SA #8: SPMO – Large Cap Momentum At Its Best

SPMO: Large Cap Momentum At Its Best
January 19, 2023

Summary

  • Momentum is the simple idea that stocks which performed relatively strong over the recent past (winners) tend to outperform those that performed poorly (losers).
  • The Invesco S&P 500 Momentum ETF invests in the 100 stocks with the highest “momentum score” (12-month return) from the S&P 500 Index.
  • Since inception in 2015, SPMO delivered momentum exposure with respect to the academic benchmark of Kenneth French. Since 2017, it also outperformed most momentum-peers.
  • SPMO especially outperformed MTUM, a similar large cap momentum ETF. However, most of this outperformance is unlikely systematic and probably comes from different rebalancing dates in 2022.
  • For investors who actively want large-cap momentum exposure, SPMO is a reasonable and cheap instrument. For those who want general momentum exposure, a fund with a larger universe is probably the better choice.


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SA #7: ITOT Vs. VTI – Since 2015 Very Similar, But VTI Still Ahead

ITOT Vs. VTI: Since 2015 Very Similar, But VTI Still Ahead
January 13, 2023

Summary

  • The iShares Core S&P Total U.S. Stock Market ETF (ITOT) and Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI) are among the largest ETFs to invest passively in the US equity market.
  • For the longest common period since 2004, ITOT underperformed VTI by about 20%-points or slightly more than 20 basis points per year.
  • However, just looking at this long-term performance chart is somewhat misleading here. Because of several changes, the two funds tracked 5 different indices over the last 15 years.
  • Starting in December 2015, ITOT switched from the S&P 1500 to the S&P Total Market Index which made the two ETFs mostly comparable. The performance gap to VTI also narrowed.
  • The analysis shows that even passive investors should not only compare ETFs by their historical performance but also pay close attention to the underlying indices, and even more important, index/benchmark changes.


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SA #6: VTI – Truly Passive Investing In The U.S. Market

VTI: Truly Passive Investing In The U.S. Market
January 6, 2023

Summary

  • In this article, I examine how investors can get truly passive exposure to the US equity market.
  • Passive investing emerged from academia and offers benefits through diversification, low fees, and historically better performance than the average active manager.
  • To passively invest in US equities, we need a market cap-weighted portfolio of all investable US stocks.
  • One proxy for that is the CRSP U.S. Total Market Index which currently consists of slightly more than 4,000 stocks – 8 times more than the S&P 500.
  • Historically, VTI followed this index with almost no tracking error and is thus among the best instruments to invest truly passively in US equities.


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SA #5: VOO – One Of The Best S&P 500 ETFs, But Far From Truly Passive

VOO: One Of The Best S&P 500 ETFs, But Far From Truly Passive
January 4, 2023

Summary

  • The S&P 500 Index is probably the most important equity index in the world.
  • For many investors, an ETF that tracks the S&P 500 became synonymous with passive investing.
  • In this article, I will compare the three largest ETFs on the index (SPY, IVV, and VOO) and challenge the passiveness of the S&P 500.
  • Based on historical performance, current expense ratios, scale, and the underlying manager profile, I would personally use the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF to track the index.
  • Within the US, the S&P 500 is a reasonable passive benchmark. From a global perspective, however, it is an active bet on US large caps.


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SA #4: QMOM – Best-In-Class Momentum, Now 20% Cheaper

QMOM: Best-In-Class Momentum, Now 20% Cheaper
December 30, 2022

Summary

  • Momentum is one of the best-researched systematic investing strategies and has produced significant outperformance in the past.
  • The Alpha Architect U.S. Quantitative Momentum ETF follows a differentiated investment process that delivered strong momentum exposure in the past.
  • Over the last 5 years, QMOM outperformed several other momentum exchange-traded funds and an academic benchmark from Kenneth French.
  • On December 1, 2022, Alpha Architect (the manager of QMOM) announced that they will lower the management fee from 0.49% to 0.39% per 01/31/2023.
  • This is a reduction of about 20% and makes the QMOM ETF even more attractive for investors who seek active momentum exposure.


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SA #3: MTUM – Momentum, But Somewhat Slow

MTUM: Momentum, But Somewhat Slow
December 28, 2022

Summary

  • Momentum is one of the best-researched systematic investing strategies, and has provided significant outperformance in the past.
  • The MTUM ETF tracks the MSCI USA Momentum SR Variant Index and is an easy way to add momentum to a portfolio.
  • The ETF follows a transparent methodology and has performed mostly in line with the academic momentum benchmark from Kenneth French since 2013.
  • The key problem of the methodology, however, is the slow, six-month rebalancing – also the reason why MTUM suffered in 2022.
  • For investors who don’t want to take too much active risk and/or monitor active managers, the MTUM ETF is still a reasonable momentum implementation.


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SA #2: QMOM – A Close Look At The Methodology

QMOM: A Close Look At The Methodology
November 20, 2022

Summary

  • Momentum is one of the best-researched systematic investing strategies and produced significant outperformance in the past.
  • Over the last 5 years, the QMOM ETF outperformed the academic benchmark from Kenneth French and several other momentum ETFs.
  • The QMOM ETF achieved this by a differentiated momentum-investment process, which I will analyze in this article.
  • The QMOM ETF delivered momentum exposure and helps to add momentum to basically all portfolios.


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SA #1: MSCI – Even Quality Can Become Too Expensive

MSCI: Even Quality Can Become Too Expensive
November 9, 2022

Summary

  • On October 25, MSCI reported quite strong 9M numbers and, for the moment, defended its high multiples (LTM P/E about 44).
  • In this article, I focus on a high-level valuation of MSCI to decide if it’s worth analyzing the stock in more detail.
  • Using a standard DCF-WACC model, market data for interest rates, and reasonable estimates for future fundamentals suggests massive overvaluation (theoretical downside of 54%).
  • The result is very similar when comparing MSCI to common valuation multiples of a peer group. Depending on the multiple, the company trades at a premium of up to 60%.
  • MSCI is undeniably a very high-quality company. But at the current levels, the company just appears way too expensive. So I am not yet interested.


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Seeking Alpha: Introduction

A few days ago, I published my first exclusive article on Seeking Alpha.

Given that Seeking Alpha has a lot of active visitors, it is a great way to build an audience for AgnosticInvesting.com. This comes at the cost that exclusive articles, as the name suggests, are only available on Seeking Alpha and you may need a premium subscription to read them.

Fortunately, however, I am still allowed to post short summaries here on my own website. You will find them under this category.

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AgPa #1: Index Whales

Index Providers: Whales Behind the Scenes of ETFs (2021)
Yu An, Matteo Benetton, Yang Song
Invited for submission to the Review of Financial Studies, URL

The first research paper examines a specific area of the asset management industry: Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) and index providers, the companies selling market indices like the S&P 500.

In a remarkable combination of empirical analysis and theoretical modeling, the authors present several interesting results:

  • Index providers are an oligopoly
  • ETF investors care about the index
  • Index providers capture 1/3 of ETF fees
  • Index providers are extremely profitable

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