IN THIS LIST

Persistence Scorecard: September 2018

SPIVA® Canada Mid-Year 2018

Persistence Scorecard: Latin America October 2018

SPIVA® Japan Mid-Year 2018

SPIVA® India Mid-Year 2018

Persistence Scorecard: September 2018

SUMMARY OF RESULTS

  • When it comes to the active versus passive debate, one of the key measurements of successful active management lies in the ability of a manager or a strategy to deliver above-average returns consistently over multiple periods. Demonstrating the ability to outperform peers repeatedly is the one way to differentiate a manager’s luck from skill.
  • According to the S&P Persistence Scorecard, relatively few funds can consistently stay at the top. However, performance persistence of domestic equity funds improved compared with the results from March 2018.
  • Out of 550 domestic equity funds that were in the top quartile as of September 2016, only 7.09% managed to stay in the top quartile at the end of September 2018 (2.33% as of March 2018). Furthermore, 6.60% (0.93%) of large-cap funds, 3.95% (0%) of mid-cap funds, and 7.69% (3.85%) of small-cap funds remained in the top quartile.
  • For the three-year period that ended in September 2018, persistence figures for funds in the top half improved as well. Over three consecutive 12-month periods, 23.64% of large-cap funds, 21.71% of mid-cap funds, and 20% of small-cap funds maintained a top-half ranking.

  • An inverse relationship generally exists between the measurement time horizon and the ability of top-performing funds to maintain their status. It is worth noting that only 0.91% of large cap and no mid-cap or small-cap funds managed to remain in the top quartile at the end of the five-year measurement period. This figure paints a negative picture regarding long-term persistence in mutual fund returns.
  • There was an improvement in performance persistence of top-half funds over the five-year horizon; 9.09% of large-cap funds, 11.52% of mid-cap funds, and 5.08% of small-cap funds maintained top-half performance over five consecutive 12-month periods. Random expectations would suggest a repeat rate of 6.25%.
  • The transition matrices are designed to track the performance of top- and bottom-quartile performers over subsequent time periods. The data show a stronger likelihood for the bestperforming funds to become the worst-performing funds than vice versa. Of 497 funds that were in the bottom quartile, 10.06% moved to the top quartile over the five-year horizon, while 21.13% of the 497 funds that were in the top quartile moved to the bottom quartile during the same period.
  • Our research also suggests that there is consistency in the death rate of bottom-quartile funds. Across all market cap categories and all periods studied, fourth-quartile funds had a much higher rate of being merged or liquidated. The five-year transition matrix shows that 31.61% of large-cap funds, 34.67% of mid-cap funds, and 24.55% of small-cap funds in the fourth quartile disappeared.
  • Compared with domestic equity funds, there was a higher level of performance persistence among the top-quartile fixed income funds over the three-year period ending September 2018. Government Long and Government Intermediate funds were the only categories in which the results showed no performance persistence.
  • Over the five-year horizon, the results show a lack of persistence among nearly all the top-quartile fixed income categories, with a few exceptions. Funds investing in long-term government and investment-grade bonds, short-term investment-grade bonds, high yield, general municipal debt, and California municipal debt were the only groups in which a noticeable level of persistence was observed. The findings are similar to those from six months prior.

pdf-icon PD F Download Full Article


Processing ...