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Expert Analysis: Australian Equities

 

On the 21st April, BHP announced its underwhelming production update while flagging further operational changes. Over the following week, BHP suffered double-digit falls, taking the S&P/ASX 200 with it. BHP’s influence on the returns of the S&P/ASX 200 increased when it became Australia’s biggest listed company following the unification with its UK listing earlier this year. This resulted in the ASX becoming more concentrated than any other major equities market. Concentration is the opposite of diversification, which is an important risk management tool for investors. That is why it is prudent to take the right approach when investing in Australian equities. Here we provide some insightful analysis for our popular Equal Weight ETF (MVW) versus the S&P/ASX 200.

On the 21st April, BHP announced its underwhelming production update while flagging further operational changes. Over the following week, BHP suffered double-digit falls, taking the S&P/ASX 200 with it. BHP’s influence on the returns of the S&P/ASX 200 increased when it became Australia’s biggest listed company following the unification with its UK listing earlier this year. This resulted in the ASX becoming more concentrated than any other major equities market. Concentration is the opposite of diversification, which is an important risk management tool for investors. That is why it is prudent to take the right approach when investing in Australian equities. Here we provide some insightful analysis for our popular Equal Weight ETF (MVW) versus the S&P/ASX 200.

In the S&P/ASX 200, BHP represents about 11% of the index. This means when you invest in the S&P/ASX 200, more than 10% of your investment is going to one company. This is because the S&P/ASX 200 is a market capitalisation index. A company’s representation in a market capitalisation index is in proportion to its size, the bigger the company, the larger its representation in the index. Most of the indices quoted in the media, such as the S&P 500 and FTSE 100 are market capitalision indices. These indices were designed to be barometers of the market’s health and were not designed to be the basis of an investment. However, as investing evolved, passive fund managers started to track these indices, giving their investors benchmark-like returns.

Not everyone is happy with benchmark-like returns. Active fund managers try to outperform market capitalisation benchmarks. They think they can outperform these benchmarks because of some of the shortcoming of these benchmarks. This includes:

  • Weighting a fund according to market capitalisation can have a negative impact on performance. This is because when the market overvalues a stock its market capitalisation goes up. A fund tracking a traditional market capitalisation index buys more and more of the overpriced stock and loses money when the market corrects. Conversely, when the market undervalues a stock, the fund sells more and more of the underpriced stock, missing profit when the market corrects.
  • An investor seeking to maximise returns want to allocate more to those companies with the greatest growth potential. By allocating to a market capitalisation index, the assumption investors are making is that those companies with the greatest growth potential are the largest, because they get more of an investment. This issue is more problematic in concentrated markets. The S&P/ASX 200 exposes investors to excessive concentration risk.   The top 10 companies represent over 50% of the index. Four of the top six companies are banks. Financials make up over nearly a third of the index. Investors buying a fund that ostensibly contains 200 stocks would likely assume such a broad-based fund to be better diversified.

It has noted that not all active funds outperform market capitalisation indices. Hence the popularity of passive funds such as ETFs. Index innovations have given rise to different index methodologies, such as equal weight, to be created. Funds that track these indices aim to give investors the best of low-cost passive investing combined with the targeted outcomes of active management. The term for indices constructed differently to market capitalisation indices is ‘smart beta’. Large institutional investors have been using them for many years.

The equal weight Index that MVW tracks is a smart beta index. Equal weighting Australian equities allocates exposure away from mega-cap stocks. MVW therefore will have greater exposure to companies outside the top 10, and is more diversified than the market capitalisation index.

Since its launch, MVW has outperformed the S&P/ASX 200.

Let’s walk through the difference between MVW and the S&P/ASX 200.

MVW vs S&P/ASX 200 - Diversification
A way to measure diversification of a portfolio is to calculate its Herfindahl Index. This index is a broadly used technique to quantify concentration. When used inversely, this index measures diversification. As at the last rebalance in March 2022, the Herfindahl Index for the S&P/ASX 200 was 340. The equivalent measure for the index MVW tracks was 112. The MVW Index is therefore around a third as concentrated as the S&P/ASX 200. In other words, the MVW Index is over three times more diversified than the S&P/ASX 200.

MVW vs S&P/ASX 200 - Performance
Equal weight investing has served Australian investors. At the end of April 2022, since its inception on ASX in 2014, MVW has outperformed the S&P/ASX 200 by 1.62% p.a.

Chart 1: Cumulative performance since MVW inception date to 30 April 2022


Table 1: Trailing performance to 30 April 2022
 

1 Month (%)

3 Months (%)

6 Months (%)

1 yr

(%)

3 yrs

(% p.a.)

5 yrs

(% p.a.)

7 yrs

(% p.a.)

Since Inception*

(% p.a.)

MVW

0.43

8.29

4.24

11.43

8.93

9.19

9.37

9.94

S&P/ASX 200

-0.85

8.24

3.59

10.16

9.41

8.81

7.94

8.32

Difference

+1.28

+0.05

+0.65

+1.27

-0.48

+0.38

+1.43

+1.62

* MVW Inception date is 4 March 2014 a copy of the factsheet is here.

Chart 1 and Table 1 source: Morningstar Direct, VanEck as at 30 April 2022. The chart and table above show past performance of MVW and of the S&P/ASX 200. You cannot invest directly in an index. Results are calculated to the last business day of the month and assume immediate reinvestment of distributions. MVW results are net of management fees and other costs incurred in the fund, but before brokerage fees and bid/ask spreads incurred when investors buy/sell on the ASX. Returns for periods longer than one year are annualised. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. The S&P/ASX 200 Index is shown for comparison purposes as it is the widely recognised benchmark used to measure the performance of the broad Australian equities market. It includes the 200 largest ASX-listed companies, weighted by market capitalisation. MVW’s index measures the performance of the largest and most liquid ASX-listed companies, weighted equally at rebalance. MVW’s index has fewer companies and different industry allocations than the S&P/ASX 200. Click here for more details.

MVW vs S&P/ASX 200 Index - Top 10 holdings
Below you can see the top 10 companies. The differences are stark – to see all the holdings in MVW and their weightings click here

Table 2: Top 10 holdings MVW                                  Table 3: Top 10 S&P/ASX 200

Source: Factset, VanEck, S&P, as at 30 April 2022
  
The reason MVW’s holdings are not equal above is that it only rebalances back to equal weight each quarter. Noticeably Ramsey is now 1.42% of MVW. At March’s rebalance, it was 1.12%, like every other holding, but due to KKR’s takeover bid its price has gone up so it makes up a bigger part of MVW now. At the next quarterly rebalance, it will be pared and the portfolio holding will be equal. 

MVW vs S&P/ASX 200 Index - Sectors
MVW is currently underweight the financials’ sector by 10.48% compared to the S&P/ASX 200. Conversely, it is overweight industrials by 5.70% and consumer discretionary by 4.35%.

Chart 2: S&P/ASX 200 and MVW Index company weightings
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Source: Factset, 31 March 2022

What this means is that if there is another systematic banking issue, or commodities fall the impact on the S&P/ASX 200 is greater than in the MVW Index.

MVW vs S&P/ASX 200 Index - Style
When looking at portfolios it is important to determine what style e.g. value or growth and what size bias a portfolio holds e.g. giant, large, mid or small. Below we can see MVW’s. Importantly MVW holds large companies with a similar value-core orientation relative to the S&P/ASX 200, which skews larger (giant) and more toward growth.

Chart 3: MVW holdings based style map                  Chart 4: S&P/ASX 200 holdings based style map

Source: Morningstar Direct, as at 31 March 2022

While each Australian equity ETF has its merit for portfolio inclusion, you should assess all the risks and consider your investment objectives.

Past performance is no guarantee of future performance. The above is not a recommendation. Please speak to your financial adviser or stock broker.

For further information you can email us or call on us on +61 2 8038 3300.

Key risks
An investment MVW carries risks associated with: ASX trading time differences, financial markets generally, individual company management, industry sectors, country or sector concentration, political, regulatory and tax risks, fund operations and tracking an index. See the PDS for details.

Published: 06 May 2022

Any views expressed are opinions of the author at the time of writing and is not a recommendation to act.

VanEck Investments Limited (ACN 146 596 116 AFSL 416755) (‘VanEck’) is the issuer and responsible entity of all VanEck exchange trades funds (Funds) listed on the ASX. This is general advice only and does not take into account any person’s financial objectives, situation or needs. The product disclosure statement (PDS) and the target market determination (TMD) for all Funds are available at vaneck.com.au. You should consider whether or not an investment in any Fund is appropriate for you. Investments in a Fund involve risks associated with financial markets. These risks vary depending on a Fund’s investment objective. Refer to the applicable PDS and TMD for more details on risks. Investment returns and capital are not guaranteed.

MVIS Australia Equal Weight Index (‘MVIS Index’) is the exclusive property of MV Index Solutions GmbH based in Frankfurt, Germany (‘MVIS’). MVIS is a related entity of VanEck. MVIS makes no representation regarding the advisability of investing in the Fund. MVIS has contracted with Solactive AG to maintain and calculate the MVIS Index. Solactive uses its best efforts to ensure that the MVIS Index is calculated correctly. Irrespective of its obligations towards MVIS, Solactive has no obligation to point out errors in the MVIS Index to third parties.