Fama and French tackle global universe

In new research Ken French and Eugene Fama are expanding their famed “size, value and momentum” work on the US market to an international data sample.

The new research aims to assess what size, value and momentum effects look like around the world.

It ues Bloomberg data, which has been cleaned by Dimensional Fund Advisors to which French is a consultant, and includes small cap stocks. It used data from 23 developed countries, in the time period November 1989 to September 2010 and looked at 38,851 unique firms.

The research looked at the excess returns for 25 portfolios formed on size and book to market, across four regions: North America, Europe, Japan and Asia ex-Japan.

“We know the value, momentum effect is much greater in small stocks in the US, now we can test that in the international market,” French said at a Dimensional investment symposium.

“We wanted to see if we can we used the model to explain the patterns. We found there was no size effect for this 20 year period globally,” French said.

Sponsored Content

The research concluded there were value premiums in all four regions except Japan. And momentum in all regions except Japan.

French said such a model can provide an important performance evaluation tool for investors, and that the Fama French three-factor model was already used by most academics and practitioners in the US.

“This can measure whether fees are good money spent, or can you do it cheaper somewhere else,” he said.

However the model’s application to the international sample was somewhat flawed as the “global factors weren’t able to explain the country portfolios.”

Addressing the fact the model “doesn’t necessarily work” French said investors could use it as an additional evaluation tool.

“By using the three factor model and a comparison of your manager to the index together it is more effective than using them separately,” he said.

While the model in the US is widely used, French is quick to point out it is “an empirically motivated asset pricing model, which is a nice way of saying there’s not a lot of theory behind it”.

Instead of building the model from a theoretical base, the two academics saw that there were patterns – such as a value effect – and built a model to capture that.

French said he and Fama tried to change one of the factors a few years ago, to better reflect what they were trying to measure, but there was revolt by their academic colleagues.

“We tried to change HML a couple of years ago, our colleagues rebelled and said you can’t it’s in all our computer codes.”

They wanted to change the high book to market and low book to market measures, to growth and value.

An interesting test of the model, is on the data of the well-respected Peter Lynch, portfolio manager of the Magellan fund at Fidelity fund from June 1977 to May 1990.

“When applying this model you learn very quickly about his tilting,” French said.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

The Netherlands’ UWV battles to regain funding

The funding crisis that hit pension funds across the world may be easing – in common with the five-year long economic crisis – but restoring healthy funding levels remains a vital priority for many investors. The Netherlands’ €4.9-billion ($6.6-billion) UWV pension fund is one of that number. A funding ratio of 98.7 per cent at

The diminishing role of agents

I’ve always been frustrated by interviewing consultants and the lack of conviction they have about their decisions. “What would your ideal model portfolio look like?” I constantly ask. “It depends on the client” is the predictable and consistent answer. That may be valid, even true, but it speaks to a wider problem. Consultants are hired

Push the reset button at PRI in Person

At the United Nations-backed Principles for Responsible Investment conference Cape Town on October 1, general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation Sharan Burrow delivered a speech entitled Push the Reset Button – a Line Between Speculation and Investment. She discussed the stability of the global economy, the necessity for investors to shift to long-term

OECD leads global infrastructure push

The OECD seeks to lengthen the time horizons of investors and get institutional money flowing from across the world into infrastructure gaps.

Sustainable investment goes to school

The Robert F Kennedy Centre for Justice and Human Rights and Columbia University’s Earth Institute will run a series of high-level courses on sustainable investment focused on environmental, social and governance approaches as well as human and labour rights this autumn. The Compass Sustainable Investing Certificate program, designed for long-term investors, will have a solutions-driven

Giving time to investment governance

Roger Urwin, global head of content at Towers Watson and governance specialist, says most organisations don’t spend enough time on it, but transformational change is all about giving time to investment governance. Culture and leadership, for example is so self-evidently important in people organisations and yet it is understated in asset owners, he says. “The soft

Previous