Rebalancing Of Smart Beta ETFs Often Overlooked

Single-factor and multifactor funds rebalance to fit the rules-based approach of each.

TwitterTwitterTwitter
ToddRosenbluth_200x200.png
Reviewed by: Todd Rosenbluth
,
Edited by: Todd Rosenbluth

Todd Rosenbluth is director of ETF and mutual fund research at CFRA.

With Vanguard’s latest expense reduction on market-cap-weighted index mutual funds and ETFs—matching in many cases the cost for similar iShares products—it is easy to forget that most asset managers are steering clear of this battlefield and focusing on an alternative approach.

At the end of January, there were more than 600 smart-beta ETFs with a combined $477 billion in assets, according to ETFGI, a consulting firm. These ETFs are constructed based on one or more fundamental and/or valuation attributes and are regularly rebalanced. As such, the holdings inside and related sector exposure can and will shift periodically.

In exchange, the fees for these products are at a moderate premium to market-cap-weighted ETFs, such as the 0.11% for the Vanguard Total World Stock Index ETF (VT), and thus warrant more regular scrutiny.

CFRA ranks 980 equity ETFs on a daily basis combining holdings-based analysis with ETF-level metrics. We assess the holdings from a valuation and risk perspective in addition to incorporating the expense ratio, the bid/ask spread and more.

Rebalancing As Risk Control

According to WisdomTree, the act of annually rebalancing constituents of its proprietary index is an important risk control. For the WisdomTree MidCap Earnings Fund (EZM), companies with share prices that appreciated at a faster rate than their fundamental improvement would typically be reduced. Meanwhile, constituents with improving earnings, but stable or falling prices, would be added to during the rebalance.

With its 2.70% increase to 20% of assets, the consumer discretionary sector experienced the greatest positive change in the November 2016 rebalance; Office Depot and Tegna were recent top-10 holdings in the sector. While both stocks are qualitative hold recommendations for CFRA, they are undervalued based on our quantitative fair value approach. In contrast, energy exposure fell by 4.70% to less than 1% amid a strong performance, despite weak earnings. EZM has a 0.38% expense ratio.

Meanwhile, the PowerShares S&P 500 Low Volatility Index (SPLV) is rebalanced on a quarterly basis to find the 100 stocks with the lowest volatility. Unlike EZM, which focuses on selling winning stocks and buying laggards, SPLV seeks those stocks with the strongest performance stability relative to the broader S&P 500 Index. Stocks that were added to the portfolio following the February rebalance included Alphabet and Oracle, two stocks with above-average A- S&P Global Quality Rankings, a metric based on historic dividend and earnings records, which is used for CFRA’s ETF rankings.

Exposure to information technology and consumer discretionary rose to 7% and 9%, respectively, up from 4% and 7% at its rebalance. Such moves narrowed the underexposure compared to the broader index. Meanwhile, the relatively high weights in utilities (19% vs. 22%) and real estate (4% vs. 6%) were trimmed. SPLV has a 0.25% expense ratio.

 

Multifactors Funds Also Rebalance

Though periodic sector shifts are to be expected, with smart-beta ETFs constructed on one metric, investors might be surprised that what’s inside multifactor ETFs can also swing. One example is the Deutsche X-trackers Russell 1000 Comprehensive Factor ETF (DEUS), which combines value, low volatility, quality, momentum and size factors.

While stocks in the utilities sector have historically scored well for value and low volatility, the industrial sector has typically scored well across most of these metrics. Yet following its latest semiannual rebalance in December, and reflective of stock price movements, DEUS’ industrials exposure widened, while the utilities weighting narrowed; both remain overweighted relative to the broader Russell 1000 Index.

Industrials sector holdings include Cummins and Southwest Airlines, both of which have CFRA buy recommendations and B+ S&P Global Quality Rankings. DEUS has a 0.25% expense ratio.

Meanwhile, the health care weighting for the JPMorgan Diversified Return US Equity (JPUS) is higher than it was three months earlier. The ETF tracks an index that is rebalanced quarterly based on value, momentum and quality factors. JPUS holds Amgen and C.R. Bard, both CFRA buy recommendations. JPUS has a 0.29% net expense ratio.

Investors are increasingly adopting low-cost smart-beta ETFs in their asset allocation strategies and benefiting from a rebalance process that ensures the constituents continually fit the rules-based approach.

However, CFRA thinks shareholders need to regularly assess what’s inside the above ETFs and their numerous peers to understand how the exposure fits within a broader portfolio.

At the time of writing, neither the author nor his firm held any of the securities mentioned. Todd Rosenbluth is director of ETF and mutual fund research at CFRA, an independent research firm that acquired S&P Global Market Intelligence's equity and fund business in October 2016. He can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him at @ToddCFRA

 

Todd Rosenbluth is director of ETF and mutual fund research at CFRA, an independent research firm that acquired S&P Global Market Intelligence’s equity and fund business in October 2016. Follow him at @ToddCFRA.