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We have just this morning released a suite of new features to the Stockopedia site - including the RiskRatings and the StockRank Styles. I will be explaining these features in an extensive webinar at 1pm today (Thursday 4th May) - (Replay link is here). The following piece is the copy from our RiskRatings Ebook which can be downloaded for iPad, Kindle, PDF or read online here. I will be publishing another post about the StockRank styles in due course.
The RiskRatings are Stockopedia’s classification of the market volatility of every company’s share price. We have designed the RiskRatings to be both a useful predictive measure of future volatility, but also an easy to use measure for accessing the “low volatility anomaly” - the unusual fact in equities, that lower volatility securities tend to outperform high volatility securities over the long term.
The five classifications (from least to most volatile) are Conservative, Balanced, Adventurous, Speculative and Highly Speculative. At any time 10% of the market will be classified as Conservative, 15% Balanced, 20% Adventurous, 25% Speculative and 30% Highly Speculative.
In general, larger, more predictable and more profitable companies (such as Microsoft or Unilever) tend to be classified as Conservative, while younger, news driven, early revenue companies (such as Snap Inc or Sirius Minerals) will be classified as Speculative.
Volatility is the most common measure of risk used in quantitative finance to assess risk adjusted returns. The use of volatility as “risk” is somewhat controversial, and criticised by many value investors. The common complaint is that "risk is not volatility, it is the likelihood of capital loss".
But modern portfolio theory, and most private investors, more broadly define Risk as the possibility of upside gain as well as downside loss. While value investors have struggled to quantify the likelihood of capital loss, Quantitative Investors have proven that price volatility is one of the best predictors of future upside and downside financial risk.
While the RiskRating is the essential rule of thumb for this purpose, we do recommend using the full suite of financial indicators available on Stockopedia to measure standard financial risks - including Bankruptcy Risk, Earnings Manipulation Risk and other Quality factors.
Most investors believe in the theory that risk and return are joined at the hip. The idea persists that to achieve higher returns you have to take on more risk.
While this may be true across different asset classes (e.g. high volatility stocks outperform low volatility cash) this theory appears to fall apart within stocks. Research studies by famous academics and practitioners including Haugen & Baker, Blitz & van Vliet and Frazzini & Pederson have proven that historically low volatility (and low beta) shares outperform high volatility shares over the long run (on a risk adjusted basis).
The reason for this ‘anomaly’ is due to a few primary factors. Firstly, investors are often averse to borrowing money to invest in low volatility equities; Secondly, the investment process at institutions is often biased towards risk-seeking by fund managers who seek to improve their bonuses in the short term; Thirdly, private investors often aim for Lottery type rewards from high risk investments. All these factors, and more, ensure that higher risk assets are often systematically over-priced, reducing their eventual returns and inverting the risk-return relationship.
Whatever the reason, the fact remains that so many private investors chase high risk / speculative shares at precisely the wrong moment. As we'll see, there are good times and areas of the market to invest in high risk shares, but over the long term, and in general, a conservative bias in the stock market does bring additional rewards.
For those inclined to investigate the academic research we recommend the research papers listed in the conclusion of this guide.
To prove the Low Volatility effect exists outside of the academic realm, we have conducted our own performance study using the RiskRatings across UK securities back to April 2013. We calculated RiskRatings on December 31st each year and constructed equally weighted portfolios of all shares with a greater than £10m market cap at the time. The portfolio performances were tracked for the year and then the portfolios were rebalanced with new RiskRatings.
We can draw the following insights:
the Conservative (lowest volatility) classification has tended to outperform the other segments over the longer term, falling less in negative markets, but rising more slowly in rising markets.
the higher volatility segments (from Adventurous to Highly Speculative) outperform considerably during ‘risk on’ market periods, but fall faster and harder in downswings and ‘risk off’ periods.
The Risk-Adjusted-Return (Sharpe Ratio) of each classification declines with increasing volatility.
These insights completely back up the findings from the academic research literature into the Low Volatility Anomaly.
Markets tend to swing between what are known as “Risk on” and “Risk off” periods. While Conservative/Balanced stocks may outperform over the longer term, portfolios of these stocks will likely considerably underperform speculative shares in bullish market periods.
Most investors looking at the above performance chart may say to themselves "Conservative stocks win out so I'll just buy conservative stocks". While this may be a great long term strategy, one has to consider how such an investor would be feeling if he'd bought a Conservative portfolio at the beginning of a 'risk-on' period (such as 2016 ) and held for 18 months... have a look at this chart:
When all your friends are making a fortune in speculative shares it can be very hard to stick to your guns in a conservative strategy. Our experience suggests that many will throw in the towel right at the time that speculative shares hit the top of the cycle. Drastic underperformance of these segments in risk off markets often leads to great financial pressure.
As markets are unpredictable, and temporary underperformance can feel unbearable to many, constructing an all-weather portfolio may minimise the risk of both long term and short term underperformance. The simplest way to do this is to build a portfolio diversified across the RiskRatings.
This may provide a portfolio with some conservative spine to steady the ship in downswings, and enough speculative thrust for meaningful participation in rallies. This could be thought of as an all weather Risk Barbell Portfolio.
Investors can use the RiskRatings as an at-a-glance measure of a stock’s volatility, but also as a useful portfolio construction and diversification measure for differing market environments. When thinking about the RiskRating of any stock, it’s worth understanding the distribution of RiskRatings across different market segments.
Firstly all the equities in the stock market are split by RiskRating as follows:
These proportions will never change. So the ratings should be understood to be relative. So if the entire market turns highly volatile for an extended period of time, there will still be 10% of the market classified as "Conservative".
In general the volatility and riskiness of stocks increases as their market capitalisation decreases. The following graphic analyses the RiskRatings and Size Groups of all Pan-European equities.
There are a few key insights:
The number of Conservative and Balanced shares across each size group is fairly similar.
The number of Adventurous shares increases fairly linearly as size decreases from Large to Micro Cap.
The count of Speculative and Highly Speculative shares increases exponentially across smaller size groups.
Proportionally large caps are skewed towards lower RiskRatings, while smaller caps are skewed towards higher RiskRatings. In spite of this, it is still possible to build risk diversified portfolios at all Size Groups.
If we look through the lens of the StockRank - our proprietary ranking of each stock’s Quality, Value and Momentum - we can see a similar picture.
The lowest ranking sets of shares tend to be far more speculative. Higher ranking shares have a proportion of lower RiskRatings.
If we dig a bit deeper we find a strong negative correlation between price volatility and company quality. The scatter plot below shows that higher Quality Rank stocks tend to have lower volatility share prices.
And digging even deeper, we get an even more interesting relation between a company’s Bankruptcy Risk to Share Price Volatility. Using the Altman Z-Score (available as a bankruptcy meter on all Stock Reports) we can build a scatter plot against Share Price Volatility.
The insight from this chart is that the highest volatility segment of the market is either focused in the highest or the lowest bankruptcy risk segments of the market. It’s clear why high bankruptcy risk stocks should be volatile, but why low bankruptcy risk stocks? The reason is twofold. Firstly a lot of the most speculative investments have binary finances (they are either well financed post-funding or very poorly financed and seeking funding), while a lot of cash generative growth stocks can become very volatile due to investor over-enthusiasm.
The RiskRating is available in four core product areas - the StockReports, the StockRank Portal, in the Stock Screener and in Table Displays.
StockReports: You can find the RiskRating at the top of all StockReports in the Classifications label, alongside the Size Group and StockRank Style. Reading the Classification sentence allows fast insight into the risk and investability of a stock.
StockRank Portal: You can also filter for various RiskRatings in the Stock Rank portal (available under the Ranks tab in the main site navigation). You can customise results according to your tolerance for market volatility or risk.
Stock Screener - For more advanced filtering, you can use the Stock Screener. Simply click the “Add a new rule” green button, select “Size / Risk / Style” then select the RiskRating from the dropdown menus. You can select multiple RiskRatings at once using this method and add other filters to your screen.
Table Displays. The Risk and Style classifications are available as default in the “Ranks” tab of all tables. If you want to add the RiskRating to any table display, launch the Table Editor by clicking the blue pencil icon in the active table tab. Open the “Profile” folder and select RiskRating from the menu. You will then have it available as a column in your table.
We use proprietary measures of volatility, which accounts for the fact that some stocks have shorter histories and/or are traded less frequently than others.
Underlying the RiskRating is a proprietary measure of volatility based on the standard deviation of three year daily price returns adjusted for auto-correlation and sample size. If a straightforward standard deviation is used as a measure of volatility, some stocks can appear to be low risk options when in fact the opposite is more often the case. We make two key adjustments to counterbalance this:
The first is adjusting for sample size. This measures how much price history we have to base our estimate on. We are always conservative and take the upper bound of the measured confidence interval to be the observed volatility.
The second is autocorrelation. This measures how highly a stock’s returns are correlated with themselves. When scaling observed daily volatility to annual volatility, we make an additional adjustment for the amount of autocorrelation observed. We use the upper bound of the confidence interval for autocorrelation just like we do with the volatility measurement. This is a technique sometimes used in assessing the volatility of Real Estate funds or other assets which aren’t priced as frequently as ordinary shares.
The RiskRatings themselves are based on the annualised adjusted volatility that we compute and split into 5 buckets with proportional weights as follows:
Conservative - lowest volatility 10% of the market.Balanced - the next lowest volatility 15% of the market.Adventurous - the next 20% of the market.Speculative - the next 25% of the market.Highly Speculative - the highest volatility 30% of the market.
The actual volatility underlying these categories can drift over time, but on average Conservative stocks stocks have less than 25% annualised volatility, Balanced stocks less than 35%, Adventurous stocks less than 45%, Speculative stocks are up to 70% annualised volatility, and Highly Speculative are above this level.
The use of Beta has become very popular amongst investors seeking Low Volatility stocks. The Beta is a simple to understand measure of the amount a share’s price movement is correlated with the market returns. Beta is hinged around 1. A beta greater than 1 suggests a share’s price moves up further on up days (and down further on down days) than the market as a whole, while a beta of less than 1 suggests a share’s price moves less than the market’s move up or down.
But if you run an analysis of the Beta of all equities you’ll find something surprising - Almost all equities are Low Beta !. While for large caps there’s almost an equal distribution between high and low beta shares… amongst the rest of the market over 75% of stocks have a Beta of less than 1.
For large cap investors, and ETF providers, using Beta as a portfolio construction technique may be ideal, but it’s a problem for individual investors who like to hunt amongst small caps. The majority of stocks you look at will be “Low Beta” shares. This is obviously not optimal.
The better measure, as well illustrated by van Vliet and Blitz in “The Volatility Effect: Lower Risk without Lower Return” is to use Total Volatility. It is our preferred measure for the RiskRatings.
So if you really want to find low volatility shares, the RiskRatings are a much more optimal measure than the Beta across the breadth of the market.
To conclude, we've designed the RiskRatings to deliver a simple and easy to understand method to assess and access various levels of Risk in listed stocks. We hope you've enjoyed the read, but more importantly, we hope you'll see your stocks and portfolios in a whole new light through the lens of the RiskRating.
For those interested in reading the academic research into the Low Volatility Anomaly, we recommend the following papers for further reading.
About Edward Croft
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HI Ed,
Another request from me.
I've been reviewing my portfolio in light of the webinar and noticed that of the 17 stocks I hold, in terms of risk style I have ...
2 Balanced
14 Adventurous
1 Speculative
I was quite surprised by this but on reflection my approach leads me to buy into stocks that are trending positively, ideally after a break out and I cut losers quite quickly.
In terms of StockRank Style, I have ...
13 High Flyers
4 SuperStocks
I'd be really interested to see performance graphs for the various combinations of Risk Styles & Stock Rank Styles. I recognise that might be quite a lot of graphs. To thin it down how about just the winning StockRankStyles for now?
I'm interested in them as I'm wondering if I'm missing out of some big gains during a risk on period by limiting exposure to more Speculative end of the risk profile.
Thanks in advance
Phil
P.S. I'm using a 'Regional' RankingSet for my universes
To what extent is the volatility/risk a function of spread/liquidity and years since IPO? In other words, if we screened the micro caps to exclude those with large spreads and only recently floated would we still find the large difference in numbers of micro caps classified highly speculative as compared to larger cap companies?
I don't have that data available I'm afraid but it makes intuitive sense that yes high bid/ask spread companies will be more volatile. Market makers will need more insurance to take stock onto their books in highly volatile stocks so they'd naturally widen the spread.
We do apply a 'years since IPO' adjustment to the ratings. The best rating a recent IPO can receive is speculative and as it matures it can go further up the hierarchy over time.
Hi Ed,
I'm just wondering - is a 'years since IPO' value available as a screening filter? I haven't found this when looking but I'd quite like to cut out recent floats from my list of shares!
Alternatively I'd like to be able to input a list of tickers for those shares that I *don't* want to see in my screen results because I've already counted them out. Is this an option which I've overlooked?
Thanks,
Damian
Hey Damian,
Thanks for this. We are in the process of making IPO and other dates available in the screener. Users will be able to exclude, or include companies that have had a recent IPO, stock split, dividend pay date, dividend ex-date and so on.
Are there any dates you are particularly interested in, beyond IPO dates?
Thanks,
Alex
Hi Alex,
That's good news thanks. I think that dividend dates (ex, pay) would be very useful along with the IPO date. Stock splits not so much but I could see a use for financial dates like those for AGMs, half-year and full-year results along with trading statement dates where known.
On my other question it would definitely be useful to be able to exclude specific stock tickers as I have some core screens which pick up companies that I don't want but I can't use another filter to exclude them because this would be too general. So the ability to add a list of tickers to filter out individually would be very handy.
Cheers,
Damian
Hey Damian,
Thanks for your reply - we can in theory provide a screening 'blacklist', as it were. Lot's of people have put this idea forward here - http://bit.ly/2q3yDtN . I'd be most grateful if you could add further comments and maybe a vote, because we tend to act on the most popular ideas.
We'll keep everyone updated as we make progress on this front.
Thanks,
Alex
Great suggestion thanks Alex - I've added my comments on blacklisting stocks from screeners here: http://ideas.stockopedia.com/forums/18977-stockopedia-suggestions/suggestions/5717337-allow-the-exclusion-of-specific-companies-from-scr
Just need a few more people to up-vote the idea now...
I consider the StockRank Style term "Neutral" is misleading and should be replaced by a term such as "Unclassified". The term "Neutral" suggests some mid-range whilst, in practice, stocks being classed as neutral have a wide range from those with relatively high mixtures of Q, V and M ratings, but which do not happen to fall within the four "positive" available StockRank styles, to those with relatively low mixtures of Q. V and M ratings, but which do not happen to fall within the four "negative" available StockRank styles.
To give one example, a stock with high Q and M ratings, and a relatively high V rating (but not one high enough for the stock to be classed as a SuperStock) would be (perversely?) classed as "Neutral", whilst if it had a lower V rating (and hence it could be argued possibly a lower potential return) it would be classed as a "High Flyer".
Indeed this is true. We originally called it "Unclassified", but then opted for "Style Neutral" as it was more noun than adjective. I really don't think the English language has the right word for this class of shares. I've pored through the Thesaurus trying to figure out a better option. Ideas welcome.
It's true that high ranking shares can be in the Neutral zone. I've seen 95 StockRank shares in this segment. While some High Flyers are currently ranked as low as a StockRank of 32. I think this is what's great about the Styles. We've seen that some of the High Flyer RiskRatings have performed extraordinarily well (e.g. Speculative High Flyers) but the median StockRank of that group is about 65. The Styles provide much more richness to the ranking system as a whole. I'm also sure that we'd find the high ranking 'neutral' stocks have done much better than the low ranking neutral stocks.
So there's nothing inherently bad about many Neutral classed shares - there's 33.33% of the market in this zone... it's just that they don't fit neatly into one of our archetypal buckets. So they are Style Neutral.
Regarding transitions - We have actually allowed a zone where shares can travel directly from Style to Style, without travelling through the Neutral space, but they have to be at an extreme. So Super Stocks can become High Flyers directly, but only if very strong QM shares. Lower QM Super stocks can only travel via the Neutral zone to become High Flyers.
You can tell I'm talking about space... it's a 3D QVM Cube. I'm a bottle of red to the good... so excuse me if I'm rather florid and even non-understandable.
Ed
I think the difficulty with having a classification system that has such a large population of shares as neutral/unclassified is that it appears unhelpful (at least visually). I wonder if a simple solution might be to colour code the neutral category; green for those that are closest to the winning strategies, red for those closest to the losing strategies and a much smaller population of shares in the middle remainsing grey?
Just a thought!
Personally, I think that would make the system easier to identify targets for further research (depending on style) and/or track shifts in classification over time.
Cheers, Simon
Hello Ed
Thank you for the detailed response to my comment, which was much appreciated. The response was totally understandable, despite the bottle of red.
I rate the Stockopedia rating systems highly, and am an experienced user, but, nonetheless, I had to keep reminding myself that a Neutral rating did not necessarily mean an indifferent rating. I think other, less experienced users, could have difficulties in interpretation..
One of the beauties of Stockopedia is the ease with which one can quickly reduce the universe of stocks for possible investment to a manageable selection, and the wide ranging Neutral classification does not help this process.
I was going to suggest you possibly split the Neutral/Unclassified share set into something like Good, Mediocre and Poor, but crazycoops alternative suggestion (post 107) to colour code this share set also appears a good one.
Anyhow, I know you are looking at StockRank Styles again and I hope this discussion has added something positive to your deliberations.
Best wishes
David Talbot
I was going to suggest you possibly split the Neutral/Unclassified share set into something like Good, Mediocre and Poor, but crazycoops alternative suggestion (post 107) to colour code this share set also appears a good one.
Really, the StockRank does this already so I'm not sure this suggestion would add any new information. The center of the Neutral set will be a StockRank of 50 (approximately), so one glance at the StockRank and you know whether it's a higher or lower ranking unclassified stock. Adding colour coding of the Style would just duplicate the information already displayed - and quite possibly we'd then receive requests for higher ranking High Flyers to be colour coded more strongly than lower ranking High Flyers !
I think other, less experienced users, could have difficulties in interpretation.
The Styles are designed to show if stocks have a strong match to one of the archetypes. That's all. Yes we've split them into 'winning' and 'losing' styles with colour coding and description... but it doesn't mean that if a stock isn't in a winning style that it can't be a winner.
I think learning the nuances of the ratings gives more dedicated subscribers more of an edge !
Sorry for being late on the ball, but I have to ask.. ..are the slides available somewhere. There's some really good tables and things in this presentation that's not available in the eBook and I'm to lazy to manually copy them into Excel. Will of course do that if the slides aren't available.
Thanks for a fantastic webinar!
*Past performance is no indicator of future performance. Performance returns are based on hypothetical scenarios and do not represent an actual investment.
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Yes we'll be publishing a longer format guide on the StockRank Styles and I'll be doing a blog this week.