Author Archives: Scalper1

5 Chip Stocks To Watch, With Apple’s Big Event March 21

A basket of top-rated chip stocks are making moves around buy points now. And Apple ( AAPL ), a big user of semiconductors, just sent out press invitations for a March 21 event where it’s expected to introduce a small iPhone and another iPad. So which chip stocks are highly rated by IBD and get at least some of their business from Apple?  Broadcom ( AVGO ), IBD Leaderboard stock  Macom Technology ( MTSI ), Cirrus Logic ( CRUS ), Mellanox ( MLNX ) and Nvidia ( NVDA ) make the list. All are at least somewhat diversified, with revenue streams in everything from data center and mobile networking systems to powerful graphics chips for virtual reality and gaming, to connected car technology and now even artificial intelligence. Chips And Profit Going into Friday trading, IBD 50 stock Broadcom was a few percentage points into buy range from a double bottom base. Broadcom made IBD’s Stocks On The Move screen early Thursday, heading up in high volume alongside Google owner Alphabet ( GOOGL ) and a few other stocks. Early Thursday, Broadcom’s management team had presented at a Susquehanna Financial analysts’ conference. “It’s a great time to operate in the semiconductor industry,” CEO Hock Tan said there. “You have a substantial profit pool … compared to similar industries of the same size.” Loading the player…   Broadcom started giving up some of its gains as stock indexes dipped into the red with falling oil prices, but it ended up with a 1.7% rise for the day. Several other top-rated chip stocks declined Thursday. Mellanox slipped to the bottom of buy range. So did Macom Technology. Nvidia edged down to about 4% under a buy point from a cup base. While the stock market’s in a confirmed uptrend, much of the action is choppy with ups and downs in oil prices and economic concerns around the globe. All five of these top-ranked chipmakers have fallen from a week ago, between 1% and 7%, with the S&P 500 index down 1%. Cirrus Logic and Mellanox were up 14% and 15% this year, respectively, going into Friday. Macom was up 1% while Avago was down 1% and Nvidia down 4%. Nvidia, an IBD 50 stock, has the strongest IBD Composite Rating of the bunch, a best-possible 99, taking into account earnings growth, stock price gains and several other metrics. The others range between 90 and 98 in Composite Rating. Apple Chips It will take awhile for teardowns to show whose chips go into whatever new products Apple introduces, and longer for those chips to translate into reported sales, and lagging iPhone sales growth lately hasn’t helped the chips. Apple Sets March 21 To Launch Small iPhone, New iPad, Watch Bands https://t.co/MxIpxMFKvc pic.twitter.com/iPxQ1lTAFF — Investors.com (@IBDinvestors) March 10, 2016 Other markets are driving growth, however. Nvidia, for instance, said in its fourth quarter report, in February, that it’s at the “center of four exciting growth opportunities — PC gaming, VR (virtual reality), deep learning and self-driving cars.” Nvidia is a partner to electric car maker  Tesla Motors ( TSLA ) and other auto manufacturers, and said last month that it’s in an alliance with Facebook ( FB ) and Chinese Internet company Alibaba Group ( BABA ) for speedy artificial intelligence chips.

Rate Cut Puts New Zealand ETF In Focus

Taking cues from global growth worries, the Central Bank of New Zealand surprisingly cut interest rates to a new record low on March 9 and hinted at additional easing, if need be. The move followed the bandwagon of global policy easing, especially in the developed world to boost economic growth and inflation. The central bank of New Zealand slashed its official cash rate by 25 bps to 2.25% to counter threats emanating from soft global growth mainly around China and the Eurozone. Also, uncertain global financial markets, the commodity market rout, a struggling dairy sector – one of the key contributors to the country’s GDP – and troubles in the housing market led the bank to ease its policy unexpectedly, per tradingeconomics . Prior to this, the bank had lowered its key interest rate by 25 bps in December 2015. Consumer prices in New Zealand nudged up 0.1% year over year in the fourth quarter of 2015, missing market expectations and marking the lowest level since the third quarter of 1999. This raised concerns among policy makers. Super accommodative monetary policies from Japan to the Eurozone made the New Zealand dollar stronger and kept consumer prices below the target range of 1-3%, per Bloomberg . So, a rate cut is essential to attain the 2% inflation goal by early 2018. Investors should note that New Zealand became the first nation in the developed world to raise its benchmark interest rate in March 2014. This was followed by three more hikes to 3.5% till July 2014. However, the trend reversed from June 2015 when the central bank resorted to a 25 bp rate cut to 3.25%. Market Impact The New Zealand dollar soon lost strength against the greenback following the announcement, though by 0.2% in one day (as of March 9, 2016). While a rate cut is normally viewed as a step forward in expediting growth and boosting the stock market, we are uncertain about how much return can be reaped by the strategy that New Zealand has adopted. It is true that many other developed economies are presently practicing way more accommodative policies. But they haven’t been able to make a jumpstart in their growth goals. Still, the move was probably necessary to give export a boost. The coming few days should go in favor of the New Zealand stock market. All these possibilities definitely turn our attention to the only pure-play ETF on this nation – the iShares MSCI New Zealand Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: ENZL ) . ENZL in Focus This ETF tracks the MSCI New Zealand Investable Market Index, giving investors exposure to 29 stocks. The product is not immensely popular with an asset base of $69.1 million and trading volume of about 35,000 shares per day. It charges investors 47 bps in annual fees. The fund is not widely spread across individual securities. It puts nearly 65% of the assets in the top 10 holdings with Auckland International ( OTCPK:AUKNY ), Spark New Zealand Ltd (NXTCY) and Fletcher Building ( OTCPK:FCREY ), taking the top three positions. The trio makes up for a combined 30% share. From a sector perspective, utilities, healthcare, industrials, telecom, consumer discretionary and materials receive a double-digit allocation each. In terms of performance, ENZL is up about 1.5% so far this year (as of March 8, 2016). In the last one year (as of March 8, 2016), the fund lost just 2.2%. The ETF currently yields 4.18% in dividend per annum making it a useful destination for income-seeking investors, especially at this low-yield environment. The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold) with a Medium risk outlook. Original Post

Can Emerging Market ETFs Sustain The Rally?

After surviving a lackluster stretch, emerging market ETFs recoiled lately as a relief rally bolstered the demand for risky securities. The deterrents that came in its path earlier seem to have cleared as the U.S. rate hike bets have taken a backseat, marring the price of the greenback at the start of 2016. Impressive gains were noticed in commodity prices in the wake of a weaker dollar. Also, hopes of further stimulus from the eurozone and Japan, China’s relentless efforts to shore up its waning economy and the hunger for higher current income (as a drive for safety encouraged the need for fixed-income investing, which in turn affected U.S. Treasury bond yields) made emerging market space a rising star lately. The winning trend can be validated by 10.4% and 11.1% returns realized respectively by the two most popular ETFs, the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (NYSEARCA: EEM ) and the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF (NYSEARCA: VWO ), in the past one month (as of March 8, 2016), against gains of 7.6% for the all-world exchange-traded fund, the iShares MSCI ACWI index ETF (NASDAQ: ACWI ), and a 7% uptick in the S&P 500-based fund, the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ). As of now, the drivers of the rally look fragile. Investors may cheer the recent reserve requirement ratio cuts in China, but these have hardly boosted the Chinese markets. Rather, weak Chinese trade data has been pushing its market down, along with other emerging market securities. On the other hand, the recent rally in oil prices is anything but stable, keeping a check on the broad-based global market recovery. Meanwhile, the U.S. economy came up with some upbeat economic numbers on manufacturing, jobs, inflation and consumer confidence. All these once again brought back rate hike talks on the table. If any such cues are given by the Fed in its upcoming meeting, the emerging markets will once again lose luster. All in all, the operating backdrop is not all bright. So, investors should practice caution while targeting this investing arena. Below, we highlight a few ETFs that can be considered in the days to come (see all emerging market ETFs here ). High Yield – WisdomTree Emerging Markets Equity Income ETF (NYSEARCA: DEM ) As foreign investors normally park their money in the riskier emerging market bloc for higher yields, what could be a better choice than DEM? This $1.31 billion ETF holds about 320 stocks. Though the fund is heavy on trouble zones like China, Russia and Brazil, and might see a sell-off ahead, a 30-day SEC yield of 6.29% would provide some protection against capital erosion. Also, the fund has highest exposure in the relatively better-placed zone, Taiwan. The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold) and is up about 6% this year (as of March 8, 2016). Low Volatility – iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: EEMV ) A low-volatility portfolio is yet another key to long-term success. For investors seeking exposure to the emerging markets, EEMV could be an intriguing pick. The $2.9 billion ETF charges 25 bps in fees. In total, the fund holds over 250 stocks in its basket, with each accounting for less than 1.71% share. The fund has a slight tilt toward financials, with 26.8% share, while information technology, telecommunication services and consumer staples round off the next three spots. The fund has retreated 0.2% in the year-to-date frame (as of March 8, 2016), was up 6.2% in the last one month and it has a Zacks ETF Rank #3. High Quality – SPDR MSCI Emerging Markets Quality Mix ETF (NYSEARCA: QEMM ) High-quality ETFs are generally rich on value characteristics, as these focus on stocks having high-quality scores based on three fundamentals factors – the performance of value, low volatility and quality factor strategies. This fund follows the MSCI Emerging Markets Quality Mix Index, holding a large basket of 744 stocks. It has amassed about $97.3 million and charges a low fee of 30 bps per annum. The fund puts more weight in China, Taiwan and South Korea. The Zacks Rank #3 fund was up 7.7% in the last one month, but off 1.2% year to date, and it yields about 2.13% (as of March 8, 2016). Original Post