A few months ago, I wrote a bullish review on the VanEck Morningstar Wide Moat ETF (BATS:MOAT), noting that the MOAT ETF has outperformed the S&P 500 Index over the long run by focusing on high quality companies with wide economic moats.
For long-term investors, the MOAT ETF looks like a good bet as it leverages Morningstar’s team of more than 100 equity analysts to identify high quality companies that should outperform over the long-run.
However, when reviewing the MOAT ETF’s latest holdings, a few companies stand out for their absence. Namely, the MOAT ETF does not have positions in some market darlings like Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Tesla Inc. (TSLA). Should investors be concerned that the MOAT ETF does not have exposure to these strong YTD performers?
Brief Fund Overview
The VanEck Morningstar Wide Moat ETF gives investors convenient exposure to companies that are considered to have durable competitive advantages, according to Morningstar’s equity research team.
Morningstar’s team of more than 100 equity analysts cover hundreds of companies globally using the same consistent research process to assess their Economic Moat. Five key attributes go into the determination of a company’s moat: switching costs, intangible assets, network effect, cost leadership, and efficient scale (Figure 1).
Companies considered to have a wide moat scores well on one or more of the attributes mentioned above and is expected to be able to sustain its competitive advantage for at least 20 years. Companies that are expected to maintain an economic advantage for 10 years is considered to have a narrow moat, while companies without an economic moat ether has no advantage or one that is expected to disappear quickly.
Out of Morningstar’s equity research coverage, only 10-15% of companies are considered to have a wide moat.
The MOAT ETF has been quite successful, garnering $10.5 billion in assets while charging a modestly high 0.46% expense ratio.
MOAT Returns Have Been Strong
As I have discussed in my prior article, returns for the MOAT ETF have been impressive, with the MOAT ETF (Figure 2) outperforming the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) on a 3/5/10 yr basis (Figure 3), with 17.3%/14.5%/13.8% in total returns to July 31, 2023, compared to 13.6%/12.1%/12.6%.
Should Investors Be Concerned About Lack Of Market Darlings?
However, one potential concern / interesting observation I have with MOAT’s portfolio is that it does not hold market darlings like Apple and Tesla.
Since these are supposedly some of the best companies in the market right now, is the MOAT ETF missing out by not holding these stocks?
Valuation Also Matters In Picking Stocks
I believe the answer to my question above is valuation. For example, in my prior article, we can see that Meta Platforms Inc. (META) was the largest holding in the MOAT ETF (Figure 4).
However, since META has gone up dramatically in the past few months, it has narrowed the gap between its stock price and Morningstar’s estimate of fair value (Figure 5).
Therefore, it makes sense that the MOAT ETF has reduced its holdings in META, from 3.3% of the fund to 1.7% of the fund currently (Figure 6).
For AAPL, although Morningstar considers the company to have a wide moat, it has traded past what Morningstar estimates to be fair value for AAPL’s shares, hence the MOAT ETF does not have a position in AAPL (Figure 7).
For Tesla, Morningstar does not consider the company to have a wide moat, hence the company does not qualify (Figure 8).
While investors can debate whether Tesla should be considered to have a wide moat or not, it is comforting as to see that the MOAT ETF has the discipline to reduce holdings of top performing stocks like META, if the returns potential to fair value is not as attractive. Similarly, it takes courage for a large-cap fund like MOAT to not hold large index weights like AAPL altogether due to valuation, as it constitutes a lot of basis risk for the fund manager.
Over the long run, the MOAT ETF’s disciplined approach to investing has produced excellent results. The index underlying the ETF, the Morningstar Wide Moat Focus Index, has outperformed the S&P 500 Index by over 200% since inception in 2007 (Figure 9).
While markets can be irrational over short periods of time, over the long-run, the Morningstar Wide Moat Focus Index has outperformed the S&P 500 Index 84% of the time on a rolling 3-year time horizon and an incredible 95% of the time on a rolling 5 year time horizon (Figure 10).
Conclusion
The VanEck Morningstar Wide Moat ETF continues to be one of my favorite funds, as its focus on companies with strong durable competitive advantages has continued to deliver excellent performance.
Analyzing the fund’s holdings, it is comforting to see that the MOAT ETF has the discipline to reduce holdings like META as it nears Morningstar’s estimate of fair value. It takes courage for a large-cap fund like MOAT to not hold large index weights like AAPL altogether, as it has traded beyond Morningstar’s estimate of fair value. I continue to rate the MOAT ETF a buy.
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