31 Jul 2020
A dynamic, diversified exposure could be the answer.
Within many portfolios, US equities constitute a relatively large proportion of the investments. This is because their collective weight represents over 50% in global market cap-weighted indices, such as the MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI). A key challenge for investors in US equities is how to allocate across varying styles and market capitalizations, as well as monitoring and dynamically alternating those allocations as market conditions evolve.
In this paper, we propose a solution to help address these demands. A US Equity All-Cap Solution actively allocates across three active US equity strategies, covering a spectrum of investment styles (growth and value) and market capitalizations (large-, mid-, and small-cap) within the US equity universe. It builds a transparent allocation to US equities that has the potential to benefit from security selection within the underlying strategies—as well as tactical asset allocation (TAA)—and risk mitigation through active management and diversification.
We believe such a solution is ideal for investors seeking a transparent and liquid investment solution for exposure to US equities, combining a range of specialist styles and market capitalizations with potential alpha generation in each underlying strategy’s universe.
…actively balancing and blending growth and value styles through investment cycles can help improve diversification of the portfolio.
The choice of benchmark for US equities defines the investment universe. With thousands of listed companies in the US equity market, we believe that broader indices offer greater potential to identify opportunities and generate alpha. Further, the choice of index or indices also governs the potential to build a diverse portfolio that takes advantage of variations in performance of different styles, such as growth and value, over time.
A common choice for investors is the S&P 500 Index, representing the 500 largest US companies in terms of market capitalization. It captures approximately 80% of available market value and is often considered the bellwether for the US economy. However, the universe of US equities is much broader than this. The S&P 500 excludes companies with small and mid-size SMID) market capitalizations. Excluding this segment of the market from a portfolio could be a missed opportunity for gaining market exposure to US SMID companies and alpha generation.
The Russell 3000 Index provides a far broader opportunity set, measuring the performance of the 3,000 largest publicly held US companies in terms of market capitalization. It represents approximately 98% of the US public equity market. Meanwhile, the Russell 1000 Index measures the performance of the 1,000 largest corporations within the Russell 3000 universe, and the Russell 2500 Index measures the performance of the 2,500 smallest companies in the universe, representing the SMID-cap segment of the market.
Figure 1 compares the cumulative total return of the S&P 500, Russell 3000, and Russell 2500 indices over time. While the Russell 2500 outperformed its two peers, it experienced larger drawdowns in times of market stress, such as the 2008 global financial crisis and the 2020 coronavirus crisis. While the performance of the S&P 500 and the Russell 3000 was similar over the period, this reflects
only the passive performance of the indices. It does not account for the potential benefits from active management within each index. Since the universe of the Russell 3000 is broader than the S&P 500, we believe a skilled active manager has more opportunities to add alpha from its wider investment opportunity set while staying within the benchmark.
According to the fundamental law of active management 1, risk-adjusted return (information ratio) is a function of skill (the correlation between investment decisions and results) and breadth (the number of independent investment decisions). A wide universe of 3,000 securities offers much more breadth than a universe of 500 securities and so elevates the potential for greater alpha generation from talented managers.
To demonstrate the potential of style diversification from index selection, Figure 2 shows the cumulative and relative total returns of growth and value stocks in the US, as represented by the Russell 1000 Value and the Russell 1000 Growth indices. The relative performance clearly oscillates, with each style displaying periods of strength at different stages of the market cycle. Each should, therefore, be considered as a distinct sub-asset class given the variations in performance.
This subcategorization is further justified by distinctive characteristics and sector composition within each index. For example, the Russell 1000 Growth includes a nearly 35% greater weighting in the information technology sector than the Russell 1000 Value, while the Russell 1000 Value includes nearly 20% more in financials and 5% more in the energy sector than the Russell 1000 Growth. Therefore, actively balancing and blending growth and value styles through investment cycles can help improve diversification of the portfolio.
While benchmark selection is important in the US equity space, it is also vital that the allocation to those benchmarks is monitored and managed over time. Introducing a layer of TAA actively changes the allocation to assets, such as growth and value or SMID and large-cap, based on analysis and views of their expected future relative performance. If TAA within a US equity allocation is skillfully employed, it can deliver an additional source of return beyond those derived from exposure to the equity market, as well as alpha from security selection.
The TAA process can be anchored in fundamental research that assesses valuations, the macroeconomic backdrop, market sentiment, technical factors, as well as corporate fundamentals, and can potentially take advantage of the typically long cycles of styles and market cap sizes. For example, like any asset, styles and sizes go through cycles of richness or cheapness. Reducing exposure to expensive assets and adding to cheap ones introduces a healthy process of taking profits when asset prices appreciate—selling high—and buying when prices are low.
How can investors gain access to the range of market cap and style opportunities in US equities? We believe an all-cap solution could be an ideal way to build a simple and transparent allocation to enhance the alpha opportunity set and potential diversification benefits. This approach combines three specialist T. Rowe Price US equity strategies to build exposure to securities across the market cap range and balance the allocation to growth and value styles.
The approach breaks down the US equity universe into large-cap and SMID-cap, and further distinguishes the large-cap section into growth and value. In this way, it constructs a representation of the entire universe of publicly traded companies in the US—a true all-cap, stylebalanced, solution.
In our solution, about 70% of the Russell 3000 universe is large-caps, 15% mid-caps, and 15% small-caps. Our US Equity All-Cap Solution uses a SMID-cap strategy benchmarked against the Russell 2500 Index and splits the large-cap exposure evenly across two strategies: one benchmarked against the Russell 1000 Growth Index and a second benchmarked against the Russell 1000 Value Index.
As illustrated in Figure 3, since the universe of the Russell 1000 dips into mid-caps, and there is some mid-cap overlap between the largecap and mid-cap strategies, we structurally overweight large-caps by 10%. This effectively outsources some of the allocation decision between small- and mid-caps to the bottom-up security selection of the SMID specialists, allowing them to choose among the best investment opportunities in the SMID universe.
Compared with a basic allocation to the Russell 3000, our approach aims to deliver a more diversified exposure to investment styles and market cap ranges. Figure 4 shows the market cap weights of the Russell 3000 Index on the left and strategic weights in our US Equity All-Cap Solution on the right. The solution more effectively diversifies the US equity exposure across styles (growth and value) and market cap size (large-cap and SMID-cap).
When constructing a portfolio consisting of several strategies, diversification is crucial. One level of diversification is achieved through blending sub-asset classes with imperfect correlation. The Russell 1000 Growth, Russell 1000 Value, and Russell 2500 indices are highly, but not perfectly, correlated. Imperfect correlation adds diversification benefits, helping to mitigate risk.
Another level of diversification is the correlation among the alphas of the different underlying strategies and between these alphas and the equity market. Lowly correlated alphas mean the return profile would be smoother, as alphas are produced at different times, as illustrated in Figure 5. As each of the underlying strategies is managed by a different portfolio manager with a different style, yet benefiting from our global research platform, the respective alphas are indeed imperfectly correlated.
Low correlation between alpha and beta means that alpha is an independent source of return, adding important diversification benefits. Figure 6 shows the correlation matrix among the alphas of the underlying strategies, as well as with the US Equity All-Cap Solution benchmark 2. A correlation below 0.70 is considered advantageous for diversification.
Our US Equity All-Cap Solution builds a diversified profile of US equity exposure, benefiting from T. Rowe Price’s active management in both security selection and TAA.
We believe that an active approach is beneficial to investing in US equities. Many investors face the dilemma of choosing between passive and active approaches for US equities. While passive may cost less than active and is potentially easier to govern, active investing can offer potential alpha generation, putting the investment to work and making it count. We believe good value for money is not achieved by simply choosing the cheaper option but by accessing investments that offer the highest ratio of potential reward to risks and charges.
In our view, selecting an asset manager with a demonstrated skill in generating alpha from security selection is vital for active management of US equities. Adding even modest alpha on average every year has the potential to compound significantly when the investment horizon is long, helping investors achieve their investment objectives.
In relation to the US Equity All-Cap Solution, three factors drive performance:
While, historically, the main driver of hypothetical performance has been market returns (beta), this could change going forward. As US equity markets are not cheap at present, future beta returns may be modest compared with those in the past. Under these circumstances, the excess returns achieved from security selection and TAA could become more important factors for performance.
The desired outcome of an active investment strategy is excess return, net of fees, above the comparative benchmark. Figure 7 shows the simulated cumulative total return of the US Equity All-Cap Solution, using the active underlying strategies, compared with the S&P 500 Index. The US Equity All-Cap Solution outperformed the index, net of fees, which included alpha from security selection of the actual track record of the underlying strategies.
Our US Equity All-Cap Solution can be readily implemented using three underlying active equity strategies offered by T. Rowe Price: (1) US Large-Cap Growth, (2) US Large-Cap Value, and (3) US Smaller Companies. All three are available as UCITS-compliant
SICAVs or OEICs or as a separately managed account (SMA). While environmental, social and governance factors are imbedded in our investment management process, in the case of SMAs, we can apply additional sustainable investing exclusions (e.g., tobacco and controversial weapons).
We believe using a single skilled asset management firm to manage the underlying strategies, as well as the allocation among them, can offer economies of scale and governance benefits. It helps to reduce monitoring costs and ease governance burdens compared with using multiple managers for each asset. Ultimately, active returns should be measured net of all costs, not just explicit
management fees.
Our capabilities in managing US equities and multi-asset strategies are significant. T. Rowe Price manages over USD 600 billion across a range of active US equity strategies, spanning a range of styles and market caps5. Our multi-asset team manages strategies totaling over USD 300 billion6.
US equities are typically a significant portion of most investment portfolios, which potentially gives investors added impetus to make the most of their allocation to this asset class. The US equity market is enormous, and investors can benefit from tapping the broad range of opportunities, diversifying across investment styles and market capitalization sizes. We believe the skilled and experienced team at T. Rowe Price can add value through both security selection and TAA across investment styles and market capitalization ranges.
5 The total US equity strategies assets managed by T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. and its investment advisory affiliates. As of June 30, 2020.
6 The combined multi-asset portfolios managed by T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. and its investment advisory affiliates. This figure includes assets that are held outside of
T. Rowe Price, but where T. Rowe Price influences trade decisions. As of June 30, 2020.
The information presented herein is hypothetical in nature and is shown for illustrative and informational purposes only. This material is not intended to forecast or predict future events, but rather to demonstrate T. Rowe Price’s capability to manage assets in this style. It does not reflect the actual returns of any portfolio/strategy and is not a reliable indicator of future results. Certain assumptions have been made for modeling purposes and are unlikely to be realized. No representation or warranty is made as to the reasonableness of the assumptions made or that all assumptions used in modeling analysis presented have been stated or fully considered. Changes in the assumptions may have a material impact on the information presented.
Data shown for the US Equity All‑Cap model portfolio are as of the dates shown and represent the manager’s analysis of the model portfolio as of that date and are subject to change over time. The model portfolio does not reflect the impact that material economic, market, or other factors may have on weighting decisions. If the weightings change, results would be different. Actual results experienced by clients may vary significantly from the hypothetical illustrations shown. The information is not intended as a recommendation to buy or sell any particular security, and there is no guarantee that results shown will be achieved.
US Equity All‑Cap Solution – the following risks are materially relevant to the solution:
Small- and Mid‑Cap Risk – stocks of small and mid‑size companies can be more volatile than stocks of larger companies.
General Portfolio Risks:
Capital Risk – the value of your investment will vary and is not guaranteed. It will be affected by changes in the exchange rate between the base currency of the portfolio and the currency in which you subscribed, if different.
Equity Risk – in general, equities involve higher risks than bonds or money market instruments.
Geographic Concentration Risk – to the extent that a portfolio invests a large portion of its assets in a particular geographic area, its performance will be more strongly affected by events within that area.
Hedging Risk – a portfolio’s attempts to reduce or eliminate certain risks through hedging may not work as intended.
Investment Portfolio Risk – investing in portfolios involves certain risks an investor would not face if investing in markets directly.
Management Risk – the investment manager or its designees may at times find their obligations to a portfolio to be in conflict with their obligations to other investment portfolios they manage (although in such cases, all portfolios will be dealt with equitably).
Operational Risk – operational failures could lead to disruptions of portfolio operations or financial losses.
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ID0003393 (07/2020)
202007-1229543