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Commodity indexes have been created to portray the aggregate movement of commodity prices, investment vehicles, and investment approaches. It can be said that an asset class does not exist without at least one representative index.
A commodity index plays the following roles in the commodity sector investments:
The following are key characteristics that differentiate each of these indexes:
It is the oldest of the selected commodity indexes. It is based on 24 commodities that apply liquidity screens to include only those contracts with an established minimum level of trading volume and available historical pricing. S&P GSCI uses a world production value-weighting scheme that gives the largest weight to the most valuable commodity. It does this based on physical trade value, similar to a market-capitalization-weighted index of nearly all major bond and stock market indexes.
It uses the rolling methodology that focuses on owning the front (i.e., near-term) contracts to address the highest liquidity and where supply and demand shocks are most likely to impact.
Commonly referred to as BCOM (previously the Dow Jones–UBS Commodity Index, i.e., DJ–UBS) is based on 22 commodities and includes liquidity as both a weighting and screening factor. However, the index is selection-based. This means that a committee uses judgment to pick the included commodities and limits the size of the sectors (33% maximum) and floors on individual commodities (2% minimum). Therefore, very different index compositions and weights can occur.
In this case, the rolling methodology focuses on owning the front (i.e., near-term) contracts.
It uses a fixed weighting scheme to allocate exposure. It uses the rolling methodology and focuses on near-term contracts. It is optimized based on the time value of maximized backwardation or minimized contango for the contracts that fall within the next 12-calendar months. Note that it takes an active decision with regards to roll return positioning as compared to the other indexes.
It consists of 19 commodities and uses a fixed-weighting scheme to allocate exposure.
An index management committee decides on the weights based on several factors, including diversification, sector representation, liquidity, and economic importance. It clusters the fixed weights into several tiers; hence components are moved from tier to tier. The rolling methodology focuses on the front and second-front months and does not require a particular calculation.
It uses a fixed-weighting scheme to allocate exposure among 37 different commodities. An index management committee makes decisions on the weights based on several factors, including diversification, sector representation, liquidity, and economic importance. It also clusters the fixed weights into several tiers, and the resulting components are moved from tier to tier as they gain or lose relative importance, as seen by the committee.
From portfolio management theory, rebalancing is more important if a market is frequently mean-reverting because there are more peaks to sell and valleys to buy. Note that frequent rebalancing can lead to underperformance in a trending market since the outperforming assets are sold but their prices continue to rise. In contrast, the underperforming assets are purchased but their prices continue declining.
It uses a floating weighting approach, such as production value (fully or partially). The higher (lower) futures prices usually coincide with higher (lower) physical prices. Therefore, the magnitude of rebalancing weights is generally lower than a fixed-weight scheme since the post-rebalance weights will generally drift in line with the current portfolio weights.
Question 1
Which of the following statements is least likely true regarding commodity futures indexes?
- Commodity sectors in backwardation typically improve index returns.
- An index that invests in several futures exchanges provides a high degree of diversification.
- Total returns of the major commodity indexes have a low correlation with traditional asset classes, such as equities and bonds.
Solution
The correct answer is B.
Commodity futures exchanges throughout the world are highly correlated and thus provide little diversification benefits.
A is incorrect. Markets in backwardation typically have positive roll yields. They will, therefore, likely improve index returns (although the price return may still not be positive, and, as such, the total return may still be negative).
C is incorrect. Commodity index returns do indeed have a historically low correlation with equities and bonds.
Question 2
All factors being constant, compared with an equally weighted commodity index, a production value-weighted index (such as the S&P GSCI) is most likely:
- Less sensitive to energy sector returns.
- More sensitive to energy sector returns.
- Equally sensitive to energy sector returns.
Solution
The correct answer is B.
The energy sector will comprise a sizable portion of a production value-weighted index and will be a meaningful driver of returns for such an index.
A is incorrect. A production value-weighted index will be more, not less, sensitive to the energy sector.
C is incorrect. A production value-weighted index will be more, not equally, sensitive to the energy sector.
Reading 35: Introduction to Commodities and Commodity Derivatives
LOS 35 (j) Describe how the construction of commodity indexes affects index returns.