Undiscovered Managers Behavioral Val Fd earns an Above Average Process Pillar rating.
The most important driver of the rating is the fund's strong long-term risk-adjusted performance. This can be seen in its five-year alpha calculated relative to the category index, which suggests that the managers have shown skill in their allocation of risk. The parent firm's five-year risk-adjusted success ratio of 57% also strengthens the process. The measure indicates the percentage of a firm's funds that survived and beat their respective category's median Morningstar Risk-Adjusted Return for the period. Their commendable success ratio suggests that the firm does well for investors and that this fund may benefit from that. Lastly, the process is limited by being an actively managed strategy. Historical data, like Morningstar's Active/Passive Barometer, finds that actively managed funds have generally underperformed their passive counterparts, especially over longer time horizons.
This strategy prefers more value-oriented stocks compared with the average fund in its peer group, the Small Value Morningstar Category. But in terms of market capitalization, it is on par with peers. Analyzing additional factors, this strategy tilts consistently toward stocks with lower quality or the shares of companies with more financial leverage and lower profitability, compared with Morningstar Category peers over the past few years. Such positions do not tend to provide much ballast for a portfolio. In the latest month, the strategy was also less exposed to the Quality factor compared with Morningstar Category peers. The managers have also tended to overweight yield during recent years, shown by the portfolio's high exposure to dividends or buybacks. High-yield stocks tend to be connected to more mature companies earning enough cash to return some to shareholders. At times, however, extreme market pressure can force them to cut their dividends, which hurts stock performance. Compared with category peers, the strategy also had more exposure to the Yield factor in the most recent month. In addition, this strategy has had a bias away from momentum stocks during these years. Momentum strategies typically bet that stocks that have recently outperformed will continue to do so, and those that have recently underperformed will keep lagging. Avoiding the former and buying the latter could indicate that managers are averse to chasing momentum. In recent months, the strategy also had less Momentum factor exposure than its peers. More information on a fund and its respective category's factor exposure can be found in the Factor Profile module within the Portfolio section.
The portfolio is overweight in financial services and utilities relative to the category average by 14.7 and 3.4 percentage points, respectively. The sectors with low exposure compared to category peers are technology and industrials, underweight the average by 7.0 and 3.6 percentage points of assets, respectively. The portfolio is composed of 96 holdings and is relatively top-heavy. Of the strategy's assets, 30.7% are concentrated within the top 10 holdings, as opposed to the typical peer's 28.1%. And finally, in terms of portfolio turnover, looking at year-over-year movements, 39% of the fund's holdings have turned over, whether through increasing, decreasing, or changing a position.