Rob Arnott wants to change the way you think about buying bonds, especially through bond indexing. The Chairman of Research Affiliates, LLC, launched the firm's RAFI–Research Affiliates Fundamental Indexes–for equities years ago and there are numerous equity ETFs and mutual funds based on them.
Those indexes use company fundamentals: book value, sales, profits and dividends, instead of a company's market cap, to determine the weighting of companies in the index. This gives the index a slight "value tilt," Arnott says; while cap weighted indexes have a slight growth tilt. And obviously, it is more like active management in the sense that the metrics it uses are familiar to devotees of fundamental research for actively-managed equity funds.
Cap-weighted indexes reward companies that have higher stock prices by overweighting them in the index, but that is bases strictly on price, not fundamental measures, it penalizes investors over the long term, in effect, as they buy more of the companies with the higher market capitalization. "The more expensive the stock is, the more you own. If the stock doubles you own twice as much," Arnott explains. Hearing this, an investor might ask herself: is there a better beta than cap-weighted beta?
Fundamentally-weighted indexes are now being applied to bond funds. The first bond fund to use a fundamental index as its base is an ETF: PowerShares High Yield Corporate Bond Portfolio (PHB). That fund was cap-weighted until earlier this month. The ETF will now track Research Affiliates' RAFI High Yield Bond Index (see a related article).
Arnott sat down to talk with WealthManagerWeb.com Editor in Chief Kate McBride in New York on Tuesday, August 10.
McBride: You just launched a fundamental index bond fund, maybe we could start with that?
Arnott: The notion of fundamental indexing makes so much intuitive sense in stocks and even more so in bonds. In stocks, with cap weighting, the more expensive the stock is, the more you own. If the stock doubles you own twice as much. That intuitively doesn't make sense. A core principle of successful investing is that you want to own more of what you think will perform better. So, is cap weighting tacitly saying that the outlook has improved after a stock doubled than before?
McBride: It looks that way, yes.
Arnott: Tacitly yes. To turn attention to the bond side: If I'm a borrower and you're a bondholder, you're lending to me. If I decide I want to double my borrowing, as a bondholder with a cap-weighted bond index, you're going to lend more to me just because I want more money.
McBride: Not based on the fundamentals of whether you deserve more money…
Arnott: Or [if I] can handle the debt service. So when you apply a fundamental index on the bond side you weight companies on their financial resources, on the size of their business–not with the size of their debt burden.
We hear a lot of controversy in sovereign debt about Greek debt. Less so about German and French debt–but worries that, they've got a lot of debt and does it make
sense for them to backstop the Greeks? You never hear about Australian debt–because there isn't much. Which would you rather lend to: Australia or Greece?
McBride: I think the answer is clear.
Arnott: Yup. Now, in an efficient market you're going to get paid more to lend to Greece, exactly in proportion to the incremental risk. So if bond markets are perfectly efficient, okay, lend more to Greece–if they borrow more, lend more still. As long as there's that nice linkage between the return you're going to earn and the risk that you're taking.
Australian and Greek debt a year ago had very similar yields but Australian debt, relative to GDP a year ago, was one-sixth as large as Greece–so, wouldn't it make a lot more sense to GDP-weight your debt? It certainly would, but GDP isn't the only measure of how solvent a country is.
There are four broad factors of production. There's capital–GDP is a decent proxy for that. There's labor–population works fine. There's resources–the size of a country can be a crude, rough proxy for resources. There's energy–the energy that a country uses and puts into its production capacity is a perfectly good measure of that. You could average those four measures and get a very crude measure of how much debt a country could comfortably support. So for a sovereign debt portfolio you could do fundamental index as well.
McBride: Ah. Now, the fund you just came out with is not sovereign, it's corporate, right?
Arnott: Correct–and on the corporate side you want to wonder how big is the company's business? So you've got sales, you've got profits, you've got–for fundamental index in stocks–dividends. Well, heck, that also matters in bonds, because if a company pays its dividends, you're more likely to get paid on the bond side than if it's given up on dividends. Instead of book value why don't we look at gross assets–because a stockholder has a call on the book value of a company; the bondholder has a call on the total assets. If you use those four measures for corporates, you have a fundamentally-weighted bond index.
What's neat about applying this in the bond arena is whether you're talking corporates or sovereigns you're not going to be drawn into lending more to a company or a country simply because it's borrowing more–and with cap-weighting, you are.
If you use a fundamental approach based on how big is the country's economy, how big is the company's business, then the bigger the economy, the more you're willing to lend; the bigger the company the more you're willing to lend. But it's proportional to the size of the company or country, not proportional to their appetite for borrowing.
You go back historically and of course you get a higher quality portfolio. Cap-weighting will load up on the biggest debtors. Makes no sense but it will. You also have [with fundamental indexing] a less risky, less volatile portfolio…because you don't have credit-spread volatility to the same extent. With lower risk and higher quality you ought to get a lower return. You don't–which tells me that the bond markets are not efficient.