A CFA and Three CPAs Walked into a Room...

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Mariko Gordon

When the CPAs outnumber me – a CFA-sporting Comparative Literature major – by three to one, you can bet I'm not going down without putting up a good fight. Last week, I found myself in that very situation, huddled with our ops team, weighing the pros and cons of participating in a stock lending program.

It all began a few weeks ago when we sold a position that happened to be heavily shorted. Though in the end it all went well, the settlement process was not its usual smooth sailing, and Daruma Portfolio Accountant Jonathan Teich wanted to know why he'd had to endure a couple of miserable days.

Nosing around, he discovered that many of our clients lend out their stocks. In this case, that meant their custodian banks had to get the shares back from the borrowers, delaying things just a wee bit. This led him to wonder what this stock lending business was all about and, to his credit, whether there was gold in them thar hills for us.

That's when I stopped the meeting.

Before talking about the return we could generate from stock lending (and the risks involved - no such thing as a free lunch, remember?), we needed to start at the beginning. My team had to explain to me - exactly and in very concrete terms - how stock lending works. While I understood conceptually what stock lending was, I wanted to know how it would actually work for us in real life. And I wanted each step in the process spelled out.

Why? Because I like to know precisely what I know and what I don't know. Better to risk looking ignorant and find out what I don't know now, than assume what I know is everything I need to know - and then find out later and to my lasting regret that there was something I should have known earlier. (Got that?)

This isn't just a matter of personal taste, either. There's a method to my madness. Indeed, the very act of describing a process or an issue concretely before having an abstract discussion about it has several benefits, applicable to life as well as investing: