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11.4.2 Index Mutual Funds Earn more Return and Eliminate more Risk

Investing in index
funds assures a higher return with less risk than the average active
fund. According to the tenets of Modern Portfolio Theory, indexing
is inherently less risky than active investing. Because an index fund
holds all of the investments that comprise a discrete asset class,
it maximally reduces risk within that asset class. Although it’s
not possible to entirely rid diversifiable risk from investment portfolios,
index portfolios come very close. An indexer therefore incurs virtually
no diversifiable risk.
While it’s true that most risk is eliminated with a portfolio of
100 stocks, this is not always the case. The amount of risk not eliminated
is what active money managers “leave on the table” as seemingly
small amounts of diversifiable risk. Yet this risk can have a substantially
negative impact on investment performance over the long run. Even the
expected return of an active portfolio containing as many as 200 stocks
can diverge one percentage point on either side of the market’s
expected return. Although this differential is certainly not substantial
in any one year, it can represent enormous differences in accumulated
wealth when compounded over extended periods of time.
In short, the diversification advantage offered by indexing can’t
be matched by any actively managed portfolio, whether it holds mutual
funds or individual stocks and or bonds or some combination thereof.
11.4.3 The Most Efficient Funds on the Market

DFA
has created index mutual funds to capture all important risk factors, and their
funds are hands down the best, most efficient index mutual funds available.
The mutual funds based on the equities from the United States use certain Exclusion Rules as a part of the fund design. These rules address several areas of concern.
1. Asset Class Concerns: exclusion of foreign stocks, ADRs, REITs, closed-end investment companies and regulated utilities in the value strategies.
2. Pricing Concerns: exclusion of recent IPOs, firms in financial difficulty, bankruptcy, merger/tender offers, or corporate actions.
3. Trading Concerns: exclusion of firms with listing requirement problems or limited operating histories.
4. Other Concerns: exclusion of limited partnerships, firms that are still under consideration, or firms with inadequate data.
The following information describes DFAs various investment strategies.
Small-Cap Strategy
DFA has been a pioneer in small stock research since the firm’s
start in 1981. Their research has found that small companies worldwide
form an asset class with higher expected returns than large companies.
Small stocks allow investors to achieve large diversification benefits.
DFA’s objective is to deliver the small company effect. To accomplish
this, DFA provides index mutual funds that invest in a broadly diversified
cross section of small companies in the United States and major international
markets.
Small companies are defined by market capitalization (price times
shares outstanding). DFA defines small companies as those companies
whose market capitalization comprise the smallest 12.5% of the
total market universe. The total market universe is defined as
the aggregate capitalization of the NYSE, AMEX and NASDAQ National
Market System firms.
U.S. Small-Cap Strategy
The small-cap strategy invests in securities of US companies
with market capitalizations within the smallest 10% of the market
universe or smaller than the 1,000th largest US company, whichever
results in a higher market capitalization break. Their goal is
to be fully invested in equities at all times. They limit themselves
to publicly traded companies that meet the size criteria of the
applicable portfolio. Additional screening criteria is also employed.
These criteria include eliminating REIT’s, investment
companies, limited partnerships, companies in bankruptcy, ADRs, companies
with qualified financial statements, OTC stocks with fewer than four
market makers or those not included on the National Market System. They
are aggressive in keeping cash levels low, generally under 2%.
New cash flow is controlled so portfolios may remain fully invested.
On a quarterly basis, the market capitalization ranking of eligible stocks
are examined to determine which issues are eligible for purchase and
which issues are sale candidates. A hold or buffer range for sales minimizes
transaction costs and keeps portfolio turnover low. Issues that migrate
above the hold range are sold, and proceeds are reinvested in the portfolio.
Individual small companies worldwide are thinly traded. As a result they
follow unique trading procedures, which have been developed and refined
to effectively and economically trade small companies.
U.S. Micro-Cap Strategy
The micro-cap strategy invests in securities of U.S. companies
whose size (market capitalization) falls within the smallest
4% of the total market universe.
Value Strategies
Studies conducted by Professors Eugene Fama at the University
of Chicago and Kenneth French at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology established that the three economic factors of
size, book-to-market (BtM), and the performance of the market
as a whole explain most of the variation of equity portfolio
average returns. DFA’s value strategies incorporate
the Fama/French research in multifactor portfolios designed to capture
the return premiums associated with high BtM and market capitalization.
U.S. Small-Cap Value Strategy
The small-cap value strategy invests in companies whose market
capitalization is in the size range of the smallest 8% of the
total market universe. After identifying the 8% of aggregate
market capitalization that would determine size, a value screen
is then applied to this universe. For the small-cap value strategy,
value stocks must have BtM ratios in the upper 25th percentile
of the value-weighted universe ranked by BtM. This BtM sort excludes
firms with negative or zero book values. Book value is reconstructed
for each eligible issue based on the interpretation of how accounting
charges affect “real” book value.
Unlike index funds that follow commercial benchmarks like the Russell
2000 Value, Dimensional defines asset classes based on a security's market
capitalization and book-to-market (BtM) ratio and actively applies our
own eligibility rules. To gain the purest representation possible, they
exclude securities that do not exhibit the general characteristics of
the defined asset class. They also eliminate securities that lack sufficient
liquidity for cost-effective trading.
The graphic below illustrates the portfolio construction engineering process for the small-cap value asset class.

Engineering portfolios around broadly defined risk factors regularly generates opportunities for Dimensional traders to add value. Rather than replicate an index in mechanical fashion, their sophisticated rules of construction permit deviations from market cap weightings and allow for the integration of stocks among asset classes. This flexibility also allows DFA to reduce transaction costs caused by counterproductive trading. For asset classes defined by size, a slightly higher hold or "buffer" range allows DFA to hold securities that commercial indexes are forced to sell, which reduces turnover and can increase returns.
U.S. Large-Cap Value Strategy
The U.S. large-cap value strategy invests in companies that have a market
capitalization in the largest 90% of the total market universe. After
identifying the 90% of the aggregate market capitalization that would
determine size, a value screen is then applied to this universe. For
the U.S. large-cap value strategy, value stocks must have BtM ratios
in the upper 10th percentile of the value-weighted universe ranked by
BtM. This BtM sort excludes those firms with negative or zero book values.
Real Estate Securities Strategy
DFA’s objective is to capture real estate market returns. This
strategy is based on rigorously back-tested research and uses a disciplined
approach designed to achieve its objective. DFA’s real estate securities
strategy has the advantage of providing market-based pricing and daily
liquidity.
The portfolio is market-cap weighted and diversified. Investments are
made in all eligible publicly traded REITs. The portfolio consists of
shares of equity and hybrid real estate investment trusts (to the extent
that at least 75% of the REITs’ assets are equity investments).
The fund does not currently purchase shares of health care or prison
REITs. The stocks in the portfolio represent more than $123 billion in
market capitalization and pro rate ownership of several thousand properties.
On at least a semi-annual basis, DFA reviews all eligible companies to
assure that their principal line of business is real estate related.
IFA has replaced U.S. REITS in its IFA Index Portfolios with Global REITs.
Global REITs are a combination of U.S. REITs and International REITs,
and they have had roughly the same annualized return as US REITs.
After adjusting for risk, however, their returns have been superior to
U.S. REITs. The data that we have on them goes back to 1989.
July 1989 to June 2008
|
Annualized
Return |
Annualized
Standard
Deviation |
Reward
-to-Risk Ratio |
Citigroup Global REIT Index |
10.11% |
12.02% |
0.841 |
Dow Jones US REIT Index |
10.28% |
14.44% |
0.712 |
Source: DFA Returns Program |
If we limit the time period to when we have live data for U.S. REITs,
the numbers look very favorable for Global REITs.
February 1993 to June 2008
|
Annualized
Return |
Annualized
Standard
Deviation |
Reward
-to-Risk Ratio |
Citigroup Global REIT Index |
11.75% |
12.47% |
0.942 |
DFA US REIT Portfolio |
10.91% |
14.11% |
0.773 |
Source: DFA Returns Program |
Even though it is shorter, this period may be considered more reliable
because the global index includes more countries that became investable
after the first few years.
In addition to REITS in developed countries, the Global REIT fund will
be allowed to purchase REITs in emerging markets, which may add additional
risk and return.
2) Therefore,
adding international REITs to IFA’s portfolios is expected to
increase their reward-to-risk ratio over the long-term.
3) The higher book-to-market ratio and lower average
size of adding international REITs over US REITs is attractive. In fact,
the average international REIT is currently selling below tangible book value. In
addition, the number of REIT holdings is 281, an increase in diversification.
4) The international allocation of your whole index
portfolio will be more in line with global allocation of equities.
If you wish to discuss this further, please contact your IFA advisor.
U.S. Large Company Strategy
DFA provides access to U.S. large companies in a portfolio structured
to approximate the investment performance of the S&P 500 Index. Currently,
the S&P 500 Index is comprised of investments in large capitalization
U.S. stocks, representing approximately 80% of the total market capitalization
of U.S. publicly traded stocks. DFA’s portfolio invests in all
the stocks that comprise the S&P 500 Index in approximately the same
proportions as they are represented in the index. The portfolio may also
invest in index futures and index options. Annual portfolio turnover
is expected to be approximately 10%.
Developed International Markets 
The developed markets portfolios invest in countries included
in the MSCI EAFE (Morgan Stanley Capital International Inc.
and Europe, Australia and Far East) Index. However, some
of DFA’s international equity portfolios invest in
asset classes not represented or are only partially represented
by the standard EAFE index. These include DFA’s international
small company and international value strategies.
DFA has managed small capitalization equities in the international
markets since 1986 when they created regional portfolios
in Japan and the United Kingdom. Since then, the firm has
added small company portfolios in Continental Europe and
the Pacific Rim and now offers a single mutual fund that
provides exposure to small capitalization stocks in all four
regions. In the stand-alone international small cap portfolio,
DFA utilizes a regional weighting scheme to ensure diversification
among the four regions. Within multi-country regions, countries
are weighted proportionately by the size of their respective
small-cap markets.
DFA defines small capitalization by region, setting a maximum
market capitalization based on the bottom portion of a major
regional market index. This methodology, which mimics the
U.S. small company portfolios, allows flexibility to adjust
the size break with market fluctuations and avoids size drift.
As a result, DFA’s international small cap portfolios
typically have a lower average market cap than competitors
or benchmarks.
DFA trades small company stocks through its London and Sydney
offices. Where possible, the firm leverages its expertise
in trading U.S. small-cap stocks, adopting a similar patient
and careful style of trading. In the United Kingdom’s
stock market in particular, DFA uses a block trading strategy
to add value.
DFA also offers both large company and small company portfolios
designed to capture the value effect. Value in their international
portfolios is defined by individual country. In the International
Large Value Portfolio, countries are weighted by market capitalization.
The International Small Value Portfolio uses a regional weighting
strategy similar to the International Small Company Portfolio.
Emerging Markets
The emerging markets portfolios include Argentina, Brazil,
Chile, Greece, Hungary, Indonesia, Israel, Malaysia, Mexico,
Philippines, Poland, South Korea, Thailand, and Turkey.
Like DFA’s other strategies, the emerging markets
portfolios are constructed to represent categories of asset
risk. Therefore, DFA offers large capitalization, small
capitalization, and value portfolios as they do in domestic
and developed international markets.
Before
adding a country in the emerging markets portfolio, DFA undertakes
a rigorous country selection process. First, the country must meet certain criteria,
including a market capitalization of at least $10 billion, sufficient
liquidity and a delivery versus payment system. DFA also applies
subjective requirements, including reasonable treatment of foreign
investors in areas of restrictions on repatriation of capital, unreasonable taxes, and ownership restrictions. In addition, they assess the legal system to insure contract enforcement and property rights protection.
As in DFA’s other international strategies,
DFA gains exposure to companies in emerging markets mainly by
investing in the local market in ordinary common equity. Where
advantageous, it may also invest in American Depository Receipts
(ADRs) traded in the United States to gain exposure to an emerging
markets country. For example, DFA purchases ADR’s in Chile
because they provide broad coverage of the stock market and allows
U.S. investors to avoid repatriation restrictions. In emerging
markets, individual countries are characterized by a high degree
of volatility and a low degree of cross-correlation among countries.
DFA weights the countries in its emerging markets portfolios
equally, maximizing diversification and minimizing overall portfolio
volatility. DFA believes that a diversified portfolio of emerging
markets’ equities complements a well-structured asset allocation |