HomeNewsBusinessMarketsFactor Investing 101: A way to spot inexpensive companies with good fundamentals

Factor Investing 101: A way to spot inexpensive companies with good fundamentals

Like active funds, factor performance should be evaluated in the long run against a market-capitalisation-weighted benchmark.

February 04, 2018 / 09:04 IST
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Mumbai: Investers reacts while watching the stock prices at a screen on the facade of the Bombay Stock Exchange in Mumbai on Monday. The sensex soared on Monday follwing the BJP's victory in the Gujarat and HP Assembly polls. PTI Photo by Shashank Parade  (PTI12_18_2017_000140B)
Mumbai: Investers reacts while watching the stock prices at a screen on the facade of the Bombay Stock Exchange in Mumbai on Monday. The sensex soared on Monday follwing the BJP's victory in the Gujarat and HP Assembly polls. PTI Photo by Shashank Parade (PTI12_18_2017_000140B)

Akash Jain S&P BSE Indices

Investors seeking to identify skilled active managers look to dissect fund performance into returns generated from factor exposures and alpha that is attributable to fund manager skill, which in turn should affect fund flows.

An analogy used to explain this concept associates factors to nutrients and stock returns to food items. Different food items (such as pulses, milk, vegetables, bread, burgers, pizza, etc.) contain nutrients (such as carbs, vitamins, proteins, fats, minerals, etc.) in varying proportions.

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Similarly, a stock’s risk/return characteristics can be thought of as being explained by different risk factors. A factor index looks to bucket stocks with similar risk/return characteristics.

Extending this analogy, different individuals (e.g., an athlete versus someone with a desk job) have different nutrient requirements, therefore they would consume different combinations of food items.