Factor Views 4Q18

Written by: Yazann Romahi and Garrett Norman

Themes from the quarterly Quantitative Beta Research Summit

In brief

  • Equity value continued to sell off. The factor is currently mired in its second-worst drawdown dating back to 1990.
  • Merger arbitrage delivered gains; however, our suite of event-driven factors was negative on losses from spinoff and share repurchase factors.
  • Macro factors broadly declined on global divergences and trade war tensions.
  • We believe in diversifying across a broad range of compensated factors while minimizing exposure to uncompensated risks, especially as we move through the latter part of the economic cycle.
  • OVERVIEW

    The factors that we favor were generally negative in a quarter marked by global divergences and episodic trade tensions (EXHIBIT 1) . The U.S. market continued to experience a late-cycle melt-up, as strong economic growth and robust earnings data drove large cap equities to their best quarter since 2013. The U.S. dollar strengthened, consumer confidence reached its highest level since 2000, and wage growth surprised on the upside, leading the market to price in the possibility of a more hawkish Federal Reserve (Fed). On the other hand, international and emerging markets bore the brunt of generally worsening economic fundamentals, political uncertainty and trade tensions that afflicted certain end markets. Emerging market (EM) currencies in particular suffered; the declines were led by the Turkish lira, which experienced a sharp fall in August, with the sell-off spreading across countries with large current account deficits and high external debt. The rising U.S. dollar and concerns about international trade also impacted a range of commodity markets. Against this backdrop, equity value extended its drawdown, while macro factors generally underperformed.

    FACTORS IN FOCUS

    Equity factors: Continued sell-off in value

    The value factor was down for a seventh consecutive quarter, with losses of over 16% in a drawdown that began at the start of 2017 (EXHIBIT 2) . While momentum was positive, the magnitude of gains was once again less than that of the losses for value. This is a historical anomaly: When value has suffered drawdowns greater than 10%, momentum has been up over 30%, on average. Since the beginning of 2017, however, momentum was only up about 7%. Elsewhere, quality was flat, with gains coming from our minimum volatility descriptor in particular, while the size factor reversed and sold off sharply in September. The opportunity set for the value factor continues to improve (EXHIBIT 3) . While value stocks are by definition cheaper than their counterparts, the gap in valuation is elevated (89th percentile) relative to history dating back to 1990, which should point to above-average returns going forward. On average, the value factor has returned around 5% on an annualized basis (net of assumed transaction costs). Historically, when the factor has been this cheap it has delivered average returns of 12% over the next 12 months and been positive more than 70% of the time. Further, gains in the value factor have tended to occur in batches—in fact, the top 20 months of performance account for 76% of the value factor’s gains since 1990. While the timing of a value rebound cannot be known, a deeper examination of the characteristics of cheap vs. expensive stocks is telling. Within the top quartile of value stocks (the cheapest names in the universe), 30% of the companies rank high in quality while 20% rank low in quality. Within the bottom quartile of value stocks (the most expensive stocks in the universe), on the other hand, 35% of the companies rank low in quality vs. 23% that rank high. In other words, the value factor is currently biased toward higher quality companies, while expensive/growth stocks are biased toward the lowest quality names (EXHIBIT 4) . In recent quarters, investors have rewarded companies that have borrowed to fuel growth, but that trend is likely unsustainable—particularly if borrowing costs continue to rise and debt has to be rolled over at higher rates. Higher rates may also spark a re-pricing of value stocks from another perspective, as higher discount rates lower the valuation of future earnings growth, a significant driver of the value of growth stocks. While nominal interest rates have begun to rise, borrowing costs and discount rates applied to fundamental valuation models take both credit spreads and nominal rates into account, and credit spreads remain low relative to their history. Should markets continue to progress from late cycle into end cycle, we may see rising credit spreads serve as a catalyst for the value factor.

    Mixed performance across event-driven factors

    The merger arbitrage factor continued to climb higher and was positive in each month over the quarter as sentiment remained strong in the M&A space. In addition, the merger arbitrage factor benefited from the auction of Sky News, the culmination of a bidding war between Comcast and 21st Century Fox that had been brewing since the end of 2016. Elsewhere, our expanded suite of event-driven factors was negative, reversing gains from earlier in the year as both the spinoff and share repurchase factors declined.We see a positive outlook for event-driven factors. Corporate activity levels for non-merger arbitrage factors have improved, and we continue to expect an increase in activity on the back of corporate tax changes in the U.S. Further, merger spreads 1 are healthy and more than 90% of deals are friendly, supporting the prospects for performance going forward.Related: What’s in Store for ETFs in Q4 2018? Related: Mid Caps Married With a Multi-Factor Strategy

    A challenging quarter for macro factors

    Last quarter, we discussed how divergences in economic growth and central bank policy across the globe have led to a difficult environment for macro factors. That environment has persisted; indeed, it has been exacerbated by trade war tensions and episodic political uncertainty. Both carry and momentum factors declined this quarter, with carry suffering in particular across currency and commodity markets. FX EM carry was negatively impacted by sell-offs across a range of currencies, including the Turkish lira, the South African rand and the Brazilian real, while commodity carry was hit by a fall in lean hog prices after China imposed tariffs on U.S. pork sales.The spread between high yielding and low yielding currencies remains below its long-term average, particularly for G10 currencies, as does the difference in term premiums across government bonds. Although this suggests a diminished potential to capture carry in those markets, rate normalization could improve the opportunity set. Regarding momentum factors, dispersion in price moves across currencies and commodities was below average, while the number of significantly trending levels fell slightly as positioning flattened out in fixed income and equity markets and moved negative across commodity markets.

    CONCLUDING REMARKS

    Overall, a number of factors suffered during the third quarter. That said, we see potential catalysts in place across the equity, event-driven and macro spaces. As always, we believe in diversifying across a broad range of compensated factors while minimizing exposure to uncompensated risks.

    FACTOR OPPORTUNITY SET

    The table below summarizes our outlook for each of the factors accessed by the Quantitative Beta Strategies platform. It does not constitute a recommendation but rather indicates our estimate of the attractiveness of factors in the current market environment.

    Get targeted exposure to attractively priced stocks with JVAL . 1 The difference between the target company’s stock price and the announced acquisition price.