Invesco RYT ETF: Technology Dashboard For March

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This monthly article series shows a dashboard with aggregate industry metrics in technology and communication services. It may also serve as a top-down analysis of some technology ETFs, whose largest holdings are used to calculate these metrics.

Shortcut

The next two paragraphs in italic describe the dashboard methodology. They are necessary for new readers to understand the metrics. If you are used to this series or if you are short of time, you can skip them and go to the charts.

Base Metrics

I calculate the median value of five fundamental ratios for each industry: Earnings Yield (“EY”), Sales Yield (“SY”), Free Cash Flow Yield (“FY”), Return on Equity (“ROE”), Gross Margin (“GM”). The reference universe includes large companies in the U.S. stock market. The five base metrics are calculated on trailing 12 months. For all of them, higher is better. EY, SY and FY are medians of the inverse of Price/Earnings, Price/Sales and Price/Free Cash Flow. They are better for statistical studies than price-to-something ratios, which are unusable or non available when the “something” is close to zero or negative (for example, companies with negative earnings). I also look at two momentum metrics for each group: the median monthly return (RetM) and the median annual return (RetY).

I prefer medians to averages because a median splits a set in a good half and a bad half. A capital-weighted average is skewed by extreme values and the largest companies. My metrics are designed for stock-picking rather than index investing.

Value and Quality Scores

I calculate historical baselines for all metrics. They are noted respectively EYh, SYh, FYh, ROEh, GMh, and they are calculated as the averages on a look-back period of 11 years. For example, the value of EYh for hardware in the table below is the 11-year average of the median Earnings Yield in hardware companies.

The Value Score (“VS”) is defined as the average difference in % between the three valuation ratios (EY, SY, FY) and their baselines (EYh, SYh, FYh). The same way, the Quality Score (“QS”) is the average difference between the two quality ratios (ROE, GM) and their baselines (ROEh, GMh).

The scores are in percentage points. VS may be interpreted as the percentage of undervaluation or overvaluation relative to the baseline (positive is good, negative is bad). This interpretation must be taken with caution: the baseline is an arbitrary reference, not a supposed fair value. The formula assumes that the three valuation metrics are of equal importance.

Current data

The next table shows the metrics and scores as of last week’s closing. Columns stand for all the data named and defined above.

VS

QS

EY

SY

FY

ROE

GM

EYh

SYh

FYh

ROEh

GMh

RetM

RetY

Hardware

76.59

75.15

0.0566

1.6368

0.0727

18.25

38.03

0.0345

0.8876

0.0401

7.03

41.90

-8.29%

14.07%

Comm. Equip.

-25.20

27.40

0.0323

0.1482

0.0288

23.04

63.67

0.0313

0.2852

0.0416

14.87

63.78

-9.36%

-6.23%

Entertainment

-19.60

-9.16

0.0294

0.4535

0.0314

12.50

49.41

0.0504

0.4396

0.0394

17.29

45.16

-10.94%

-23.67%

Electronic Equip.

-22.87

43.94

0.0408

0.3398

0.0393

20.45

43.61

0.0438

0.8499

0.0400

12.55

34.92

-6.29%

-3.96%

Software

-20.64

9.80

0.0241

0.1321

0.0298

21.16

83.86

0.0276

0.1801

0.0385

17.32

86.13

-13.22%

-19.91%

Telecom

-46.88

-0.23

0.0601

0.5823

-0.0162

12.12

57.36

0.0489

0.6500

0.0305

11.89

58.76

-5.35%

1.62%

Semiconductors

-11.19

19.72

0.0520

0.1946

0.0293

32.09

62.67

0.0470

0.2555

0.0368

23.16

62.12

-11.84%

-2.80%

IT Services

-14.29

3.29

0.0343

0.2590

0.0318

26.95

54.42

0.0394

0.3421

0.0337

24.72

55.78

-7.80%

-2.25%

Value And Quality chart

The next chart plots the Value and Quality Scores by industry (higher is better).

Value and quality in Technology and Communication

Value and quality in Technology and Communication (Chart: author; data: Portfolio123)

Evolution since last month

Since last month, the most remarkable changes are improvements of quality score in telecommunication, and of value score in entertainment and IT services.

RYT ETF - Variations in value and quality

Variations in value and quality (Chart: author; data: Portfolio123)

Momentum

The next chart plots momentum data.

RYT ETF - Momentum in Tech and Communication

Momentum in Technology and Communication (Chart: author; data: Portfolio123)

Interpretation

Hardware is the most attractive technology industry regarding value and quality: both scores are far above the baseline. It is also ranked first for 12-month momentum. Other industries are overvalued by 11% to 25%, except telecommunication, which is much worse. Good quality scores may justify overvaluation in communication equipment, electronic equipment, semiconductors, and to a lesser extent in software. Telecommunication and entertainment are the less attractive industries in regard to my metrics.

Focus on RYT

The Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight Technology ETF (RYT) has been tracking the S&P 500 Equal Weight Information Technology Index since 11/01/2006. It has a total expense ratio of 0.40%, which is significantly more expensive than capital-weighted ETFs in the same sector like XLK (0.12%) and VGT (0.10%). As of writing, the fund holds 75 stocks. Holdings are in equal weight on every rebalancing, but weights may drift with price action. The next table shows the current top 10 holdings with valuation and growth metrics. The heaviest one weighs less than 2% of asset value. The risk related to individual stocks is much lower than for capital weighted tech ETFs, where the top two holdings Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) together represent over 40% of assets.

Ticker

Name

Weight

EPS growth %TTM

P/E TTM

P/E fwd

Yield%

CTXS

Citrix Systems Inc.

1.96%

-39.01

41.48

18.95

1.47

JKHY

Jack Henry & Associates Inc.

1.84%

19.69

39.38

38.16

1.07

NLOK

NortonLifeLock Inc.

1.80%

1002.28

17.91

15.90

1.81

HPE

Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co.

1.73%

921.70

5.94

7.86

2.90

CTSH

Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp.

1.70%

57.45

21.74

19.35

1.23

FLT

FleetCor Technologies Inc.

1.63%

22.85

22.98

14.92

0.00

SEDG

SolarEdge Technologies Inc

1.63%

14.67

104.19

63.08

0.00

GPN

Global Payments Inc.

1.60%

69.07

38.62

13.32

0.79

IBM

International Business Machines Corp.

1.58%

1.73

19.54

12.65

5.29

HPQ

HP Inc.

1.58%

137.28

6.47

8.45

2.76

Data calculated with Portfolio123

RYT has lagged XLK since inception in November 2006: 507% vs. 683% in total return. This is a difference of about 1.9 percentage point annualized. Despite a lower idiosyncratic risk (exposure to individual stocks), RYT shows a higher risk than XLK in historical volatility and drawdowns.

In summary, RYT is a good instrument for investors seeking a technology fund without excessive exposure to big tech companies. However, the theoretical edge of an equal-weight strategy has been underwhelming for 15 years: RYT is significantly inferior to capital-weighted technology ETFs in risk-adjusted performance since inception. Moreover, management fees are higher.

Dashboard List

I use the first table to calculate value and quality scores. It may also be used in a stock-picking process to check how companies stand among their peers. For example, the EY column tells us that a hardware company with an earnings yield above 0.0566 (or price/earnings below 17.67) is in the better half of the industry regarding this metric. A Dashboard List is sent every month to Quantitative Risk & Value subscribers with the most profitable companies standing in the better half among their peers regarding the three valuation metrics at the same time. The list below was sent to subscribers several weeks ago based on data available at this time.

DFIN

Donnelley Financial Solutions Inc.

KLIC

Kulicke and Soffa Industries Inc.

THRY

Thryv Holdings Inc.

ZD

Ziff Davis Inc.

FB

Meta Platforms Inc.

AMKR

Amkor Technology Inc.

SWKS

Skyworks Solutions Inc.

IT

Gartner Inc.

TDC

Teradata Corporation

IBM

International Business Machines Corp.

It is a rotating list with a statistical bias toward excess returns on the long-term, not the result of an analysis of each stock.

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