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3 Best-Rated Dreyfus Mutual Funds To Consider

The Dreyfus Corporation – a segment of BNY Mellon – was founded in 1951 and has around $286 billion of assets under management allocated across a wide range of equity and fixed-income mutual funds. Meanwhile, established in 1784 by Alexander Hamilton, BNY Mellon currently has nearly $1.6 trillion assets under management invested throughout the globe. It provides services including investment management, investment services and wealth management across 35 countries. Below we share with you three top-rated Dreyfus mutual funds. Each has earned a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy) and is expected to outperform its peers in the future. To view the Zacks Rank and past performance of all Dreyfus mutual funds, investors can click here to see the complete list of Dreyfus funds . Dreyfus Global Equity Income A (MUTF: DEQAX ) invests a large portion of its assets in equity securities. DEQAX invests in dividend-paying companies situated in the United States, Canada, Japan, Australia, Hong Kong and Western Europe. DEQAX may invest a maximum 30% of its assets in emerging markets. DEQAX seeks total return. The Dreyfus Global Equity Income A fund has a three-year annualized return of 7.1%. As of January 2016, DEQAX held 55 issues with 5.52% of its assets invested in Philip Morris International Inc. (NYSE: PM ). Dreyfus International Equity A (MUTF: DIEAX ) seeks capital appreciation over the long run. DIEAX invests the majority of its assets in securities of foreign companies. DIEAX focuses on companies that are located in Canada and countries included in the Morgan Stanley Capital International Europe, Australasia and Far East (MSCI EAFE) Index. The Dreyfus International Equity A fund has a three-year annualized return of 2.3%. DIEAX has an expense ratio of 1.12% compared to the category average of 1.22%. Dreyfus Municipal Bond (MUTF: DRTAX ) invests a major portion of its assets in municipal debt securities that are expected to provide return exempted from federal income tax. DRTAX invests the majority of its assets in securities that are rated A or higher. DRTAX is believed to maintain a dollar-weighted average maturity of more than 10 years. The Dreyfus Municipal Bond fund has a three-year annualized return of 3.5%. Daniel Marques is one of the fund managers of DRTAX since 2009. Original Post

7 Year Bull Market? It May Only Be 6 Years And 2 Months After All

What do these 10 companies – Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT ), Macy’s (NYSE: M ), Kohl’s (NYSE: KSS ), Sears (NASDAQ: SHLD ), Target (NYSE: TGT ), Best Buy (NYSE: BBY ), Office Depot (NASDAQ: ODP ), K-Mart, J.C Penney (NYSE: JCP ), Gap (NYSE: GPS ) – all have in common? Each one of them is closing down a slew of retail storefronts. The “talking heads” on CNBC want you to believe that brick-and-mortar woes are merely a reflection of the consumer’s preference to shop online. Maybe. Or perhaps shuttering the doors will help boost the bottom-line profitability of retail company shareholders. After all, the SPDR S&P Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: XRT ) has bounced an astonishing 17.5% off its bear market lows. On the other hand, a 24.5% bearish descent for the retail segment does not reflect positively on the well-being of American business. In fact, many influential sectors of the U.S. economy have already descended more than a bearish 20%. There have been peak-to-trough declines ranging from 20%-40% in energy, materials, transporters, biotechnology as well as financial institutions. The bear market rally in the Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLF ) still leaves the influential sector in correction territory, roughly 12% beneath its July pinnacle. Perhaps ironically, the business media excitedly embraced the 7th birthday of the bull market yesterday (3/9/16). What was missing from the exuberance? The S&P 500 traded at 1989 back in July of 2014. That’s 20 months ago. More critically, 42% of S&P 500 components remain mired in bear market territory, even after the 10% bounce off of the February lows. And what if the S&P 500 should ultimately drop 20% prior to reclaiming its May 2015 record high of 2130? In that case, the bull market would have ended ten months ago at an age of six years, two months. Not surprisingly, the very same folks who believed the bear market was unstoppable at the February lows – S&P 500 at 1829 – shifted back to the bull camp the minute the S&P 500 closed above 2000. Did the fundamental backdrop on three consecutive quarters of declining earnings per share (EPS) change to justify the bullishness? Hardly. Hadn’t they ever seen how bear market rallies work? Where broad market gauges could jump 10%, 15%, even 18% in the middle of a bearish downtrend? Apparently not. In spite of the bullish refrain that you have to invest in stocks because there is no alternative (T.I.N.A.), investor preference for intermediate-term treasury bonds demonstrates otherwise. The Federal Reserve is raising its overnight lending rate; committee members express a desire for gradual stimulus removal. Yet that guidance has done little to dissuade the investment community from embracing low yielding investment grade debt – the kind of capital preservation one might get by selecting the iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ). The result? The yield curve continues to flatten. The spread between “10s” and “2s” has fallen to a meager 1%. In fact, you’d have to go back to the start of the Great Recession to witness a similar phenomenon. “But Gary,” there is not going to be a recession. “The Federal Reserve won’t make the mistake that it made in 2008 by waiting an entire calendar year before coming to the rescue with asset purchases via electronic money creation (a.k.a. QE).” How is that working out for Europe? This morning, Mario Draghi of the European Central Bank (ECB) hoped to kick-start its moribund regional economy by announcing a foray into deeper negative interest rate waters (-0.4%) and committing to $87 billion per month in asset purchases. Not only did global investors sell the news – not only did the SPDR EURO STOXX 50 ETF (NYSEARCA: FEZ ) give up nearly all of its 2% intra-day gains – but the European economy has yet to show genuine improvement from the stimulus policies of the ECB. Consequently, the bear market rallies in Europe have consistently registered “lower highs” and “lower lows.” Meanwhile, each of the respective BRIC nations (i.e., Brazil, Russia, India, China) are still suffering. There are cracks in Australia’s housing market. And the entire Canadian economy? It has been falling apart on numerous measures. The hope, then, is that the resilient U.S. consumer will buck the trend of global stagnation. Unfortunately, U.S. corporate profits cannot escape a worldwide demand strike , particularly when 50% of profits come from overseas operations. It seems the resilient U.S. consumer is being asked to carry a whole lot more weight on his/her shoulders than is feasible. With Markit’s U.S. Services PMI hitting a recessionary 49.8 in February – a data point that is at the lowest level in nearly two-and-a-half years – maybe the consumer is getting closer to “tapping out.” Disclosure: Gary Gordon, MS, CFP is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. Gary Gordon, Pacific Park Financial, Inc, and/or its clients may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds, and/or any investment asset mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. At times, issuers of exchange-traded products compensate Pacific Park Financial, Inc. or its subsidiaries for advertising at the ETF Expert web site. ETF Expert content is created independently of any advertising relationships.

New High Dividend ETF With Free Cash Flow Focus By Pacer

With the global market being edgy since the start of this year, demand for value-oriented and high-yielding products is high now. Agreed, every storm ends sometime and risk-on sentiments will return to the market. But this year seems to be a little different with growth worries expected to remain in the marketplace for a longer time (read: Enjoy High Yield with These Low Beta EM Local Currency Bond ETFs ). This operating backdrop makes the launch of Pacer Global High Dividend ETF (BATS: PGHD ) – launched by Pacer Funds Trust – extremely well timed. Let’s see how the fund is designed and what its prospects are. PGHD in Focus It is a strategy-driven, exchange-traded fund that looks to provide a steady stream of income and capital appreciation by picking companies with a high free cash flow (FCF) yield and an impressive dividend yield. The fund accomplishes its objective by tracking the Pacer Global Cash Cows Dividends 100 Index. The index first tracks 1000 companies in the FTSE all-world developed large-cap index. From the initial universe, 300 companies with the highest trailing 12-month free cash flow yield are chosen. From this set, 100 companies having the highest trailing 12-month dividend yield are picked to form the underlying benchmark. The fund currently holds 100 stocks. Currently, the U.S. is the top nation in the fund with over 35% weight followed by Switzerland (8.45%), the U.K. (7.14%) and Australia (6.77%). Sector-wise, Industrials (16.93%) and Consumer Staples (16.6%) dominate the fund with over 32% allocation, while Energy (5.8%) and Financials (0.82%) occupy the bottom two spots. The fund is equal-weighted in nature, with no stock accounting for more than 2.27% of the basket. Wal-Mart Stores, Altria Group and AT&T are the top three holdings of the fund. The fund charges 60 basis points in fees. As the name suggests, the fund is rich in yields with the Pacer Global Cash Cows Dividends 100 Index offering 5.06% annual yield (as of January 29, 2016). How Could it Fit in a Portfolio? The fund could be a good choice for value investors with a global market focus. Against the present low-yield backdrop worldwide, the hunt for higher yield is common among investors. This, accompanied by the higher free-cash flow yield criteria, provides the portfolio a value quotient as these companies traditionally suffered less during the economic upheaval, per the factsheet (read: 3 Dividend ETF Winners Year to Date ). Also, the issuer went on explain that higher free cash flow generating companies are also great tools to tap growth opportunities as these in turn result in capital gains. Moreover, the fund’s exposure to numerous economies is expected to provide huge diversification benefits to investors. However, investors should note that the ETF will be subject to severe currency risk. As such, the product is most suitable for long-term investors, willing to bear any currency volatility in the short run. ETF Competition The high dividend yield space is chockablock with products. From that angle it wouldn’t be easy for the fund gain enough market share. So, the fund will have to sell the highest free-cash flow yield feature to hog investors’ attention. This space is yet to be exploited. TrimTabs International Free-Cash-Flow ETF (NYSEARCA: FCFI ) normally grabs the attention of investors interested in the free-cash flow related funds. FCFI looks to track the international companies with the highest free cash flow yields. But since FCFI yields only 1.21% annually (as of February 24, 2016) and charges 69 bps in fees, the newly launched PGHD has chances to score more, with increased yield and a lower expense ratio. Link to the original post on Zacks.com