JPMorgan U.S. Applied Data Science Value earns an Above Average Process Pillar rating.
The leading factor in the rating is the parent firm's five-year risk-adjusted success ratio of 57%. 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. Noteworthy risk-adjusted performance also bolsters the rating. This can be seen in the fund's five-year alpha calculated relative to the category index, which suggests that the managers have shown skill in their allocation of risk. Lastly, the process is limited by the number of months that the management team has been running this vehicle together.
This strategy tends to pick smaller market-cap firms compared with the average fund in its peer group, the Large Value Morningstar Category. But in terms of style (value/growth) exposure, it is similar. Examining additional factor exposure, this strategy has exhibited a tilt toward high-volatility stocks or the shares of companies with histories of the higher standard deviation of returns, compared with Morningstar Category peers in the last few years. Such stocks tend to rise faster and fall harder than the broad market. High-volatility exposure contributes to stronger performance during bull markets, but often at the cost of losing more during downturns. In recent months, the strategy was more exposed to the Volatility factor compared with its Morningstar Category peers as well. This strategy has also been exposed to liquid stocks during these years. More-liquid assets contribute to more-flexible exit strategies without price changes and tend to be a ballast during market selloffs. For example, if the portfolio faces successive redemptions in a short period of time, it will be less likely to experience a significant loss. Compared with category peers, the strategy also had more exposure to the Liquidity factor in the most recent month. Additionally, the managers have tended to overweight yield, shown by the portfolio's high exposure to stocks paying dividends or buying back shares. 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. In this month, the strategy also had more exposure to the Yield factor over 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 has allocations in its top two sectors, industrials and healthcare, that are similar to the category. The sectors with low exposure compared to category peers are technology and consumer defensive, with technology underweighting the average portfolio by 3.5 percentage points of assets and consumer defensive similar to the average. The strategy owns 104 securities and its assets are more dispersed than peers in the category. In particular, 20.9% of the fund’s assets are concentrated in the top 10 fund holdings, as opposed to the typical peer's 27.4%. And finally, in terms of portfolio turnover, on a year-over-year basis, 17% of the fund's holdings have changed, whether through increasing, decreasing, or changing a position.