Strategy
In the context of ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds), a strategy refers to the approach that investors or fund managers employ to achieve specific financial goals, such as growth, income, or market hedging.
Various strategies include:
• Active: actively managed funds that do not strictly follow an index.
• Bullet maturity: funds and their bonds mature on a designated date.
• Buy-write: utilizes an options overlay strategy where call options are written against similar equity exposure.
• Copycat: mimics the positions of other prominent funds or managers.
• Dividends: selection or weighting based on dividends paid by companies.
• Duration hedged: adjusts interest rate risk of its bond portfolio.
• Equal: equally weighs all holdings.
• ESG: employs environmental, social, corporate governance, and other ethical principles for selection or weighting.
• Exchange-specific: the fund's universe is strictly a single exchange.
• Extended-term: selects a single futures contract commodity type with a longer tenor than the primary month.
• Fixed asset allocation: adheres to a set criterion of asset allocation.
• Fundamental: based on data from a company's financial statements.
• Growth: targets the growth side of the style continuum.
• Inflation hedged: aims to counteract the inflation risk of securities.
• Laddered: selects commodity futures according to static tenor rules.
• Long-short: holds both long and short positions, often across multiple asset classes.
• Low volatility: exposes to stocks with lower historical price volatility.
• Momentum: targets stocks based on historical price trends.
• Multi-factor: combines fundamental and technical factors for stock exposure.
• Optimized commodity: adjusts commodity exposure based on specific rules.
• Price-weighted: weighs based on security prices without considering the total market value.
• Target duration: seeks a stable aggregate estimated interest rate risk level.
• Technical: chooses securities based on historical price patterns.
• Time since launch: uses IPO or spin-off dates as a selection criterion.
• Value: claims exposure to the value side of the style spectrum.
• Vanilla: intends to offer standard exposure to a market segment.