Everybody’s Styling

April 21, 2005

 

Comparison Data

It is tempting to include data comparing each of the indexes on a variety of financial metrics: price/earnings ratio, price/book ratio, dividend yield, etc. Unfortunately, the indexes are constructed in such a way that they don't allow for easy apples-to-apples comparisons.

The problem has to do with how the indexers sort stocks into various market capitalization categories: large cap vs. mid cap vs. small cap. Consider the chart below, which shows the percentage of the U.S. equity universe that each indexer includes in each major market capitalization categories.

Index Family

Large Cap

Mid Cap

Small Cap

Dow Jones Total Market

73%

19%

8%

Dow Jones/Wilshire

87%

No Index

12%

Morningstar

70%

20%

7%

MSCI

72%

15%

12%

Russell

92%

No Index

8%

S&P/Barra

77%

7%

3%

Wilshire

79%

9%

10%

*Note that the Intellidexes are excluded from this analysis, because they do not aim to recreate the entire equity universe.

Within the large cap sector, indexers include between 70 and 92 percent of the total U.S. market - a 22 percent swing!

The difficulty in using comparison data arrives because the market values large companies differently from small companies. As a result, one index may have a higher average price/earnings ratio than another because of its selection methodology, or because it has more large cap names … it's hard to isolate the impact.

With that in mind, however, consider the chart below, which compares data from the eight major U.S. small cap value indexes as of March 31, 2005

Small Cap Value Index Comparison

Index Family

Price/Book Ratio

2004 Return

Dow Jones Total Market

2

18.37%

Dow Jones/Wilshire

2

19.61%

Intellidex

3

36.22%

Morningstar

2.2

24.03%

MSCI

2

23.70%

Russell

1.8

22.25%

S&P/Barra

1.7

21.83%

Wilshire

1.6

19.62%

Two things jump out from the data.

 

First, methodology clearly plays a key role in determing the index-level statistics. The two indexers who put the greatest emphasis on book value in their methodology (S&P/Barra and Wilshire) have the two lowest price/book ratios in this important value category. Similar results follow for other capitalization categories.

Second, there is a huge variability in the returns. In 2004, the worst performing small cap value index - the Dow Jones Total Market index - returned just 18.37 percent. In comparison, the best-performing index - the "enhanced" Intellidex index - returned 36.22 percent, almost twice as much. Even within the traditional indexes, there was a huge deviation in return, with the 24.03% return on the Morningstar index outpacing the Dow Jones product by almost six percent.

 

Find your next ETF

Reset All