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Are Momentum ETFs Delivering Momentum Returns?

We consider a popular momentum ETF and illustrate that its historical performance is almost entirely attributable to passive exposures to simple non-momentum factors , such as Market and Sectors. Investors may thus be able to achieve and even surpass the performance of popular momentum ETFs with transparent, passive, and potentially lower-cost portfolios of simpler funds. Attributing the Performance of Momentum ETFs to Simpler Factors We analyzed the iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF (NYSEARCA: MTUM ) using the AlphaBetaWorks Statistical Equity Risk Model – a proven tool for forecasting portfolio risk and performance . We estimated monthly positions from regulatory filings, retrieved positions’ factor ( systematic ) exposures , and aggregated these. This produced a series of monthly portfolio exposures to simple investable risk factors such as Market, Sector, and Size. The factor exposures at the end of Month 1 and factor returns during Month 2 are used to calculate factor returns during Month 2 and any residual (security-selection, idiosyncratic , stock-specific) returns un-attributable to factors. There are only two ways for a fund to deviate from a passive portfolio: residual returns un-attributable to factors and factor timing returns due to variation in factor exposures over time. We define and measure both components below. iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF – MTUM: Performance Attribution We used the iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF as an example of a practical implementation of a theoretical momentum portfolio. MTUM is a $1.1bil ETF that seeks to track an index of U.S. large- and mid-cap stocks with high momentum. The fund’s turnover, around 100% annually, is about half that of the theoretical momentum factor. iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF – MTUM: Factor Exposures The following factors are responsible for most of the historical returns and variance of MTUM: MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF – MTUM: Significant Historical Factor Exposures Click to enlarge Source: abwinsights.com Latest Mean Min. Max. Market 88.44 84.12 65.46 96.03 Health 23.73 30.28 23.73 34.94 Consumer 74.02 32.53 13.10 74.06 Industrial 1.69 9.71 1.13 24.51 Size -10.47 -1.04 -11.09 7.67 Oil Price -2.90 -2.45 -4.94 -0.04 Technology 17.72 16.56 1.50 32.29 Value -4.86 -2.13 -8.00 5.20 Energy 0.00 1.86 0.00 4.12 Bond Index 6.51 1.08 -22.90 23.64 iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor : Active Return To replicate MTUM with simple non-momentum factors, one can use a passive portfolio of these simple non-momentum factors with MTUM’s mean exposures as weights. This portfolio defined the Passive Return in the following chart. Active return, or αβReturn, is the performance in excess of this passive replicating portfolio. It is the active return due to residual stock performance and factor timing: MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF – MTUM: Cumulative Passive and Active Returns Click to enlarge Source: abwinsights.com MTUM’s performance closely tracks the passive replicating portfolio. Pearson’s correlation between Total Return and Passive Return is 0.96. Consequently, 93% of the variance of month returns is attributable to passive factor exposures, primarily to Market and Sector factors. Once passive exposures to simpler factors have been removed, MTUM’s active return is negligible. Since MTUM’s launch, the cumulative return difference from such passive replicating portfolio has been approximately 1%: 2013 2014 2015 Total Total Return 16.73 14.62 8.50 45.18 Passive Return 16.06 16.48 4.55 41.34 αβReturn 1.11 -2.46 2.54 1.12 αReturn 3.91 0.05 0.29 4.27 βReturn -2.71 -2.52 2.23 -3.05 This active return can be further decomposed into security selection (αReturn) and factor timing (βReturn). These active return components generated low volatility, around 1% annually, mostly offsetting each other as illustrated below: iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF – MTUM: Active Return from Security Selection AlphaBetaWorks’ measure of residual security selection performance is αReturn – performance relative to a factor portfolio that matches the funds’ historical factor exposures. αReturn is the return a fund would have generated if markets had been flat. MTUM has generated approximately 4% cumulative αReturn, primarily in 2013, compared to roughly 1.5% decline for the average U.S. equity ETF: MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF – MTUM: Cumulative Active Return from Security Selection Click to enlarge Source: abwinsights.com iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF – MTUM: Active Return from Factor Timing AlphaBetaWorks’ measure of factor timing performance is βReturn – performance due to variation in factor exposures. βReturn is the fund’s outperformance relative to a portfolio with the same mean, but constant, factor exposures as the fund. MTUM generates approximately -3% cumulative βReturn, compared to a roughly 1% decline for the average U.S. equity ETF: MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF – MTUM: Cumulative Active Return from Factor Timing Click to enlarge Source: abwinsights.com These low active returns are consistent with our earlier findings that many “smart beta” funds are merely high-beta and offer no value over portfolios of conventional dumb-beta funds. It is thus vital to test any new resident of the Factor Zoo to determine whether they are merely exotic breeds of its more boring residents. Conclusion Theoretical, or academic, momentum portfolios are not directly investable. A popular momentum ETF, MSCI USA Momentum Factor , did not deviate significantly from a passive portfolio of simpler non-momentum factors. Investors may be able to achieve and surpass the performance of the popular momentum ETFs with transparent, passive, and potentially lower-cost portfolios of simpler index funds and ETFs. The information herein is not represented or warranted to be accurate, correct, complete or timely. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Copyright © 2012-2016, ALphaBetaWorks, a division of Alpha Beta Analytics, LLC. All rights reserved. Content may not be republished without express written consent. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

How To Play The Choppy Market With Cheap Smart Beta ETFs

The global stock market has been shaky, with a series of woes related to China and oil price. While the number of headwinds is raising questions on the health of the global economy, domestic growth seems to be on track with a spate of encouraging data lately. Amid heightened volatility and uncertainty, investors are seeking some smart stock selection strategies to alleviate the risks in the market. One such strategy is smart beta, which seeks to deliver better risk-adjusted returns, and has the potential to outperform the market even in turbulent times, while keeping the cost low. This strategy has been gaining immense popularity in recent years given its unique features and incredible stock selection methodology. As per PowerShares , smart beta is the fastest-growing segment of the ETF industry, with a staggering growth of 21% over the past three years. It currently accounts for 12% of the total ETF industry (see all the ETF categories here ). Why Smart Beta? The smart beta strategy helps to capture market inefficiencies in a transparent way by adding extra metrics, like dividends, volatility, revenue, earnings, momentum, equal weight and other fundamental factors, to the market cap or rules-based indices. It often closes the gap between passive and active investing. Also, it takes specific factors from the active management universe at a lower cost and instills it in a passive listed fund. As a result, the smart beta strategy offers the best of both active and passive strategies, providing investors an opportunity to increase portfolio diversification, reduce risk and enhance returns (alpha generation) over time. While the promise of smart beta is great, the strategy has certain drawbacks, including concentration issues, higher turnover and lower trading volumes. Though backtest results showed their outperformance over longer periods, the strategy could lag during a specific time period or in a particular economic cycle. Still, investors could earn above-average returns by selecting the right ETFs according to the market conditions or trends. Smart Beta ETFs in Focus The space is crowded with a variety of products, including the simplest equal-weighting, fundamental-weighting and volatility/momentum-based weighting methodologies. However, dividend ETFs are the primary drivers of smart beta growth this year, followed by low volatility and value factor. As such, we have highlighted four smart beta ETFs that are suitable for investors in the current choppy market and are low-cost choices in their specific fields. PowerShares S&P 500 High Dividend Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: SPHD ) The lure of dividend ETFs is back, as yields are at lower levels and volatility is at its peak. While there are several smart beta ETFs targeting dividend investing, SPHD could be an excellent choice. This fund follows the S&P 500 Low Volatility High Dividend Index and holds 50 securities, which have historically provided high dividend yields and low volatility. It is widely spread out across individual securities, as each holds less than 3.7% of assets. From a sector look, financials takes the top spot at 20.5%, while utilities, industrials and consumer discretionary round off the next three with a double-digit exposure each. The fund has so far managed assets worth $811.8 million, while volume is solid, trading at around 256,000 shares per day. The expense ratio came in at 0.30%. iShares MSCI USA Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: USMV ) Given the high level of volatility, investors could be well protected with USMV. This is the largest and most popular ETF in the low volatility space, with AUM of $9.7 billion and average daily volume of 2.6 million shares. It offers exposure to 169 U.S. stocks having lower volatility characteristics than the broader U.S. equity market by tracking the MSCI USA Minimum Volatility Index. The expense ratio comes in at 0.15%. The fund is well spread across a number of components, with each holding less than 1.7% share. From a sector look, financials, healthcare, consumer staples and information technology occupy the top positions, with double-digit exposure each. The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank of 2 or “Buy” rating with a Medium risk outlook. iShares MSCI USA Quality Factor ETF (NYSEARCA: QUAL ) Though the chance of rate hikes this month faded out given the ongoing financial instability, a slew of encouraging data lately points to a rate hike sometime later this year, putting the spotlight on quality ETFs like QUAL. This fund tracks the MSCI USA Sector Neutral Quality Index and provides exposure to the stocks with positive fundamentals, like high return on equity, stable year-over-year earnings growth and low financial leverage. This results in a basket of 123 securities that are pretty spread across a number of sectors and securities, with none holding more than 5.11% of assets. Information technology, financials, healthcare and consumer discretionary each accounts for double-digit exposure. The product has amassed more than $2 billion in its asset base and charges just 15 bps in annual fees from investors. However, average trading volume is solid, at more than 295,000 shares per day. SPDR Russell 1000 Momentum Focus ETF (NYSEARCA: ONEO ) With the receding fears of a recession in the U.S., investors could tap the upcoming stock rally with this momentum ETF. This fund provides exposure to the large cap U.S. stocks having a combination of core factors (high value, high quality and low size characteristics) with high momentum characteristics. This is easily done by tracking the Russell 1000 Momentum Focused Factor Index, and the approach results in a broad basket of 908 securities that are widely diversified, with none holding more than 0.83% of assets. Consumer discretionary takes the top spot at 20.2%, while producer durables and financial services round off the next two spots with double-digit exposure each. ONEO is new to the space, having accumulated $319.5 million in its asset base within three months. It charges a lower fee of 20 bps per year and trades in solid volume of around 148,000 shares. Original Post

MaziValue February Performance And March Outlook

PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE Note : Mazi Ume Capital LLP does not exist right now, but if I do run a hedge fund in the future, that’s what it will be called. Mazi Ume Capital LLP is just my personal portfolio for now. Click to enlarge Below, is a chart from Interactive Brokers’ Portfolio Analyst comparing my performance (Consolidated) to the Russell 2000 (RTY), S&P 500 (SPX), and the Vanguard Total World Stock Index ((NYSEARCA: VT )) since inception of the portfolio on December 10th, 2015. I believe the performance of the Indexes include dividends. My portfolio’s return (Consolidated) is after interest and fees. Interactive Brokers charges interest when you buy a security in a different currency, and fees are trading fees. My portfolio is most comparable to the Russell2000, since every stock on the long side (90% of total portfolio) has a