ETF companies are gunning for DFA

iShares, Schwab, FlexShares launch funds based on investment factors
OCT 28, 2013
Exchange-traded-fund companies are following in the footsteps of financial adviser favorite Dimensional Fund Advisors Ltd. and building new products around academic research to offer investors a new way to beat the market. BlackRock Inc.'s iShares, Charles Schwab Investment Management and Northern Trust Corp.'s FlexShares are among the firms that have recently launched ETFs based on investment factors such as value, profitability, size and momentum. The idea that factors such as a company's stock price relative to the market, its ability to generate a profit or how big the company is are good predictors of future performance isn't new. However, factor investing has taken off in recent years along with passive investing, though not nearly at the same torrid pace, as the shift away from actively managed equity funds continues. “Passive and factor investing are joined at the hip,” said Samuel Lee, an analyst at Morningstar Inc. “Passive is based on a lot of academic and finance theory that says it's impossible to beat the market. Factor investing is an offshoot of that,” Mr. Lee said. “Factor investors probably started off as Bogle-style buy-and-hold investors, then looked deeper into the research,” he said, referring to The Vanguard Group Inc. founder John Bogle. The research shows that over time, overweighting companies with favorable prices, profitability, size or momentum can lead to better overall risk-adjusted returns. The key to that, though, is time. Over the long run, these factors should come out on top, but they don't offer any magic to ward off events such as the financial crash or periodic bouts of underperformance, researchers contend. Despite that, advisers in particular seem to be buying into factor investing in a big way this year. To see the how the demand for factor investing has popped this year, there is no need to look much further than DFA, which was the first company to focus on factors, sold primarily through advisers. DFA has had $11 billion in inflows through the first half this year, more than any other of the 10 largest mutual fund companies except for Pacific Investment Management Co. LLC and Vanguard, according to Morningstar. At Schwab, advisers are also beginning to embrace fundamentally weighted ETFs, which offer a different flavor of value investing. Almost three of five advisers on Schwab's platform reported using fundamentally weighted ETFs, according the company's Independent Advisor Outlook Study. One in five plan to increase their use of fundamentally weighted ETFs in the near future, according to the study. “The reality is, factor strategies are an active body of work that's happening in the world of academia and the industry,” said Mark Carver, investment strategist at iShares. “We're always trying to find new ways to enhance how we invest for clients. Factors do that,” Mr. Carver said. “As new ideas are vetted, more people are starting to put them into practice,” It isn't just advisers who are open to new ideas. DFA is tinkering with its investment strategy thanks to new research that made it possible to reliably screen for profitability. This year, it is in the process of including a quality screen to go along with its value and size factors. Much like with passive investing, fees play a big role in determining how well a factor strategy will perform over the long run, Mr. Lee said. “If you're going to do factor investing, you can't pay active-manager fees,” he said. “It defeats the purpose of it,” Mr. Lee said. “They have to be low cost to work.” The average U.S equity fund at DFA has an expense ratio of 33 basis points, according to Morningstar. That is about one-third the price of the average equity fund at American Funds, which runs only actively managed funds. The FlexShares Morningstar U.S. Market Factors Tilt ETF (TILT), which leans its portfolio toward small and value companies, charges 27 basis points, while three Schwab Fundamental U.S. ETFs set to be launched Thursday will charge 32 basis points. The iShares suite of four factor ETFs, which cover size, value, momentum and quality, are the cheapest, with expenses of just 15 basis points. So far, the ETFs are off to a good start in terms of competing, performancewise. The FlexShares ETF, for example, had a return of 28.15% over the one-year period through Aug. 9. The DFA U.S. Core Fund (DFEOX) had a return of 28.9% over the same time period, according to Morningstar Inc. Both have outperformed the S&P 500's 23% return. Still, don't expect anyone at DFA to lose sleep over the new competition. “These are compelling alternatives,” Mr. Lee said. “But I don't think any DFA advisers are going to be jumping ship.”

Latest News

Slow is smooth, smooth is fast
Slow is smooth, smooth is fast

Chasing productivity is one thing, but when you're cutting corners, missing details, and making mistakes, it's time to take a step back.

Edward Jones layoffs about to hit employees, home office staff
Edward Jones layoffs about to hit employees, home office staff

It is not clear how many employees will be affected, but none of the private partnership’s 20,000 financial advisors will see their jobs at risk.

CFP Board hails record July exam turnout with 3,214 test-takers
CFP Board hails record July exam turnout with 3,214 test-takers

The historic summer sitting saw a roughly two-thirds pass rate, with most CFP hopefuls falling in the under-40 age group.

Founder of water vending machine company, portfolio manager, charged in $275M Ponzi scheme
Founder of water vending machine company, portfolio manager, charged in $275M Ponzi scheme

"The greed and deception of this Ponzi scheme has resulted in the same way they have throughout history," said Daniel Brubaker, U.S. Postal Inspection Service inspector in charge.

Advisor moves: Raymond James, Wells Fargo reel in billion dollar-plus advisor teams
Advisor moves: Raymond James, Wells Fargo reel in billion dollar-plus advisor teams

Elsewhere, an advisor formerly with a Commonwealth affiliate firm is launching her own independent practice with an Osaic OSJ.

SPONSORED Delivering family office services critical to advisor success

Stan Gregor, Chairman & CEO of Summit Financial Holdings, explores how RIAs can meet growing demand for family office-style services among mass affluent clients through tax-first planning, technology, and collaboration—positioning firms for long-term success

SPONSORED Passing on more than wealth: why purpose should be part of every estate plan

Chris Vizzi, Co-Founder & Partner of South Coast Investment Advisors, LLC, shares how 2025 estate tax changes—$13.99M per person—offer more than tax savings. Learn how to pass on purpose, values, and vision to unite generations and give wealth lasting meaning