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Showing papers by "Robert D. Arnott published in 2010"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors apply valuation-indifferent weighting to U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds, high-yield bonds, and hard-currency emerging market bonds and find outperformance is higher for markets in which more inefficiencies and greater volatilities would be expected to occur.
Abstract: In historical testing, valuation-indifferent weighting applied to U.S. and global equities has produced statistically significant and economically large outperformance when compared with traditional capitalization-weighted benchmarks. In this article, the authors apply valuation-indifferent weighting to U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds,U.S. high-yield bonds, and hard-currency emerging market bonds.They find that fixed-income portfolios constructed using valuation-indifferent weighting outperform their corresponding cap-weighted benchmarks. The authors also find that the outperformance is higher for markets in which more inefficiencies and greater volatilities would be expected to occur. Both findings are consistent with the empirical evidence produced in the equity applications of valuation-indifferent weighting, as well as in the proposed noise-in-price theoretical rationale for the results.

21 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, valuation-indifferent weighting was applied to U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds, high-yield bonds, and hard-currency emerging market bonds.
Abstract: In historical testing, valuation-indifferent weighting as applied to U.S. and global equities has produced statistically significant and economically large outperformance when compared with traditional capitalization-weighted benchmarks. In this paper, we apply the method to U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds, U.S. high-yield bonds, and hard-currency emerging market bonds. We find that fixed-income portfolios constructed using valuation-indifferent weighting outperform the corresponding cap-weighted benchmarks. We also find that the outperformance is higher for markets in which we might typically expect more inefficiencies and greater volatilities. Both findings are consistent with the empirical evidence found in the equity applications of valuation-indifferent weighting, as well as the proposed noise-in-price theoretical rationale for these results.

12 citations