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Floating Rate ETFs In Flux

This article originally appeared in the April issue of WealthManagement Magazine and online at Floating Rate ETFs in Flux . With fed rate hikes likely coming at a slower pace, investors flee some floating-rate notes. Nearly a year ago, as part of our survey of alternative income funds (” Alternative Alternative Income “), we picked through a number of floating-rate note (FRN) portfolios to find the potential best-of-class performance should interest rates rise. Well, since then rates have risen by 34 basis points in the three-month Libor and 26 basis points in the three-month T-bill yield. Curiosity compels us to revisit the floater funds to see how the asset class has fared. Not all these portfolios are alike, so one shouldn’t expect uniform results. The vast majority of the $9.8 billion held by exchange traded fund (ETF) versions are invested in corporate securities. And, among these, there’s further differentiation by credit ratings. Most investors are attracted to funds holding high-yield securities, though significant assets are committed to investment-grade paper. The junk/quality split is 54/40 with the remaining 6 percent in municipal and Treasury notes as well as a fund devoted to variable-rate preferred stock and hybrid securities. Money Flows Overall money has flowed out of the 12 ETFs plying the floater trade over the last 12 months. Net redemptions of $417 million reduced the category’s asset base by 4 percent. This wasn’t a wholesale dumping; it was more tactical. Some segments lost assets, some gained. And that’s a story in itself. Junk note funds lost nearly 16 percent, or $986 million, while ETFs invested in higher-grade corporate notes saw inflows of nearly 5 percent, or $183 million. At the same time, there was a $5 million, or 45 percent, boost in the newer (and smaller) Treasury segment. The single fund devoted to municipal notes bled assets, losing $27 million, or 28 percent, of its base while the other singleton, the variable preferred stock ETF, tripled in size with $408 million in net creations. Two trends are at work here. Some of the high-yield assets migrated to safer havens, namely bank-grade and Treasury paper. Mainly, that’s been an escape from duration risk. Money’s also being drawn to the equity side in response to more encouraging economic data. The second trend is a mercenary search for yield. Consider the inflow to the preferred stock ETF. Dividend yields for variable preferreds indexed in the Wells Fargo Hybrid and Preferred Securities Floating and Variable Rate Index exceed 5 percent, significantly higher than the rates earned by junk notes. Investors believe that stocks, common or preferred, are okay to buy again. Especially if they produce lip-smackin’ income. The insulation from duration risk is a boon. So, let’s take a closer look at the cash thrown off by these ETFs, along with their return characteristics. High-Yield Corporate Floaters The 600-lb. gorilla among high-yield floater ETFs is the $3.7 billion PowerShares Senior Loan Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: BKLN ) , which owns more than 70 percent of the segment. As BKLN goes, so goes the segment. Buoyed by a market-weighted 4.22 percent dividend yield, high-yield ETFs collectively earned a total return of -2.54 percent over the past 12 months. The segment’s discernible duration is 2.27 percent, making it the most rate-sensitive in the asset class. When benchmarked against the i Shares Core Total U.S. Bond Market ETF (NYSEARCA: AGG ) , a broad market bond index tracker with a duration of 5.53 percent, you can see the bargain made by FRN investors: Aiming for higher dividends and less rate sensitivity, they settled for lower overall returns. Despite its middling dividend yield, assets have flowed to the First Trust Senior Loan ETF (NASDAQ: FTSL ) in the past year. FTSL is actively managed with a mandate that allows the portfolio to be invested in non-U.S. paper and equities. Net creations have boosted the fund’s asset base by 87 percent. Investment-Grade Corporate Floaters Dividends are a lot lower in the bank-grade segment. With a collective “A” credit rating, the segment’s market-weighted yield is just 0.58 percent. Modified duration, at 0.12 percent, is very low as well. Like high-yield corporates, total returns have been negative, though at -0.40 percent, less so. The $3.5 billion iShares Floating Rate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: FLOT ) sets the segment’s pace, though the fund to beat has been the SPDR Barclays Investment Grade Floating Rate ETF (NYSEARCA: FLRN ) . FLRN is the only corporate floater that produced a positive total return over the past year. Treasury Floaters Floating-rate Treasury paper, with its low yield and virtually nonexistent duration is really a cash substitute. Investors, wary of potential Fed rate hikes, have goosed up the segment’s small asset base in the last 12 months. It’s the only segment, too, that’s produced a positive, albeit small, total return. Nearly all the segment’s assets are held in the iShares Treasury Floating Rate Bond ETF ( TFLO) . Other Floaters There are a couple of ETFs at the corners of the floating-rate market. The PowerShares Variable Rate Preferred Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: VRP ) , claiming the highest dividend yield in the class, earns the variable moniker in more than one way. It’s been one of the category’s more volatile issues, and ended up losing money overall in the past 12 months. A stablemate, the PowerShares VRDO Tax-Free Weekly Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PVI ) , owns municipal bonds, rated AA- on average, that can be redeemed weekly. Duration is negligible, which make the fund a cash substitute. With no dividend stream, however, the total return pretty much reflects its holding costs. No wonder the fund lost assets. An Overview The side-by-side comparison in Chart 1 shows how the category’s biggest funds behaved over the past 12 months. Three ETFs-FLOT, PVI and TFLO-varied little from their starting values, but BKLN and VRP wobbled significantly. Such volatility speaks to inherent risk. Floating-rate funds limit duration risk so they’re obliged to take on more credit risk to generate attractive returns. We seem to have reached a risk inflection point, though. By and large, investors are fleeing the risk in the high-yield corporate market. That exodus, in great part, reflects investor perceptions that Fed rate hikes may be coming at a slower pace than originally expected. The advantage of holding variable-rate securities, then, has diminished, making other assets more appealing.

Facebook Messenger Becoming A Swiss Knife That Could Poke Apple

Facebook ( FB ) is in position to make its widely popular Messenger platform an all-in-one tool that could include a partnership or a battle with Apple ( AAPL ) and its Apple Pay system. An investigation by The Information found software codes inside Facebook Messenger that could enable the messaging service to handle in-store purchases, among other features. Messenger currently allows people to send cash between users. But data from Apple iOS code examined by The Information suggest Facebook could provide users the ability to pay for goods in person. Facebook has gradually increased the features in Messenger, such as live video calling or the ability to request a ride from Uber. During Facebook’s quarterly earnings conference call in January, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said newer services would include the ability to book airline tickets, as well as new payment features. But rather than proving its own payment service, Zuckerberg suggested a partnership. “We don’t view ourselves as a payments business, that’s not the type of company that we are,” Zuckerberg said on the call. “We’ll partner with everyone who does payment. We look at the stuff that Apple is doing with Apple Pay for example as a really neat innovation in the space that takes a lot of friction out of transactions as well.” He noted that small tests began about one year ago with some e-commerce services, so that people who bought goods could follow up with customer service or purchase more goods. “We started off pretty slowly, but that’s going to be some of the basis for how we look to make Messenger a business going forward,” Zuckerberg said. “And we’re happy with the initial results.” Facebook Messenger As Payments Vehicle Unclear By entering the mobile payments fray, Facebook could either partner or compete with Apple, Android Pay by Alphabet ( GOOGL ) and other services. “There is clearly the potential for Messenger to be used as a payment mechanism,” wrote Richard Windsor, an analyst at Edison Investment Research, in a research note. “This is all well and good, but the real secret to payments is not the app but the back-end and fulfillment, and how this will work is unclear.” Facebook rivals in Asia, such as WeChat from Tencent Holdings ( TCEHY ) and Alipay from Alibaba ( BABA ), already provide the ability to pay for goods through the app platform. “Although this is virgin territory for Facebook, its Asian rivals have been on this path for quite some time,” Windsor wrote. He said Facebook will face some challenging obstacles in expanding its Messenger features to new areas, but said it’s on the right track. “We see Facebook expanding into media consumption, shopping, gaming and search which will give it over 80% coverage of the Digital Life pie and market leadership,” Windsor wrote. “However, it is one thing to cover the pie and quite another to monetize it. Assuming that Facebook gets it right, it is on the way to create a thriving ecosystem that according to Edison estimates could allow it to double its revenues over the next five years or so.” Facebook stock was up 2%, near 116, in afternoon trading in the stock market today . Facebook is trading comfortably above its 50-day moving average as it works on a new base with a 117.69 buy point.

Twitter Adds New Technology To Bring Images To Visually Impaired

Twitter ( TWTR ) said people using Apple ‘s ( AAPL ) iOS or  Alphabet ‘s ( GOOGL ) Google Android can now add descriptions to images in tweets, a benefit to the visually impaired. The update allowing descriptions — also known as alternative text — empowers “ everyone to ensure content shared on Twitter is accessible to the widest possible audience,” said Twitter engineer Todd Kloots in a blog post Tuesday. . “Photos have been at the center of some of the biggest moments on Twitter,” said Kloots. “ As a core part of the Twitter experience, it’s important that images shared on our platform are accessible to everyone, including those who are visually impaired.” People can use the feature  via the “compose image descriptions” option in the Twitter app’s accessibility setting. When an image is added to a tweet, the user can tap the “add description” button and insert a description of up to 420 characters to the image. Visually impaired people will have access to the description by using assistive technology, such as screen readers and braille displays, Twitter said. Smartphones have other accessibility features, including VoiceOver, the iPhone’s built-in gesture-based app that reads text on a touchscreen aloud, and Google Android’s TalkBack, through which visually impaired users can access anything on their phones. Voice Activation Usage Still Low Voice-activated services, including Apple’s Siri, Amazon.com ‘s ( AMZN ) Alexa, Alphabet’s Google Now, Microsoft ‘s ( MSFT ) Cortana and others, can assist all consumers, including the visually disabled, as people increasingly rely on mobile phones for shopping, communicating and information. But surveys have found those voice-activated services aren’t getting much use. Just 13% of U.S. mobile phone owners use a voice-controlled personal assistant on their device each day, according to a survey last June from 451 Research. The Americans with Disabilities Act requires websites and mobile applications to be accessible. Google announced its Google Impact Challenge: Disabilities last year with a $20 million grant for technology innovators in the nonprofit community who work on technology to make people with disabilities more independent. In addition to Twitter and Microsoft, Adobe Systems ( ADBE ), Dropbox, LinkedIn ( LNKD ), Yahoo ( YHOO ), Facebook ( FB ), Intuit ( INTU ) and others have jointly asked universities  to train computer students in accessibility software design and are requiring new hires to demonstrate some familiarity with it, according to the Mercury News. Besides facing competition from rivals such as Facebook, Twitter is struggling to expand its user base as its user growth has slowed. Twitter has launched programs to reel in “logged out” users who visit Twitter’s site but don’t have accounts of their own, making them less coveted by advertisers. Twitter stock was up 2% in afternoon trading in the stock market today , near 16. Image provided by Shutterstock .