May 6, 2015

How good is Smart Beta?

A popular topic lately has been “Smart beta” ETFs. What is smart beta? It is using different ways to weight an index and the ETF that tracks it. For example, the S&P500 index is a capitalization weighted index. Bigger companies have a larger portion of the index. If you look at the SPY, Apple which is the largest company, accounts for 4% of the index (https://www.spdrs.com/product/fund.seam?ticker=spy). Other ways one can weight an index are equal weight, by volatility, by fundamental measures, by technical measures and so on. Why would you do this? To beat the returns of the S&P500 index . But are these other ways better?

Testing Notes

Test dates from 1/1/2005 to 3/31/2015. No commissions. Buy and sell on the last trading day of the month at the closing price. Rebalance all positions on this day too. All returns include dividends.

Baseline tests

150506a

Here we have the returns for the SPY. The Guggenheim S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF, RSP, all stocks are approximately .2% in size. Then equal weight stocks using data from Norgate Data which has historical index constituent information. All the S&P500 stocks as equal weight with a rebalance each month. The results are close to RSP and with the yearly numbers, which you can see in the spreadsheet.

The weightings

We will examine several technical indicators and use those for weightings. We can either favor lower or higher values. How is weighting done? An example of higher value weighting is as follows. There are three stocks in the index with technical values of 20, 30 and 40. First sum all the values to get 90. Then for stock 1 the weighting would be 20/90 or 22.2%. For stock 2 it would be 30/90 or 33.3%. For stock 3, the weighting would be 40/90 or 44.4%.

If we wanted to favor lower values, then the weightings are determined as follows. Take the reciprocal values of all the indicators and add them up. For this example we have 1/20, 1/30 and 1/40. The sum being .108333. The weighting for stock 1 is (1/20)/.108333 or 46.3%. The weighting for stock 2 is (1/30)/.108333 or 30.8%. The weighting for stock 3 is (1/40)/.108333 or 23.1%.

The indicators being tested are

  • 100 day historical volatility
  • 2 period daily RSI
  • 10 period daily ADX
  • 21 day total return
  • 21 day moving average of Close*Volume

The last one, I added after I had done all the others and was surprised that they did not produce better CAR than I expected..

The results

150506b

First notice there is no improvement in MDD. So much for smart beta helping there. Given that the baseline return is 10.07 CAR for equal weighting, these indicators are working by giving a little extra beta. I was expecting HV100 to produce better results on both low and high from my own research. Surprisingly a short term indicator, RSI2, produced good results 1 month out. Another disappointment was ROC21. The results are opposite from all the momentum expectations. The big surprise is the DollarVolume. Going for those low really values out produced all other indicators. If you start an ETF using this, don’t forget to send me licensing checks. Granted the ETF could not handle much money because your biggest positions would be in the least liquid stocks.

Monte Carlo

What if we randomly assigned every sock a value between 1 and 100 and use that for sizing? What would the average and standard deviation of the CAR be? This would help give context to the above results.

150506c

After a thousand runs, as expected the average CAR of 10.07 matches equal sizing. I did not expect how small the standard deviation would be. Most of the indicator results produce values over three standard deviations.

A smaller portfolio

This is all interesting but we can’t trade 500 stocks, ignoring no one wants to trade a strategy with a 60% MDD. What does a portfolio of smaller positions look like? The stocks will still be proportionally weighed according to their indicator values.

150506d

The indicators HV100, RSI2 and DollarVolume worked as expected. The returns for low increased while the returns for high decreased. ROC21 numbers are all screwy from what one would expect. DollarVolume again producing some impressive CAR numbers, if we could only ignore that drawdown. There may be a start of a strategy here.

Links for more information on Smart Beta

The spreadsheet

The spreadsheet includes yearly breakdown of returns, other portfolio sizes and the Monte Carlo runs. Fill in the form to get it.

Final thoughts

 

Remember, the original S&P500 index is capitalization weighted. Imagine instead of being capitalization weighted the index was equal weight and those results were worse than capitalization weighted. We would then call ‘capitalization weighting’ smart beta because it beats the index. There is nothing special with any weighting scheme other than being different. One can make arguments about why one is better than the other but it is arbitrary. And here is the rub with smart beta. If it is still in all the S&P500 stocks, it is hard to avoid that massive drawdown. I don’t care how much more beta one gets, with drawdowns like that it is very hard to justify doing it.

I am off next week to Australia to present at the 2015 Australian Technical Analysts Association. It should be lots of fun.

Backtesting platform used: AmiBroker. Data provider:Norgate Data (referral link)

Good Quant Trading,

Fill in for free spreadsheet:

spreadsheeticon

 

Click Here to Leave a Comment Below

Ilya Kipnis - May 6, 2015 Reply

Smart Beta, to my experience (having worked at such a fund for about a year) is more marketing innovation than investment innovation in my opinion. Yes, the cap weight strategy is notoriously bad. However, other “Smart Beta” strategies aren’t without their own intrinsic downsides. Any factor bet you make introduces the risk of betting wrong on that factor. Furthermore, there are right and wrong ways to bet on factors.

For instance, you use ROC_21–aka one-month momentum. I have found that to be a notoriously bad predictor. 4 month momentum, to my experience, works *much* better. On top of that, if you turn over monthly, you should limit yourself to the securities you can reliably trade in and out of (aka high-volume), and then rank them by whatever factors you want (EG Flexible Asset Allocation, along with other works of Dr. Wouter Keller) use a combination of momentum, volatility, and correlation/covariance, in its various flavors. We should have another paper out by the end of this month on that.

-Ilya

    Cesar Alvarez - May 6, 2015 Reply

    Ilya,

    Thanks for the comments. I will. have to look at 4 month momentum and see how it works with some of my other strategies.

    Cesar

Quantocracy's Daily Wrap for 05/06/2015 | Quantocracy - May 6, 2015 Reply

[…] How good is Smart Beta? [Alvarez Quant Trading] How good is Smart Beta? A popular topic lately has been Smart beta ETFs. What is smart beta? It is using different ways to weight an index and the ETF that tracks it. For example, the S&P500 index is a capitalization weighted index. Bigger companies have a larger portion of the index. If you look at the SPY, Apple which is the largest company, accounts for 4% of the index […]

Chris - May 7, 2015 Reply

How robust is the choice between momentum of 3, 4, 6 etc. months?

Logical-invest uses 3 months, Meb Faber I believe uses an average of the sum of 3, 6, 12 months and so on.

How good is Smart Beta? | SAMUELSSONS RAPPORT - May 10, 2015 Reply

[…] Source: How good is Smart Beta? | Alvarez Quant Trading […]

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