Abstract:
The 1/N rule of equal equity weightings for portfolios was found by previous studies to be a simple way to not only achieve portfolio diversification but also to outperform more sophisticated approaches of portfolio optimisation. This study compared quarterly rebalanced equal- and value-weighted portfolios constructed of large-, mid-, and small-caps on the JSE during the holding period of December 1987 to November 2018. The portfolios were constructed following the rolling window approach (quarterly), different holding periods (12, 36, 60 and 120 months) and before transaction costs. Multi-variate and t-tests were performed to test for differences in total mean return, volatility, maximum drawdown, performance success ratio, Sharpe ratio, Treynor ratio, Jensen’s alpha, and Information ratio. This study found that large- and mid-cap equal-weighted portfolios significantly outperformed their value-weighted counterparts regarding the total mean return, volatility, Sharpe and Treynor ratio for longer investment periods. Small-cap equal-weighted portfolios underperformed across all investment periods and performance metrics.