Sector Rotation

Investment Vehicles High Relevance

An active investment strategy that shifts portfolio allocations among different economic sectors based on business cycle phases. Certain sectors (technology, consumer discretionary) typically outperform during expansion while others (utilities, consumer staples, healthcare) perform better during contraction.

Example

As economic indicators signal recession, a portfolio manager reduces technology and consumer discretionary holdings (cyclical sectors) and increases allocation to utilities and consumer staples (defensive sectors) to preserve capital during the downturn.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse sector rotation with market timing or think it is a passive strategy. Sector rotation is active management based on economic cycles, not short-term price movements. Additionally, students may misidentify which sectors are cyclical versus defensive.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying which sectors outperform during expansion versus contraction phases
  • Recognizing sector rotation as an active management strategy with associated costs
  • Understanding the relationship between business cycle phases and sector performance
  • Distinguishing between cyclical sectors (discretionary, technology) and defensive sectors (utilities, staples)
  • Evaluating the limitations and risks of sector rotation strategies

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Active management disclosure requirement Must disclose higher fees, costs, and tax implications Investment advisers must inform clients that sector rotation is active management with associated transaction costs and potential tax consequences

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Rachel, a portfolio manager, reviews economic data showing GDP growth accelerating to 4.5%, unemployment declining to 3.8%, and consumer confidence reaching multi-year highs. Corporate earnings are beating expectations across most sectors. A client asks about adjusting their portfolio to capitalize on these trends. Which sector allocation change would be most appropriate based on this business cycle phase?

Question 2

Which of the following sectors are typically classified as defensive sectors that tend to outperform during economic contraction?

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Question 3

An investment adviser implements a sector rotation strategy by shifting 20% of a client portfolio ($80,000 out of $400,000 total) from technology sector funds into utility sector funds. Three months later, technology sector returns +12% while utilities return +2%. What is the opportunity cost of this sector rotation decision?

Question 4

All of the following statements about sector rotation strategies are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An economist forecasts that the current economic expansion is nearing its peak, with GDP growth slowing from 5% to 2%, unemployment at historic lows but wage pressures increasing, and the Federal Reserve signaling potential rate hikes to control inflation. Which of the following sector rotation adjustments would be appropriate in anticipation of a transition from peak to contraction?

1. Reduce allocation to consumer discretionary sector
2. Increase allocation to technology growth stocks
3. Increase allocation to utilities and consumer staples
4. Reduce allocation to financial services sector

💡 Memory Aid

Think of sector rotation like changing clothes with the seasons: In summer (expansion) you wear shorts and t-shirts (cyclical sectors = tech, discretionary). In winter (contraction) you bundle up in a warm coat (defensive sectors = utilities, staples, healthcare). You rotate your wardrobe based on the economic weather, not random timing.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: