I attended a luncheon and presentation on “Smart Beta”
organized by CFA Society Malaysia on 22nd June 2017. The speaker was Mr. Charles J. Yang, CFA,
Managing Director of Tokio Marine Asset Management. It was a great event and the speaker
delivered a very concise presentation about Smart Beta Investing.
Mr. Yang pointed out that smart beta is not a “modified”
mathematical definition of conventional beta.
It could be interpreted as a category of asset management, somewhere between passive and active management.
The total asset under management using smart beta approach was about US$
416 billion in 2016. Among the common
factors of smart beta strategy such as “Low Volatility”, “High Dividend”, “Book
Value”, “Cash Flow” and etc., Mr. Yang presentation was focusing on “Low
Volatility”.
As an engineering to finance apprentice, I asked some technical
questions during the Q&A session. My
questions were:
- What was the time-period used to calculate beta?
- What was the data frequency used to calculate beta?
- Why these time-period and data frequency were chosen to calculate beta?
Below were Mr. Yang’s answers:
- Three years.
- Monthly data.
- Trial and error basis using quantitative statistical method, need to back test.
From his reply we could infer that portfolio rebalancing is required periodically as the volatility of the assets in the portfolio may change from time to time, thus a quantitative team is essential to assist the smart beta strategy.