The New Smart Beta Factor Exposure: U.S. Dollar Sensitivity

The Newest Factor Tilt: Currency Sensitivity

Most smart beta indexes have a weighting process that tilts weight to factors such as valuation, quality, momentum or low volatility. For instance, WisdomTree’s Dividend Stream® -weighted approach can be described as a modified market cap index that tilts market cap weight to stocks with higher dividend yields. Mathematically, the Dividend Stream equals dividends per shares x shares outstanding, but it also equals market cap x dividend yield.

WisdomTree believes currency sensitivity is an important factor for helping to explain portfolio returns and has thus incorporated it into an indexing process through a factor tilt that is conceptually similar to the dividend tilt described above.

There are two ways WisdomTree incorporated this currency sensitivity into a new indexing approach by introducing two innovative Indexes:

1) Stock Selection: Focus on Local Economy versus Export-Oriented U.S. Stocks.

U.S. Local Economy Stocks = WisdomTree Strong Dollar U.S. Equity Index: These are firms that derive more than 80% of their revenues from within the United States. These companies tend to be less impacted by a strong-dollar environment—they aren’t focused on selling their goods and services abroad, and their cost of imports improves with a rising purchasing power of the dollar. This Index also excludes Energy and Materials stocks, as the returns for those two sectors have been mostly negatively correlated to the returns of the U.S. dollar.4
U.S. Exporters = WisdomTree Weak Dollar U.S. Equity Index: These are firms that derived at least 40% of their revenue from exports, which means they tend to be more impacted by a strong-dollar environment, as they are focused on selling their goods and services abroad. Similarly, during a weak-dollar period, we’d expect these firms to become more competitive in selling their goods abroad.

2) Weighting: WisdomTree’s currency factor Indexes tilt market cap weights to stocks whose returns are more sensitive (or correlated) to the returns of the U.S. dollar. The mathematical adjustment uses the rank of the correlation of each stock’s returns relative to the returns of the U.S. dollar to smoothly tilt5 the starting market cap weight toward stocks whose returns have exhibited certain correlations with the returns of the U.S. dollar.

a. The WisdomTree Strong Dollar U.S. Equity Index tilts weight to stocks whose returns have had higher correlations to the returns of the U.S. dollar.
b. The WisdomTree Weak Dollar U.S. Equity Index tilts weight to stocks whose returns have been more negatively correlated (or lower correlated) to the returns of the U.S. dollar.

How These Strategies Work

One of the most important macroeconomic forces impacting the market have been currency changes motivated by diverging monetary policies. If the U.S. dollar continues to be strong over the coming years, as is WisdomTree’s baseline view, this can provide a continued headwind to U.S. exporters and favor the WisdomTree Strong Dollar U.S. Equity Index.

Conversely, if one views the U.S. dollar strength as a fleeting trend set to reverse, such an environment would favor U.S. exporters and the WisdomTree Weak Dollar U.S. Equity Index.

1Refers to the Tokyo Stock Price Index (TOPIX) universe; source: Bloomberg.
2Refers to the WisdomTree Europe Hedged Equity Index, tracked by the WisdomTree Europe Hedged Equity Fund (HEDJ) before fees and expenses.
3 Refers to the WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Index, tracked by the WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund (DXJ) before fees and expenses.
4Refers to the Federal Reserve U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar Index.
5Technically, the correlation factor of the weighting uses an exponential weighting process based on the correlation rank. This correlation factor is 75% of the weight, while the market cap component is 25% of the weight.