Top Pros' Top Picks

Slow and Steady Wins for This Fund
Specialty: ETFs
Keyword Image
Published: 1/17/2012
By Samuel Lee
Tickers mentioned: SPLV, USMV

In a world where most investors are falling over themselves looking for enhanced total returns, this fund takes a more mellow, long-term approach, writes Samuel Lee of Morningstar ETFInvestor.

In the slow-growth world, low-volatility stocks are king. They’re often quality companies offering essential services and are therefore less dependent on marginal economic growth.

With interest rates set to stay at zero for at least a couple of years, pension funds and many retirees are stretching for risk in the hopes of higher returns. They’ll probably be disappointed.

Power Shares S&P 500 Low Volatility (SPLV) bucks that tendency by owning less-volatile stocks and could be seen as the antidote to the “risk bubble,” as long as it isn’t being used to replace lost bond income.

Suitability
This exchange traded fund has a lot going for it. It implements a simple low-volatility strategy with very low fees.

Investors of all stripes can benefit from less-volatile stocks thanks to a puzzling phenomenon: Over the past 50 years, the least-volatile stocks have performed about as well as the market, but with far less risk. Low-volatility stocks have outperformed in most international stock markets studied, too, putting it up there with the value and size effects in terms of empirical support.

The most convincing explanation for low volatility’s performance involves leverage aversion. Investors who target above-market returns may be unwilling or unable to use leverage to reach their expected return targets.

By resorting to volatile stocks (more accurately high-beta stocks), which theoretically should outperform less-volatile stocks, investors hope to earn above-average profits. Ironically, their collective bet on high-beta stocks leads to low risk-adjusted returns.

There’s ample evidence this market inefficiency is real. However, low-volatility strategies can underperform during bull markets. ETFs like SPLV will likely produce great risk-adjusted returns over decade-long time horizons.

SPLV’s beta, or sensitivity to the market’s gyrations, is about 0.70—for each 1% move, SPLV will move in the same direction by 0.7%. This fund could serve as the nucleus of an investor’s stock allocation, but to fully benefit, investors should be willing to underperform during extended bull markets.

The rich world looks poised for another recession. Yet the US stock market is unattractively valued compared with its historical average. In order to combat depressed consumer demand, rich-world central banks have driven down real interest rates to punishingly low levels, inflating asset prices.

At a price of around 1,250, the S&P 500 yields about 2% and historically has grown real per-share dividends by about 1% to 2% annualized. If you add in share buybacks, a hidden boost to yield, equity investors are facing a prospective long-run 4% to 5% real return. To compound modest expected returns, longer-term challenges are cresting over the horizon.

Several factors will slow down the rich-world’s growth over the medium and long term: deleveraging, debt, and demographics. Consumers and banks are busy winding down debts, or deleveraging, at the same time; the result is a balance-sheet recession, a rare and long-lived situation that puts the economy in a fragile state. Low demand means businesses will have a hard time growing their profits, while governments take in less revenue and run deficits.

The growing government-debt load presages higher taxes for everyone—meaning, again, lower earnings for investors. Rich-world governments are also burdened with massive health-care liabilities. This is new territory; the world has never promised so much money to future generations while simultaneously experiencing a steep, coordinated decline in the ratio of workers to retirees.

The demographic headwinds introduce two major sources of uncertainty:

  • One is the upward pressure on the equity risk premium, or the reward investors demand for taking on stock risk. As investors age, they become more risk-averse, meaning they’ll demand higher future expected returns from risk assets. This will pressure equity prices down in order to bring their yields up to acceptable levels.
  • The second risk is the macroeconomic uncertainty introduced by the rich world’s policy response to the staggering promises it has made to the elderly.

Continued…

Page 1 | Page 2 | Next Page

TRADESHOW LOCATIONS

Show Logo
San Francisco
 • August 15 – 17, 2013
Free eLetters

Receive all-new market analysis and commentary, timely recommendations, exclusive videos, and much more from hundreds of top experts. Subscribe today!

INVESTING ELETTERS

   More Details

Daily Investing Alert

Weekly Investing eLetter

Hot Off The Tape Weekly Video eLetter

TRADING ELETTERS

   More Details

Daily Trading Alert

Trading Lessons

Trader Talk Podcast

Most Popular

Keyword Image The Week Ahead: Will 2013 Be Another Double-Digit Year?
A test of all-time stock highs looks highly likely next year, but the market's reaction to fiscal...
Large-Cap Winners & Losers
15 Most Overbought S&P 500 Stocks
Rising Sun Redux
Sponsored Links

Royal Dutch Shell, plc

The Shell Group, (The Group), is a diverse group of energy companies with around 90,000 employees…

SAP AG

SAP is the world's leading provider of business software(*), offering applications and services…

Royal Dutch Shell, plc

The Shell Group, (The Group), is a diverse group of energy companies with around 90,000 employees…

Atlas Pipeline Partners, L.P.

Atlas Pipeline Partners (APL) is active in the gathering and processing segments of the midstream…