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Tim Hale Global Tilted Portfolio 60 & 80
Cm258
Posted: 12 August 2024 18:52:44(UTC)
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Hello.

As my post history will show, I have chopped and changed a fair bit over the years (adding PE and Infrastructure, adding high dividend ETFs, contemplating active investment trusts and so on).

But I am now the owner of Smarter Investing, and from this, feel I have a simple(ish) model portfolio to follow which I understand.

I am happy with the inclusion of the risk factors, and the overall portfolio construction. The only tweak I have made is on the Defensive Mix, opting to retain intermediate bond ETFs as opposed to shorter. These are existing holdings and I feel the upside with interest rates likely to be cut wasn't worth throwing out.

If there's an interest, I'm happy to keep this thread up to date with performance on a recurring basis! And we see how this tracks over time.

Portfolio 60 for my ISA

Return Engine
36% VWRP - Developed & emerging global equities
9% UBS FTSE RAFI Developed 1000 Index fund - Developed value
9% WLDS - Developed small cap
6% HPRO - Global commercial property

Defense Mix
15% IGLT - Intermediate UK government bonds
15% IGLH - Intermediate developed government bonds
10% Royal London Short Duration Index Linked fund - Global Inflation-Linked bonds

Portfolio 80 for my SIPP

Return Engine
48% SSAC - Developed & emerging global equities
12% UBS FTSE RAFI Developed 1000 Index fund - Developed value
12% WLDS - Developed small cap
8% HPRO - Global commercial property

Defense Mix
10% VGOV - Intermediate UK government bonds
10% IGLH - Intermediate developed government bonds
15 users thanked Cm258 for this post.
Jed Mires on 12/08/2024(UTC), Newbie on 12/08/2024(UTC), Jon.Snow on 12/08/2024(UTC), Tim D on 12/08/2024(UTC), Jay P on 12/08/2024(UTC), Peanuts on 13/08/2024(UTC), Wave Action on 13/08/2024(UTC), Sheerman on 13/08/2024(UTC), DHardisty on 13/08/2024(UTC), Rob B on 13/08/2024(UTC), MartynC on 13/08/2024(UTC), L.P. on 13/08/2024(UTC), Rocca Billy on 13/09/2024(UTC), Sara G on 13/09/2024(UTC), markydeedrop on 03/01/2025(UTC)
Tim D
Posted: 12 August 2024 19:37:39(UTC)
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I've not read the Hale book myself (but it sounds interesting).

Are you sure IWFV captures whatever facet of "value" Hale is talking about? It tracks the "MSCI World Enhanced Value index", which if you look into what "Enhanced Value" means it means that despite the value tilt it tweaks the sectoral allocations so that they match the parent MSCI World index.

e.g MSCI World is 24% tech and so is IWFV (because "enhanced"). But instead of the tech "winners" in the top 3 of that - AAPT, MSFT, NVDA - you're holding top 3 CSCO, IBM, QCOM instead (all also tech). Now maybe this is what you want if those are indeed "good value" compared with overpriced winners. But you could equally argue that the "enhanced" index is unreasonably drawing you into an overheated sector and just buying the also overheated rubbish in it. CSCO being "good value for a tech company" might not be much of a value play if tech as a whole is lousy value.

If you look at MSCI's ordinary "unenhanced" value index
https://www.msci.com/doc...-4bec-b5ed-a7b56eca8e0d
that's only 9% tech and the top 3 are Broadcom (tech) and JPMorgan & Berkshire Hathaway (both financials).

Which one is the "true" value portfolio? (Or more to the point, what does Hale mean by "value" and is it closer to one index's approach or the other?)

Bit of an academic question as I think most of the ETF providers have gone with tracking the "enhanced value" index. But there are a few other more exotic ones I think.

Have to admit I do hold some IWVG myself (the distributing version of the ETF), from days when I was more enthusiastic about "smart beta". Thoroughly underwhelmed by it so far (IWFM & IWFQ have been the winners in that game) and yet.... altogether now... value's coming back any day now I tell you!
6 users thanked Tim D for this post.
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Cm258
Posted: 12 August 2024 19:47:11(UTC)
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Tim D;315585 wrote:
I've not read the Hale book myself (but it sounds good).

Are you sure IWFV captures whatever facet of "value" Hale is talking about? It tracks the "MSCI World Enhanced Value index", which if you look into what "Enhanced Value" means it means that despite the value tilt it tweaks the sectoral allocations so that they match the parent MSCI World index.

e.g MSCI World is 24% tech and so is IWFV (because "enhanced"). But instead of the tech "winners" in the top 3 of that - AAPT, MSFT, NVDA - you're holding top 3 CSCO, IBM, QCOM instead (all also tech). Now maybe this is what you want if those are indeed "good value" compared with overpriced winners. But you could equally argue that the "enhanced" index is unreasonably drawing you into an overheated sector and just buying the also overheated rubbish in it. CSCO being "good value for a tech company" might not be much of a value play if tech as a whole is lousy value.

If you look at MSCI's ordinary "unenhanced" value index
https://www.msci.com/doc...-4bec-b5ed-a7b56eca8e0d
that's only 9% tech and the top 3 are Broadcom (tech) and JPMorgan & Berkshire Hathaway (both financials).

Which one is the "real" value portfolio? (Or more to the point, what's Hale mean by "value" and is it more one approach or the other?)

Bit of an academic question as I think most of the ETFs providers have gone with tracking the "enhanced value" index. But there are a few other more exotic ones I think.

Have to admit I do hold some IWVG myself (the distributing version of the ETF), from days when I was more enthusiastic about "smart beta". Thoroughly underwhelmed by it so far (IWFM & IWFQ have been the winners of that game) and yet.... altogether now... value's coming back any day now I tell you!


A very fair challenge. In the book there is a product section, and Hale advises for something tracking the MSCI Value index, but I cannot find a suitable ETF tracking this. As you say, they all track the 'Enhanced' version of the index.

Aha, yes, this addition of the value risk factor did play on my mind in that it has serially underperformed the market cap index. But hey ho, with conviction I plough forward. Maybe the day of small caps and value is upon us and this portfolio has a good slug of that!!
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Tim D on 12/08/2024(UTC)
ben ski
Posted: 12 August 2024 21:05:35(UTC)
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I recall on Bogleheads, it was either the Hale or Merriman Ultimate Buy-and-Hold Portfolio, the author had revised his opinion and admitted it hadn't worked. I've never liked these kind of portfolios – there's no logic behind them; no understanding of how to build a portfolio. They're just like naive active fund portfolios – betting on a couple of different horses to keep things interesting.

The whole theory around risk factors is questionable and inconsistent. Cliff Asness debunked the Size effect 10 years ago, when improved data on old stocks showed there was no long-term premium after all. It shows the very weak academic standards behind this stuff. We've got 3,000+ factors now because Fama & French set such a low bar. (6x more 'risk factors' than there are stocks in the S&P)

There are ways to use tilts strategically. I don't like using bonds in my own portfolios. So I might use a Quality tilt, or overweight Consumer Staples and Healthcare. Quality Dividend Growth is a good tilt away from more speculative parts of the market, without betting against large companies like Apple and Microsoft. But you still need to be building from a realistic framework. You need to know what the drag will likely be, if the correlations are useful .. People who've just swallowed FF Factor Theory, and want to add a few more betting slips ("You never know! You might get lucky! Have a nibble!") – these are not serious people. The best way to tilt away from market concentration is just to add an equal-weight index – it's effectively every factor (known and unknown). Whether that's a good idea or not is another matter.
9 users thanked ben ski for this post.
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Cm258
Posted: 13 August 2024 05:15:09(UTC)
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ben ski;315595 wrote:
I recall on Bogleheads, it was either the Hale or Merriman Ultimate Buy-and-Hold Portfolio, the author had revised his opinion and admitted it hadn't worked. I've never liked these kind of portfolios – there's no logic behind them; no understanding of how to build a portfolio. They're just like naive active fund portfolios – betting on a couple of different horses to keep things interesting.

The whole theory around risk factors is questionable and inconsistent. Cliff Asness debunked the Size effect 10 years ago, when improved data on old stocks showed there was no long-term premium after all. It shows the very weak academic standards behind this stuff. We've got 3,000+ factors now because Fama & French set such a low bar. (6x more 'risk factors' than there are stocks in the S&P)

There are ways to use tilts strategically. I don't like using bonds in my own portfolios. So I might use a Quality tilt, or overweight Consumer Staples and Healthcare. Quality Dividend Growth is a good tilt away from more speculative parts of the market, without betting against large companies like Apple and Microsoft. But you still need to be building from a realistic framework. You need to know what the drag will likely be, if the correlations are useful .. People who've just swallowed FF Factor Theory, and want to add a few more betting slips ("You never know! You might get lucky! Have a nibble!") – these are not serious people. The best way to tilt away from market concentration is just to add an equal-weight index – it's effectively every factor (known and unknown). Whether that's a good idea or not is another matter.


Thanks Ben ski.

I think there is quite a bit of logic covering the asset allocation and then the actual portfolio construction, in the book.

It's Merriman who devised the Ultimate Buy and Hold Portfolio (detailed below). I believe Hales Global Tilt Portfolio has changed slightly since 2006, for example ditching commodities, but the value and size risk factors have remained.

What's the difference between a value tilt, and say tilting towards quality/quality dividend growth/equal weight?

Merriman Buy and Hold Portfolio
6% U.S. Total Stock Market
6% U.S. Large Cap Value
6% U.S. Small Cap Stocks
6% U.S. Small Cap Value
6% U.S. REITs
6% International Developed Markets Stocks
6% International Value
6% International Small Cap Stocks
6% International Small Cap Value
6% Emerging Markets Stocks
12% Short-Term Treasury Bonds
20% Intermediate-Term Treasury Bonds
8% TIPS
Cm258
Posted: 13 August 2024 06:23:19(UTC)
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On the Value front, Hale recommends either MSCI World Value or FTSE RAFI Developed 1000.

https://www.morningstar....shot.aspx?id=F00000ZMAT costs 0.25bps, so looks to be a good fit!

I don't think the MSCI World Enhanced Value index is at all what Hale intended. As you point out Tim, it says "The weight of each sector in this index is equated with the weight of that sector in the MSCI World". Which isn't really achieving the desires outcome.

The FTSE RAFI Developed 1000 on the other hand, states "Consequently the indices are less prone to excessive concentration arising from market fads, which can result in over-exposure to individual companies, sectors or countries".

The constituents of the latter look very different to the former, and it is this Hale suggests as a risk factor.

So I've made the decision to utilize the UBS fund that tracks the FTSE RAFI Developed 1000 index for the value tilts.
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Tim D on 13/08/2024(UTC)
Peter61
Posted: 13 August 2024 08:03:04(UTC)
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VHYL could be another option for a value (ish) tilt. It follows an index based on dividend yield rather than value factors and ends up with a sector mix very different than the parent (all world) index, e.g technology 7.3 % vs 27.5%

https://research.ftserus...WHDY&IsManual=False

Pete
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Cm258 on 13/08/2024(UTC), Guest on 13/08/2024(UTC)
Rob B
Posted: 13 August 2024 09:12:55(UTC)
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Good thread, Cm258. My thoughts / questions as follows:

Historically how much outperformance does this portfolio give over the equivalent weighted LifeStrategy or HSBC Global Strategy funds? Is it low single digits? If so, is the extra effort worth it?

With the components involved and some of the small percentages held, you could find yourself veering off course every quarter. That would make rebalancing a little tricky. When and how would you rebalance? Annual alignment through sales or top up in underperforming holdings each month with new money?

The relatively new Blackrock Lifepath Target Date Funds (this is the 2030 fund - 56.5% equity / 43.5% FI) look interesting as they hold quite a few of the Hale components such as:

13.87% iShares Overseas Government Bond Index Fund UK
10.15% iShares UK Gilts All Stocks Index Fund UK
6.48% iShares Up to 10 Years Index Linked Gilt Index Fund UK
4.72% iShares MSCI World Small Cap ESG Enhanced UCITS ETF

Had to dig into the annual report to find the breakdown of holdings. But for me there’s too much ESG nonsense stuff in there. Nonsense in the sense of how ESG is implemented by Blackrock rather than the concept of important stuff like good business governance.
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Tim D on 13/08/2024(UTC), L.P. on 13/08/2024(UTC)
Cm258
Posted: 13 August 2024 09:56:00(UTC)
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Rob B;315636 wrote:
Good thread, Cm258. My thoughts / questions as follows:

Historically how much outperformance does this portfolio give over the equivalent weighted LifeStrategy or HSBC Global Strategy funds? Is it low single digits? If so, is the extra effort worth it?

With the components involved and some of the small percentages held, you could find yourself veering off course every quarter. That would make rebalancing a little tricky. When and how would you rebalance? Annual alignment through sales or top up in underperforming holdings each month with new money?

The relatively new Blackrock Lifepath Target Date Funds (this is the 2030 fund - 56.5% equity / 43.5% FI) look interesting as they hold quite a few of the Hale components such as:

13.87% iShares Overseas Government Bond Index Fund UK
10.15% iShares UK Gilts All Stocks Index Fund UK
6.48% iShares Up to 10 Years Index Linked Gilt Index Fund UK
4.72% iShares MSCI World Small Cap ESG Enhanced UCITS ETF

Had to dig into the annual report to find the breakdown of holdings. But for me there’s too much ESG nonsense stuff in there. Nonsense in the sense of how ESG is implemented by Blackrock rather than the concept of important stuff like good business governance.


Thanks Rob.

Historically, this portfolio is actually slightly underperforming LS60. So it is a very fair challenge as one would expect the complexity of it to deliver outperformance. I will continue to track this.

In terms of rebalancing, Hale suggests rebalancing when one allocation deviates 10% from its target. But the reality is I will attempt to keep this steady through monthly regular investing, topping up holdings that need it with new monies.

Here are some charts from Trustnet showing this portfolio. I can completely understand the response I will get is 'why bother'. But is it sad I am quite looking forward to managing this?





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Wave Action on 13/08/2024(UTC), Rob B on 13/08/2024(UTC), Tim D on 13/08/2024(UTC), L.P. on 13/08/2024(UTC)
Cm258
Posted: 13 August 2024 10:56:13(UTC)
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And the same for the 80/20 implementation of the portfolio:



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