Many investors take a fundamental approach to stock selection. They
seek to find securities that have the best metrics in terms of PE
ratios, dividends, or favorable trends on a variety of other
statistics.
While this is a time tested strategy, many probably haven’t
considered taking into account the forces of supply and demand and
how this relates to stocks as well.
Investment research firm TrimTabs does just that by looking at what
is called ‘float shrink’ in order to determine which securities are
reducing the supply of their shares. TrimTabs believes that this
shrinking float is vital to stock selection as the firm views stock
prices as a function of supply and demand rather than value.
Intuitively, this makes sense; the same level of investor interest
or capital going after a reduced number of shares should, in
theory, lead to a higher average price. While it is an idea that is
straight out of an economics class—and one that we are all very
familiar with-- many investors fail to consider this aspect when
constructing their portfolios (read 5 Best Performing Active
ETFs).
Not to worry though, as TrimTabs has an exchange-traded fund around
this strategy, which though overlooked by many investors, has
actually been beating out the market over the long term. For those
interested in this unique approach, we have highlighted more about
this strategy below and how investors can utilize this approach in
their own portfolios with the
AdvisorShares TrimTabs Float
Shrink ETF (TTFS):
What is Float
Shrink?
‘Float Shrink’ is an idea that looks at corporate actions and how
they influence the ‘float’ which is another way of saying the
number of shares that are free to trade of all the shares
outstanding. TrimTabs dives deep into a variety of actions in order
to determine if the float is increasing, shrinking, or staying the
same, zeroing in on secondary offerings, M&A activity, share
buybacks, and certain types of insider activity in order to find
the answer.
However, this isn’t the end of the process, as there is also a
quality aspect as well. Managers look to find companies that are
shrinking the float by increasing free cash flows, and not by
taking on more debt.
Additionally, since this an actively managed strategy, TTFS
managers can get in as soon as fresh corporate actions that shrink
the float are revealed, while it can exit right when unfavorable
plans are announced that either suggest float shrink activity is
fading or even if the float is increasing (See Forget Dividends
Focus on Buyback ETFs Instead).
“Investors have been experiencing more than a decade of stock
supply shrink. The number of companies available for the
public to invest in has plunged from 7,562 in July 1998 to 3,663 in
March 2014 (measured by the members in the Wilshire 5000 Index), as
public companies were bought out, went private, or delisted,” said
Minyi Chen, EVP and Portfolio Manager of TTFS.
“According to our research in float shrink strategy, picking the
companies that implement float shrink policies in a right way could
result in long-term outperformance and lower volatility. Both
characteristics are highly valued for equity strategies,” continued
Chen.
TTFS Portfolio
This results in a portfolio of about 100 stocks that is pretty well
spread out from a market cap perspective. Currently, the holdings
have a skew towards consumer discretionary, technology, industrials
and health care, while it is light on energy, telecoms, and
materials.
Investors should also note that the fund uses an equal weight
methodology. While this technique is relatively foreign to most, it
may have some benefits over traditional cap weighted
approaches.
“Equal weight is relatively new compared to market cap
weight. In the past decade, numerous research results showed
that equal weight portfolios could outperform their market cap
weight counterparts in the long run on a risk-adjusted basis,” said
Minyi Chen.
“Equal weight helps to reduce large cap bias in the portfolio and
randomizes factor exposure at the same time. In contrast, cap
weighting tends to overweight overbought companies and underweight
oversold companies,” continued TTFS’ portfolio manager (read
Buyback ETFs Continue to Outperform).
Downsides
Investors should note that this strategy doesn’t come cheap, as the
current net expense ratio comes in at 0.99% a year. This puts TTFS
far higher than passively managed broad market funds, and several
other niche products.
The fund also hasn’t really caught on with investors for the most
part—despite its solid methodology—as assets under management are
currently at just over $125 million. This produces a fund that
doesn’t have the most robust daily average volume, so that is a
factor to consider as well (though current bid ask spreads seem
relatively tight).
ETF competition
Still, TTFS has been a strong performer over the long haul and it
has proven to be a far less volatile strategy as well. In fact, the
fund’s worst quarter since inception saw a loss of roughly 1.7%
compared to a loss of 3.15% for the Russell 3000’s worst quarter.
Meanwhile, for 2013, the fund beat out the
S&P 500
(SPY) by a solid margin, despite having a similar beta,
and it is looking good from a trailing twelve month return
perspective too:
One competitor to be aware of though is the
PowerShares
Buyback Achievers ETF (PKW). This fund focuses on one key
aspect of the TrimTabs methodology—stock buybacks—zeroing in on
companies that have reduced their net shares by at least 5% in the
past 12 months.
The fund has proven to be quite popular as it has over $2 billion
in AUM, while it too has been a strong performer. PKW has slightly
underperformed TTFS over the past two years (57.04% gain to
55.59%), but it does charge 71 basis points a year in fees (read 5
ETF Predictions for 2014).
Investors should also note that PKW focuses on companies that have
reduced shares outstanding, compared to the TTFS focus on float
reduction. Lastly, TTFS is active while PKW has a passive strategy,
so there are definitely some big differences to consider between
these two products.
Bottom Line
There are many ways to decide how to invest in stocks, but an often
overlooked one is to consider supply and demand. TrimTabs does just
that with its Float Shrink ETF which zeroes in on companies that
have reduced the float of shares trading, have strong free cash
flow, and are not deeply in debt either.
The technique has proven itself over the past few years, as TTFS
has easily outperformed the S&P 500—without taking on more
risk—while it has also edged out its top competitor, PKW. And
though many investors haven’t embraced the product yet, the solid
fundamentals behind supply demand investing suggest that you might
want to take a closer look at this product for your own portfolio,
and particularly if you are seeking a broad play that has the
ability to outperform without adding more risk.
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PWRSH-BYBK ACHV (PKW): ETF Research Reports
SPDR-SP 500 TR (SPY): ETF Research Reports
TRIMTB-FLT SHRK (TTFS): ETF Research Reports
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