Can you find quality companies in every sector?
In what may be the late stages of a bull market, many investors have flocked to quality. As a factor that may do well on the tail end of rising rates, quality can provide investors with the comfort that if markets turn, at least their money will be in companies with strong balance sheets that can potentially weather the storm better than others. This is one reason we believe the WisdomTree US Quality Dividend Growth Index, a strategy meant to measure dividend growth and the quality factor among large caps in the US market, has bested the S&P 500 Index by more than 200 basis points (bps) year-to-date through 31 August 2017.
Source: WisdomTree, Bloomberg, as of 31/08/2017.
You cannot invest directly in an index. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Index performance does not represent actual fund or portfolio performance. A fund or portfolio may differ significantly from the securities included in the index. Index performance assumes reinvestment of dividends but does not reflect any management fees, transactions in fund shares. Such fees, expenses and commissions could reduce returns. WisdomTree, its affiliates and their independent providers are not liable for any informational errors, incompleteness or delays or for any actions taken in reliance on information contained herein. Additional Index information is available at www.wisdomtree.com
Yet, we noticed that not all indices are taking advantage of the quality trend year-to-date. In fact, the MSCI USA Sector Neutral Quality Index is lagging the S&P 500 by almost 150 bps and lagging its non-sector-neutral counterpart by almost twice that, despite the positive environment for the factor it is designed to capture. We decided to dig a little deeper to pinpoint the differences among these indices and to ascertain why they might be capturing recent market trends so differently.
In the below chart, the numbers in red and green represent the total return for each S&P 500 sector year-to-date. The data above each column is the percentage weight each index had in those respective sectors as of 31 August 2017.
YTD total returns of S&P 500 sectors as of 31/8/2017
Click to enlarge
Sources: WisdomTree, Bloomberg, MSCI fact sheets, as of 31/08/2017. Red and green numbers represent YTD total returns of the respective S&P 500 sectors. Numbers above each column represent the percentage weight of each index in that sector.
Index performance does not represent actual fund or portfolio performance. A fund or portfolio may differ significantly from the securities included in the index. Index performance assumes reinvestment of dividends but does not reflect any management fees, transaction costs or other expenses that would be incurred by a portfolio or fund, or brokerage commissions on transactions in fund shares. Such fees, expenses and commissions could reduce returns.
One thing that stood out to us about the WisdomTree US Quality Dividend Growth Index and the MSCI USA Quality Index is how they seek out quality, wherever they may find it. That is what leads the indices to have almost 0% exposure to the energy sector and no exposure to telecommunications, the only two S&P 500 sectors that are negative year-to-date. The MSCI USA Sector Neutral Quality Index, however, forces itself to be sector neutral, picking “quality” companies in sectors that the WisdomTree Index and MSCI USA Quality Index avoided altogether.
The MSCI USA Quality Index, while performing well, has still lagged the WisdomTree US Quality Dividend Growth Index despite an almost 20% over-weight to the best performing sector in the S&P 500: information technology. The WT Index, which caps individual sector bets at 20% during the annual rebalance, found quality elsewhere and distributed weight to sectors such as health care, allowing it to keep pace and even outperform the MSCI USA Quality Index without running the same sector risk should information technology take a turn for the worst.
Conclusion
With quality currently outperforming, it’s important to know what makes up your index. In the case of the WisdomTree US Quality Dividend Growth Index, we believe it has done its job of capturing dividend growth and quality while avoiding sectors that don’t possess it and not weighting too heavily to those sectors that may have a lot of it.
You may also be interested in reading…
+ Screening for quality: Deconstructing our Quality Dividend Growth strategies
+ Balancing global opportunities against regional risks: Why you might consider global quality equity