Major Refreshes For Quality-Focused ETFs Take Shape (DES)

From WisdomTree: We tend to write a lot about the annual rebalance of the WisdomTree U.S. Earnings Indexes because–simply put–this is the single most important difference that they bring to any U.S. equity discussion.

The success of the nearly 11-year live track record can be traced back to this process, repeated each year based on data screened on the last trading day of November.

Modern Alpha Generation Must Have a Foundation within Risk Premiums

Even as academics continue to research and debate the presence (or lack thereof) of different risk premiums, consensus has seemed to accept the presence of five primary factors upon which excess returns over and above what could be explained by taking excess risk have tended to be based:

  1. Value

  2. Quality

  3. Size

  4. Momentum

  5. Low volatility

As the terminology has shifted from fundamentally weighted to smart beta to now modern alpha, the building blocks–these factors–have remained constant. We wrote recently (“11 Consecutive Years of Lowering P/E Ratios … and Counting!“) about how one can think of our U.S. Earnings Index rebalance “refreshing” exposure to the value factor. Now, we turn our focus to quality.

Profitability within Small Caps and Mid-Caps Has Been Associated with Stronger Returns

Profitability within Small Caps and Mid-Caps
Profitability within Small Caps and Mid-Caps

As we search for the darkest shades of green–the strongest returns–we tend to see them on the small- to mid-cap end of the size spectrum and on the higher end of the operating profitability spectrum. We see the darkest shades of red (lowest returns) clustered along the lowest operating profitability quintile. Simple, long-run data, therefore, suggests that the first hurdle to clear could very well be avoiding those firms with the lowest operating profitability, while the second could be emphasizing stronger profitability within the mid-cap and small-cap size segment.

Market Capitalization-Weighted Indexes Won’t Avoid Unprofitable Firms

Simply utilizing a broad-based, market capitalization-weighted benchmark of mid-caps or small caps will not actually avoid exposure to unprofitable firms. We never cease to be surprised by 1) the amount of exposure to unprofitable firms present, particularly in certain small-cap benchmarks, and 2) the variation in exposure to unprofitable firms across different index providers.

Importantly, exposure to unprofitable firms–particularly those with negative trailing 12-month earnings per share–is a fairly insignificant matter on the large-cap end of the size spectrum, which is why we don’t discuss it here.

Exposure to Unprofitable Companies in Mid-Cap and Small-Cap Benchmarks

Unprofitable Companies in Mid-Cap and Small-Cap
Unprofitable Companies in Mid-Cap and Small-Cap
  • Russell 2000 Index Variants: Three of the top four exposures to unprofitable firms were the Russell 2000 Index, Russell 2000 Value Index and Russell 2000 Growth Index. This methodology, true, is the broadest-based of the indexes shown, but we’d encourage people to remember that a consequence of being the broadest-based is including firms with strong, average and weak fundamentals.