Company and
DFA International Small Cap Value.
BONDS: Last year, Mr. Yeske tapped only the portfolio's bond
allocation, made up of high-quality bonds, to make withdrawals for
retired clients. This kept them from being forced to sell stocks to
meet their income needs. Mr. Yeske says he views the fixed-income
allocation as "our stable reserve."
The 30% bond allocation is dedicated to mutual funds that invest
in short- to medium-term bonds. The longer a bond's maturity, the
more it fluctuates in price for a given change in interest rates.
And the yields on those longer-dated bonds may not be much higher
than those on the short- or medium-term ones. "When you get beyond
five years, you get a lot of volatility and very little additional
returns," sums up Mr. Yeske.
He splits the allocation equally among three DFA funds, which
invest in high-quality bonds of various types, including
mortgage-related bonds and corporate bonds. DFA One-Year Fixed
Income aims to provide stable returns in excess of inflation. DFA
Short-Term Extended Quality dips a little lower in the quality
spectrum of bonds, but its average bond quality is still
investment-grade. Finally, DFA Five-Year Global Fixed Income invests
both in the U.S. and abroad, and can also hedge against currency
fluctuations.
Until some months ago, Mr. Yeske owned two Pimco funds for his
bond allocation, with expenses of 0.45% or more. In comparison,
DFA's bond funds charge 0.28% or less, so the advisers decided to
shift to the lower-cost alternative. Costs are "one of the few
things that you can control," says Mr. Yeske, who firmly believes
they should be kept to a minimum.
REAL-ESTATE SHARES: Like many advisers, Mr. Yeske believes that
real-estate investments can help diversify a portfolio because they
perform differently than other investments.
While in 2008 this was not so much the case, because most asset
classes were losing value at the same time, Mr. Yeske notes that
during the bear market for stocks in 2000 and 2001, real estate was
one of the few investments that held up.
Also, he says that assets are rarely totally uncorrelated. "The
only choice that's available to you is assets that are relatively
uncorrelated," says Mr. Yeske. Even last year, he notes, some asset
classes were losing more value than others.
His 4% allocation to real estate is through DFA Global Real
Estate Securities, a fund of funds that invests in a U.S. and an
international real-estate fund offered by DFA. The underlying funds
own REITs and companies considered to be REIT-like entities in
various countries, including emerging markets.
—Ms. Anand is a personal-finance columnist for The Wall
Street Journal, based in New Delhi,
India.
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