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Fundamental-Weighted Index

A Fundamental-Weighted Index (also known as 'Fundamental Indexing') is a type of stock market index that weights its constituent companies based on core business metrics rather than their stock market price. Unlike a traditional market-cap-weighted index like the S&P 500, which gives the most weight to the companies with the highest total stock market value, a fundamental index determines a company's importance by its economic size. Think of it as measuring a company's substance—its sales, earnings, book value, or dividends—instead of just its popularity on Wall Street. This approach was famously pioneered and popularized by Rob Arnott of Research Affiliates. The core idea is to sever the link between a stock's price and its weight in the portfolio, creating an index that reflects a company's real-world footprint rather than market sentiment.

How It Breaks from the Herd

Imagine a traditional index as a popularity contest. The more popular a stock becomes (i.e., the higher its price goes), the bigger its influence in the index. A fundamental index throws out the ballot box and instead looks at the companies' report cards.

The Building Blocks

Instead of asking, “What is the company's total stock market value?”, a fundamental index asks questions like:

An index can be built using one of these factors or, more commonly, a composite of several. For example, a company that accounts for 2% of the total sales, 1% of the total dividends, and 3% of the total book value of all companies in the index might be assigned a blended weight of 2%. The key takeaway is that its stock price doesn't enter the calculation.

A Simple Tale of Two Companies

Let's say we have two companies, Momentum Megacorp and Steady Sales Inc.

In a market-cap-weighted index, Momentum Megacorp would have 5 times the influence of Steady Sales Inc. (500 / 100). But in a fundamental index based purely on sales, Steady Sales Inc. would have 4 times the weight of Momentum Megacorp (80 / 20). This method automatically gives more heft to the business that is arguably more substantial but less loved by the market.

The Value Investor's Angle

For followers of value investing, this is where things get exciting. A core weakness of market-cap weighting is that it forces you to buy more of a stock as its price rises and sell it as its price falls. In a roaring bull market or a stock market bubble, this means you are systematically increasing your exposure to the most expensive and potentially overvalued stocks. This is the exact opposite of the value mantra: “Buy low, sell high.” Fundamental indexing flips this on its head. By anchoring portfolio weight to business fundamentals, it creates a natural—and automatic—value tilt.

This disciplined rebalancing acts as a built-in “contrarian” strategy, systematically leaning into companies that are cheap relative to their business size and away from those that are expensive. It's a way to harness the long-term potential of the value premium without having to pick individual stocks.

Pros and Cons for Your Portfolio

While compelling, this strategy isn't a magic bullet. Here’s a balanced look.

The Good Stuff (Pros)

The Watchouts (Cons)