Category Archives: etf

Yahoo Senior VP Sandy Gould Latest Executive To Leave The Company

Yahoo ( YHOO ) has confirmed that Senior Vice President of Talent Acquisition and Development Sandy Gould will become the latest high-profile executive to leave the struggling Internet firm helmed by CEO Marissa Mayer. Yahoo has recently implemented layoffs and begun the process of selling itself and spinning off its hefty stake in China’s Alibaba Group ( BABA ), while it’s also in the midst of a proxy fight seeking to oust its entire board. “I have decided to leave Yahoo. It’s time to take a break and decide my next adventure,” said Gould in a statement sent to IBD on Friday. “I have had an amazing experience working for Yahoo. It has been transformational, and I have loved the learning, mission, people, and the opportunity to work with Marissa. The recruiting team and community at Yahoo are incredible. I have loved building and unleashing the superpowers of Yahoo employees. The stories I will proudly tell will be of amazing experiences, loyal devotion, of a brilliant CEO and an incredible and passionate leadership team! Leaving Yahoo is the hardest leaving I have ever done. Yahoo will always be in my heart.” Gould joined Yahoo three years ago after stints at Disney ( DIS )/ABC Television Group, Linden Labs/Second Life and RealNetworks,  according to Re/Code . Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer is under intensified pressure from major investor Starboard Value, which wants change. Starboard said last week that since Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer and others in the company’s leadership “have repeatedly failed shareholders,” the hedge fund wants to sweep out all of the ailing Web company’s directors and replace them with its own slate. Yahoo’s revenue growth has stalled for nearly a decade as ad dollars continued to slip away to rivals, including Facebook ( FB ), Netflix ( NFLX ), Alphabet ( GOOGL ) unit Google and high-profile startups Snapchat and Pinterest, among others. Yahoo has reportedly received interest from as many as 40 groups who have until April 11 to submit preliminary bids for its core business and Asian assets. Yahoo stock was down a fraction in afternoon trading in the stock market today , near 36.

Do Not Be Fooled By The Commodities ETFs Surge

The commodity market has seen a surge lately, with precious metals deserving a special mention. A falling dollar in the wake of a volley of subdued U.S. data points, concerns over global growth and an acute plunge in oil prices have marred the possibility of frequent rate hikes this year. This has taken the shine off the greenback and has helped the rally in precious metals in the first quarter of 2016 (read: ETFs to Rise if Dollar Falls ). Within the entire collection, the surge in gold was unparalleled, approaching ‘the best quarter in nearly 30 years’. Gold bullion ETF iShares Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: IAU ) has advanced 16.1% so far this year (as of March 31, 2016). The ETFS Physical Silver Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SIVR ) , which looks to reflect the price of silver bullion has added 11.5% this year, followed by a 9.6% jump in the ETFS Physical Platinum Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: PPLT ) . The PowerShares DB Precious Metals ETF (NYSEARCA: DBP ) is up 15.5% so far this year (as of March 31, 2016) (read: Gold ETFs Regaining Their Glitter ). Will This Uptrend Continue? Agreed, the Fed Chair has recently hinted at a ‘cautious’ stance on future policy tightening, taking into account the downside risks emanating from global financial market upheaval. And it also lowered its number of rate hike estimates for 2016 from four to two in its March meeting, which in turn has dampened the U.S. dollar. But will the dollar trend be so glum if the U.S. economy continues to offer back-to-back upbeat economic data. This is truer in the face of improving trend seen in the labor and manufacturing sector. Meanwhile, Q4 2015 U.S. GDP was adjusted higher, from the advanced estimate of 0.7% to 1.0% in the second estimate and then finally to 1.4% in the third reading. This gives cues of positive economic development at home. Moreover, the demand-supply scenario is hardly balanced in the commodity market. The issue is especially evident in case of agricultural prices. Supply glut and lower demand has been a longstanding problem in the agro-field. However, investors should note that despite the downbeat underlying fundamentals, the Teucrium Agricultural ETF (NYSEARCA: TAGS ) rose 6% in the last one month (as of March 31, 2016). Coming to the industrial metals, investors should note that many of these are highly susceptible to Chinese economic condition. Though China’s manufacturing sector has grown surprisingly in March since July 2015, the situation is still shaky. This might put a basket of commodities like copper and nickel in a false position, going forward. Crude oil also bounced back in the middle of the first quarter on output freeze talks by major oil producers. But with several energy companies getting delisted in recent times and supplies still brimming, the road ahead for crude is definitely slippery. Keeping aside the fundamentals, profit-taking activity after such a bullish run can also cause a dip in the commodity ETFs segment. As of March 31, 2016, the relative strength index of the SPDR Gold Trust ETF ( GLD) , the PowerShares DB Precious Metals ETF ( DBP) and SIVR stood at 50.28, 51.13 and 51.93, respectively, indicating that these are nowhere near the oversold territory. So, edgy investors should have a cautious approach toward commodity investing. However, as long as global growth issues keep dominating headlines, safe haven assets like gold will likely have an upper hand. So, even if other commodities fall flat, gold ETFs have higher chances of further price appreciation if the Fed stays dovish. Link to the original post on Zacks.com

Happy Hour: Build Your Own Smart Beta

I don’t own smart beta funds because I don’t believe they fit my strategy. Instead, I stick with a simple approach, four funds – a U.S., developed international, emerging markets, and treasury bonds – adjusting the allocation based on valuation. Basically, I move from expensive to cheap and if all equities are expensive then move from expensive to bonds. That’s the simplified version. I don’t believe smart beta would add enough “extra return” due to the adjustments. It’s very possible – I haven’t tested it – that I’d get a lower return from smart beta funds due to poor timing and higher costs, so I just stick with the lowest cost approach. Why pay more for something that I might not get? That’s the way I see it. It’s not perfect but it fits my mentality and it’s easy to manage. But if I could design the ideal smart beta fund around my strategy, it’d be based off a global index weighted by quality and price. The highest weighting would go to the highest quality, lowest priced stocks and move down from there. And I really see no reason to own every stock in said index. I’d eliminate all the highest priced, lowest quality stocks or expensive junk. And it would maintain a “cash position” if too many stocks exceeded a specific low quality and/or expensive limit. And it would do it all at a low cost. Pipe dreams, I know. Maybe someday it will be possible to build personally customized funds at a low cost. If it happens, I’m certain someone will screw it up. Anyways, the point of this was because of a slew of smart beta articles I saw this week. Smart betas “market-beating returns” are nice to look it. That’s the draw and the downfall. Too often people pick funds based on performance – not what best fits their strategy – because they don’t have a strategy or their strategy is to chase performance. So most investors will never see those returns. They’re not willing to accept periods of less than market returns to get the excess return over time. Most investors will get better returns simply by being more robotic. Less mistakes lead to higher returns over time. Doing nothing more often with a basket of basic index funds will get you a better return than chasing the best performing smart beta funds. All their doing is spending more money (via higher fees) to make the same costly mistakes. Once you’ve got doing nothing down pat, then look into smart beta and factor tilts. If it fits your strategy, then use it. And if not, then don’t. Last Call