| S&P
Active vs. Passive Study Focuses on Sector Funds
IndexFunds.com Staff
May 14, 2003 |
|
Standard & Poor's released a study showing active sector fund
managers have fared relatively well against sector indexes that
track thin slices of the market over the past five years. However,
over the last three years a majority of active funds beat the
indexes in only two out of eight sectors.
In other words, different time periods yielded different results.
Judging by the S&P study results, active funds as a group have
been largely successful in beating sector indexes over the longer
five-year period, but the results have been worse during the bear
market of the past three years.
| Percentage of Sector Funds
Outperformed by Index |
| Fund Category |
Comparison Index |
One Year |
Three Year |
Five Year |
| All Sector Funds |
S&P 500 |
48.11 |
44.12 |
41.78 |
| Energy Sector |
S&P 500 Energy |
40.74 |
52.38 |
44.44 |
| Financial Sector |
S&P 500 Financial |
50.00 |
29.41 |
45.45 |
| Health Care Sector |
S&P 500 Health Care |
76.36 |
80.65 |
45.45 |
| Information Technology |
S&P 500 Information Technology |
82.86 |
65.75 |
45.95 |
| Materials Sector |
S&P 500 Materials |
8.00 |
14.71 |
32.43 |
| Telecommunication Services Sector |
S&P 500 Telecommunication Services |
54.55 |
68.75 |
44.44 |
| Utilities Sector |
S&P 500 Utilities |
6.67 |
89.47 |
61.90 |
| Real Estate Sector |
S&P REIT Composite |
32.76 |
86.44 |
52.63 |
Source: Standard & Poor's. For periods ending March
31, 2003. Outperformance is based upon equal-weighted fund counts.
Among Materials sector funds, 68% and 85% beat the S&P 500 Materials
index over last five and three years, respectively. However, while
gold and precious metals have performed well over the past three
years, the index is poorly represented in this sector.
The benchmarks did well in the sectors traditionally considered
as income producing. Over the last five years, 53% of Real Estate
sector funds underperformed the S&P REIT Index, and 62% of Utilities
sector funds fell short of the S&P 500 Utilities index.
The number of sector funds investors can choose from has risen
dramatically in recent years, including several new index-lined
sector ETFs and nearly 400 active sector funds, according to S&P.
Many narrow technology funds were launched during the bull market
of the late 1990s, and according to S&P nearly a third of all
sector funds in the study were classified in its information technology
sector. In this sector, 21% of funds liquidated or merged in the
last 12 months. In the three years since the technology bubble
burst, 66% of funds in this sector fared worse than the S&P 500
Information Technology index, said S&P.
Few equity active vs. passive studies have concentrated on sector
investing, with most of the research thus far focusing on broad
equity or style categories. This may be due to the difficulty
of classifying sector funds, and of finding appropriate benchmarks
because active sector funds even within an industry may pursue
very different strategies.
S&P noted several issues that complicate benchmark choices for
index vs. active performance in sector investing:
- Index providers have different sector classification schemes,
and active managers might not restrict their investments based
on any particular sector classification system.
- While an active sector fund might invest in large-, mid-,
and small-cap stocks, there are no broad market sector indices
available for popular broad market benchmarks such as the Wilshire
5000, Russell 3000 or S&P SuperComposite 1500. The study used
S&P 500 sector indexes; the S&P REIT index was used for real
estate sector funds.
- Sector funds might have small portions of their assets invested
outside the U.S.
Among all actively managed sector funds, 11.3% liquidated or merged
in the last year, compared to 6.8% of general equity funds, according
to S&P. The S&P study adjusts for survivorship bias.
There are a few sectors in which the number of funds with five-year
histories was so small that any index vs. active comparison would
be meaningless. After eliminating those sectors, S&P was left
with eight sectors for the study: Energy, Financials, Healthcare,
Information Technology, Materials, Telecommunications, Utilities,
and Real Estate. Funds were classified based on holdings and the
fund's investment objective as stated in the prospectus.
The complete study is available on the Standard & Poor's website.