Vanguard ETF: | 7.4%* | ||
Diversified Core: | 8.1%* | ||
Six Core Asset ETFs: | 7.3%* |
Articles on iyr
- Google’s 401K Plan: Another Good Employee Benefit
09/26/2010
In our previous article, we discussed Hewlett Packard 401K plan. This article continues the series of case studies for various 401K plans for IT companies. It discusses Google 401K Plan and how portfolios in this plan are positioned in today’s market environment.
Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) is an internet search and advertising company that pioneered in search technology. It dominates search and its related advertising business. It is headquartered in the old SGI building in Mountain View, California. Google is well known for its talented employees and innovation friendly work environment. Google offers generous 401K match to its employees.
Google 401K plan consists of 15 funds. These funds enable participants to gain exposure to 4 major assets: US Equity, Foreign Equity, REITs and Fixed Income. The list of minor asset classes covered are
Large Blend: SPY, VTI
Mid-Cap Blend: MDY, IWR
Foreign Large Blend: EFA
Foreign Large Growth: EFG
Real Estate: IYR, ICF, VNQ
Intermediate-Term Bond: AGG, BND
Short Bond: BSVAs of 9/15/2010, this plan investment choice is rated as Above Average based on MyPlanIQ Plan Rating methodology that was designed to measure how effective a plan's available investment funds are. It has the following detailed ratings:
Diversification – Rated as average (score: 62%)
Fund Quality – Rated as above average (score: 65%)
Portfolio Building -- Rated as great (score: 92%)
Overall Rating: above average (score: 75%)
The chart and table below show the historical performance of moderate model portfolios employing strategic and tactical asset allocation strategies (SAA and TAA, both provided by MyPlanIQ). For comparison purpose, we also include the moderate model portfolios of a typical four asset SIB (Simpler Is Better) plan. This SIB plan has the following candidate index funds and their ETFs equivalent:
US Equity (SPY or VTI)
Foreign Equity (EFA or VEU)
REITs (IYR or VNQ or ICF)
Fixed Income (AGG or BND)
Performance chart (as of 9/15/2010)Performance table (as of 9/15/2010)
1 Yr AR (%) 1 Yr Sharpe (%) 3 Yr AR (%) 3 Yr Sharpe(%) 5 Yr AR (%) 5 YR Sharpe (%) Plan SAA 9 83 1 4 4 18 4 SIB SAA 10 72 1 3 5 17 Plan TAA 14 93 11 97 11 101 4 SIB TAA 9 59 7 61 9 80 Currently, asset classes in REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) (VNQ, IYR, ICF) and fixed income (AGG, BND) are doing relatively well. These asset classes are available to Google 401k plan participants.
To summarize, Google 401K plan participants can achieve reasonable investment returns by adopting asset allocation strategies that are tailored to their risk profiles. Currently, the tactical asset allocation strategy indicates overweighing on REITs and fixed income funds.
labels:investment,
Symbols:GOOG,HPQ,SPY,VTI,IWD,VTV,IWF,VUG,MDY,IWR,EFA,EFG,EFV,SCZ,IYR,ICF,VNQ,BWX,PCY,EMB,BND,IEF,TLT,BSV,MUB,HYG,JNK,PHB,VEU,ETF,Portfolio,Building,Asset,Allocation,IRA,401K,
- Armstrong Index Based Lazy Portfolio Returns Study
09/17/2010
Frank Armstrong, author of The Informed Investor, proposed thisportfolio for an MSN Money article. The two key points of the portfolio are that it has four asset classes (US, International, REIT, Bonds) and relies on market indices rather than active management.The portfolio uses index funds because index funds eliminate manager risk. It overweights small-cap stocks as small-cap stocks have historically outperformed large caps stocks. The portfolio has a strong value tilt, based on the theory that, over the long haul, beaten-down stocks will perform better than high-flying growth stocks.
This should be a low cost, well performing portfolio.The fund selection for testing the strategy is listed below with the ETF alternatives:- 9.25% in Vanguard Small Cap Value VISVX (SCZ)
- 9.25% in Vanguard Value VIVAX (SPY, IYY)
- 6.25% in Vanguard Small-Cap Growth VISGX (VBK)
- 6.25% in Vanguard 500 Index VFINX (IVW)
- 31% in Vanguard Total International Stock VGTSX (EFA)
- 8% in Vanguard REIT VGSIX (IYR, VNQ, RWX)
- 30% in Vanguard Short-Term Bond VBISX (BND, AGG)
Things to note about the portfolio:- This is designed as a lazy portfolio with limited rebalancing specified
- With 70% in equities, this would be considered an aggressive portfolio
- REIT is possibly underweighted
We will create historical returns of this portfolio as originally planned and then compare against strategic asset allocation (annual rebalance) and tactical asset allocation. This will measure:- The impact of equal weighting of the equities – bonds will be fixed at 30% -- SAA strategy
- The impact of actively managing the equities – bonds remain fixed at 30% -- TAA strategy
We will then introduce a four asset SIB which will give a measure of the choice of funds. The SAA and TAA strategies will give the same weights to each of the funds but use simpler asset classes funds.4 Asset SIB Breakdown with ETF alternativesLARGE BLEND VTSMX (VTI)Foreign Large Blend VGTSX (VEU)REAL ESTATE VGSIX (VNQ)Intermediate-Term Bond VBMFX (BND)The results are shown below. There are a number of interesting things to note- The closest comparison of similar strategies is the Armstrong Original versus the Armstrong SAA. The Armstrong original outperforms SAA which says that overloading the US stocks towards small value is successful
- All of the buy and hold strategies suffer from the “downturn dip” and the tactical asset allocation strategies perform much better
- The difference between the two TAA strategies is negligible
Annual Returns 1 Year 3 Years 5 Years Original 8.83 -0.88 4.27 Armstrong SAA 13.91 -2.60 2.96 Armstrong TAA 12.71 7.30 10.43 4 SIB SAA 14.12 0.25 4.59 4 SIB TAA 12.32 7.15 10.21
Takeaways:- The Armstrong portfolio is a well constructed set of diversified assets based on market indices
- To reduce volatility in today’s economy, it might make sense to add commodities and emerging market equities
- The biggest impact on returns is moving to a tactical asset allocation strategy
- The SIB portfolios which can easily be executed with ETF’s perform very well and will be low cost
labels:investment,
Symbols:DIA,IYY,VTI,DVY,ONEQ,QCLN,QABA,PWC,VTV,VUG,IWM,IWO,IWW,MDY,IJJ,IJK,VO,AGG,BND,SHY,VBK,IJS,VBR,IWP,IWS,VEA,EFG,EFV,VWO,VEU,SCZ,SPY,IYR,IVW,RWX,EFA,VNQ,Tactical,Asset,Allocation,asset,allocation,armstong,ideal,index,strategic,asset,allocation,
- Getting Most out of Your Retirement Plan: A Case Study on Hewlett Packard 401K Plan
09/16/2010
Retirement investing is an integral part of American personal finance. With $8.9 trillion parked in over 800 thousand retirement plans (401K), millions of Americans will increasingly rely on their 401K accounts to fund their future retirement needs. This article is part of a series of case studies we are conducting for various 401K plans. In this article, we will discuss how participants in Hewlett Packard 401K plan can achieve reasonable investment results using asset allocation strategies. We will also discuss how those portfolios are positioned in today’s market environment.
Hewlett Packard (HP) (NYSE: HPQ) is one of the largest IT companies. Founded by Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard in Palo Alto, California, HP was the earliest technology company that eventually led the formation of Silicon Valley. Today Hewlett-Packard has over 300 thousands employees world wide.
HP is known to be employee friendly. It has been named several times as one of the best companies to work for. Its 401k plan provides a well diversified array of high quality funds.
Hewlett Packard 401K plan consists of 29 funds. These funds enable participants to gain exposure to 5 major assets: US Equity, Foreign Equity, Emerging Market Equity, REITs and Fixed Income. The the list of minor asset classes covered:
Large Blend: SPY, VTI
Large Value: IWD, VTV
Large Growth: IWF, VUG
Mid-Cap Blend: MDY, IWR
Foreign Large Blend: EFA
Foreign Large Growth: EFG
Foreign Large Value: EFV
Foreign Small/Mid Growth: SCZ
Diversified Emerging Mkts: EEM, VWO
Real Estate: IYR, ICF, VNQ
World Bond: BWX
Emerging Markets Bond: PCY, EMB
Inflation-Protected Bond: TIP
Intermediate-Term Bond: AGG, BND
Long Government: IEF, TLT
UltraShort Bond: BSV
Muni National Long: MUB
High Yield Bond: HYG, JNKAs of 9/13/2010, this plan investment choice is rated as Above Average based on MyPlanIQ Plan Rating methodology that was designed to measure how effective a plan's available investment funds are. It has the following detailed ratings:
Diversification – Rated as great (score: 89%)
Fund Quality – Rated as above average (score: 76%)
Portfolio Building -- Rated as above average (score: 72%)
Overall Rating: above average (score: 78%)
The chart and table below show the historical performance of moderate model portfolios employing strategic and tactical asset allocation strategies (SAA and TAA, both provided by MyPlanIQ). For comparison purpose, we also include the moderate model portfolios of a typical five asset SIB (Simpler Is Better) plan. This SIB plan has the following candidate index funds and their ETFs equivalent:
US Equity (SPY or VTI)
Foreign Equity (EFA or VEU)
Emerging Market Equity (EEM or VWO)
REITs (IYR or VNQ or ICF)
Fixed Income (AGG or BND)
Performance chart (as of 9/13/2010)Performance table (as of 9/13/2010)
1 Yr AR (%) 1 Yr Sharpe (%) 3 Yr AR (%) 3 Yr Sharpe(%) 5 Yr AR (%) 5 YR Sharpe (%) Plan SAA 15.95 145.83 2.34 10.27 5.76 29.43 5 SIB SAA 13.09 96.52 2.49 8.77 6.74 29.02 Plan TAA 15.53 103.28 9.35 73.75 11.43 88.56 5 SIB TAA 9.99 68.82 8.11 66.77 11.62 92.08 Currently, asset classes in emerging market stocks (EEM, VWO), REITs (Real Estate Investment Trusts) (VNQ, IYR, ICF) and fixed income (AGG, BND) are doing relatively well. These asset classes are available to HP 401k participants.
To summarize, Hewlett Packard 401K plan participants can achieve reasonable investment returns by adopting asset allocation strategies that are tailored to their risk profiles. Currently, the tactical asset allocation strategy indicates overweighing on emerging market stocks, REITs and fixed income funds.
labels:investment,
Symbols:HPQ,SPY,VTI,IWD,VTV,IWF,VUG,MDY,IWR,EFA,EFG,EFV,SCZ,IYR,ICF,VNQ,BWX,PCY,EMB,BND,IEF,TLT,BSV,MUB,HYG,JNK,PHB,VEU,ETF,Portfolio,Building,Asset,Allocation,IRA,401K,
- John Wasik’s Nano Portfolio Performance Scrutinized
09/14/2010
John Wasik has been a professional journalist and author for 30 years specializing in personal finance, the environment, investing and social issues. John has proposed a Nano plan investment portfolio which employs just a handful of index or exchange- traded funds (ETFs) to cover virtually the entire world of bond and stock markets. This portfolio is supposed to be rebalanced annually.
John Wasik presents a classic asset allocation strategy with simple buy and hold.
- 20% in Vanguard Total Stock Market VIPERS (VTI) – alternatives: SPY, IWM
- 20% in Vanguard Total International (VGTSX) – alternatives: EFA, VEU, EEM, VWO, ADRE
- 20% in Vanguard REIT VIPERS (VNQ) – alternatives: IYR, ICF
- 20% in iShares Lehman TIPS Bond (TIP)
- 20% in iShares Lehman Aggregate Bond (AGG) – alternative: BND
Things to note about the portfolio:- With 40% in fixed income, this would be considered moderate risk
- With VGTSX covering both international and emerging markets (albeit in one fund) this would be something between a 4 and 5 asset class portfolio
- VGTSX is not an ETF; while VGTSX can easily be replaced by VEU (Vanguard FTSE All-World ex-US ETF) we will keep VGTSX because it has a longer history for back testing
We will make a comparison of the performance of this portfolio with
- Rebalancing every month as opposed to every year
- Simpler Is Better (SIB) portfolios we discussed in a previous article,
- Tactically managing the portfolio
The first set of results compares strategic asset allocation performance. What we note is:
- All portfolios suffer from the sharp downturn and is what is driving the increasing move towards a tactical allocation strategy
- The lazy portfolio – rebalancing once a year performs as well as the monthly rebalancing
- Wasik’s portfolio performance matches the 4 Asset SIB closely
- The extra asset class in the 5 asset SIB enables it to outperform everything else
Wasik's portfolio against SIBs Annualized Returns 1 year 3 years 5 years Wasik original 16,75 1.22 5.03 Wasik monthly rebalance 16,27 0.18 4.39 4 SIB SAA 15.11 1.08 4.37 5 SIB SAA 15 2.35 6.33
The second set of results compares tactical asset allocation performance. What we note is:- The tactical asset allocation strategies clearly mitigate the downturn
- Wasik’s portfolio performance matches the 4 Asset SIB closely when tactical asset allocation strategies are applied to both
- The extra asset class in the 5 asset SIB enables it to outperform everything else
Annualized Returns 1 year 3 years 5 years Wasik TAA 16.53 8.47 10.43 4 SIB TAA 15.67 6.65 9.04 5 SIB TAA 12.62 8.13 11.35
Takeaways:- ETF’s are a good vehicle for any portfolio and with increasing track record, it’s possible to demonstrate good historical performance
- It is increasingly clear that deploying a tactical asset allocation strategy is key. All buy and hold strategies are going to suffer the same downturn properties and with choppy market conditions, minimizing downside risk is critical
- With a buy and hold, there is little difference between monthly or annual rebalancing so you can be very lazy if you don’t mind the downside!
- Five asset classes perform better in all cases – in the TAA case, the five asset SIB gives you an extra 6% a year since inception – doubling the asset base every decade
labels:investments,
Symbols:ti,vnq,tip,agg,veu,spy,iwm,efa,iyr,icf,bnd,eem,vwo,adre,
- Schwab ETFs Review
07/27/2010
In June, Schwab announced reducing expenses for their proprietary ETFs. This, along with recently announced commission free ETF trading from Schwab, Vanguard and Fidelity, represents an important and promising trend for ETFs in portfolio building. The following is the comparison among similar ETFs from Schwab, Vanguard and iShares.
Schwab Vanguard iShares Schwab U.S. Broad Market ETF SCHB (0.06%) VTI (0.07%) IWV(0.21%) Schwab U.S. Large-Cap ETF SCHX (0.08%) VV (0.12%) IVV (0.09%) Schwab U.S. Large-Cap Growth ETF SCHG (0.13%) VUG (0.14%) IVW (0.18%) Schwab U.S. Large-Cap Value ETF SCHV (0.13%) VTV (0.14%) IVE (0.18%) Schwab U.S. Small-Cap ETF SCHA (0.13%) VB (0.14%) IJR (0.20%) Schwab International Equity ETF SCHF (0.13%) VEA (0.14%) EFA (0.35%) Schwab International Small-Cap Equity ETF SCHC (0.35%) VSS (0.40%) SCZ (0.40%) Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF SCHE (0.25%) VWO (0.27%) EEM (0.72%) So far, Schwab ETFs are all equity (stock) index based funds that include U.S. stocks, international stocks and emerging market equity. Compared with iShares or even Vanguard, Schwab has been late in the game and their ETFs have short history. However, Schwab has a relatively good record in their mutual funds that are managed using quantitative models. That experience using quantitative models in their portfolio management certainly can help their ETF management. Ultimately, what it really matters for investors are the total returns of ETFs that reflect both expenses (taken out from asset under management, usually monthly) and fund performance before fee. The following is the total annualized return table for ETFs from Schwab, Vanguard and iShares up to 7/23/2010. All performance data are calculated from Schwab ETFs’ inception date.
Schwab Vanguard iShares Schwab U.S. Broad Market ETF (inception 11/03/2009) SCHB (11.78%) VTI (11.09%) IWV(11.9%) Schwab U.S. Large-Cap ETF (inception 11/03/2009) SCHX (10.57%) VV (9.54%) IVV (9.37%) Schwab U.S. Large-Cap Growth ETF (inception 1/4/2010) SCHG (-4.23%) VUG (-4.72%) IVW (-5.81%) Schwab U.S. Large-Cap Value ETF (inception 12/15/2009) SCHV (1.48%) VTV (1.06%) IVE (0.5%) Schwab U.S. Small-Cap ETF (inception 11/03/2009) SCHA (23.92%) VB (23.25%) IJR (22.08%) Schwab International Equity ETF (inception 11/03/2009) SCHF (-0.01%) VEA (-2.25%) EFA (-4.03%) Schwab International Small-Cap Equity ETF (inception 1/14/2010) SCHC (-9.51%) VSS (-8.43%) SCZ (-11.14%) Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF (inception 1/14/2010) SCHE (-3.09%) VWO (-2.49%) EEM (-5.77%) From their short history, it is very impressive that almost all of Schwab ETFs deliver better or no worse total returns: all Schwab ETFs outperform their iShares counterparts while, compared with Vanguard, only SCHE (emerging mkt equity) and SCHC (international small cap) slightly underperform Vanguard VWO and VSS respectively. Coupled with commission free trades for these ETFs, Schwab ETFs are very enticing for investors. The main drawback, however, is that Schwab does not offer ETFs in other major asset classes, especially in fixed income (it was reported that Schwab will soon provide fixed income ETFs). To build an effective portfolio, investors are forced to use other ETFs to cover missing major asset classes such as fixed income. Schwab charges $8.95 per trade for ETFs provided by other parties.
MyPlanIQ maintains Schwab Commission Efficient ETFs Plan. Since Schwab's ETFs only cover Domestic and International Equities, the additional ETFs are used to include other major asset classes including US REIT (IYR), Global REIT (IGR), Commodities (DBC, GLD), International Bonds (BWX), Fixed Incomes and Long/Intermediate/Short US Treasury Bonds (TLT, IEI, SHY) and High Yield Junk Bond (JNK). These additional ETFs are not commission free in a Schwab brokerage account. The strategic and tactical asset allocation moderate portfolios have the following performance:
1 Yr Annual Return 3 Year Annual Return 5 Year Annual Return Strategic Asset Allocation Moderate 20% 0% 3% Tactical Asset Allocation Moderate 4% 5% 6% In conclusion, like Vanguard ETFs, Schwab proprietary ETFs offer compelling values for portfolio building: low cost and commission free. To make their ETFs widely usable and competitive to iShares, however, Schwab (as well as Vanguard) needs to help to increase trading volume for these ETFs so that the tracking errors/friction could be reduced. This is perhaps the major important remaining obstacle for these ETFs to become staples for portfolios.
Symbols:schb,vti,iwv,schx,vv,ivv,schg,vug,ivw,schv,vtv,ive,scha,vb,ijr,schf,vea,efa,schc,vss,scz,sche,vwo,eem,iyr,icf,igr,dbc,gld,bwx,tlt,iei,shy,jnk,iyg,agg,bnd,
- Investing with Styles Can Pay off
07/09/2010
- Understanding and Building Your ETF Portfolio
06/27/2010
- The Mystery Advisers
06/09/2010
- David Swensen's Six Asset Investment Plan
06/09/2010
- Selecting Candidate ETFs for Effective Portfolio Building
06/03/2010
- Apartment Investment and Management Company 401(k) Retirement Plan Report On 12/03/2010
12/03/2010
This report reviews Apartment Investment and Management Company 401(k) Retirement Plan plan. We will discuss the investment choices and present the plan rating by MyPlanIQ. Current economic and market conditions are discussed in the context of the investment portfolios in the plan. We will then show how participants in Apartment Investment and Management Company 401(k) Retirement Plan can achieve reasonable investment results using asset allocation strategies.
Plan Review and Rating
Apartment Investment and Management Company 401(k) Retirement Plan's 401K plan consists of 22 funds. These funds enable participants to gain exposure to 4 major assets: US Equity, Foreign Equity, REITs, Fixed Income. The list of minor asset classes covered:
Foreign Large Growth: EFG
Inflation-protected Bond: TIP
Intermediate-term Bond: AGG, CIU, BIV, BND
Large Blend: IVV, IYY, IWV, VTI, VV, SPY, DLN, RSP, SCHX
Large Growth: IVW, IWZ, JKE, VUG, ELG, QQQQ, RPG, SCHG
Large Value: IVE, IWW, JKF, VTV, ELV, PWV, RPV, SCHV
Mid-cap Blend: IJH, IWR, JKG, VO, MDY, EMM, PJG, DON, EZM, MVV
Real Estate: IYR, ICF, VNQ
Retirement Income:
Small Blend: IJR, IWM, JKJ, VB, DSC, PJM, DES, SAA, UWM, SCHA
Small Growth: IJT, IWO, JKK, VBK, DSG, PWT, RZG, UKK
Small Value: IJS, IWN, JKL, VBR, DSV, PWY, RZV, UVT
Target Date 2000-2010: TZD
Target Date 2016-2020: TZG
Target Date 2026-2030: TZL
Target Date 2036-2040: TZV
Target Date 2050+:
As of Dec 2, 2010, this plan investment choice is rated as based on MyPlanIQ Plan Rating methodology that measures the effectiveness of a plan's available investment funds. It has the following detailed ratings:
Diversification -- Rated as (76%)
Fund Quality -- Rated as (36%)
Portfolio Building -- Rated as (87%)
Overall Rating: (68%)Current Economic and Market Conditions
We have experienced an uncertain 2010: plenty of worries on whether the US economy will climb out of the great recession and recover.
- The Federal Reserve embarked on Quantitative Easing II (QE2) to stimulate the economy.
- The housing market is still at its low but largely stabilized.
- The unemployment rate is stuck at 9%.
Americans continue to face an uncertain future, given (among others) the high unemployment rate, large federal and local government debts and global trade imbalance. With such an economic backdrop, the stock and debt markets are going to be volatile. Despite this, markets have been resilient and appear positioned to rebound.
In this market it is even more critical to properly diversify and respond market changes. MyPlanIQ offers two asset allocation strategies: strategic and tactical asset allocation strategies ( SAA and TAA for participants in Apartment Investment and Management Company 401(k) Retirement Plan).
Strategic Asset Allocation is based on well known modern portfolio theory and its key features include: diversification, proper fund selection and periodically re-balancing.
Tactical Asset Allocation works on a diversified array of assets provided by funds in a plan and adjusts asset mixes based on market conditions such as asset price momentum utilized by TAA.
Portfolio Discussions
The chart and table below show the historical performance of moderate model portfolios employing strategic and tactical asset allocation strategies. For comparison purpose, we also include the moderate model portfolios of a typical 4 asset SIB (Simpler Is Better) plan . This SIB plan has the following candidate index funds and their ETFs equivalent:
US Equity: (SPY or VTI)
Foreign Equity: (EFA or VEU)
REITs: (IYR or VNQ or ICF)
Fixed Income: (AGG or BND)
Performance chart (as of Dec 2, 2010)Performance table (as of Dec 2, 2010)
Portfolio Name 1Yr AR 1Yr Sharpe 3Yr AR 3Yr Sharpe 5Yr AR 5Yr Sharpe Apartment Investment and Management Company 401(k) Retirement Plan Tactical Asset Allocation Moderate 15% 97% 10% 84% 12% 98% Apartment Investment and Management Company 401(k) Retirement Plan Strategic Asset Allocation Moderate 13% 120% 4% 19% 6% 30% Four Core Asset Index Funds REITs Tactical Asset Allocation Moderate 8% 58% 6% 54% 9% 80% Four Core Asset Index Funds REITs Strategic Asset Allocation Moderate 11% 87% 2% 6% 5% 20% Currently, asset classes in US Equity (SPY,VTI), Foreign Equity (EFA,VEU) and REITs (IYR,VNQ,ICF) are doing relatively well. These asset classes are available to Apartment Investment and Management Company 401(k) Retirement Plan participants.
To summarize, Apartment Investment and Management Company 401(k) Retirement Plan plan participants can achieve reasonable investment returns by adopting asset allocation strategies that are tailored to their risk profiles.
Symbols: AIV , SPY , VTI , EFA , VEU , IYR , VNQ , ICF , AGG , BND , CIU , BIV , EFG , IVE , IWW , JKF , VTV , ELV , PWV , RPV , SCHV , TZD , TZG , TZL , TZV , IVV , IYY , IWV , VV , DLN , RSP , SCHX , IVW , IWZ , JKE , VUG , ELG , QQQQ , RPG , SCHG , IJH , IWR , JKG , VO , MDY , EMM , PJG , DON , EZM , MVV , IJS , IWN , JKL , VBR , DSV , PWY , RZV , UVT , IJR , IWM , JKJ , VB , DSC , PJM , DES , SAA , UWM , SCHA , IJT , IWO , JKK , VBK , DSG , PWT , RZG , UKK , TIP
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