The nemesis of cap-weighted indexing turn attention to bonds

First he convinced some of us that cap-weighted indexing doesn’t work, now Rob Arnott, the founder of Research Affiliates, is back with more bombshells – that the equity risk premium, as we came to know it, is gone and not hurrying back; and that emerging market debt is “objectively a better credit risk” than US Treasuries, at a higher yield to boot.

Combine these two controversial thoughts, and it’s no surprise to learn that Arnott has been turning his attention to fixed income, with RAFI recently launching a bond business.

Research Affiliates has sought to reshape global sovereign fixed-interest benchmarks like it did traditional equity benchmarks, where it ignored price in favour of ranking companies based on their sales, book value, dividends, earnings and number of employees.

According to Arnott, established benchmarks which weight sovereign bonds according to the amount on issue are over-representing the countries least able to service their debts.

“Bond investors are lenders. Why should we deliberately choose to lend more to those who are most deeply in debt?” he asks, echoing sentiments in a recent note to RAFI investors entitled ‘Debt Be Not Proud’ (with apologies to John Donne).

Arnott’s team has come up with a way of measuring a sovereign’s capacity to service its debt, which compares the level of that outstanding debt to the country’s economic size.

Sponsored Content

RAFI measures economic size using four factors: gross domestic product, population (as a simple gauge of labour force size), land mass (as an even simpler gauge of its access to resources), and aggregate energy consumption.

The factors aren’t quite as straightforward as they sound.

The square root of the land mass number was used, as Arnott explains, “to avoid grossly rewarding big, sparsely populated countries like Russia, Australia, and Canada, or penalising small, crowded countries like Hong Kong and Singapore.”

He also placed a caveat on the energy consumption factor – that a country’s needs may partly be met through petroleum imports.

Country weights for each of the four factors were calculated separately, then equally weighted to arrive at an overall weight within the RAFI sovereign bond index.

As the attached graph shows, most of the countries with the best debt-burden-to-economic-size ratio, and thus most able to service their debts, were in the emerging markets.

He said the reversal of market weights to RAFI weights would be even more pronounced if the benchmark were able to include debt that was not publicly traded, such as that of government-sponsored enterprises (Fannie Mae etc), state and local debt, off-balance sheet debt and unfunded entitlements – some of which Arnott said could be very large, particularly in the case of the US.

Arnott admitted there were “pockets of discipline” in the developed world, anointing a ‘Prudent Nine’ including Australia, Poland, Slovakia, Canada, Finland, New Zealand, Norway, Slovenia and Sweden which collectively spoke for less than 4 per cent of world sovereign bond debt, yet totalled 6 per cent of world GDP, 18 per cent of world land mass, and 8 per cent of world RAFI weight.

Overall, however, developed markets account for 62 per cent of the world’s GDP and owe 90 per cent of the world’s sovereign bond debt. Meanwhile emerging markets collectively produce 38 per cent of the world’s GDP and owe just 10 per cent of world sovereign bond debt.

“Does hidden debt and off-balance-sheet debt change this picture? Yes. In the wrong direction!” Arnott exclaims.

“The emerging markets have, for the most part, little off-balance-sheet debt. The developed economies have, in many instances, vast off-balance-sheet debt. One might reasonably argue that — absent political risk — emerging markets are collectively more creditworthy than US Treasuries. Which invites a provocative question: when will US Treasuries be priced to offer a risk premium – a higher yield – more than the most stable and solvent sovereign debt that money can buy: emerging markets?”

Arnott is predicting a ‘3D hurricane’ – of debt, deficit and demographics – will suppress equity returns for years to come, particularly as baby boomers sell down their assets into markets with fewer buyers.

He says investors need to recalibrate.

“A 5 per cent returns isn’t a problem if you’re expecting a 5 per cent return. You’re only affected if you shoot for a higher return, spend accordingly, but then only get the more modest result.”

Straitened times suit Arnott and RAFI to some degree. He claims fundamental equity indexing outperforms the cap-weighted approach in about half of all bull market years, 80 per cent of single-digit return years, and 90 per cent of negative years.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Dutch reform to tread lightly on investment mix

When the Netherlands pension reforms were announced in 2011, many experts argued they were likely to substantially increase the risk appetites at the funds guarding the country’s $1-trillion pension assets. Recent developments to the reform proposals make the overall impact far from clear, however, suggesting there will be no bonanza for Dutch investment managers. The

Over the industry? Change it

The pension and funds management industry is self-serving. There are too many players, there’s too much jargon, too much leakage and too much patting each other on the back. And that’s not just my opinion: the results of a 12-month research project, across 60 countries and more than 3000 investors concur. The research by State

Bit of a bubble in the property pool

In a landmark project, the £11-billion ($17.5-billion) Greater Manchester Pension Fund (GMPF), a scheme for 10 local councils and hundreds of small regional employers including schools and charities, will invest in a series of residential housing projects with local authorities. Lauded as a completely new way of funding house building in the city, Manchester council

Inversion therapy:
the investor as benchmark

The pension and funds management industry needs to redefine performance to an absolute return measure, according to The Influential Investor: How Investor Behaviour is Redefining Performance, a paper that is the result of 12 months of research with more than 3000 investors and investment providers across 68 countries. The report, which sought to uncover the

Will Christmas be the final blow for Spain’s Social Security Reserve Fund?

The Spanish Social Security Reserve Fund is set to be depleted by another €7 billion ($9.05 billion) before the end of 2012, according to IESE Business School pension expert, Javier Diaz Gimenez. The $90-billion fund has already been asked by the government for $3.8 billion, which is likely to go towards a raise in state

Fiduciaries’ top concern is US gridlock

Endowments and foundations in the United States are more concerned with the US political and fiscal gridlock than the uncertainty caused by the European debt crisis, according to a survey of non-profit organisations by Mercer Hammond. Partner at Mercer Hammond, Russ LaMore, says the US situation dominated the global macroeconomic concerns of these investors, followed

Previous