Low-Volatility ETFs

PowerShares S&P 500 Low Volatility Portfolio (NYSEArca: SPLV) has hauled in nearly $8 million of inflows a day, every day, since the ETF launched in May 2011. The popularity of low-volatility funds highlights the anxiety in the wake of the financial crisis, and investors remain skittish despite the Dow Jones Industrial Average rising to a new all-time high.

SPLV was the first low-volatility ETF and has gathered assets of $4 billion in less than two years.

“As the flagship low-volatility ETF on the market, SPLV has averaged over $7.6 million in inflows per day since its inception,” notes Ben Fulton, Invesco PowerShares managing director of global ETFs.

SPLV holds the 100 stocks from the S&P 500 with the lowest realized volatility over the past year. Volatility measures the tendency of a stock to fluctuate in price. Also, the ETF gives a greater weighting to stocks with lower volatility. Most ETF benchmarks weight companies by their size or market capitalization.

“Investors have been allocating low-volatility ETF strategies as core portfolio holdings,” said John Feyerer, head of product strategy and research at Invesco PowerShares. “PowerShares low-volatility ETFs are based on an index methodology that is easy to understand and are an effective way for investors to add or maintain equity exposures, while attempting to mitigate overall portfolio risk. We believe the PowerShares suite of low-volatility ETFs represent an attractive alternative to cap weighted strategies.”

Other low-volatility ETFs include iShares MSCI USA Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEArca: USMV), PowerShares S&P International Developed Low Volatility (NYSEArca: IDLV) and iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Minimum Volatility (NYSEArca: EEMV). [Low-Volatility ETFs Still Hot Despite Collapsing VIX]

“The Dow is at record levels, the S&P 500 is approaching a new record and market professionals are showing a high level of optimism, so it might come as something of a surprise to see that low-volatility ETFs have been one of the hottest corners of the fund landscape in recent months. The concept behind these funds certainly makes sense, particularly for investors who wish to stay exposed to the markets but have concerns about short-term downside risks,” says S&P Capital IQ.

Low-volatility ETFs have also experienced unusually strong demand and are performing quite well so far in 2013.