Value ETFs Lag Growth, Momentum Counterparts

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This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

There were ample expectations for the opposite to be true heading into 2018, but value exchange traded funds continue lagging their growth and momentum counterparts this year. That could be an ominous sign, particularly with the U.S. humming along.

Value stocks usually trade at lower prices relative to fundamental measures of value, like earnings and the book value of assets. On the other hand, growth-oriented stocks tend to run at higher valuations since investors expect the rapid growth in those company measures, but more are growing wary of high valuations.

Data suggest turnover is increasing in value ETFs, including the Vanguard Value ETF (VTV) .

VTV, one of the largest value ETFs in the U.S., follows the CRSP US Large Cap Value Index. The fund charges just 0.05% per year, or $5 on a $10,000 investment, making it cheaper than 95% of competing funds, according to Vanguard data.

VTV “absorbed $424 million in trades Tuesday, almost triple its average daily volume over the past year,” reports Bloomberg.

Increased Activity for Value ETFs

VTV is not the only value ETF seeing increased activity in recent trading sessions. The same is true of the iShares S&P 500 Value ETF (IVE) , another widely followed value ETF.

“Investors also moved about $274 million worth of the iShares S&P 500 Value ETF, or IVE, more than double the average daily turnover in the past year,” according to Bloomberg.

Investors' dissatisfaction with value ETFs is a scenario worth monitoring.

“The thinking goes that value stocks do best during expansionary phases, when strong corporate profits lift even the most chronically underpriced shares. In the later cycles, investors gravitate toward growth and quality stocks that can gin up profits independent of the economic backdrop,” reports Bloomberg.

The $16.2 billion IVE holds nearly 400 stocks. IVE allocates over 37% of its combined weight to financial services and energy stocks.

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