| Index
Spotlight: Broader MSCI EAFE Should Raise Bar for Active
Managers
By John Spence
June 24, 2002 |
|
The benefits of using index funds to invest in the U.S. stock
market have been well documented, but some make the argument that
indexing international markets is a sure way to underperform.
The smoking gun in the international active vs. passive debate
is the large number of active managers that outperform the traditional
yardstick for international equities: the MSCI EAFE index.
For the 15-year period ended May 31, 2002, 89% of funds in Morningstar's
foreign stock fund category beat it. This is a small data set
because there just aren't a lot of foreign funds that have been
around that long - only 27. For the 10-year period, there are
77 funds and 62% of them beat the MSCI EAFE index.
"The MSCI EAFE's return has historically been an easy hurdle
to clear," said Morningstar analyst Peter Di Teresa.
Although these numbers give the impression that the MSCI EAFE
(Europe, Australasia, Far East) is a punching dummy for active
managers, the comparison needs to be taken in context. First,
the data doesn't reflect survivorship bias - poor-performing active
funds can be taken out back and shot or merged out of existence.
Second and more importantly, judging the success of an international
manager against the MSCI EAFE can be misleading, despite the index's
traditional widespread acceptance and use. For example, Morningstar's
definition of its foreign stock category is "an international
fund having no more than 10% of stocks invested in the United
States." That's a fairly broad mandate, and group evaluations
against the MSCI EAFE may not result in apples-to-apples comparisons.
By the same token, index fund advocates have also been guilty
of unfair performance evaluations in their attacks on active managers.
For example, in the late 1990s indexers loved to point to the
small percentage of all equity active funds that outperformed
the S&P 500. However, the economy was experiencing an unprecedented
bull market for large-cap growth stocks, and a few names came
to dominate the index and fuel eye-popping annual returns. It's
unfair to lump all active managers together and compare them to
a hot-performing asset class - fund managers should be judged
against the relevant benchmark. The fact that a small-cap manager
is lagging the S&P 500 says nothing about his or her stock-picking
skills; instead the S&P SmallCap 600 or Russell 2000 should
be used. Consider the following excerpt from a recent Journal
of Indexes article by Vanguard index fund manager Gus Sauter,
who also managers some of Vanguard's active funds:
"A widespread misconception is that indexing works in large
caps, but not in sectors such as small caps. At times, this conclusion
appears to be supported by the data. But the data's real lesson
is that we're measuring managers with the wrong yardsticks. With
better benchmarks, outperforming - or underperforming - an index
would no longer be a matter of holding stocks from a different
universe. Performance would reflect the success of a manager's
stock selections within the appropriate universe. Although it's
unlikely that large numbers of active managers could boast of
index-beating performance, even over short periods, these better
indexes could in fact be a boon to talented active managers. Their
relative success could be attributed to skill, not dismissed as
an artifact of faulty benchmark construction."
Comparing an active manager's performance against a benchmark
is only useful if the index represents the entire opportunity
set available. In this scenario, the way a manager beats (or loses
to) the appropriate index is to not look like it by underweighting
or overweighting certain stocks or sectors relative to the index.
For example, an active manager correctly benchmarked against the
MSCI EAFE had great success against the index in the 1990s by
underweighting a struggling Japanese economy. However, it should
be noted that many Western fund managers also underweighted Japan
in the 1980s, which led to underperformance as the Japanese economy
zoomed ahead.
Country bets aside, the MSCI EAFE should be a tougher hurdle
to clear for active managers because the index is beefing up its
coverage. At the end of May 2002, the MSCI EAFE expanded its coverage
in each country to 85% of float-adjusted market capitalization,
up from the previous 60% of total market capitalization. What
this means is that active managers will have a smaller forest
in which to hunt outside the index for companies that may outperform.
"As the EAFE Index grows to 85% of the investable universe,
the variability of managers' returns around the index will decrease,"
wrote Barclays Global Investors investment strategists Binu George
and Andy Olma in a recent brief.
The bottom line is that for many investors looking to diversify
outside the U.S., international index funds still offer the same
primary benefits as their domestic counterparts: lower expenses,
tax efficiency, and style consistency. As Nobel Laureate William
Sharpe states in his classic article The
Arithmetic of Active Management, after costs the return on
the average actively managed dollar will be less than the return
on the average passively managed dollar. However, this is only
true if the index represents the entire opportunity set available
to active managers, or at least as much of it as possible. Therefore,
the expanded coverage of the MSCI EAFE index should be good news
for passive investors.