The Heckman Global Allocation Model for Emerging Markets uses a smart beta (factor based) approach to allocating the markets. In the Heckman Country Allocation Model, there are 14 factors utilized in the model.

Using dividend yield as an example of a factor, we calculate a score for every market each month based on how high the market’s dividend yield is relative to the average market. Starting with MSCI Emerging Market benchmark country capitalization weights, we re-balance the portfolio by assigning overweights to markets with higher-than-average dividend yields and underweights to markets with lower than average dividend yields. Each country gets an overweight or underweight allocation relative to the benchmark that is roughly in proportion to the difference between its score and the cross-market average score (with restrictions on the maximum allocation possible to small markets to avoid unrealistically large exposures). The portfolio is updated each month and performance returns (gross of transactions costs) are calculated monthly. Returns are then measured relative to MSCI Emerging Market benchmark returns.

How have each of the factors performed for Emerging Markets Allocation in 2022?

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Two of the Value Indicators would have strongly outperformed the MSCI Emerging Market Index with the strongest indicator being dividend Yield. An emerging market portfolio based solely on this measure — overweighting markets with high dividend yields and underweighting markets with low dividend yields — would have outperformed the MSCI Emerging Market Index by 690 basis points. Overall, the strongest factor was terms-of-trade trend which measures export prices relative to import prices over the last 18 months. This factor would have overweighted energy and materials exporting markets early in 2022 when prices were rising for these commodities. The next two strongest factors were changes in nominal short-term interest rates over the last 24 months and real exchange rate valuation. Changes in nominal short-term interest rates would have overweighted markets with the lowest changes nominal short-term interest rates and underweighted markets with the highest nominal short-term interest rate changes. Likewise, the real exchange rate valuation factor would have overweighted markets with the undervalued real exchange rates and underweighted markets with overvalued real exchange rates. Of the 14 indicators only 2 substantially underperformed the MSCI Emerging Market benchmark – overweighting markets with low price-to-book ratios and underweighting markets with high price-to-book ratios and overweighting markets with current account surpluses relative to GDP and underweighting markets with a low current account surplus or deficits relative to GDP.

Russia effect on factor performance

Russia was part of the MSCI Index until early March. If Russia were taken out of the MSCI Index for the whole year, all the Value Indicators would have outperformed the MSCI Emerging Market Index. The performance of both Beta and Sovereign Yield Spread Change would have been lower if Russia were taken out of the MSCI Emerging Market Index at the beginning of the year since they were good Risk indicators of the impending “Russia Risk”.


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