An All-ETF Portfolio With Exposure To Narrow Themes
A request came in for an update of an all-ETF portfolio exercise I first did in June, 2006. You can read the original post here.
The
table to the left is a cleaner version (easier to read) of the
construction of the portfolio when I wrote about in June 2007 for TSCM - you can read that here.
The
portfolio from the top down is very similar to what I was doing in
client accounts in June 2006. There have been a few changes in client
accounts since, but I have not updated the portfolio from the time I
first input it into Morningstar in June a year ago.
From the
bottom up there are only a couple of ETFs there that I use for clients.
I would note that WisdomTree had not made much hay by June of 2006,
so a redo would look different than this mix. Obviously there are
plenty of other new funds that would be considered, like maybe MOO.
Morningstar
has a performance tab that is a little quirky and while I cannot vouch
that it is exactly accurate, the chart below says that for the trailing
12 months it is up 19.11%. In the same time the S&P 500 is up
14.96%. Neither figure includes dividends which I will get to in a
moment.
I tried to get a number from inception and that one did
not seem quite right as a function of sliding the arrow along the
bottom, but it shows this beating the SPX approximately 24.50% to 24.00%. If
true, eh, a push.
On
reason I am not a fan of this sort of portfolio is that the dividend yield from a
portfolio of funds is usually less than a portfolio of individual stocks.
The
few times I have looked at this on Morningstar the dividend yield has
been a moving target. As of yesterday, it showed a 1.51% yield which is
about 20 beeps less than the S&P 500. By using more stocks, I get a
close to a 3% yield in real portfolios - though I should add that for
whatever reason Morningstar does not always have accurate dividend info
with ETFs.
This is merely an academic exercise to explore moderate weightings in very narrow ETFs that are poo-poohed by other people.
Morningstar
does not have much in the way of information for risk adjusted return.
R-Squared, Alpha, Beta and Standard Deviation are only available for 3
years and I did not see a Sharpe Ratio. Since many of the funds have
not been around for three years there are no data points.
Some of the funds are up a lot and so now have a
disproportionate weighting. The plan from here is to leave this
original portfolio as is and create a second one. I can do one of two
things with the second one.
One would be to start over with the
exact same weighting into the exact same funds. The other idea would be
to create a new portfolio (some of the funds would be the same) that
took in new funds that have since listed and would account for the few
top down portfolio changes I have made for clients since the original
post 16 months ago.
So this will be a vote based on comments
left. You are either voting for rebalancing the old or creating a new.
Either would take a lot of cypherin' and figurin' (Jethro Bodine reference) so only one choice for now based on reader votes. And if no one gives a crap that's fine too.
Either way this is best thought of an academic exercise. Vote for what you think is most useful for the exercise.
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This article has 13 comments:
Nusbaum
Nusbaum
there is nothing to participate in unless you devise something and post it, which you are welcome to do.