Low-turnover, low-cost quells cap vs equal debate

The debate over cap-weighted or equal-weighted portfolios has been somewhat quelled by the launch of a new strategy by INTECH Investment Management that combines the two approaches.

Conceding there are flaws to both a cap-weighted and equal-weighted approach to indexation, INTECH has developed a low-turnover, low-cost strategy that combines both approaches in a ratio of 3:1 (cap-weighted to equal-weighted).

President of the International Division for INTECH, David Schofield, said the mathematically-based strategy was trying to put forward a practical and implementable solution which combines the invest-ability of cap-weighted with the alpha of equal-weighted.

“Both on their own have substantial drawbacks. Cap-weighted drawbacks are well-documented, and with equal-weighted the drawbacks include cost of implementation, volatility, and very limited capacity, which are all not good characteristics of an index,” Schofield said.

The cap-weighted approach has dominated passive investing for decades, with a recognition in the past couple of years it is “not optimal”, Schofield said.

In that time a variety of alternatives have emerged, with fundamental indexation the most high-profile.

Sponsored Content

But what most alternative strategies have in common is that the key selling point is still a comparison to cap-weighted in regards to performance, basically making them an active strategy.

“The cap-weighted mentality is so engrained in investors, there is always an eye on the relativity,” Schofield says.

“They are compared to cap-weighted in their performance but half of them take no account of cap-weighted in their construction and often have high tracking error in comparison. Our proposed alternative index is a proper passive strategy, it has no fundamental analysis or judgement, it’s pure maths.”

Schofield said the mix of the two approaches meant the relative return was worth having (50 to 60 basis points) but the tracking error was not substantial (1.5 to 2 per cent). The alpha being captured is volatility, he said.

“The strategy you choose depends on how much tracking error you want to take. You can be fully invested in equal weighted, which means large positions in the smallest stocks and you have liquidity and implementation limitations. At the other end you can be fully invested in cap-weighted, or somewhere between the two. We limit the turnover and make it practical, about 8 to 10 per cent. We believe a 3:1 ratio achieves the right compromise, it’s a trade-off.”

The strategy is built on patented technology which creates such a portfolio blend and trading of it as well.

The 3:1 ratio means that every successively smaller stock ends up with a larger overweight compared to its previous stock, for example the 100th stock a slightly larger overweight compared to the 99th.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Holland’s hybrid: defined ambition

Jan Tamerus, actuary director at PGGM, was instrumental in developing the new Dutch pension defined-ambition structure. Back in 2006, he was involved in looking at the sustainability of the defined benefit system and in concluding it was not in fact sustainable, the idea of defined ambition evolved. One of the key reasons for not going

Is the Great Rotation passing pension funds by?

The prospect of a seismic shift from bond to equity investments looks set to pass most of the world’s pension funds by, argue experts. The concept of a ‘Great Rotation’ rose to prominence following its use by Bank of America Merrill Lynch in October. It argued in a note that “the era of bond outperformance

APG’s Wuijster refines asset management

APG, which manages €314 billion ($480 billion), has always been innovative. Ronald Wuijster earned a reputation as somewhat of a pension rockstar when he introduced the idea of intellectual property rights as an asset class and bought the music rights to a number of high profile musicians from the contemporary to classical. That investment, which

Parrado’s guide to building sovereign wealth funds

They may be on opposite sides of the Earth, but Chile in Latin America and Central Asia’s sparsely populated Mongolia share more than a few similarities. Both boast some of the biggest copper deposits in the world and now Mongolia has turned to Chile for advice on how best to steward income from its forecast

Partnership creates global events network

Conexus Financial, the financial services media and events company and publisher of top1000funds.com, has formed a partnership with the New York-based World Pension Forum (WPF) to create a major international conference business catering to the world’s largest institutional investors. Conexus will apply its events management expertise and experience to enhance existing WPF events – three

Embracing board diversity at HESTA

The Australian fund, HESTA Superannuation stands out among its peer of industry funds for a few reasons, not the least of which is its predominantly female (80 per cent) member base, but it’s also one that has seen notable growth in the past 20 years. From a fiduciary perspective, the fund has gone from less than

Previous