What’s the Difference: Low Volatility vs. Minimum Volatility

 | Feb 03, 2023 11:01

‘Similar in spirit, different in approach’ describes how one can view these investment approaches. While both strategies are based on the low volatility anomaly, the way each executes this objective differs meaningfully.

Low volatility investing focuses on the volatility of individual equities within a benchmark, ranking them on their past volatility measures, and then forming a portfolio accordingly. Conversely, minimum volatility portfolios determine the historical return volatilities and correlations of all the individual stocks in the benchmark, then utilize an optimization approach to construct the least volatile portfolio, based on their weightings and observed relationship over time.

Simply put, for low volatility portfolios, the absolute focus is ensuring that only low volatility stocks are present, whereas minimum volatility portfolios may include stocks deemed volatile – but their overarching relationship in the portfolio is what takes precedence.

h2 Different approach, different exposures/h2

The difference in each investment strategy’s approach is very much reflected within their sector allocations. Using the S&P 500 Low Volatility Index and S&P 500 Minimum Volatility Index as references, low volatility strategies will lean more towards defensive sectors, such as Utilities and Consumer Staples, whereas minimum volatility tilts towards cyclical sectors, such as Information Technology and Financials. It is worth noting that the exposure to the energy sector is non-existent or negligible across both strategies, as of December 2022, given the volatility that is inherent within the sector – particularly over the past 3 years.

The difference in sector allocation truly demonstrates how distinct each investment approach is and where the sources of return (and risk mitigation) are derived from by the portfolio.