Wednesday, April 23, 2025

T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Fund

Today, T. Rowe Price, one of my favored and recommended fund managers, touted their Capital Appreciation Fund, symbol PRWCX, claiming "17 years" of superior performance on LinkedIn.  

An Unprecedented Streak of Performance

So, I just had to check.


SPY in blue
PRWCX in red
20 year normalized performance
Source: Barchart.com

S&P vs. T. Rowe Price Cap. Appr. Fund

Sorry, but I just don't see it. 

More from TRP:

Our Capital Appreciation suite puts a record-breaking team on your side

Our commitment to serving clients drives us to think deeply about their needs and develop powerful solutions to address different investor goals. The Capital Appreciation Fund is just one of several in our Capital Appreciation suite, each designed with different objectives and risk tolerances in mind. While each fund has a unique investment objective, all share a single goal: to deliver better outcomes for clients.

T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Equity ETF (TCAF)  

  • Seeks capital growth

T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Fund (PRWCX) - Currently closed to new investors

  • Seeks capital growth plus preservation

T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation & Income Fund (PRCFX)

  • Seeks income plus capital growth

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Vista Commodity Basket up 7% Q1 2025

The Vista Commodity basket of 15 diversified long-dated commodity futures contracts rose 7% in the first quarter of 2025. While April's tariff tantrum tanked stocks and the commodity ETFs, the long-dated Vista basket fared a little better falling only to unchanged for the year. 


Short-term commodity index ETF performance.

Normalized ccrors where 12/29/2023 = 1000
VISTA =  Vista Commodity Basket
SPY = SPDR S&P 500 ETF
DJP = Bloomberg Commodity Index ETF
GSG = S&P GSCI Commodity Index ETF
Source: Barchart.com

Rollng Returns as of 3/31/2025.

The long-term chart shows how the Vista basket recovers to new all-time highs while the major commodity index ETFs have barely broken even for the 16 year period and still have far to go to make their 2010 highs. 

Commodities recover to new long-term highs.

Normalized commodity ETF performance where 4/30/2009, the Vista Basket inception date, = 1000.

2025's commods were propelled by gold's 20% gain in the first quarter. Note, the table below has a 4/12/2025 end date. 

Vista basket component 4/12/25 ytd returns.
Source:Barchart.com

While commodities LOOKED healthy, tariff threats can take a major toll on these and all markets. The world was in an excellent position for outsize returns in nearly all markets. Tariff threats are actually an ex-ante or externality not central to the real economy, at least not YET central. If they become real, all bets are off and the world of unintended consequences rears its ugly head. EVEN IF, all threats are rescinded, the economics may not recover for a long time as the rule of law, confidence and trust in Pax Americana may be broken for four or more years. 


© VistaMktResearch, All Rights Reserved  
gdrahal@VistaMktResearch.com 
















Wednesday, April 9, 2025

AQR versus SPY + BND

After reading a tout piece on the history of AQR as a quant fund I looked it up. AQR (symbol AQRIx) is a 60-40 stock/bond fund for rich people. The minimum individual investment is $5 Million!


SPY = SPDR S&P 500 ETF
AGG = iShares Aggregate Bond ETF
AQTIX = AQR Multi Asset Fund


Look at the YTD%Chg, down only a fraction of the market. AQR is the fund Bernie Madoff wanted to show his investors, nary a down year. But then again, while avoiding risk, you avoid gains as the 2,3,5,and 10 year returns show. 

Then again, why buy AGR when you can make your own 60/40 SPY/BND mix. And this mix triples while AGR doubles? Caveat: it will take work and cost rebalancing you own 60/40 portfolio. So maybe the difference between the green and orange is rebalancing cost.

Sunday, April 6, 2025

The Magic of 3X ETFs

This data in this post is as of 2/10/25.

On January 29, 1982, trading began in the Chicago Mercantile Exchange S&P 500 futures contract (symbol ES). This futures contract was designed primarily for institutional and large speculative investors. (Today there’s the micro e-mini and many other index futures contracts.)

On January 29, 1993, State Street’s S&P 500 SPDR (symbol SPY) became the first index exchange traded fund (ETF) which offered indexers the ease and liquidity of regular stock trading.  And finally, on November 6, 2008, a controversial innovation, the S&P 500 Bull 3X Direxion ETF (symbol SPXL) began trading. SPXL is a “3X fund”, it targets three times the daily return of the S&P 500 index each day. SPXL may have three times the risk, but this is where the magic happens!

To start, let’s compare the 5-year chart for the three liquid index products: SPY (the plain vanilla S&P stock index ETF), ESn (the continuous “nearby” S&P 500 futures contract) and SPXL (the jacked up 3X leveraged S&P 500 ETF):

Continuously compounded performance, normalized where 1/3/2020 = 1000.

 

Table 1









SPY = S&P 500 SPDR

ESn = S&P 500 “E-mini” continuous nearby futures contract

SPXL = S&P 500 Bull 3X Direxion ETF

Continuously compounded annualized return and standard deviation.

Source: barchart.com closing prices adjusted for dividends and splits.

 

First let’s note the chart has 2 major market breaks, one in 2020 and the other in 2022. Also note Table 1 in no way shows SPXL (or any other 3X ETF we look at, for that matter) delivers 3X for extended periods. The one month is close: 8% versus the 9% target. Going further out the SPXL definitely has a higher return than the index but the farther out you go, volatility takes its toll. SPXL’s 1 year 43% is good but far off the 3X 60% target. For the 2, 3 and 5 years, the gap only gets worse. To Direxion’s credit, the SPXL prospectus makes no claims for periods over ONE DAY! Even the 3X daily target has no guarantee. The prospectus does point out the risk that a 33% one day drop in the index is a 100% loss in the 3X.

 

Looking again at the chart, SPY fell roughly 30% in the 2020 market break. At the March 2020 low, SPXL was down 70%!  You COULD claim that SPXL outperformed, beating its -90% target, but this was no comfort as we lived it. The 2022 market break took SPY roughly from up 50% on Jan 1, 2022, to up only 20% by October, a 30% decline.  At the same time, SPXL went from roughly +100% to -20%, a 120% decline-this time exceeding its 3X target!

 

Before leaving returns, let’s point out that SPY and nearly ALL broad-based index ETFs have de minimis tracking error. They are excellent proxies for their underlying indexes. Also note that the index futures contract lags the index generally in all periods. This is due to the cost of maintaining a futures position-rolling futures from the March contract to June, to September and finally the “Christmas” December expiration month and so on.

 

We see the risks, let’s see the magic!

 

To see this, assume you throw caution at the wind and recklessly want to maximize your exposure to the S&P 500 stock index with the least amount of cash possible. The E-Mini S&P 500 futures contract value equals $50 per point ($50 x 3642.25 =) $182,113. The “exchange minimum margin” on January 3, 2020 was $6,300. $6,300 controlled $182K! This is insane 30X leverage! If the E-mini falls 126 points, you are wiped out. But long before that happens, your broker will give you a margin call or sell you out. Or, more likely, will NOT honor exchange minimums and demand a much larger initial deposit.

 

Next, you buy $182,000 SPY on maximum 50% margin, borrowing half of the purchase and paying half in cash or $91,000 . Finally, buy $182,000 worth of SPXL. Since this is 3X, you cannot buy on margin but your $60,000 purchase allegedly controls $180,000.

 

Table 2




  

In Table 2, we see the market price and starting account value for each of our investment comparisons.

 

Table 3.




 



In Table 3 we assume the investor holds their ETFs or rolls their futures and meets ALL margin calls with no withdrawals from the 1/3/2020 start date to the current 2/10/2025 end date. Commissions and interest not included.

 

Here comes the magic! While the returns are all roughly the same, leveraged futures and marginable stock have the risk of margin calls. Your 3X ETF will have NO MARGIN CALLS no matter where the market goes. Due to the hocus-pocus of 3X money managers, 3X can give you a dollar certainty the other choices cannot. You are one and done with 3X. You are one and maybe many margin calls- not done- with the others. In the end, the total dollars for futures and 3X, were not much different (roughly $60K) nor did they affect the returns. But on day one, who knew? While not an endorsement of 3X ETFs, take this as an illustration of the three basic ways to leverage a position.

 

Caveats: these kinds of results can only be expected with the broadest based index products with the lowest tracking errors. The more exotic the underlying or complex the product is, the greater the variation in returns. Why volatility affects total return is for another article.