Dorsey Wright Multi-Factor Global Equity Index Methodology

Similar documents
Dorsey Wright Global Technical Leaders Index Methodology

Dorsey Wright Sector 4 Index Methodology

Dorsey Wright Dynamic U.S. Sector Focus Five Index Methodology

PHLX Oil Service Sector Index Methodology

NASDAQ Chaikin Power Indexes SM Methodology

Nasdaq BulletShares Ladder Index Family Methodology

Nasdaq Global ex-australia Sector Indexes Methodology

NASDAQ US Multi-Asset Diversified Income Index SM Methodology

Point & Figure Basics

DORSEY WRIGHT TECHNICAL LEADERS INDEX FAMILY METHODOLOGY

Dorsey, Wright & Associates

Why Tactical Portfolio Management?

Nasdaq Future Australian Sustainability Leaders Index Methodology

Dorsey, Wright & Associates

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED METHODOLOGY

The Q2 Factor Winner? Small Cap.

Invesco Multi-Factor Large Cap Index Methodology April 2018

Nasdaq Future Global Sustainability Leaders Index Methodology

NASDAQ VICTORY VOLATILITY WEIGHTED INDEX FAMILY METHODOLOGY

The FRED Report Portfolio Report Card Through 2016

HSBC USA Inc. Leveraged Buffered Uncapped Market Participation SecuritiesTM

Invesco Strategic US Small Company Index Methodology July 2018

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED METHODOLOGY

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED METHODOLOGY

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED EARNINGS-WEIGHTED METHODOLOGY

NASDAQ-100 INDEX METHODOLOGY

The Case for Growth. Investment Research

Discover the power. of ETFs. Not FDIC Insured May May Lose Lose Value Value No No Bank Bank Guarantee

Navigator Global Equity ETF

INFORMATION CIRCULAR: FIRST TRUST EXCHANGE-TRADED FUND VI

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED METHODOLOGY

Ground Rules. Russell 1000 Diversified Factor Index v1.8

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED METHODOLOGY

AQR Momentum Indices. International Equities Methodology Description

International Technical Leaders: Developed and Emerging ETFs Celebrate 10-Year Anniversary

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED METHODOLOGY

Richard Bernstein Advisors American Industrial Renaissance Index

Head Traders, Technical Contacts, Compliance Officers, Heads of ETF Trading, Structured Products Traders. Exchange-Traded Fund Symbol CUSIP #

The S-Network Large-Cap Sharpe Ratio Index (SHRPX) Official Rule Book

Cushing 30 MLP Index INDEX METHODOLODGY GUIDE. June 18, 2014

INFORMATION CIRCULAR: ALPS ETF TRUST

Invesco US Small Cap Index Methodology October 2017

Richard Bernstein Advisors American Industrial Renaissance Index

Index Methodology Guide 1.1

Technical Insights, Powerful Solutions

S&P High Yield Dividend Aristocrats Methodology

Ground Rules. FTSE Developed Diversified Factor Index v2.6

METHODOLOGY FOR IQ CANDRIAM SUSTAINABLE EQUITY INDEXES. Last Updated: October 10, 2017

Rulebook for John Hancock Dimensional Emerging Markets Index (the Index )

Ground Rules. FTSE Developed Ex North America Diversified Factor Index v2.1

Index Methodology Guide 1.3

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED METHODOLOGY

John Hancock Dimensional Mid Cap Index Rulebook

BNY Mellon ADR Index Administration and Procedures Manual. December 2012

Low trubeta Indices Index Methodology November 2018

NYSE Dynamic U.S. Large Cap Buy- Write Index (NYBW)

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED GLOBAL EX-US QUALITY DIVIDEND GROWTH INDEX METHODOLOGY

WISDOMTREE RULES-BASED METHODOLOGY

S&P/BOVESPA Indices Methodology

Information Circular: PowerShares Actively Managed ETF Trust

BlueStar Blockchain Technology Index

S&P MLP Indices Methodology

High trubeta TM Indices

Index Methodology Document. January Fidelity Factor Index Methodologies

Rulebook for John Hancock Dimensional Developed International Index (the Index )

December 31, June 30,

Index Methodology Guide v1.1

OTCQB Composite Index Rules Document. January 2015

Lazard Asset Management Factor Report SEP Factor Returns¹ (%)

BlueStar Artificial Intelligence Index

Dow Jones Global Composite Yield Index Methodology

Version 2.0 June 2012 GROUND RULES FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF THE FTSE NASDAQ DUBAI INDEX SERIES

The S-Network BlackSwan Core Index (SWANXT) Index Rules and Methodology

NYSE Select Sector Equal Weight Index

ETF.com Webinar: H2O Investing: Combining the Best Elements Within Smart Beta

Indices. This note is an adapted version of Chapter 2 in Investments: Principles of Portfolio and Equity Analysis by Mcmillan et al.

Gain Exposure to International Dividends

Cushing MLP Market Cap Index

Richard Bernstein Advisors Quality Income Index

Technical Insights, Powerful Solutions

S&P U.S. Indices Methodology

US MARKET ROTATION STRATEGY ETF NYSE ARCA TICKER: HUSE (the Fund ) July 2, 2018

AlphaSolutions Reduced Volatility Bull-Bear

AlphaSolutions Blended Bull/Calendar

Methodology Document of NIFTY Low Volatility 50 Index March 2019

Version 1.5 June 2012 GROUND RULES FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF THE FTSE NASDAQ DUBAI SHARIAH INDEX SERIES

BlueStar Israel Global Strategic Value Index

Methodology Document. NIFTY Free Float Midcap 100 Index NIFTY Free Float Smallcap 100 Index

Methodology Document of NIFTY Low Volatility 50 Index August 2017

Your Fund Selection Guide

What's New? Feddern Financial Consulting Group TODAY'S NEWS:

Index Methodology Guide v1.0

Rules for the Construction and Maintenance of the. OMX Iceland 8 Index

Ground Rules. JP Morgan Diversified US Factor Equity Index Series v1.2

Don't Underestimate the Power of International Buybacks

Information Circular: PowerShares Exchange-Traded Fund Trust II

Ground Rules. FTSE Value-Stocks China Index v2.1

5 Year Certificates of Deposit Linked to the HSBC Vantage5 Index

S&P/TSX Composite Single Factor Indices Methodology

Ground Rules. FTSE Value-Stocks China A-Share Index v2.1

Transcription:

Dorsey Wright Multi-Factor Global Equity Index Methodology Index Description The Dorsey Wright Multi-Factor Global Equity Index seeks to provide global equity exposure by selecting up to eight exchange-traded funds from the PowerShares DWA Momentum and PowerShares S&P Low Volatility suite of Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs). The objective of the Index is to gain global equity exposure, when favored, based on investment themes identified through the relative strength relationships within Dorsey Wright s Relative Strength Tally Rankings. When equities are not in favor, the Index can invest in the Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index (Nasdaq: NQCASH2) in allocations of either 30% or 100%. Index Calculation The value of the Index equals the aggregate value of the Index share weights, also known as the Index Shares, of each of the Index Securities multiplied by each such security s Last Sale Price 1, and divided by the divisor of the Index. The divisor serves the purpose of scaling such aggregate value to a lower order of magnitude which is more desirable for reporting purposes. If trading in an Index Security is halted on its primary listing market, the most recent Last Sale Price for that security is used for all index computations until trading on such market resumes. Likewise, the most recent Last Sale Price is used if trading in a security is halted on its primary listing market before the market is open. The Index began on June 2, 2016 at a base value of 1000. Two versions of the Index will be calculated a price return index and a total return index. The price return Index (Nasdaq: DWAMFGE) is ordinarily calculated without regard to cash dividends on Index Securities. The total return Index (Nasdaq: DWAMFGET) reinvests cash dividends on the exdate. Both Indexes reflect extraordinary cash distributions. The Indexes are calculated and disseminated once per second from 9:30:01 to 17:16:00 Eastern Time (ET) in USD. The closing value of the Indexes may change up until 17:15:00 ET due to corrections to the Last Sale Price of the Index Securities. 1 For purposes of this document, Last Sale Price refers to the last regular day trade reported on such security s Index Market. The Index Market is the listing market for which prices are received and used by Nasdaq in the Index calculation and generally will represent the most liquid trading market of the Index Security. If a security does not trade on its Index Market on a given day or the Index Market has not opened for trading, the most recent last sale price from the Index Market (adjusted for corporate actions, if any) is used. For securities where Nasdaq is Index Market, the Last Sale Price may be the Nasdaq Official Closing Price (NOCP) when Nasdaq is closed. 1

Eligibility Criteria The potential inventory (the Selection Universe ) for the Index consists primarily of PowerShares Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) representative of different segments from the U.S. Equities and International Equities asset classes (see appendix A). In instances where the Cash asset class moves into favor, the Index can invest in the Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index (See Appendix B for Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index Methodology). The Selection Universe s members are chosen at the sole discretion of the Index Provider. The Index is designed to provide targeted exposure to a maximum of eight ETFs that the Index Provider employs to gain exposure to both an asset class and a return factor. In instances where U.S. Equities and/or International Equities rank below Cash within Dorsey Wright s Relative Strength Tally Ranking, the Index can invest in the Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index in allocation weights of either 30% or 100%. The Index Provider believes that the most adaptive tool to achieve the goal of discerning the strongest trends versus that of the weakest is Relative Strength. Relative Strength is a momentum technique that relies on unbiased, unemotional, objective data, rather than biased forecasting and subjective research. Relative Strength is a way of recording historic performance patterns, and Dorsey, Wright & Associates (DWA) uses Relative Strength signals as an indicator for current momentum trends among a universe of securities. Index Evaluation Point & Figure Charting: Point-and-Figure charting is a logical, organized way of recording supply and demand within a security, focusing on the price movements of that security. Point-and-Figure charts filter out insignificant price movements by ignoring small price fluctuations, trading volume, and time. Point & Figure Relative Strength Charting: Relative Strength is another technical analysis tool that measures a security's performance relative to other securities, benchmarks, or broad market indices. Relative Strength is a momentum technique that relies on unbiased, unemotional, objective data, rather than biased forecasting and subjective research. Relative Strength is a way of recording historic performance patterns, and DWA uses Relative Strength signals as an indicator for current momentum trends among a universe of securities. For the purpose of conducting the Dorsey Wright Multi-Factor Global Equity Index methodology, DWA establishes an underlying inventory of ETFs to represent the six macro asset classes, including (without limitation): U.S. Equities, International Equities, Fixed Income, Currencies, Commodities, and Cash. For the purposes of this Index, DWA is only concerned with the rankings of U.S. Equities, International Equities, and Cash in relation to one another. DWA builds approximately 2,500 Relative Strength comparisons for each ETF in the underlying inventory versus each of the others in the underlying inventory using the following process: (i) On a daily basis, DWA computes the ratio of the closing price of each ETF representing either one of the macro asset classes or a cash position to the closing price of each other in the established inventory. 2

Example: Relative Strength Reading = (ETF 1 Closing Price ETF 2 Closing Price) x 100 (ii) As a result of on-going calculations, a Point-and-Figure Relative Strength chart is created for each relationship within the inventory. A Point-and-Figure Relative Strength chart is a variation of a Point & Figure chart using the input value as computed in the previous step, instead of individual security prices. Relative Strength Matrix: DWA has implemented a systematic way of analyzing many Point-and-Figure Relative Strength charts by aggregating Buy Signals and Sell Signals within a Matrix format. When a column of X s exceeds a previous column of X s, the chart indicates a Buy Signal (also referred to as positive Relative Strength). Conversely, Sell Signals are given when a column of O s exceeds a previous column of O s (also referred to as negative Relative Strength). DWA created the Relative Strength Matrix (the Matrix ) to analyze large numbers of charts and to easily display an equally large data set of signals. Each box of the Matrix represents a Relative Strength comparison between one ETF and another, where the numerator is the ETF running down the left-hand side of the matrix and the denominator is the ETF from the top of the Matrix. For each ETF in the defined inventory, the total number of Relative Strength charts that are on a Buy Signal is noted in the column Buys of the Matrix. The Matrix is ranked such that the ETF with the highest number of Buy Signals is ranked #1, and appears at the top of the Matrix. The ETF with the lowest number of Buy Signals is ranked last and appears at the bottom of the Matrix. Matrix Tally Concept: After conducting Relative Strength analysis among all representative securities from the inventory within the Matrix, DWA then ranks the macro asset classes from strongest to weakest based on their respective Tally rankings. The Tally reading is simply the sum of the Buy Signals for each ETF representing a given asset class or cash. The number of Buy Signals for each of the ETFs included in the Matrix contributes equally to the Tally reading of the asset class they represent. Index Construction On a monthly basis the Tally rankings are used to set the macro asset class rankings and generate an allocation based on the rule set below. The Index over-weights and underweights its allocation between U.S. Equity and International Equity asset classes based on the macro asset class rankings. If Cash ranks above U.S. Equities or International Equities, the Index will own the Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index in an allocation of approximately 30%. In the event that Cash ranks above both U.S. Equities and International Equities, the Index will own the Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index at a 100% allocation. If U.S. Equities ranks above International Equities within the Relative Strength Tally Ranking, and both U.S. Equities and International Equities rank above Cash, the Index will invest approximately 70% in ETFs representative of the U.S. Equities asset class and 30% in ETFs representative of the International Equities asset class. 3

If U.S. Equities ranks below International Equities within the Relative Strength Tally Ranking but above Cash, the Index will invest approximately 30% in ETFs representative of the U.S. Equities asset class, and 70% in ETFs representative of the International Equities asset class. If Cash ranks above International Equities but below U.S. Equities, the Index will invest approximately 70% in ETFs representative of U.S. Equities, and 30% in the Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index. If Cash ranks above U.S. Equities but below International Equities, the Index will invest approximately 70% in ETFs representative of International Equities, and 30% in the Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index. If Cash ranks above both the U.S. Equities and International Equities asset classes, the Index will invest 100% in the Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index. Once the composition of the macro asset class level of the Index methodology has been determined, the Index methodology then utilizes the same Relative Strength Tally Ranking to determine whether to overweight the Momentum Factor relative to the Low Volatility Factor within each asset class allocation. When a U.S. Equities position is established within the Index, the Index fulfills that macro asset class allocation through varying weights in the four U.S. Equities ETFs listed on Appendix A. If U.S. Equities ranks first or second in the Relative Strength Tally Ranking, the Momentum Factor, as represented by the PowerShares DWA Momentum Portfolio (PDP) and the PowerShares DWA SmallCap Momentum Portfolio (DWAS), will be over-weighted to represent 70% of the total U.S. Equities allocation. Each of these securities is added to The Index in equal dollar amounts. In contrast, if U.S. Equities ranks in the third, fourth, or fifth spots in the Relative Strength Tally Ranking, the Low Volatility Factor, as represented by the PowerShares S&P Low Volatility Portfolio (SPLV) and the PowerShares S&P SmallCap Low Volatility Portfolio (XSLV), will be over-weighted to represent 70% of the total U.S. Equities allocation. Each of these securities is added to The Index in equal dollar amounts. When an International Equities position is established within the Index, the Index fulfills that macro asset class allocation through varying weights in the four International Equities ETFs listed on Appendix A. If International Equities ranks first or second in the Relative Strength Tally Ranking, the Momentum Factor, as represented by the PowerShares DWA Developed Markets Momentum Portfolio (PIZ) and the PowerShares DWA Emerging Markets Momentum Portfolio (PIE), will be over-weighted to represent 70% of the total International Equities allocation. Each of these securities is added to The Index in equal dollar amounts. In contrast, if International Equities ranks in the third, fourth, or fifth spots in the Relative Strength Tally Ranking, the Low Volatility Factor, as represented by the PowerShares S&P Developed Markets Low Volatility Portfolio (IDLV) and the PowerShares S&P Emerging Markets Low Volatility Portfolio (EELV), will be over- 4

weighted to represent 70% of the total International Equities allocation. Each of these securities is added to The Index in equal dollar amounts. The Index is evaluated for changes to both holdings and weightings on a monthly basis. If the evaluation results in changes to either Index holdings or their weights, the Index will undergo a full rebalance to target weights for macro asset classes and individual holdings within the macro asset classes (as described within Index Construction ). Any changes to the Index will be announced on the Market Reference Date, typically the first Monday of each month. If the first Monday is a holiday, the next trading day will serve as the Market Reference Date. The effective date for the Index changes will be stated on the Market Reference Date (typically two business days after the Market Reference Date), and last sale prices on the Market Reference Date will be used to calculate new Index Shares. Index Maintenance Index Share changes are not made outside of the evaluation; however, changes arising from ETF dividends and ETF splits are made to the Index on the evening prior to the effective date of such corporate action. In the case of certain spin-offs or rights issuances, the price of the Index Security is adjusted and a corresponding adjustment is made to the Index Shares such that the weight of the Index Security does not change as a result of the action. A special cash dividend announced by the listing exchange, will result in an adjustment to the Last Sale Price for the special amount distributed and a corresponding adjustment to the Index Shares of an Index Security prior to market open on the ex-date such that the weight of the Index Security will not change as a result of the action. A special dividend may also be referred to as extra, extraordinary, non-recurring, one-time, unusual, etc. Ordinarily, whenever there is a change in an Index Security or a change to the price of an Index Security due to spin-offs, rights issuances or special cash dividends as mentioned above, the divisor is adjusted to ensure that there is no discontinuity in the value of the Index which might otherwise be caused by any such change. All changes are announced in advance and are reflected in the Index prior to market open on the Index effective date. Nasdaq may, from time to time, exercise reasonable discretion as it deems appropriate in order to ensure Index integrity. 5

Appendix A The Index Securities are limited to the following list or similar alternatives: U.S. Equities PowerShares DWA Momentum Portfolio (PDP) PowerShares DWA SmallCap Momentum Portfolio (DWAS) PowerShares S&P 500 Low Volatility Portfolio (SPLV) PowerShares S&P SmallCap Low Volatility Portfolio (XSLV) International Equities PowerShares DWA Developed Markets Momentum Portfolio (PIZ) PowerShares DWA Emerging Markets Momentum Portfolio (PIE) PowerShares S&P Developed Markets Low Volatility Portfolio (IDLV) PowerShares S&P Emerging Markets Low Volatility Portfolio (EELV) Cash Position Nasdaq US T-Bill Part 2 Index (NQCASH2) May 2016 6

Appendix B Nasdaq US T-Bill V2 Index Methodology Index Description The Nasdaq US T-Bill V2 Index is designed to act as a US dollar-denominated cash position through the use of twenty-five US Treasury-Bills (T-Bills) ranging from 0 to 180 days in duration. Index Calculation The Nasdaq US T-Bill V2 Index is an equal weighted index. The value of the Index equals the aggregate value of the Index share weights, also known as the Index Shares, of each of the Index Securities multiplied by each security s Last Sale Price, and divided by the divisor of the Index. The divisor serves the purpose of scaling such aggregate value to a lower order of magnitude which is more desirable for Index reporting purposes. The Index began on September 21, 2015 at a base value of 100.00. One versions of the Index is calculated a total return index. The total return index (Nasdaq: NQCASH2) reinvests cash proceeds. The Indexes are calculated and disseminated once per day in USD. The closing value of the Indexes may change up until 17:15:00 ET due to corrections to the Last Sale Price of the Index Securities. Eligibility Criteria Index eligibility is limited to active United States Treasury Bills with duration less than 180 days. Index Evaluation The Index Securities are evaluated on a weekly basis, except as outlined below under the Holiday Exceptions section. 1) Up to twenty-five T-Bills with maturities between 0 and 180 days remaining will be selected for Index inclusion at the launch. 2) Each Thursday, at the close of trading, the Index will be reviewed to determine the Index Security with the last amount of maturity remaining. This Index Security will 7

be removed from the Index and will be replaced with a new Index Security that has up to 180 days of maturity remaining. The new Security will be replaced at the same weight as the removed Index Security. 3) The Index change will become effective prior to market open on the following Friday. Holiday Exception 1) In the event Thursday is a US trading holiday, the review will be conducted on the next US trading day. 2) In the event Monday is a US trading holiday, the Index changes will become effective on the next US trading day. 3) In the event Friday is a US trading holiday, the review will be conducted on Wednesday and will become effective the following Monday. Index Rebalance The Index employs an equal-weighted methodology and will be set to equal weighted at the Index launch. At each weekly Evaluation, the removed Index Security will be replaced at the same weight as the new Index Security. If the weight of any individual security deviates by more than 20% from a target equal weight percentage, the Index will undergo a rebalance back to equal weight at the next Weekly Evaluation. Nasdaq may, from time to time, exercise reasonable discretion as it deems appropriate in order to ensure Index integrity. June 2016 8