| UBS
Asset Management Licenses Morningstar Indexes
By John Spence
April 11, 2002 |
|
Long known as a sideline mutual fund tracker and commentator,
Morningstar is set to enter the industry as an active participant
in the role of index licensor. UBS Global Asset Management said
today that it will be the first fund company to license at least
some of Morningstar's 16 proprietary equity indexes as the basis
for exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
"UBS has licensed Morningstar indexes for both the U.S.
and Europe," said Joseph LaCorte, managing director for UBS
Global Asset Management. "Which products and the timing will
be decided based upon identification of specific demand."
The Morningstar indexes are comprised of a U.S. total market
index, several broad benchmarks broken down by style and market
capitalizations, and 9 indexes covering each style box.
"In building the indexes, we wanted to combine the ways
we think people should pick, build, and monitor portfolios,"
said Morningstar managing director Don Phillips. "Most investors
just pick a hot-performing fund and don't really think about how
it fits in with the rest of their portfolio. They don't look at
the big picture."
Phillips said he believes there is room for Morningstar's new
benchmarks in an already crowded index business and growing ETF
market.
"Existing indices really were constructed independent of
stock and fund research," said Phillips. "When we first
developed our style boxes we looked at only two valuation factors:
p/b and p/e, which was reasonable ten or fifteen years ago. Later
we realized the system wasn't perfect, because fund managers aren't
just looking backwards. Now the style box methodology also includes
some forward-looking growth criteria."
Liquidity is a major concern for intraday-traded ETFs, and Phillips
said the fact that Morningstar's indexes are float-weighted should
help. In float-adjusted benchmarks, a company's weight in an index
is determined by the number of shares actually available for purchase
on the open market, an approach that cuts down on liquidity crunches.
"In most cases I anticipate the ETFs will be full replications
of the index, and definitely for the large-cap benchmarks,"
said Phillips.
"The Morningstar indexes have been designed to be compliant
with both the Registered Investment Company (RIC) and UCITS [European
equivalent] concentration limits. In addition, underlying equity
liquidity is a major consideration in determining the universe
of securities that make up the indexes," said LaCorte of
UBS.
UBS Global Asset Management currently offers six exchange-traded
funds that trade on the Swiss Exchange under the "Fresco"
brand name. These funds cover the broad European, UK, and Japanese
economies. UBS also has ETFs hitched to the Dow Jones Industrial
Average as well as U.S. large-cap and technology benchmarks from
Dow Jones.