International Equity Style Box

International Equity Style Box

The international equity style box is a three-by-three grid for visually representing and comparing risk-return structures of foreign stocks and foreign funds. Some analysts have speculated that the popularity of the style box unduly restricts fund managers who may avoid certain sound investment strategies because they would cause the fund to change categories in the style box, which may frustrate shareholders who bought into the fund partly because of its style box classification. Investors use the international equity style box, a variation on Morningstar's stock style box, to understand the degree of diversification of their international portfolios. The international equity style box, also known as the international stock style box, is a two-dimensional grid. The difference between the equity style box and the international equity style box originally lies in the sizing system.

The international equity style box is a visual heuristic for evaluating the investment criteria of global stocks.

What Is the International Equity Style Box?

The international equity style box is a three-by-three grid for visually representing and comparing risk-return structures of foreign stocks and foreign funds. Investors use the international equity style box, a variation on Morningstar's stock style box, to understand the degree of diversification of their international portfolios.

As of March 31, 2004, all U.S. and non-U.S. stocks and mutual funds are evaluated under the same style methodology.

The international equity style box is a visual heuristic for evaluating the investment criteria of global stocks.
Adapted from the original equity style box, the international version helps investors understand their risk, return, and diversification potential of global stock portfolios.
As of 2004, Morningstar uses the same methodology and criteria for building style boxes for both domestic and international stocks and mutual funds.

Understanding International Equity Style Boxes

The international equity style box, also known as the international stock style box, is a two-dimensional grid. The horizontal axis measures value and growth characteristics, which breaks down into three sections: value on the left, growth on the right and blend in the middle. The vertical axis measures capitalization and breaks down into small, medium, and large. This scheme produces nine categories with which to classify investments.

If investors assign each of the foreign investments in their portfolio to a square on the international equity style box, they will get a simplified picture of the degree of diversification. If their portfolio is not sufficiently diversified, the international equity style box will make it immediately apparent which investment categories are not yet represented.

This methodology was originally introduced in May 2002 for U.S. stocks and portfolios only.

The difference between the equity style box and the international equity style box originally lies in the sizing system. Whereas the equity style box determines the size of a company by the geometric mean of market capitalization, the international equity style considered median market capitalization. Today, all style boxes use the same methodology.

Limitations of the International Equity Style Box

Investment research firm Morningstar introduced their proprietary style box in 1992. Its simple, effective visual classification system soon made it ubiquitous in the investment world. Its simplicity and ubiquity remain two strong reasons to continue to use the style box in its several forms, but it has its limitations.

For one, the style box does not include short positions in its classification system. That means a long-short investment strategy cannot be represented in the style box. Some other strategies are not committed to consistent growth, value, or blended approach. Investment products managed by these strategies will bounce all over the style box as the nature of their holdings shifts along the horizontal axis.

Some analysts have speculated that the popularity of the style box unduly restricts fund managers who may avoid certain sound investment strategies because they would cause the fund to change categories in the style box, which may frustrate shareholders who bought into the fund partly because of its style box classification.

Related terms:

Blend Fund

A blend fund is a type of equity mutual fund that includes a mix of value and growth stocks.  read more

Diversification

Diversification is an investment strategy based on the premise that a portfolio with different asset types will perform better than one with few. read more

Equity Style Box

An equity style box is a graphic representation of an investment's defining factors, designed by financial services researcher Morningstar, Inc. read more

Fixed-Income Style Box

A fixed-income style box provides a visual representation of the investment characteristics of fixed-income investments. They were created by Morningstar and are most commonly used for mutual funds. read more

Fund Manager

Learn more about fund managers, who oversee a portfolio of mutual or hedge funds and make final decisions about how they are invested. read more

Growth Investing

Growth investing is a stock-buying strategy that aims to profit from firms that grow at above-average rates compared to their industry or the market. read more

Long/Short Fund

A long/short fund is a type of mutual fund that takes long and short positions in investments typically from a specific market segment.  read more

Market Capitalization

Market capitalization is the total dollar market value of all of a company's outstanding shares. read more

Morningstar Inc.

Morningstar is a Chicago-based investment firm that offers various products and research insights in over 27 markets around the world. read more

Mutual Fund

A mutual fund is a type of investment vehicle consisting of a portfolio of stocks, bonds, or other securities, which is overseen by a professional money manager. read more