Choose your goal posts … and then keep them there

Is the choice between a cap-weighted or fundamental index really going to result in more goals (or alpha), or is it just shifting the posts? It doesn’t really matter what you choose as your benchmark – it is exactly that, a benchmark. A point of reference. But if what you are deciding is the choice of an investment methodology or style, that is an entirely different question.

Fundamental indexing, driven by Rob Arnott, of Research Affiliates, is a methodology that involves selecting and weighting securities by fundamental measures such as company size, as opposed to market capitalisation. The firm’s research shows that it is designed to work in inefficient markets, which by definition means it should result in higher alpha than a cap-weighted approach. And the academic literature seems to support this outperformance.

But this is an argument for it being an alternative strategy, and not an alternative benchmark. At least by my definition of a benchmark.

If investment management is a science and an art, then perhaps the benchmark should be thought of as the experiment’s control. It is the constant against which everything else is measured. If this is the case, does it matter what you choose, as long as it doesn’t move?

Everything else can then be measured against it. And in that analogy, ‘everything else’, the art, is an investment strategy, even if it is passive.

Even Research Affiliates acknowledges that “cap-weighted indexes are measures of the market, and thus are generally viewed as good benchmarks of market performance”.

Sponsored Content

But it argues as the basis for an investment strategy, cap-weighting results in overweighting overpriced securities and underweighting underpriced securities.

That hasn’t stopped Research Affiliates, perhaps opportunistically, partnering with an index provider, Russell, to launch a series of 23 fundamental indexes. (One such index is the Russell FundamentalGlobal Index).

Investment innovation is a good thing, no doubt, and it’s firms such as these that encourage alternative thinking (not to mention alternative sources of income). But ambiguity is lethal.

Research Affiliates by its own admission outlines that from the perspective of the Capital Asset Pricing Model, anything that is not cap-weighted is neither passive nor an index, which means a fundamental index strategy is neither passive nor an index.

There are other alternatives to index construction as well, such as equal-weighted indices, which also have unique challenges such as an inherent small cap and value tilt.

There is a plethora of academic research fuelling the debate, but while some investors are discussing fundamental indexing as an alternative benchmark to a cap-weighted benchmark, it must be pointed out that the lack of transparency around the argument is not doing anyone any favours.

For more readings see:

Valuation indifferent weighting for bonds

Beyond cap weight

Fundamental indexation

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Public pensions shape insto era of hedge funds

The past four-year upsurge in the number of public pension funds investing in hedge funds is shaping the new institutional era of hedge fund management, with funds approaching the asset class for new reasons, says Preqin. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Inflation devalues attempts at consensus

The two big decisions for fiduciary investors this year concern interest rates and currencies. But those decisions are relatively easy. What is a lot more difficult is: how do you go about implementing these big-picture decisions at the hands-on level?mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalPERS to slash fees in wake of $1bn external spend

CalPERS will set an external fee reduction target for the financial year, in light of the fact it spent more than $1 billion on external asset management fees in 2009-2010 and only a relatively modest $29.5 million on investment office personnel services including salaries.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

DB beats DC in unequal race

The average corporate defined-benefit plan in the US has outperformed the Callan DC index by 1.61 per cent since 2006, although this is partly due to a difference in fee reporting.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Tail hedging can balance risk: PIMCO

Executive vice-president and head of client analytics at PIMCO, Sebastien Page, who is tasked with bringing the intellectual and analytical capital of the manager to clients in a new consultant-type role, says tail-risk hedging is an effective way to reduce volatility and enhance returns.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

France’s FFR halves equities, weights bonds

Equities allocations have been slashed as a result of government changes to the liabilities of the Fonds de Reserve pour les Retraites (FFR) which prompted changes to the fund’s investment policy. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous