|
Performance
Attribution: A
Look at
KLD Indexes in 2005
By:
Chris
McKnett, Index Project Manager
The
family of KLD Indexes has two stories to tell:
- A social story based on
the screens employed to construct and maintain the indexes,
and
- A performance story that
is expressed in both absolute and relative terms.
Both
aspects help investors interpret the financial performance of socially
screened indexes.
KLD
constructs social indexes using screens that reflect the issues
and interests of social investors. As a result, the indexes represent
the portfolios of social investors in two ways: as performance benchmarks
and as universes of companies appropriate for investment. As benchmarks,
they help investors define and analyze the differences between screened
and traditional market benchmarks.
In
this article, we look at the 2005 performance of the Domini 400
SocialSM
Index (DS 400), KLD Broad Market SocialSM
Index (BMS), KLD Large Cap SocialSM
Index (LCS) and the KLD Select SocialSM
Index (SS). We compare each KLD index to an unscreened market benchmark,
such as the S&P 500 or the Russell 3000. The findings illustrate
some general characteristics of social indexes. In addition, they
shed light on differences between KLD indexes, showing the variance
in their returns and the sources of this divergence.
Performance
While
this analysis focuses on 2005, performance in any given period should
be framed in a longer, more representative context. Table 1
presents one-, three- and five-year performance of KLD indexes and
their respective unscreened benchmarks.
Table
1: Index Performance1
|
KLD
Indexes Performance
|
|
|
One
Year
|
Three
Year*
|
Five
Year*
|
|
KLD's
DS 400 Index
|
3.00%
|
13.44%
|
0.51%
|
|
S&P
500
|
4.91%
|
14.39%
|
0.54%
|
|
KLD
BMS Index
|
5.45%
|
15.89%
|
0.84%
|
|
Russell
3000
|
6.12%
|
15.90%
|
1.58%
|
|
KLD
LCS Index
|
5.49%
|
15.37%
|
0.19%
|
|
Russell
1000
|
6.27%
|
15.42%
|
1.07%
|
|
KLD
SS Index
|
3.84%
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
|
Russell
1000
|
6.27%
|
15.42%
|
1.07%
|
|
Source:
Russell Indexes, Dow Jones & Co, and Standard & Poor's
Table 2 shows the
relative performance of KLD Indexes by subtracting the returns of
the benchmark from those of the KLD index. As demonstrated in the
table, each KLD index underperformed its benchmark in 2005.
Table
2: 2005 Performance Differences
|
2005
Relative Performance
|
|
|
Index
|
Performance
|
Benchmark
|
Performance
|
Difference
|
|
|
KLD's
DS 400
|
3.00%
|
S&P
500
|
4.91%
|
-1.91%
|
|
|
KLD
BMS
|
5.45%
|
Russell
3000
|
6.12%
|
-0.67%
|
|
|
KLD
LCS
|
5.49%
|
Russell
1000
|
6.27%
|
-0.78%
|
|
|
KLD
SS
|
3.84%
|
Russell
1000
|
6.27%
|
-2.43%
|
|
|
Source:
KLD Research & Analytics, Russell Indexes, Dow Jones, Standard
& Poor's
This
difference is captured in Graph 1, which illustrates how
each KLD Index performed relative to its benchmark. The x-axis represents
the benchmark baseline of 0.00% and each line captures the KLD Index
performance on the y-axis relative to the benchmark. The performance
variance for each index is explained by a combination of unique
factors, yet nonetheless some common themes emerge.
Graph
1:
Comparison of KLD Indexes Versus Benchmark - 2005

Source:
Russell Indexes and FactSet Research Systems
Sector
Weightings and Stock Selection
The
impact of variance in sector weights introduced by social screens
is an important element of index performance. Sector weightings
relative to each index benchmark provides insights into both the
social and performance story. For the DS 400, BMS and LCS, the largest
contributor to underperformance was relative underweight positions
in the Energy sector. Other sector and company weights contributed
to performance variance, but when taken as a group they effectively
canceled each other out. The net result was that the Energy sector
impact on performance accounted for nearly 100% of BMS and LCS underperformance
and for roughly 60% of DS 400 underperformance.
The
energy companies in the DS 400 outperformed those in the S&P 500
by 52.73% to 31.10%, a positive difference of 21.63%. However, the
significant difference in weighting caused the DS 400 to underperform
in energy.
Stock
selection within sectors is another important attribution factor.
The LCS and BMS outperformed the DS 400 in 2005. The principal reason
resides in better performance of holdings in the Health Care and
Financials sectors during the year.
The
DS 400, BMS and LCS are market capitalization weighted, meaning
that holdings are weighted in proportion to their size. In contrast,
the SS selection and weighting process uses optimization to maximize
exposure to KLD’s ESG scores. The SS concentrates positions in companies
with higher KLD scores, resulting in larger company bets than the
other KLD indexes. In 2005, SS performance was hurt most by stock
selection within the Health Care and Financials sectors.
Table
3 shows the performance of every sector relative to its market
benchmark for each KLD Index. It is important to understand that
these figures capture the effects of both sector weights and sector
performance. Positive contributions are shown in blue and negative
contributions are shown in red.
Table
3:
Performance Attribution by Sector in Basis Points – 2005
|
|
BMSI
vs
Russell 3000
|
LCSI
Vs
Russell 1000
|
DSI
Vs
S&P 500
|
SSI
Vs
Russell 1000
|
|
Information
Technology
|
12
|
13
|
13
|
115
|
|
Consumer
Discretionary
|
19
|
19
|
9
|
11
|
|
Materials
|
4
|
3
|
2
|
27
|
|
Consumer
Staples
|
3
|
5
|
23
|
0
|
|
Health
Care
|
66
|
73
|
4
|
-139
|
|
Unassigned
|
-11
|
-4
|
14
|
23
|
|
Telecommunication
Svces.
|
-16
|
-17
|
-20
|
2
|
|
Financials
|
-1
|
2
|
-50
|
-153
|
|
Industrials
|
-43
|
-49
|
-24
|
-66
|
|
Utilities
|
-43
|
-47
|
-45
|
-50
|
|
Energy
|
-78
|
-84
|
-126
|
-29
|
|
Source:
FactSet Research SystemS, Inc.
The
table shows that all KLD Indexes outperformed the benchmarks in
the Information Technology, Consumer Discretionary and Materials
sectors and underperformed the benchmarks in the Industrials, Utilities,
and Energy sectors.
A
common thread to outperformance was that within the Information
Technology, Consumer Discretionary and Materials sectors, KLD Index
stock selection was superior to the benchmark. In addition, KLD
Indexes were overweighted in both the Information Technology and
the Consumer Discretionary sector, which further contributed to
relative outperformance. The DS 400, BMS, and LCS underweighted
Materials, while the SS overweighted the sector.
Relative
underperformance for all four indexes in the Industrials, Utilities,
and Energy sectors was attributable to underweighting. Holdings
in these sectors tend to be limited by the social and environmental
screens, and this characteristic dampens index performance during
markets favorable to those sectors. In addition, stock selection
in the Industrials and Utilities sector contributed to sector underperformance.
Screening
(used in the DS 400, BMS and LCS) and scoring (used in the SS) introduce
similar but not identical biases. In a general sense, Information
Technology firms tend to have a small environmental footprint while
Energy firms tend to have a substantial environmental footprint.
The performance data suggests that environmental factors, in aggregate,
stand out as the most dominant screen.
Conclusion
As
we have shown, social screening influences performance of social
indexes and portfolios. This influence may have a positive or negative
effect depending on market conditions.
In
2005, the market was broadly affected by higher energy prices, driven
by a rise in the price of oil to more than $70 per barrel. The environment
screens applied by KLD lead to a substantial underweight in the
Energy sector. The DS 400, BMS and LCS hold no integrated oil companies,
although they do hold smaller oil companies as well as oil and gas
exploration firms. The largest negative impact on the performance
of these indexes came from underexposure to energy. By contrast,
the SS, while underweight, was closer to the market benchmark weight
in energy, and its performance in this area was better than the
other KLD indexes.
In
2005, the DS 400, BMS and LCS were hurt more by their sector weight
variations than they were helped by their stock selection. The SS
was hurt by both its sector weightings and stock selection -with
stock selection having the largest performance impact.
Attribution
analysis depicts correlations between KLD Indexes. For example,
consistent with their benchmarks, the weightings in the BMS and
LCS are substantially similar. Given this fact, one could hypothesize
that contributors to relative performance for each index would substantially
overlap. Attribution analysis confirms this hypothesis.
Attribution
can also be utilized to illustrate differentiation among KLD Indexes.
For example, the DS 400 was the top performer in the Consumer Staples
sector and the bottom performer in the Energy sector. Further examination
of performance attribution data would reveal whether this was attributable
to sector weighting, stock selection, or both.
A
review of Table 3 reveals the uniqueness of the SS. The social story
of the index is differentiated from that of other KLD indexes and
informs the performance story. The SS offers investors a risk-controlled
ESG strategy and adds diversity to the KLD Index family.
While
the social and performance stories of KLD Indexes are interwoven,
attribution analysis is a useful analytical tool to identify what
drives the performance story, which, in turn, sheds light on the
impact of the social construct of each index on performance.
Russell
3000® Index and Russell 1000® Index
are trademarks of Frank Russell Company. S&P 500® Index is
a trademark of Standard & Poor’s. Domini 400 SocialSM
Index, KLD Broad Market SocialSM
Index, KLD Large Cap SocialSM
Index and KLD Select SocialSM
Index are service marks of KLD Research & Analytics, Inc.
1
The KLD Global Climate 100SM
Index is excluded from this analysis due to a July 1, 2005 launch
date.
|