Vanguard To Change Benchmarks for Seven Index
Funds
By John Spence,
Associate Editor
Vanguard announced yesterday that it will transition to new MSCI
U.S. equity benchmarks for several of its index funds, a move
the Valley Forge-based fund group has been positioning itself
for over the past several months, and perhaps years. In 2002,
Vanguard licensed
the MSCI benchmarks, and shareholders in a proxy vote approved
a change that allowed the trustees of eight passive equity funds
to switch target benchmarks (trustees of 19 other Vanguard index
funds were already empowered to make a switch on their own).
The table below shows which index funds will switch to MSCI benchmarks
- each new target MSCI index tracks the same market segment as
the corresponding current index.
|
Vanguard index fund
|
Index currently tracked
|
|
|
S&P 500/Barra Growth
|
|
|
S&P 500/Barra Value
|
|
|
S&P MidCap 400
|
|
|
Russell 2000
|
|
|
S&P SmallCap 600/Barra Growth
|
|
|
S&P SmallCap 600/Barra Value
|
|
Variable Insurance FundMid-Cap Index
Portfolio
|
S&P MidCap 400
|
Aside from a transition away from the Russell 2000 for the Vanguard
small-cap index fund, all of the affected funds track Standard
& Poor's indexes or S&P/Barra indexes. Vanguard has announced
no plans to change the benchmark for its behemoth S&P 500
index fund.
Although the index changes had been brewing for some time, the
formal announcement yesterday by Vanguard had to represent at
least a dent in the prestige of S&P, the venerable index provider
whose roots go back to Alfred Cowles. However, the loss might
not be too distressing for S&P because many sources have alleged
that Vanguard founder John Bogle decades ago negotiated index
licensing fees that were heavily in Vanguard's favor.
In any case, relations between the two firms have been strained
- S&P took Vanguard to court
in 2000 and successfully blocked
the launch of Vanguard exchange-traded funds based on S&P
and S&P/Barra indexes. The lawsuit, which involved complex
licensing fee and exclusivity issues, puzzled many industry observers
because S&P and Vanguard seemed like such a natural fit. Vanguard
has maintained that the transition has nothing to do with the
S&P lawsuit.
Below Gus Sauter, who recently assumed an expanded role as Vanguard's
chief investment officer responsible for all in-house stock and
fixed income investment management functions, talks about the
MSCI indexes and how Vanguard will manage the transition.
Q: What are some of the challenges of managing a transition
like this? Will the funds incur capital gains and transaction
costs?
A: In terms of realizing capital gains, all of the funds
except for one will likely realize a loss because of the decline
in the markets. The small-cap growth fund may realize very modest
gains, but we have existing realized losses in all the funds including
that fund. The losses will more than offset any potential for
realization of capital gains. So capital gains really won't be
much of an issue.
In terms of making the transition, we want to make sure we don't
provide any front-running opportunities; we want to be as "stealth"
as possible. For that reason, we have announced that the transaction
will occur sometime between April 20th and September 30th. As
soon as the transition is completed, obviously we will notify
all investors that the indexes have been effectively changed.
We will first of all cross any trades internally that can be crossed.
A lot of the funds will be buying what the other funds are selling.
Our preliminary analysis indicates that about 40% to 45% of all
the trades can be crossed between the funds, so there's no cost
associated with those [trades].
For the remaining trades, we will go to the marketplace. One
advantage for us is that, over time, we have developed trading
capabilities using all the various types of trading techniques.
Because of the nature of indexing we've been very eager to adopt
all of the new trading venues that have been developed. We were
early adopters of all the ECNs [electronic communications networks]
and the alternative trading systems. We use futures extensively,
we use direct access brokers on the floors of the exchanges, and
we have access to the futures trading pits. We also do basket
trading. So over time we've developed a wide variety of capabilities
to gain liquidity. We think that we can execute a great amount
of the trading without being noticed. Also, this transition won't
happen over a day or two; it will likely take a few weeks.
Q: What were the main reasons for making the transitions?
A: We had identified five characteristics of what we would
consider an "ideal" index. When MSCI announced their
index methodology, they incorporated four of those characteristics,
so we were intrigued by their construction methodology. This year
they've started to produce the results of back tests of their
methodology. The back tests have revealed, as we suspected, that
the indexes have a tremendous amount of style integrity. They
seem to capture very well the performance of various investment
styles, whether it's value or growth, or large or small. At the
same time, the MSCI indexes experienced meaningfully less turnover
in various segments of the market, particularly in small-caps.
So those two characteristics are what we like the most - style
integrity and lower turnover.
Q: The MSCI indexes use "buffer zones" to
cut down on unnecessary turnover between indexes. Can you explain,
in layman's terms, how this works?
A: If the large-cap index consists of the 300 largest
stocks, then there's a hurdle at stock number 301 where the mid-cap
index starts. Without buffers, if stock number 300 becomes stock
number 301, then it would migrate to the mid-cap index. With a
buffer, you establish a band [around the cut-off point]. If the
stock remains inside that band it will not migrate to the next
index.
The effect is that turnover is moderated. But perhaps more importantly,
this system recognizes how active managers buy and sell stocks.
When a stock migrates within a relatively small range, active
managers don't decide all of the sudden that a large-cap stock
is a mid-cap stock. It's a gradual process, and the buffer zones
reflect that reality.
04/04/2003
More information about the transition, including an explanation
by Sauter, is available on the Vanguard website.
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