Quality Factor
A-share quality factors: ROE, margins and cash flow
Quality factors look for durable profitability, reliable cash flow and resilient balance sheets. A high ROE can be lifted by leverage or one-off gains, so use several measures together.
Typical direction
Higher profitability and cash conversion are commonly ranked higher; lower leverage and accrual risk are commonly ranked higher.
Data
Income statement, balance sheet and cash-flow statement
Refresh
Quarterly refresh, often using TTM values
Research hypothesis
Write the hypothesis before reading the backtest
Profitability, cash conversion and financial resilience may provide information beyond valuation and growth when measured with consistent disclosure timing.
A factor is a testable research hypothesis, not an investment recommendation or return promise.
Factor health card
Pre-backtest checks for this factor
Research purpose
Test whether profitability and cash-flow quality add information beyond valuation or growth.
Refresh and rebalance
Usually quarterly after filings; allow a disclosure lag.
Data timing
Keep quarter, cumulative and TTM values distinct.
Neutralisation
Standardise within sector and separate financials from non-financials.
Overlapping exposures
Often paired with value or growth.
Check before use
Review one-off gains, impairments and leverage-driven ROE.
Definitions
Core measures
ROE
Attributable net income ÷ average attributable equityDecompose margin, turnover and leverage.
Gross margin
(Revenue − cost of revenue) ÷ revenueCompare within sector before ranking.
Cash conversion
Operating cash flow ÷ attributable net incomeShort-term working-capital changes can move the ratio.
Leverage
Total liabilities ÷ total assetsFinancials need their own interpretation.
Research protocol
Keep the same research conventions across factors
Data availability
Financial, dividend and share data become available on actual disclosure or implementation dates, not report-period end dates.
Universe and exclusions
Document index membership, listing age, ST, suspensions, delistings and missing-data rules.
Processing and neutralisation
Version winsorisation, standardisation, sector/size neutralisation and missing-value rules.
Tradability
Include price limits, suspensions, participation, fees, slippage and market impact.
Out-of-sample review
Report IC, grouped returns, exposures, turnover and rolling out-of-sample evidence together.
Build and validate
What to test
- 1Test each quality component before building a composite.
- 2Check coverage by reporting season.
- 3Compare exposures before and after value or size controls.
Common pitfalls
- ×Calling leverage-driven ROE operating quality.
- ×Comparing banks and manufacturers with one leverage rule.
- ×Mixing single-quarter, cumulative and TTM figures.
A-share implementation
A-share checks that belong in the backtest
- Use the actual disclosure or implementation date; do not make a field available at the report-period end date.
- State the universe, listing-age, ST, suspension, delisting and missing-data rules before running the backtest.
- Model price limits, suspensions, fees, slippage and participation limits instead of assuming every close can be traded.
- Financial-statement revisions should be versioned: distinguish first disclosure from later restatements.
Research prompt
A reviewable starting prompt
“In CSI 300 non-financial stocks, build a sector-neutral quality score from ROE, cash conversion and leverage. Use actual filing dates and report IC, grouped returns, sector exposure, turnover and drawdown.”
FAQ
Can ROE represent quality by itself?
No. It reflects profitability, asset turnover and leverage. Combine it with cash flow, persistence and balance-sheet checks.
What can quality be paired with?
Value, growth or momentum are common research combinations. Test correlations and exposures rather than assuming diversification.