Scientific Beta

This article, published in the Fall 2016 issue of the Journal of Index Investing, analyzes what academic research has to say on equity factors. The objective is to understand what lessons can be learned from such research on designing and evaluating factor indexes. When analyzing academic publications on equity factor investing, five important lessons emerge, which provide useful perspective on practical questions about factor indexes. 

This article analyzes what academic research has to say on equity factors. The objective is to understand what lessons can be learned from such research on designing and evaluating factor indexes. When analyzing academic publications on equity factor investing, five important lessons emerge, which provide useful perspective on practical questions about factor indexes. This article looks at the empirical analysis that is required to identify rewarded factors. It then turns to the economic rationale behind factors and looks into the role of diversification for a given factor tilt. Moreover, it discusses the issue of implementation costs and addresses the question of crowding risks. Finally, the article discusses how popular practical implementations relate to the academic grounding.