Return-seeking portfolio construction is an important consideration for corporate defined benefit (DB) plans at all stages of their glidepath. Within the return-seeking portfolio, we believe that balancing upside equity participation with funded-ratio drawdown mitigation is key to long-term success. As discussed in a previous paper, we think plans working to balance these objectives should consider three return-seeking building blocks. The first two are core equities and diversifying strategies (e.g., liquid infrastructure, return-seeking fixed income, REITS/real estate, low-beta hedge funds). The third is defensive equity strategies, which we define as approaches with a philosophy and process explicitly aligned with downside mitigation, creating the potential for downside capture below 100% while maintaining meaningful upside capture. Pairing core equities with defensive equities and diversifying strategies may create another lever to reduce funded-ratio volatility, in addition to other derisking steps (e.g., adding to long-duration fixed income).
We are often asked by plan sponsors how we identify strategies that fit the defensive equity category, and at the heart of that process is the work of our Fundamental Factor Team. Here we discuss the team’s views on defensive factors, including their role and options for accessing them, their historical performance, and the current factor environment.
How can different defensive factors help and be added to a portfolio?
While many allocators think solely of low volatility strategies when they hear the term “defensive factors,” we see three categories that can potentially play distinct and complementary roles:
Low-volatility factors may serve as the downside mitigation “anchor” for a defensive strategy. In the data we share in this article, they are represented by our US low volatility factor, which is based on the bottom decile of the US market by forecast volatility generated from a US risk model (in this and the other categories below, these factor buckets are cap weighted and rebalanced monthly).
Cash-compounder factors may contribute to better upside participation relative to other defensive factors. They are represented by our US profit stability factor, which is the top decile of the US market when sorted by the stability of economic profits generated over the past 10 years.
Income-oriented factors may provide current income and valuation sensitivity that is often lacking in purely defensive strategies, given that defensive stocks tend to trade at a premium to the market. They are represented by our US sustainable income factor, which is the top decile of the market when sorted by a composite factor score based on a stock’s dividend yield, dividend stability, sustainable growth, and solvency risk.
Active manager strategies offer one option for tapping into these factors. For example:
- Low volatility factors may be accessed via quantitative low volatility and minimum variance strategies;
- Cash compounder factors may be accessed through quality and dividend-growth strategies; and
- Income-oriented factors may be accessed via equity income and defensive or quality-value strategies.
The three factors could also be incorporated in a portfolio using a multi-strategy solution that can adjust the strategic weights in pursuit of specific levels of upside/downside or current income. Finally, another option is a multi-factor solution that can allocate to all three factors in a holistic approach, allowing the factor weights to be adjusted to target particular objectives — similar to the multi-strategy approach.
How defensive factors have performed over time
To bring these factors to life, Figure 1 compares their returns to the broad US market over two time periods. Over the past 20 years (dark-blue bars), the US profit stability factor and the US sustainable income factor beat the market. The low volatility factor performed in line with the market but with much lower volatility.1
Turning to the past 10 years (light-blue bars), we would first note that this is a period in which market leadership in the US was very narrow, at both the style level (growth over quality and value stocks) and the stock level (dominated by a handful of technology and technology-adjacent companies). Against this backdrop, we see that among the defensive factors, only the US profit stability factor outperformed the market (more on this market narrowness issue later in the article).