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Have the Smart Betas Become Crowded Trades? November 2015 Update

November 03, 2015
by Kal
Best ETFs, Best Exchange Traded Funds
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Smart Beta Valuations

Have the Smart Betas become crowded trades?  How can we tell?

With the outlook for growth slowing, new smart beta investors in Quality are paying a significant premium today for the strategy. This premium is so high that their entire expected return advantage is reversed into a major return “disadvantage” over the next five years. Investors in Minimum Volatility, Momentum and Equal-Weighted are overpaying by enough to net them an expected return of zero versus a cap-weighted index (before fees). New investors in High Dividend Yield are getting a pricing bargain that adds 20bps/year to their expected return advantage. The best news continues to be for new investors in Value, who are getting a deep discount that offers them the opportunity to more than triple their expected return advantage (3% vs 1% annually).

What did we look at?

We evaluated six “smart beta” alternatives to a US Large/Mid Cap Cap-weighted index exposure. These were 1) Equal Weighted, 2) Minimum Volatility, 3) Quality, 4) Value, 5) Momentum and 6) High Dividend Yield as defined by MSCI.

How much excess return should we expect from these “smart betas” over the long-term?

Each “smart beta” offers an alternative approach to building a portfolio other than a cap-weighted index. It promises an excess return over time in exchange for tracking error risk. This is no different than an active management proposition. First, for each, we developed an expected tracking error estimate over the next five years. We then made the assumption that each had the same information ratio (expected excess return/unit of tracking error). The resulting expected excess return estimates ranged from 1.0% to 1.6% annually, depending on the “smart beta.”

Are overvalued “smart betas” creating negative valuation returns that detract from their long-term returns?

Investor enthusiasm can take market prices above value. The resulting overvaluation will create a negative source of return for the new investor, as it corrects over time. We refer to this as a negative valuation return. A negative valuation return will detract from an investor’s long-term return, which is compensation for bearing risk over time. Negative valuation returns are observable at the market level, the industry level and certainly at the individual security level. We can therefore also expect them at the “smart beta” level.

About the Author
At The Headlands Group, we are committed to making high probability of success investors. We transform client concerns about financial markets into the confidence that comes from knowing their investing experience will be a successful one. If we can succeed in getting clients to avoid “easy and popular” and allowing us to do “difficult and unpopular” on their behalf, we have made them into the “house” at the market casino and improved the odds that they will be successful over their investing lifetimes. We believe our clients perform better than most large institutions – despite not having the same investment resources.
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