Schwab Intelligent Portfolios Guide to Asset Classes & ETFs
Introduction
A foundational belief that underlies Schwab Intelligent Portfolios® is that investors should be well diversified, both within and across asset classes. Within the program, portfolios may contain a combination of about 20 expanded asset classes, along with an FDIC-insured cash allocation. That begs the question, what is an asset class?
It's not an entirely precise concept. Generally speaking, an asset class is a group of investments such as stocks and bonds that can be further broken down by characteristics such as market capitalization and level of risk. Like so many definitions, though, the technical terms can only do so much. Examples bring the term to life far more powerfully.
This document is a guide to the asset classes that are present in at least one of the portfolios that comprise Schwab Intelligent Portfolios. In addition to describing the investments that are included in each asset class, we've highlighted the role each plays in a portfolio and when they tend to perform well and poorly.
This article also includes a list of the exchange-traded funds (ETFs) selected for each asset class within Schwab Intelligent Portfolios. ETFs are selected based on stringent criteria to ensure that all ETFs within the program—whether Schwab ETFs™ or third-party ETFs—deliver accurate asset class representation with low costs. These selection criteria include characteristics such as assets under management (AUM), ETF liquidity, how closely the ETF tracks its underlying index, and operating expense ratio (OER).
Schwab Intelligent Portfolios are designed to be low cost and range in weighted average overall ETF OERs at the portfolio level from 0.02% to 0.19%.
These selection criteria help pare down thousands of ETFs to the approximately 50 included in the program that could potentially be part of your Schwab Intelligent Portfolios account. Most asset classes include two ETFs, a primary ETF and a secondary ETF. To enable tax-loss harvesting1 within asset classes, the primary and secondary ETFs selected for the program track different underlying indexes.2
Charles Schwab Investment Management, Inc. (CSIM) periodically reviews and updates the selected ETFs in our portfolios. ETF information shown in this paper is as of June 30, 2024 to coincide with the last review process.
To learn more about the role of each asset class, download our Guide to Asset Classes.
Guide to Expanded Asset Classes
- U.S. Large Company Stocks
- U.S. Large Company Stocks–Fundamental
- U.S. Small Company Stocks
- U.S. Small Company Stocks–Fundamental
- International Developed Large Company Stocks
- International Developed Large Company Stocks–Fundamental
- International Developed Small Company Stocks
- International Developed Small Company Stocks–Fundamental
- International Emerging Markets Stocks
- International Emerging Markets Stocks–Fundamental
- U.S. Exchange-Traded REITs
- International Exchange-Traded REITs
- U.S. High Dividend Stocks
- International High Dividend Stocks
- U.S. Treasuries
- U.S. Investment Grade Corporate Bonds
- U.S. Securitized Bonds
- U.S. Inflation Protected Bonds
- U.S. Corporate High Yield Bonds
- International Developed Country Bonds
- International Emerging Markets Bonds
- Preferred Securities
- Bank Loans
- Investment Grade Municipal Bonds
- Investment Grade California Municipal Bonds
- Gold and Other Precious Metals
- FDIC-insured Cash
ETF List (As of 6/30/2024)
Category | Primary ETF | Secondary ETF |
---|---|---|
U.S. Large Company | SCHX–Schwab U.S. Large-Cap | VOO–Vanguard S&P 500 |
U.S. Large Company–Fundamental | FNDX–Schwab Fundamental U.S. Large Company | PRF–Invesco FTSE RAFI U.S. 1000 |
U.S. Small Company | SCHA–Schwab U.S. Small-Cap | VB–Vanguard Small-Cap |
U.S. Small Company–Fundamental | FNDA–Schwab Fundamental U.S. Small Company | PRFZ–Invesco FTSE RAFI U.S. 1500 Small-Mid |
International Developed Large Company | SCHF–Schwab International Equity | VEA–Vanguard FTSE Developed Markets |
International Developed Large Company–Fundamental | FNDF–Schwab Fundamental International Equity | PXF–Invesco FTSE RAFI Developed Markets ex-U.S. |
International Developed–Small Company | SCHC–Schwab International Small-Cap Equity | VSS–Vanguard FTSE All-World ex-U.S. Small Cap |
International Developed Small Company–Fundamental | FNDC–Schwab Fundamental International Small Equity | PDN–Invesco FTSE RAFI Developed Markets ex-U.S. Small-Mid |
International Emerging Markets | SCHE–Schwab Emerging Markets Equity | IEMG–iShares Core MSCI Emerging Markets |
International Emerging Markets–Fundamental | FNDE–Schwab Fundamental Emerging Markets Equity | PXH–Invesco FTSE RAFI Emerging Markets |
U.S. Exchange-Traded REITS | SCHH–Schwab U.S. REIT | USRT–iShares Core U.S. REIT |
International Exchange-Traded REITS | HAUZ–Xtrackers International Real Estate | VNQI–Vanguard Global ex-U.S. Real Estate |
U.S. High Dividend | SCHD–Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity | VYM–Vanguard High Dividend Yield |
International High Dividend | HDEF–Xtrackers MSCI EAFE High Dividend Yield Equity ETF | VYMI–Vanguard International High Dividend Yield |
Fixed Income
Category | Primary ETF | Secondary ETF |
---|---|---|
U.S. Treasuries | SCHR–Schwab Intermediate-Term U.S. Treasury | IEI—iShares 3-7 Year Treasury Bond |
U.S. Investment Grade Corporate Bonds | SCHI – Schwab 5-10 Year Corporate Bond | SPIB–SPDR® Portfolio Intermediate Term Corporate Bond |
U.S. Securitized Bonds | VMBS–Vanguard Mortgage-Backed Securities | MBB–iShares MBS |
U.S. Inflation Protected Bonds | SCHP–Schwab U.S. TIPS | SPIP—SPDR Portfolio TIPS |
U.S. Corporate High Yield Bonds | HYLB–Xtrackers USD High Yield Corporate Bond | USHY—iShares Broad USD High Yield Corp Bond |
International Developed Country Bonds | IAGG—iShares Core International Aggregate Bond | BNDX–Vanguard Total International Bond |
International Emerging Markets Bonds | EBND–SPDR® Bloomberg Emerging Markets Local Bond | EMLC– VanEck J.P. Morgan EM Local Currency Bond |
Preferred Securities | PFF-iShares Preferred & Income Securities | PSK–SPDR ICE Preferred Securities |
Bank Loans | BKLN–Invesco Senior Loan | N/A |
Investment Grade Municipal Bonds | VTEB–Vanguard Tax-Exempt Bond | MUB–iShares National Muni Bond ETF |
Investment Grade California Municipal Bonds | CMF–iShares California Muni Bond | PWZ–Invesco California AMT-Free Muni Bond |
Category | Primary ETF | Secondary ETF |
---|---|---|
Gold and Other Precious Metals | IAU–iShares Gold Trust | GLTR–abrdn Physical Precious Metals Basket Shares |
Stocks
U.S. Large Company Stocks
- What is it?
U.S. large company stocks are publicly traded equities issued by the largest companies domiciled in the United States. Most traditional stock indexes are constructed based on a market-capitalization-weighted ("market cap") approach (e.g., S&P 500®, Russell 1000®, etc.), in which companies with the largest market caps have the largest weights. Market cap is the most common measurement of a company's size, and is computed by taking the number of outstanding shares and multiplying it by the price of the stock. U.S. large company stocks are one of the most widely recognized and liquid asset classes, and are commonly viewed as a key building block to any diversified portfolio. Some of the more well-known, publicly traded corporations included in this asset class are older companies that have been around since the 19th century such as General Electric and Procter & Gamble, as well as much younger companies such as Alphabet and Meta. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
U.S. large company stocks are meant to help provide growth to a portfolio. Many of these companies also provide income through the payment of dividends. - When does it perform well?
U.S. large company stocks typically perform well when underlying companies are growing and fundamentals are strong. When these companies are investing profits back into their businesses for research and development, personnel and technology, this can be a positive signal. Often, periods of strong U.S. large company growth happen simultaneously with strong overall economic growth and low inflation. Valuation matters, as well. When stock prices are low relative to earnings, for example, subsequent price performance is more likely to be strong. - When does it perform poorly?
These stocks perform poorly during economic slowdowns or expectations of such slowdowns and when interest rates are high. Unexpected inflation may also hurt these stocks. When prices are high relative to earnings, price performance can suffer. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab U.S. Large-Cap>TickerSCHX>
-
Secondary ETF>NameVanguard S&P 500>TickerVOO>
U.S. Large Company Stocks—Fundamental
U.S. Large Company Stocks—Fundamental
- What is it?
U.S. large company stocks—fundamental are investments of larger U.S. companies that are included in fundamental indexes, which screen and weight companies based on fundamental factors such as sales, cash flow and dividends. Most traditional stock indexes are constructed based on market-cap (e.g., S&P 500®, Russell 2000®, etc.), where companies with the largest market capitalizations have the largest weights. Including allocations to fundamentally weighted indexes adds diversification within a portfolio and may improve risk-adjusted returns over time. Due to their differences in construction, fundamentally weighted indexes tend to behave differently than market cap-weighted indexes in different market environments while retaining benefits of traditional indexing such as transparency and relatively low-cost implementation. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Investments in fundamentally weighted ETFs and traditional market-cap weighted ETFs can be used as a complement to each other because they differ in their performance under various market environments. The end result is a portfolio that we believe can result in better risk-adjusted results over time. - When does it perform well?
Based on research conducted by Research Affiliates, LLC, FTSE Russell, and Schwab Center for Financial Research among others, fundamental index strategies have outperformed market-cap indexes over longer time periods. This is partly attributable to the fact that the fundamental strategies break the link of assigning a weighting with the price of the stock. A market-cap index provides the largest weighting to the largest companies regardless of valuation. As a result, market-cap indexes can be described as "overweighting over priced stocks and underweighting undervalued stocks."3 Since fundamental index strategies tend to overweight companies that appear cheap based on various financial metrics, they tend to outperform in environments that reward such "cheap" (i.e., value) stocks. As for their absolute level of performance, fundamental strategies are affected in much the same way and by the same factors as U.S. large company stocks. - When does it perform poorly?
Fundamental index strategies may lag market-cap indexes in "boom" or "momentum" periods or when the biggest companies (as measured by market capitalization) dramatically outperform the smaller companies in an index. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - U.S. Large Company Stocks—Fundamental
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab Fundamental U.S. Large Company>TickerFNDX>
-
Secondary ETF>NameInvesco FTSE RAFI U.S. 1000>TickerPRF>
U.S. Small Company Stocks
- What is it?
U.S. small company stocks—or "small caps"—are investments in the equity of smaller U.S. companies, generally those that represent the bottom 10% of the market by cumulative market capitalization. Small company stocks may provide greater potential for growth than large company stocks. However, they are riskier because their size makes them more vulnerable to economic shocks, inexperienced management, competition and financial instability. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
The U.S. small company stocks offer higher growth potential than many other asset classes because of the potential for such companies to grow rapidly. Small cap stocks have higher expected long-term returns relative to other asset classes to compensate for the higher risk associated with them. - When does it perform well?
U.S. small company stocks generally perform well when the economy is expanding or investors expect such expansion to occur. Small company stocks tend to be more closely tied to the strength of the U.S. economy than large company stocks because they typically generate most of their revenue within the U.S. while large multinational companies often generate a substantial portion of revenue in multiple geographies around the world. Valuation matters as well. When prices are low relative to, for example, earnings, subsequent price performance is more likely to be strong. - When does it perform poorly?
During extreme equity market or economic stress, these stocks tend to perform poorly. When prices are high relative to earnings, price performance can suffer. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - U.S. Small Company Stocks
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab U.S. Small-Cap>TickerSCHA>
-
Secondary ETF>NameVanguard Small-Cap>TickerVB>
U.S. Small Company Stocks—Fundamental
- What is it?
U.S. small company stocks—fundamental are investments in the equity of smaller U.S. companies that are included in fundamental indexes, which screen and weight companies based on fundamental factors such as sales, cash flow and dividends. Most traditional stock indexes are constructed based on market-cap (e.g., S&P 500®, Russell 2000®, etc.), where companies with the largest market capitalizations have the largest weights. Including allocations to fundamentally weighted indexes adds diversification within a portfolio and may improve risk-adjusted returns over time. Due to their differences in construction, fundamentally weighted indexes tend to behave differently than market cap-weighted indexes in different market environments while retaining benefits of traditional indexing such as transparency and relatively low-cost implementation. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Investments in fundamentally weighted ETFs and traditional market-cap weighted ETFs can be used as a complement to each other because they differ in their performance under various market environments. The end result is a portfolio that we believe can result in better risk-adjusted results over time. - When does it perform well?
Based on research conducted by Research Affiliates, LLC, FTSE Russell, and Schwab Center for Financial Research among others, fundamental index strategies have outperformed market-cap indexes over longer time periods. This is partly attributable to the fact that the fundamental strategies break the link of assigning a weighting with the price of the stock. A market-cap index provides the largest weighting to the largest companies regardless of valuation. As a result, market-cap indexes can be described as "overweighting over priced stocks and underweighting undervalued stocks."3 Since fundamental index strategies tend to overweight companies that appear cheap based on various financial metrics, they tend to outperform in environments that reward such "cheap" (i.e., value) stocks. As for their absolute level of performance, fundamental strategies are affected in much the same way and by the same factors as U.S. small company stocks. - When does it perform poorly?
Fundamental strategies may lag market-cap indexes in "boom" or "momentum" periods or when the biggest companies (as measured by market capitalization) dramatically outperform the smaller companies in an index. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - U.S. Small Company Stocks—Fundamental
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab Fundamental U.S. Small Company>TickerFNDA>
-
Secondary ETF>NameInvesco FTSE RAFI U.S. 1500>TickerPRFZ>
International Developed Large Company Stocks
- What is it?
International developed large company stocks are investments in the equity of larger foreign companies that have high market capitalizations and are domiciled in countries with mature economies. The stock markets in these developed countries benefit from strong investor protections, corporate governance and legal infrastructure. Investing in these stocks involves additional risks, which include differences in financial accounting standards, currency fluctuations, geopolitical risk, foreign taxes and regulations, and the potential for illiquid markets. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
While U.S. companies can have vast international operations and exposure, investing solely in U.S. stocks means excluding nearly three-fourths of the global economy and over half of the world's stock market value. International developed large company stocks provide some of the same benefits as U.S. large-company stocks – growth potential and more stable financial results than smaller foreign companies – but provide diversification benefits due to their exposure to non-U.S. markets. In addition, investing in companies located overseas offers the potential to benefit from currency diversification—foreign company returns are generally denominated in foreign currencies, so they provide some protection against a potential fall in the value of the U.S. dollar relative to those currencies. - When does it perform well?
This asset class tends to perform well when international developed countries are growing more rapidly than the U.S. and when their currencies are appreciating against the U.S. dollar. Valuation matters as well. When prices are low relative to, for example, earnings, subsequent price performance is more likely to be strong. - When does it perform poorly?
When the U.S. dollar is gaining against these currencies, this asset class tends to perform poorly relative to U.S. stocks. The relative performance can also be poor when non-U.S. economies are weakening or expected to weaken. When prices are high relative to earnings, price performance can suffer. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - International Developed Large Company Stocks
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab International Equity>TickerSCHF>
-
Secondary ETF>NameVanguard FTSE Developed Markets>TickerVEA>
International Developed Large Company Stocks—Fundamental
- What is it?
International developed large company stocks – fundamental are investments in the equities of larger foreign companies that are included in fundamental indexes, which screen and weight companies based on fundamental factors such as sales, cash flow and dividends. Most traditional stock indexes are constructed based on market-cap (e.g., S&P 500®, Russell 2000®, etc.), where companies with the largest market capitalizations have the largest weights. Including allocations to fundamentally weighted indexes adds diversification within a portfolio and may improve risk-adjusted returns over time. Due to their differences in construction, fundamentally weighted indexes tend to behave differently than market cap-weighted indexes in different market environments while retaining benefits of traditional indexing such as transparency and relatively low-cost implementation. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Investments in fundamentally weighted ETFs and traditional market-cap weighted ETFs can be used as complements in an investment portfolio because they tend to perform differently in various market environments. Including both market cap-weighted and fundamentally weighted ETFs in a portfolio can enhance diversification and potentially improve risk-adjusted results over time. - When does it perform well?
Based on research conducted by Research Affiliates, LLC, FTSE Russell, Schwab Center for Financial Research and others, fundamental index strategies have outperformed market-cap indexes over longer time periods. This is partly attributable to the fact that fundamental strategies break the link of assigning a weighting with the price of the stock. A market-cap index provides the largest weighting to the largest companies by market cap regardless of valuation. As a result, market-cap indexes can be described as "overweighting over priced stocks and underweighting undervalued stocks."3 Since fundamental index strategies tend to overweight companies that appear cheap based on various financial metrics, they tend to outperform in environments that reward such "cheap" (i.e., value) stocks. As for their absolute level of performance, fundamental strategies are affected in much the same way and by the same factors as other international developed large company stocks. - When does it perform poorly?
Fundamental index strategies may lag market-cap indexes in "boom" or "momentum" periods or when the biggest companies (as measured by market capitalization) dramatically outperform the smaller companies in an index. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection -International Developed Large Company Stocks—Fundamental
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab Fundamental International Equity>TickerFNDF>
-
Secondary ETF>NameInvesco FTSE RAFI Developed Markets ex-U.S.>TickerPXF>
International Developed Small Company Stocks
- What is it?
International developed small company stocks are investments in the equity of smaller foreign companies that are domiciled in countries with mature economies and stock markets that benefit from strong investor protections, corporate governance and legal infrastructure. Investing in international developed small company stocks involves additional risks, which include differences in financial accounting standards, currency fluctuations, geopolitical risk, foreign taxes and regulations, and the potential for illiquid markets. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Like U.S. small company stocks, these investments offer greater potential for growth than their large-cap counterparts. In addition, they provide diversification relative to U.S. markets because the revenues of these companies tend to be tightly tied to their home countries. By contrast, large multinational companies typically generate revenues in multiple geographies around the world. - When does it perform well?
International developed small company stocks typically perform well during the earlier stages of a global economic recovery. A strong foreign currency relative to the dollar also enhances the returns of international developed small company stocks. Valuation matters as well. When prices are low relative to earnings, for example, subsequent price performance is more likely to be strong. - When does it perform poorly?
A struggling global economy adversely impacts the performance of these stocks. When prices are high relative to earnings, price performance can suffer. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection -International Developed Small Company Stocks
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab International Small-Cap Equity>TickerSCHC>
-
Secondary ETF>NameVanguard FTSE All-World ex-U.S. Small Cap>TickerVSS>
International Developed Small Company Stocks—Fundamental
- What is it?
International developed small company stocks - fundamental are investments in the equities of smaller foreign companies that are included in fundamental indexes, which screen and weight companies based on fundamental factors such as sales, cash flow and dividends. Most traditional stock indexes are constructed based on market-cap (e.g., S&P 500®, Russell 2000®, etc.), where companies with the largest market capitalizations have the largest weights. Including allocations to fundamentally weighted indexes adds diversification within a portfolio and may improve risk-adjusted returns over time. Due to their differences in construction, fundamentally weighted indexes tend to behave differently than market cap-weighted indexes in different market environments while retaining benefits of traditional indexing such as transparency and relatively low-cost implementation. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Investments in fundamentally weighted ETFs and traditional market-cap weighted ETFs can be used as complements in an investment portfolio because they tend to perform differently in various market environments. Including both market cap-weighted and fundamentally weighted ETFs in a portfolio can enhance diversification and potentially improve risk-adjusted results over time. - When does it perform well?
Based on research conducted by Research Affiliates, LLC, FTSE Russell, Schwab Center for Financial Research and others, fundamental index strategies have outperformed market-cap indexes over longer time periods. This is partly attributable to the fact that fundamental strategies break the link of assigning a weighting with the price of the stock. A market-cap index provides the largest weighting to the largest companies by market cap regardless of valuation. As a result, market-cap indexes can be described as "overweighting over priced stocks and underweighting undervalued stocks."3 Since fundamental index strategies tend to overweight companies that appear cheap based on various financial metrics, they tend to outperform in environments that reward such "cheap" (i.e., value) stocks. As for their absolute level of performance, fundamental strategies are affected in much the same way and by the same factors as other international developed small company stocks. - When does it perform poorly?
Fundamental index strategies may lag market-cap indexes in "boom" or "momentum" periods, or when the biggest companies (as measured by market capitalization) dramatically outperform the smaller companies in an index. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - International Developed Small Company Stocks—Fundamental
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab Fundamental International Equity>TickerFNDC>
-
Secondary ETF>NameInvesco FTSE RAFI Developed Markets ex-U.S. Small-Mid>TickerPDN>
International Emerging Market Stocks
- What is it?
Emerging market stocks are equity investments in foreign companies domiciled in countries with developing economies that have been experiencing rapid growth and industrialization. Emerging markets differ from their developed market counterparts in four main ways: (1) They have lower household incomes; (2) They are undergoing structural changes, such as modernization of infrastructure or moving from a dependence on agriculture to manufacturing; (3) Their economies are undergoing development and reform programs; (4) Their markets are less mature. Emerging markets are riskier than developed markets due to greater potential for political instability, currency fluctuations, an uncertain regulatory environment, volatility and higher investment costs. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Emerging markets offer a unique combination of benefits: (1) Higher growth potential than developed markets, as corporate revenues have the potential to grow faster when economic growth is higher. (2) Diversification. By investing in emerging markets, diversification increases as emerging markets can perform differently than developed markets. - When does it perform well?
Emerging market stocks generally perform well during periods of faster growth when commodities are trading at relatively high levels, local export markets are thriving due to a growing economy, and local governments implement policies more conducive to private sector growth. Valuation matters as well. When prices are low relative to earnings, for example, subsequent price performance is more likely to be strong. - When does it perform poorly?
Emerging market stocks typically struggle when the U.S. is in a recession or experiencing a slow-growth environment. Also, due to their relatively high dependence on commodity sales, they typically don't perform well when commodities are experiencing declining prices. Periods of high geopolitical risk are also harmful for emerging market stocks. When stock prices are high relative to earnings, price performance can suffer. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - International Emerging Market Stocks table
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab Emerging Markets Equity>TickerSCHE>
-
Secondary ETF>NameiShares Core MSCI Emerging Markets>TickerIEMG>
International Emerging Market Stocks—Fundamental
- What is it?
International emerging market stocks—fundamental are investments in the equity of foreign companies that are based in countries experiencing rapid growth and industrialization, and are included in fundamental indexes, which screen and weight companies based on fundamental factors such as sales, cash flow and dividends. Most traditional stock indexes are constructed based on market-cap (e.g., S&P 500®, Russell 2000®, etc.), where companies with the largest market capitalizations have the largest weights. Including allocations to fundamentally weighted indexes adds diversification within a portfolio and may improve risk-adjusted returns over time. Due to their differences in construction, fundamentally weighted indexes tend to behave differently than market cap-weighted indexes in different market environments while retaining benefits of traditional indexing such as transparency and relatively low-cost implementation. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Investments in fundamentally weighted ETFs and traditional market-cap weighted ETFs can be used as complements in an investment portfolio because they tend to perform differently in various market environments. Including both market cap-weighted and fundamentally weighted ETFs in a portfolio can enhance diversification and potentially improve risk-adjusted results over time. - When does it perform well?
Based on research conducted by Research Affiliates, LLC, FTSE Russell, Schwab Center for Financial Research and others, fundamental index strategies have outperformed market-cap indexes over longer time periods. This is partly attributable to the fact that fundamental strategies break the link of assigning a weighting with the price of the stock. A market-cap index provides the largest weighting to the largest companies by market cap regardless of valuation. As a result, market-cap indexes can be described as "overweighting over priced stocks and underweighting undervalued stocks."3 Since fundamental index strategies tend to overweight companies that appear cheap based on various financial metrics, they tend to outperform in environments that reward such "cheap" (i.e., value) stocks. As for their absolute level of performance, fundamental strategies are affected in much the same way and by the same factors as other emerging market stocks. - When does it perform poorly?
Fundamental index strategies may lag market-cap indexes in "boom" or "momentum" periods or when the biggest companies (as measured by market capitalization) dramatically outperform the smaller companies in an index. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - International Emerging Market Stocks—Fundamental table
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab Fundamental Emerging Markets Equity>TickerFNDE>
-
Secondary ETF>NameInvesco FTSE RAFI Emerging Markets>TickerPXH>
U.S. Exchange-Traded REITs
- What is it?
U.S. real estate investment trusts (REITs) are real estate related securities traded on U.S. exchanges. REITs invest in many underlying properties, including hospitals, shopping centers, office buildings, apartment buildings, and hotels. The IRS requires REITs to pay out at least 90% of their taxable income to unit holders every year. By doing so, REITs are often exempt from corporate income taxes on the portion of their income that is paid out to unit holders, avoiding the double taxation that many publicly traded companies experience. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
U.S. REITs can provide both inflation protection and income potential to a portfolio. REITs can also provide diversification to a portfolio of more traditional asset classes. Investors have long flocked to REITs (and real estate in general) because of their reputation as a hedge against inflation, as a way to increase diversification, and to generate income. - When does it perform well?
Since dividends from REITs generally increase with inflation, REITs tend to do better than most other asset class in moderate or high inflation environments. - When does it perform poorly?
REITs do poorly during recessions as occupancy rates and valuations may both fall in such environments. REITs also tend to do poorly during periods of rising interest rates when that rise isn't accompanied by higher inflation. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - U.S. Exchange-Traded REITs table
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab U.S. REIT>TickerSCHH>
-
Secondary ETF>NameiShares Core U.S. REIT>TickerUSRT>
International Exchange-Traded REITs
- What is it?
International exchange-traded REITs are investments in real estate investment trusts focused on real estate and/or mortgage securities traded in foreign countries. Like most securities, REITs are exposed to potential downturns in specific sectors/regions of the real-estate markets and the broader economy and also contain additional risks due to potential leverage. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
International real estate is appealing for a number of reasons: It has the potential to deliver strong performance, attractive yields and diversification relative to traditional investments. In addition, investing in companies located overseas offers the potential to benefit from currency diversification. Foreign company returns are denominated in foreign currencies, so they provide some protection against a potential fall in the value of the U.S. dollar relative to those currencies. - When does it perform well?
As is the case with many other securities with exposure to real estate markets, international REITs typically perform well during declining interest rate environments and when banks are expanding their lending portfolios. They also tend to hold up well against inflationary pressures. - When does it perform poorly?
As is the case with most asset classes, recessions generally don't bode well for international exchange-traded REITs. Periods of sharply rising interest rates can also be difficult for this type of investment. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - International Exchange-Traded REITs table
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameXtrackers International Real Estate>TickerHAUZ>
-
Secondary ETF>NameVanguard Global ex-U.S. Real Estate>TickerVNQI>
U.S. High Dividend Stocks
- What is it?
U.S. high dividend stocks represent the equity of U.S. companies that tend to distribute higher-than-average dividends to shareholders. These are typically large company stocks, as a higher percentage of large companies pay dividends compared with small companies. Historically, high dividend strategies have resulted in vastly different sector weights than market capitalization-weighted strategies. Currently within the S&P 500, a market-cap-weighted index, the largest sectors are Information Technology and Health Care. Within high dividend strategies the largest sectors have often been high dividend-yielding sectors such as Industrials. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
These stocks typically are well-suited for investors seeking both growth and income from their investments because they deliver more predictable annual income than the average stock, may reduce volatility and could appreciate over time. Dividend-paying companies are generally perceived to be more stable than those that don't pay dividends because they are returning excess capital to shareholders. - When does it perform well?
High dividend paying stocks perform well in most markets. They have exhibited particularly strong relative performance versus non-dividend paying equities during bear markets. Valuation matters as well. When prices are low relative to earnings, for example, subsequent price performance is more likely to be strong. - When does it perform poorly?
High dividend paying stocks may struggle to keep pace during more speculative bull market periods when stock price returns make up a larger portion of total returns, which include dividends plus stock price appreciation. Faster-growing companies that pay little or no dividends may see stronger stock price returns in this type of environment than companies that distribute earnings in the form of dividends rather than investing those earnings back into potential growth. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - U.S. High Dividend Stocks
- Name
- Ticker
-
Primary ETF>NameSchwab U.S. Dividend Equity>TickerSCHD>
-
Secondary ETF>NameVanguard High Dividend Yield>TickerVYM>
International High Dividend Stocks
- What is it?
International high dividend stocks are investments in the equity of foreign companies that tend to distribute higher-than-average dividends. Dividend-paying companies are generally perceived to be more stable than those that don't pay dividends because they are returning excess capital to shareholders. As with most international assets, investing in international high dividend stocks involves additional risks, which include differences in financial accounting standards, currency fluctuations, geopolitical risk, foreign taxes and regulations, and the potential for illiquid markets. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
These stocks are well-suited for investors seeking both growth and income from their investments as well as international diversification. These investments offer the same potential benefits as domestic dividend generating securities, plus the added diversification benefits of international exposure. - When does it perform well?
High dividend stocks generally perform competitively with other stocks in most market climates, but tend to outperform relative to other stocks during market downturns. Valuation matters as well. When prices are low relative to, for example, earnings, subsequent price performance is more likely to be strong. - When does it perform poorly?
International developed high dividend stocks may perform poorly in higher return, more speculative markets where capital appreciation accounts for a higher percentage of total return. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - International High Dividend Stocks table
- Name
- Ticker
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Primary ETF>NameXtrackers MSCI EAFE High Dividend Yield Equity>TickerHDEF>
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Secondary ETF>NameVanguard International High Dividend Yield>TickerVYMI>
Fixed Income
U.S. Treasuries
- What is it?
Treasuries are debt securities of the U.S. government issued through the U.S. Department of the Treasury at various maturities, from one year or less to as long as 30 years. They generally pay interest on a semi-annual basis, and timely payment of principal and interest is backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, making them among the highest credit-quality investments available. Treasuries are taxable at the federal level but exempt from state and local taxes. Yields on Treasury securities are usually lower than for most other bonds because investors are willing to accept less income in exchange for lower risk. While these bonds are generally considered free from credit risk, they do carry interest rate risk—all else being equal, their prices increase when interest rates fall and vice versa. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Since Treasuries are considered to carry minimal credit risk, they provide a secure and predictable source of income, and can be a means of preserving capital. Money that investors want to keep safe from default and stock market risk is often invested in Treasuries. The market for Treasuries is large and liquid, which means that investors can easily buy and sell the securities when they want. By keeping a portion of the portfolio's assets safe, an allocation to Treasuries in an overall portfolio may allow an investor to take risk in some other part of the portfolio with more confidence. Finally, Treasuries provide diversification from stocks in a portfolio. They often move in the opposite direction of stocks, particularly when the economy is weakening and/or when stocks are falling. - When does it perform well?
Treasuries tend to perform best when inflation is low and interest rates are falling, like all bonds. But they tend to outperform other types of bonds, on a relative basis, when market volatility is high and when the economy is weakening and stock prices are falling. Investors often put money into Treasuries as a perceived safe haven during times of economic and/or geo-political turmoil due to the high level of safety and liquidity. - When does it perform poorly?
Treasuries tend to perform poorly when inflation and interest rates are rising and market volatility is low. If investors perceive that the economic and financial environment is low risk, then Treasuries are seen as less attractive to hold than other types of investments, such as corporate bonds or stocks. The lower yields for Treasuries make them less attractive to investors when risk and market volatility are low. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection -U.S. Treasuries table
- Name
- Ticker
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Primary ETF>NameSchwab Intermediate-Term U.S. Treasury>TickerSCHR>
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Secondary ETF>NameiShares 3-7 Year Treasury Bond>TickerIEI>
U.S. Investment Grade Corporate Bonds
- What is it?
U.S. investment grade corporate bonds are investments in the debt of U.S. corporations with relatively high credit ratings provided by one or more of the major U.S. credit rating agencies. Investment grade corporate bonds are those rated BBB- or higher by Standard and Poor's, or Baa3 or higher by Moody's Investors Service. That high rating indicates that these bonds have relatively low default risk, and, as a result, the bonds generally pay a lower interest rate than debt issued by entities with below-investment-grade credit ratings. These bonds pay higher interest than comparable bonds issued by the U.S. Government, all else being equal. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Investment grade corporate bonds can allow investors to earn higher yields (with more credit risk) than more conservative investments like U.S. Treasuries, with lower credit risk than that of sub-investment grade, or "high yield," corporate bonds. Credit risk is the risk that a borrower will fail to meet a contractual obligation, resulting in a loss of principal or interest. The higher yields that investment grade corporate bonds offer as compared to Treasuries can help enhance the overall return of a fixed income portfolio. Investment grade corporate bonds also offer diversification benefits. The investment grade corporate bond market is large, with hundreds of issuers and thousands of individual issues, allowing investors to diversify by issuer, industry, maturity and credit rating.
Investment grade corporate bonds also offer diversification benefits due to relatively low correlation to stocks. Correlation is a statistical measure of how investments have historically moved in relation to one another. Investment grade corporate bonds tend to default less than high yield bonds. The relatively low default rate for investment grade bonds suggests that they can be considered part of an investor's "core" portfolio. Investment grade corporate bonds trade in the secondary market and their prices can fluctuate. They tend to be more liquid than sub-investment grade corporate bonds and less liquid than Treasuries, but the liquidity can vary depending on each issue. Some bonds trade more actively than others, and when selling you may receive less than your initial investment. - When does it perform well?
Investment grade corporate bonds tend to perform well when the economy is growing and default rates are low and are expected to stay low. In addition to the higher yields that corporate bonds offer, investment grade corporate bonds can appreciate in price as well. The yield advantage that corporate bonds offer relative to Treasuries is called a credit spread; it can be thought of as compensation for the extra risks they have. If the economic outlook is strong or default rates are expected to remain low, investors may accept lower compensation, as the perceived risks of default may decline. When the credit spread falls, the price of corporate bonds generally rises relative to U.S. Treasury bonds. - When does it perform poorly?
Investment grade corporate bonds tend to perform poorly if economic growth slows and defaults are expected to rise. Even though investment grade corporate bonds tend to default significantly less than high yield corporate bonds, investors may demand higher yields to compensate for the potential for a higher rate of corporate defaults. As a result, yields tend to rise relative to Treasuries, pushing prices lower. During periods of market distress, investment grade corporate bonds are generally less liquid than more conservative investments like U.S. Treasuries, which could exacerbate price volatility. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - U.S. Investment Grade Corporate Bonds table
- Name
- Ticker
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Primary ETF>NameSchwab 5-10 Year Corporate Bond>TickerSCHI>
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Secondary ETF>NameSPDR® Portfolio Intermediate Term Corporate Bond>TickerSPIB>
U.S. Securitized Bonds
- What is it?
U.S. Securitized bonds are securities in which principal and interest payments are backed by cash flows from a particular asset or pool of assets. Some of the most common assets used as collateral for these bonds include mortgages, automobile loans and credit card debt. Often these securities will be structured into various groups of assets, or tranches, based on the credit rating of the underlying debt. One type of securitized bond is a mortgage-backed security (MBS). Mortgage-backed securities are created by pooling mortgages purchased from their original lenders. As homeowners make their mortgage payments, those payments get passed on to MBS holders. As a result, mortgage-backed securities generally pay both interest and principal on a monthly basis. If the mortgages in the pool get paid off earlier than expected (from homeowner prepayments) then MBS investors would get their principal back more quickly. Some of the more common types of mortgage-backed securities are those guaranteed by the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae) and those issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac). Ginnie Mae is backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, while MBS issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are implicitly backed by the U.S. government. However, the U.S. government has no obligation to save either company from default. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
Securitized bonds can help investors earn higher yields than Treasuries, while still investing in high quality investments. And since they generally pay interest and principal on a monthly basis, they can help those investors looking for income. However, the monthly payment can vary, based on the payment speeds of the underlying assets, such as mortgage payments. The uncertainty of monthly payments is one reason why MBS generally pay higher yields than Treasuries. Mortgage-backed securities can also help boost the credit quality of a portfolio, especially those guaranteed by Ginnie Mae. MBS generally have many of the same risks of traditional bonds (such as interest rate risk, credit risk and liquidity risk), but they also come with two unique risks—prepayment risk and extension risk. Prepayment risk occurs when homeowners pay their mortgages back more quickly and then the principal of the MBS gets paid more quickly. Extension risk occurs when homeowners prepay at slower rates, leading to a return of principal that takes longer than initially anticipated. - When does it perform well?
Mortgage-backed securities generally perform well when interest rates are relatively stable or falling. Just like traditional bonds, the price and yields of MBS tend to move in opposite directions. However, because falling interest rates can lead to an increase in prepayments—due to homeowners refinancing their mortgages—the price of mortgage-backed securities might not rise as high as they would have in the absence of a prepayment option. In this case, price appreciation may be tempered, and because of an increase in prepayments, MBS investors are then left to reinvest at lower interest rates. - When does it perform poorly?
MBS perform poorly when interest rates are rising. When interest rates rise, investors are less likely to prepay their mortgages, since they would likely have to refinance at a higher rate. This means that it can take longer to get your money back, meaning it will likely take longer to invest in those higher yields. And like Treasury bonds, higher MBS yields lead to lower prices. If long-term interest rates rise, mortgage-backed securities tend to perform poorly. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - U.S. Securitized Bonds table
- Name
- Ticker
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Primary ETF>NameVanguard Mortgage-Backed Securities>TickerVMBS>
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Secondary ETF>NameiShares MBS>TickerMBB>
U.S. Inflation Protected Bonds
- What is it?
U.S. inflation protected bonds are securities issued by the U.S. Treasury that protect investors against inflation by adjusting the principal value based on changes in the U.S. Department of Labor's Consumer Price Index. Like traditional Treasury bonds, they are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government. Inflation protected bonds pay interest on a semi-annual basis, based on a fixed rate at issuance. The actual coupon payment may vary, since that fixed coupon rate is based on principal that adjusts for inflation or deflation. Inflation protected bonds are issued several times a year, with initial maturities of 5, 10, and 30 years. However, due to the passage of time, these bonds can be bought in the secondary market with various maturities. The principal value rises with inflation, and falls with deflation. The coupon payment is always based on the adjusted principal, even if it falls below its initial par value due to deflation. However, at maturity, investors will always receive the greater of the adjusted par value or its initial par value. In other words, the initial principal amount of an inflation protected bond is protected from deflation, but the coupon payments are not. - What role does it play in a portfolio?
In 1997, the U.S. Treasury introduced inflation protected bonds as a means of protecting against the corrosive impact of inflation. With these bonds, the principal value adjusts upward with inflation, and downward with deflation. Inflation protected bonds can be a good addition to a fixed income portfolio for investors to help protect against the impact of inflation on their fixed income holdings. - When does it perform well?
U.S. inflation protected bonds generally perform well when inflation rises, since the principal and coupons would both rise as well. The bonds may also perform well when inflation expectations rise, as investor demand can push the prices higher relative to traditional U.S. Treasuries, as investors seek inflation protection. Inflation protected bonds are still bonds whose prices and yields move in opposite directions. If traditional Treasury bond yields are falling, inflation protected bonds' yields may follow suit, pushing prices higher. - When does it perform poorly?
Inflation protected bonds generally perform poorly if inflation is declining, outright deflation takes hold, or inflation expectations decline. If expectations for future inflation are tame, investors may prefer traditional Treasury bonds, pushing inflation protected bond prices lower. Also, if Treasury yields rise without an accompanying rise in inflation, inflation protected bond prices would likely fall as well. - ETF Selection
ETF Selection - U.S. Inflation Protected Bonds
- Name
- Ticker
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Primary ETF>NameSchwab U.S. TIPS>TickerSCHP>
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Secondary ETF>NameSPDR Portfolio TIPS>TickerSPIP>
U.S. Corporate High Yield Bonds