Sector Investing Strategies - Equal WeightSector Investing Strategies - Equal Weight Many successful investors follow sector investing. Some of the largest funds and ETFs including the SPDR S&P 500 Index ETF (SPY) base their portfolio allocation on the capitalization weighted S&P 500 index. This sector investing strategy allows you to match the market as defined by the S&P 500. Another sector investing method is to weight each sector equally. Select Sector SPDRs Breaking the S&P 500 into sectors allows you to tailor asset allocations to fit your investment goals. Owning one sector gives you more exposure to industries that may be outperforming the market. They also allow you to hedge other holdings in your portfolio. An individual sector may carry a higher risk level than the S&P 500 as a whole due to concentration on one industry. Owing a sector that is beating the market offers you an opportunity to generate returns greater than S&P 500 Index. When you select and weight the sectors that meet your specific investment goals, you can create a portfolio that meets your perspective of the market and your individual risk assessment. Over the last ten years the performance of the Select SPDRs varied significantly. In fact, the average difference between the best performing and worst performing sectors has been more than 40% per year. For example, during the height of the dotcom boom, Technology returned 66.69% while Consumer Staples lost 14.49%. In 2000, Consumer Staples delivered 26.04% return and Technology lost 42.04%. If you were on the right side of these sectors during these two years, you did quite well. On the other hand, if you were on the wrong side your portfolio took a significant hit. Equal Weight Sector Strategy According to Standard & Poor's the equal weighting strategy has lower volatility than the S&P 500. Over the last tens years, volatility using its standard deviation was 15.4% for the Equal Sector Strategy vs. 15.8% for the S&P 500. The more volatile sectors such as the financial and technology are more heavily weighted within the S&P 500. On the other hand, the S&P 500 under-weights the lower volatility sectors such as consumer staples and utilities. By investing equal amounts in each sector, you are skewing your portfolio toward the lower volatility sectors. This results in less volatility than the S&P 500. Moreover, over the last ten years the Equal Weight Strategy beat the S&P 500. Had you invested in the S&P 500 ten years ago, your return would have been -0.15%, where as the Equally Weight Sector Strategy delivered 2.83% over the same ten-year period. As of the end of September 2009, the Materials sector S&P SPDR (XLB) has climbed 38.65 percent, while the S&P 500 returned 19.26%. Yet Materials is the smallest sector, comprising only 3.57% by capitalization. This means if you owned the S&P 500 ETF (SPY) you would have not benefited from the strength in the Materials sector, as it was substantially underweighted. On the other hand had you owned an equal weight of the S&P 500, your portfolio performance would have been higher as the Materials sector would have counted for just as much as Energy sector, one of the largest sectors as measured by capitalization. The Energy sector underperformed the S&P 500. One of the negative's of the equal weight strategy, is each time you reallocate your portfolio you must make nine trades to bring each sector back to their 11.1% equal weighting, incurring trading costs. These trades also incur tax consequences, negating some of the advantages of owning an ETF. For those interested, the Rydex Equal Weighted S&P 500 ETF (RSP) follows S&P's Equal Weight strategy.
A sector investing strategy that equally weights each sector has provided investors with a way to beat the market by taking advantage of the lower volatility that is inherent in the method. It also encourages investors to capture profits by rotating profits from the best performing sectors to the worse performing ones. This can work out to an investor's advantage, as each year different sectors tend to be the best performers. Be sure to understand the risks. Hans E. Wagner Hans runs a very successful investing site at http://www.tradingonlinemarkets.com that helps people learn to invest using proven stock market portfolio strategies. The site also includes several sample portfolios that substantially beat all the market averages. Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Hans_Wagner Published at Dec, 05 '09 , Read 397 times. If you liked this article subscribe to the Free HYWD Newsletter
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