Practical analysis for investment professionals
15 August 2022

Outperformance Ain’t Alpha

Introduction

Around 90% of US drivers rate themselves as safer and more skillful than average. Obviously, such perceptions do not reflect reality. After all, 9 out of 10 people can’t all be above average. Nevertheless, the results are compelling: They illustrate an innate human tendency to overrate our own talents and skills and underrate those of others.

Equity mutual fund managers likely have a similarly distorted view of their ability to generate alpha by outperforming the stock market. Otherwise, how would they justify their jobs?

But perhaps we’re missing the point. Maybe most drivers do drive safely and most fund managers outperform, with only a very few accounting for a disproportionate share of traffic tickets and accidents and major capital losses, respectively. Unfortunately not. The majority of fund managers do underperform their benchmarks: Only 17% of US large-cap mutual fund managers beat the S&P 500 over the last 10 years, according to the latest S&P SPIVA Scorecard. Moreover, there is no consistency among those few who did outperform. This all implies that successful manager selection is almost impossible.

But research shows that factors rather than skill explain out- and underperformance. Therefore, outperformance and alpha are not exactly the same thing. So, how do we explain the difference?

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Outperformance

While fund managers emphasize their ability to create alpha for clients, fund factsheets compare their performance to a benchmark. For example, the Invesco S&P 500 Pure Value exchange-traded fund (ETF, RPV) generated a return of 0.7% over the last 12 months, while its benchmark, the S&P 500, yielded –10.2%. The S&P 500 Value index might be a better point of comparison for RPV, but relative to the broad index, the ETF has delivered significant value — pun intended — to its investors.


RPV Smart Beta ETF Outperformance = Alpha?

Chart showing RPV Smart Beta ETF Outperformance = Alpha?
Source: FactorResearch

Factor Exposure Analysis

Since the RPV ETF selects roughly the 100 cheapest S&P 500 stocks, it is a value-focused strategy. A regression analysis with a one-year lookback validates this. RPV has high betas relative to the S&P 500 — it is a long-only strategy — as well as to the value and quality factors. 

The value factor exposure and the quality factor negative beta are both intuitive because cheap companies tend to rank poorly on quality metrics. Stocks trading at low valuations tend not to be highly profitable and often have excessive leverage or other issues.


Factor Exposure Analysis — RPV Smart Beta ETF: Betas, Last 12 Months

Chart showing Factor Exposure Analysis -- RPV Smart Beta ETF: Betas, Last 12 Months
Source: FactorResearch

Contribution Analysis

With the factor betas, we can create a contribution analysis. RPV had a high beta compared with the S&P 500 — 0.90 — which was down 10.2% over the last 12 months. Therefore, the broad market contributed –9.1% to RPV’s returns. Save for the value factor, which contributed 12.5%, other equity factors had a marginal impact.


Factor Contribution Analysis: RPV Smart Beta ETF, Last 12 Months

Chart showing Factor Contribution Analysis: RPV Smart Beta ETF, Last 12 Months
Source: FactorResearch

Alpha Calculation

Since we know how much the stock market and equity factors contributed to RPV’s performance, we can also calculate the residual. Theoretically, this represents the manager’s skill, or whatever market beta and factors are not responsible for. Stated differently, it is the alpha.

For RPV, the alpha was negative. But how can the alpha be negative when the ETF outperformed its benchmark? The implication is that the value-focused strategy was implemented poorly. Management fees, market impact, and transaction costs must also be taken into account. While there will always be slippage, that only explains a fraction of the –5.7% result.

Based on this analysis, investors would have been better off avoiding RPV and buying the S&P 500 and the factor exposures through a zero-cost ETF and risk premia indices, respectively.


Alpha Calculation: RPV Smart Beta ETF, Last 12 Months

Chart showing Alpha Calculation: RPV Smart Beta ETF. Last 12 Months
Source: FactorResearch

The alpha calculation may be a little confusing since RPV is a smart beta ETF that provides exposure to the value factor and we’re using a factor exposure analysis to measure the contributions. But we can replicate this approach with Fidelity Contrafund (FCNTX), one of the most well-known equity mutual funds. FCNTX has a long track record going back more than 40 years and manages close to $100 billion. The fund holds a concentrated equity portfolio that is dominated by Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, and other growth stocks.

But over the last 12 months, this strategy hasn’t worked well either: FCNTX has declined by more than 20% due to beta and factor exposure. According to the contribution analysis, the S&P 500 and equity factors can’t fully explain the negative performance, that is, alpha was negative. As such, the fund manager must take responsibility for at least some of the losses.


Alpha Calculation: Fidelity Contrafund (FCNTX), Last 12 Months

Chart showing Alpha Calculation: Fidelity Contrafund (FCNTX), Last 12 Months
Source: FactorResearch

Outperformance vs. Alpha

By running contribution analyses for 13 US stock market equity mutual funds and ETFs, we can demonstrate the significant difference between outperformance and alpha. In only one case — the Davis Select US Equity ETF (DUSA) — were outperformance and alpha almost identical at –0.5%. The ETF does have exposure to factors, but the contributions netted themselves out. That means the loss can only be attributed to fees or lack of skill.

As for the ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK), much of the recent criticism may be overstated. According to our calculations, Cathie Wood, ARKK’s fund manager, has created alpha. The ETF is down 61.8% over the last 12 months, but the market accounted for –17.7% of that and factors for another –53.0%. So, there was 8.9% of alpha. ARKK is highly concentrated with a few growth names — Tesla, for example. This results in betas to the S&P 500 of 1.7 and to the value factor of –1.35. Since factor exposure analysis reveals all this, investors have only themselves to blame if such bets go south.


Active Fund Managers: Outperformance vs. Alpha

Chart showing Active Fund Managers: Outperformance vs. Alpha
Source: FactorResearch

Different Input, Different Output

Though contribution analysis is the most meaningful alpha calculation methodology, the data that is used matters. So far, we have employed FactorResearch factors. These apply industry-standard definitions for stock selection and market capitalization constraints for defining the stock universe. They also include transaction costs and are constructed beta-neutral.

With Dow Jones and Fama and French data, the alphas vary somewhat. The three-factor model from Fama and French yields the largest difference because only the market, size, and value factors come into play.

Factor definitions matter and should be as practical as possible. For example, the universe of stocks in Fama and French factors include illiquid small caps that many investors don’t have access to, lack transaction costs, and are constructed dollar-neutral. To benchmark a product to such factors sets unrealistic expectations.


Alphas of Equity Fund Managers by Data Source

Chart showing
Source: FactorResearch

Further Thoughts

Capital allocators have more and more data and better technology to inform their allocation decisions. But the same is true for fund managers.

This evolution has made markets more efficient and outperformance more difficult to achieve. Even in emerging markets or private markets like private equity, manager returns over the last decade indicate little in the way of value creation and nothing in the way of consistency.

Given this, it raises the question of whether it’s worth measuring alpha at all.

For more insights from Nicolas Rabener and the FactorResearch team, sign up for their email newsletter.

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All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author’s employer.

Image credit: ©Getty Images / GibsonPictures


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About the Author(s)
Nicolas Rabener

Nicolas Rabener is the managing director of Finominal, which provides quantitative solutions for factor investing. Previously he founded Jackdaw Capital, a quantitative investment manager focused on equity market neutral strategies. Previously, Rabener worked at GIC (Government of Singapore Investment Corporation) focused on real estate across asset classes. He started his career working for Citigroup in investment banking in London and New York. Rabener holds an MS in management from HHL Leipzig Graduate School of Management, is a CAIA charter holder, and enjoys endurance sports (100km Ultramarathon, Mont Blanc, Mount Kilimanjaro).

1 thought on “Outperformance Ain’t Alpha”

  1. Walter Street says:

    I think your conclusion is the correct one. Alpha has always been a flawed concept. It is very easy to move the goal posts ex-post on which factors or models are included to “explain away” outperformance(of course active managers do the same thing by choosing inappropriate benchmarks too).

    I have always favored absolute performance measures where outperformance or underperformance can be measured with a simple yes or no. While they all individually have flaws, looking at a mosaic of absolute rolling returns vs an appropriate bench, relative sharpe, relative sortino, and relative upside/downside will get you 90% of the way there. Factors/alpha can help you determine an appropriate benchmark, an attribution, and look for style consistency, but they are 100% the wrong approach to measuring manager skill in my opinion.

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