Advisor Flipbooks

SEI Quantitative Investment Management

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Seek outperformance Seek to reduce risk Factor Value Quality Momentum Low volatility Objective Seeks to invest in stocks that are inexpensive relative to fundamentals. Seeks to invest in stocks with stable profitability and healthy balance sheets. Seeks to invest in stocks with improving earnings movement and price trends. Seeks to invest in stocks with stable earnings and lower risk. Behavioral foundation Mean reversion in prices due to investor overreaction as a result of loss aversion or liquidity preference. Stable compounding of prices due to investor tendency to overpay for lottery-like outcomes. Trend in prices due to investor under- reaction as a result of anchoring. Risk reduction via stocks with more stable return profiles and/or lower correlation to the market. Historical hit rates of factor outperformance We strive to provide factor solutions that are profitable, optimized, and continuously enhanced. Description: A hit rate refers to the percentage of rolling periods that a specific factor's return exceeded the return of a benchmark index. This chart shows the percentage of rolling periods in which each of the factors–value, quality, and momentum–outperformed their relative counterparts. The analysis covers 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year periods and uses data from July 1964 to June 2024. Source: Analysis using Ken French Data Library as of 6/30/24. Data from July 1964 through June 2024. Value represented by HML (high book-to-market minus low book-to-market). Quality represented by RMW (robust minus weak). Momentum represented by MOM (high prior returns minus low prior returns). Counterparts for value, quality, and momentum are higher priced stocks, less profitable stocks, and downward trending stocks. -year -year -year -year Value Quality Momentum 4

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