All-America Research Team Hall of Fame Welcomes François Trahan
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All-America Research Team Hall of Fame Welcomes François Trahan

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The Cornerstone Macro portfolio strategist and quant joins the ranks of the research elite after ten of 11 years as a first teamer.

François Trahan knows numbers: Raised in Canada, the son of a father with a mathematics Ph.D. and a mother who was an accountant, math came easily to him. Trahan studied economics and econometrics at the University of Montreal and immersed himself in the mysteries of the business cycle at BCA Research in Montreal before heading to New York. This year Cornerstone Macro’s Trahan, 47, enters the All-America Research Team Hall of Fame after winning No. 1 in Portfolio Strategy for ten of the past 11 years. (He has also appeared on the team for Quantitative Strategy.) Despite his success, Trahan now recognizes the limitations of trying to quantify economic and market processes. “If I could have done it again, I would have wanted to know more about history and psychology — behavioral finance,” he says. “If you think about it, in every asset bubble the world has ever seen, the commonality is human beings and how people react to greed and irrationality. It’s not just numbers.”


With his rimless glasses and quietly precise speech, which has just a hint of a Canadian accent, Trahan appears the epitome of the peerlessly rational man. But his career has been shaped by experience, serendipity, hard work and, he says, the efforts of many colleagues. BCA was a formative step. “The reality is that academia is not really geared toward the understanding of macro as it pertains to financial markets, so BCA was an awesome experience,” he says. “I had three bosses while I worked there; two of them are clients of mine at Cornerstone, and the third heads the Bank of Canada — the Janet Yellen of Canada, Stephen Poloz.”


For Trahan, New York meant deep immersion in the markets. He spent four years at Bear Stearns Cos. as chief investment strategist — he made his first appearance on the research team in 2004, while at Bear — and left in early 2007, before the firm collapsed in the subprime mortgage crisis. He jumped to International Strategy & Investment Group (ISI), a research shop run by Ed Hyman, an All-America Research Team Hall of Famer who was No. 1 in Economics for 35 consecutive years, to serve as an investment strategist for what he calls the best macro team on Wall Street. In 2010 he left to partner with former Bear colleague Edward Wolfe at Wolfe Research (then Wolfe Trahan & Co.), and in 2013 he co-founded Cornerstone Macro with Nancy Lazar (who in 2015 broke Hyman’s first-team streak), Andy Laperriere and Roberto Perli.


By then Trahan had begun to think more seriously about the end of the Great Moderation — that 40-year period defined by relatively moderate booms and busts. As the investment world struggled to negotiate the volatility and disruption of the postcrisis years, Trahan increasingly began to write and talk about a new era in which many of the old rules, reinforced by the Great Moderation, no longer applied. In 2011 he wrote, with Katherine Krantz, The Era of Uncertainty: Global Investment Strategies for Inflation, Deflation, and the Middle Ground. “The end of the Great Moderation led to an era of boom and bust,” Trahan said in a 2014 interview. “It will completely change the investment process. Everything you’ve learned about investing is going to fail.” In a recent e-mail to Institutional Investor, he declares, “The past is no longer the best blueprint for the future.”


Trahan is no permabear. Though he did warn about housing problems before the subprime crisis, some of his most famous calls were to stay invested, and even now he’s asserting that the stock market will do fine through the end of 2016.


Throughout his career Trahan has managed to work with some of the greatest minds in that broad view of the markets and the economy known as macro. In particular, he praises the collegial atmosphere that existed at ISI when he first went there. Later, he admits, the firm grew larger and shifted its focus from macro to fundamental analysis — one factor in his departure. ISI merged with Evercore in 2014, but the old ISI remains Trahan’s touchstone for the ideal high-level research firm. “I think 29 of our 52 employees at Cornerstone spent part of their careers at ISI,” he says. “Essentially, we have created something like the ISI of old.” As Cornerstone’s managing partner, Trahan acknowledges that day-to-day management takes time and effort, but he’s quick to credit his team for allowing him to manage and continue his winning research ways. “So far, so good,” he says.


 

The All-America Research Team Hall of Fame Listed below are the members of the All-America Research Team Hall of Fame, ranked by the total number of times they finished in first place in their sector(s), and the firms where they worked at the time of their most recent top appearances.


Ed Hyman,

Evercore ISI

36

Dennis Leibowitz,

Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corp.

25

Stephen Girsky,

Morgan Stanley

23

Jerome Gitt,

Merrill Lynch

22

Michael Armellino,

Goldman, Sachs & Co.

21

Joel Price

Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corp.

20

Jack Salzman,

Goldman, Sachs & Co.

20

Joseph Ellis,

Goldman, Sachs & Co.

19

Mark Schoenebaum,

Evercore ISI

18

Richard Sherlund,

Goldman Sachs & Co.

17

George Staphos,

Bank of America Merrill Lynch

17

William Young,

Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corp.

17

Robert Farrell,

Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith

16

Patricia McConnell,

Bear, Stearns & Co.

16

David Raso,

Evercore ISI

16

Kenneth Abramowitz,

Bernstein

15

Robert Cornell,

Lehman Brothers

15

Emanuel Goldman,

Paine Webber

15

A.M. (Toni) Sacconaghi,

Bernstein

15

Meredith Adler,

Barclays

14

Jessica Reif Cohen,

Merrill Lynch

14

Ehud Gelblum,

Morgan Stanley

14

Thomas Hanley,

UBS Securities

14

Jerry Labowitz,

Merrill Lynch

14

Andrew Lazar,

Barclays

14

Lee Seidler,

Bear, Stearns & Co.

14

Andrew Steinerman,

J.P. Morgan

14

Steven Fleishman,

Wolfe Research

13

Barry Good,

Morgan Stanley

13

Jeffrey Klein,

Kidder, Peabody & Co.

13

Michael Weinstein,

J.P. Morgan

13

David Adelman,

Morgan Stanley

12

Harvey Heinbach,

Merrill Lynch

12

John Hindelong,

Credit Suisse
First Boston

12

Curt Launer,

Credit Suisse
First Boston

12

Steven Milunovich,

Merrill Lynch

12

John Tumazos,

Prudential Equity Group

12

Gary Yablon,

Credit Suisse
First Boston

12

Ivy Zelman,

Zelman & Associates

12

Joseph Bellace,

Merrill Lynch

11

Jeffrey deGraaf,

Renaissance Macro Research

11

Elaine Garzarelli,

Lehman Brothers

11

Jonathan Goldfarb,

Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith

11

Joseph Greff,

J.P. Morgan

11

B. Alexander Henderson,

Citigroup/Salomon
Smith Barney

11

Jay Meltzer,

Goldman, Sachs & Co.

11

John Rohs,

Schroder Wertheim & Co.

11

Jeffrey Sprague,

Citi

11

Cai von Rumohr,

Cowen and Co.

11

Richard Bernstein,

Merrill Lynch

10

Ernest Liu,

Goldman, Sachs & Co.

10

John Mackin,

Morgan Stanley

10

J. Kendrick Noble Jr.,

Paine Webber
Mitchell Hutchins

10

Katharine Plourde,

Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corp.

10

William Siedenburg,

Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co.

10

François Trahan,

Cornerstone Macro

10

Harold Vogel,

Merrill Lynch

10

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