| Enhanced
Indexing
By John Spence
December 21, 2000 |
|
There wasn't a lot of emphasis placed on enhanced indexing during
the bull market of the 1990s when investors were fed a steady
diet of consecutive and unprecedented high yearly returns. However,
with the recent stock sell-off, squeezing out those extra percentage
points can make a difference, and is causing many investors to
explore the risks and benefits associated with enhanced indexing.
How Does Enhanced Indexing Work?
Managers who use an enhanced indexing strategy seek to outperform
an index through a limited amount of active management. There
are two approaches to enhanced indexing: the stock-selection strategy
and the derivatives-based, or synthetic, strategy.
Stock-selection is the more simplistic of the two strategies
that employs a regulated amount of active management and stock-picking
by a fund manager. To be considered an "enhanced indexing"
strategy, it is commonly held that tracking error should not exceed
2.00%. But generally, the fund manager will utilize quantitative
analysis and research to identify stocks or sectors that may outperform,
and overweight in those stocks or sectors. As is true with all
active management, a major hurdle is overcoming transaction costs.
The second approach that is becoming more widespread - the synthetic
strategy - uses derivative contracts in an attempt to outperform
the returns of the index. A common form of synthetic enhanced
indexing involves owning futures, which is in a sense a "buy
now, pay later" approach. For example, margin rates for S&P
500 futures currently run about 5% of the total contract value.
The remaining 95% of the investment can then be placed in short-term
fixed income investments. The trick is to outperform the London
InternBank Offered Rate (LIBOR) with the fixed income investments.
LIBOR is the financing rate associated with S&P 500 futures,
so returns above LIBOR lead to enhanced performance.This is just
one example of the many complicated strategies used in synthetic
enhanced indexing. Also, many managers combine the stock-picking
and synthetic strategies in a hybrid approach.
The standard by which enhanced indexers measure themselves is
Information Ratio, which is determined by dividing the excess
return percentage by the tracking error percentage. An enhanced
index fund manager with a relatively high Information Ratio is
considered successful.
Does Enhanced Indexing Work?
Wiesenberger, a division of Thompson Financial, today released
a study that examined the performance of 40 enhanced index funds,
24 of which were based on the S&P 500. Wiesenberger compared
the enhanced index fund returns against their respective indexes
for the life of each fund. To see how the enhanced index funds
reacted to the recent market downturn, they performed the same
analysis over the period between March and November 2000. All
performance data was calculated as of 11/30/2000.
Performance Over Fund Lifetime
| Index tracked |
Sector |
No. of funds |
No. of funds outperformed |
No. of funds underperformed |
% success |
| S&P 500 |
Large Cap |
24 |
12 |
12 |
50.00% |
| S&P 400 |
Mid Cap |
3 |
2 |
1 |
66.66% |
| S&P 600 |
Small Cap |
2 |
1 |
1 |
50% |
| Russell 1000 Growth |
Small Cap Growth |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0.00% |
| Russell 100 Value |
Small Cap Value |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0.00% |
| Nasdaq 100 |
Technology |
1 |
1 |
0 |
100.00% |
| Lehman Bros. Aggregate Bond |
General Bond |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0.00% |
| Lehman Bros. Gov/Corp |
Gov/Corp Bond |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0.00% |
| Blend - 60% S&P 500,
40% Lehman Bros. Agg. Bond |
Hybrid |
2 |
0 |
2 |
0.00% |
Source: Wiesenberger study -
Enhanced Index Funds or In
Need of Enhancement
Fund Performance, March-November 2000
| Index tracked |
Sector |
No. of funds |
No. of funds outperformed |
No. of funds underperformed |
% success |
| S&P 500 |
Large Cap |
23* |
10 |
13 |
41.66% |
| S&P 400 |
Mid Cap |
3 |
0 |
3 |
0.00% |
| S&P 600 |
Small Cap |
2 |
0 |
2 |
0.00% |
| Russell 1000 Growth |
Small Cap Growth |
1 |
1 |
0 |
100.00% |
| Russell 100 Value |
Small Cap Value |
1 |
1 |
0 |
100.00% |
| Nasdaq 100 |
Technology |
1* |
n/a |
n/a |
n/a |
| Lehman Bros. Aggregate Bond |
General Bond |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0.00% |
| Lehman Bros. Gov/Corp |
Gov/Corp Bond |
1 |
0 |
1 |
0.00% |
| Blend - 60% S&P 500,
40% Lehman Bros. Agg. Bond |
Hybrid |
2 |
1 |
1 |
50.00% |
*The PaineWebber Enhanced S&P 500 Index Fund and the Nasdaq
100 Index Fund didn't exist during the period between March and
November 2000
Source: Wiesenberger study -
Enhanced Index Funds or In
Need of Enhancement
The most striking thing about the results of the study is the
lack of any conclusive proof that one type of enhanced index fund
outperforms its peers. The size, name, enhanced strategy, or experience
of a fund family did not have a big impact on the results of the
study. For example, the 12 funds that outperformed the S&P
500 over their lifetimes employed diverse approaches to enhanced
indexing. There doesn't appear to be a correlation between one
type of strategy and an increased likelihood that it will beat
its index.
Additionally, Wiesenberger found no correlation between a fund's
degree of success and the type of index tracked, or the index's
own performance. It is also interesting to note that over half
of the funds that beat the index over their lifetime lagged the
index between March and November 2000.
The age of a fund does not appear to affect the likelihood that
it will outperform its index. The 19 funds that outperformed the
index over their lifetime had an average age of 5.45 years, while
the 21 funds that lagged the index had an average age of 5.55
years.
Generally, the findings of the study seem to support the idea
that enhanced indexing shares many characteristics with active
management. Although some managers will beat the index, it's difficult
to identify in advance who those managers might be because there
is no conclusive proof that one type of enhanced index fund will
outperform the next.