Tag Archives: author

5 Strong Buy Municipal Bond Mutual Funds

Debt securities will always be the natural choice of the risk-averse investor, because this category of instruments provides regular income flow at low levels of risk. Income from regular dividends helps to ease the pain caused by plunging stock prices. When considering safety of capital invested, municipal bond mutual funds are second only to those investing in government securities. In addition, the interest income earned from these securities are exempt from Federal taxes, and in many cases, from state taxes as well. Below, we will share with you 5 top-rated municipal bond mutual funds. Each has earned a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy) , as we expect these mutual funds to outperform their peers in the future. To view the Zacks Rank and past performance of all municipal bond funds, investors can click here to see the complete list of funds. Dreyfus High Yield Municipal Bond Z Fund (MUTF: DHMBX ) seeks a tax-exempted high level of current income. It invests a lion’s share of its assets in municipal securities that are expected to provide returns that are free from Federal income tax. DHMBX is generally expected to maintain dollar-weighted average maturity of more than 10 years. The Dreyfus High Yield Municipal Bond Z Fund is non-diversified and has returned 5.4% over the past one year. As of June 2015, DHMBX held 87 issues, with 3.55% of its assets invested in Tobacco Settlement Financing Corp N Asset 5%. MFS Municipal High-Income Fund A (MUTF: MMHYX ) invests a large chunk of its assets in securities that are expected to pay interest exempted from Federal taxes. It may invest in securities that provide income which are not exempted from Federal alternative minimum tax. The MFS Municipal High-Income Fund A has returned 5.7% over the past one year. MMHYX has an expense ratio of 0.67%, as compared to a category average of 0.95%. Federated Municipal High Yield Advantage F Fund (MUTF: FHTFX ) seeks high current income. The fund invests in securities that are believed to provide Federal tax-free interest income. FHTFX normally invests in long-term securities. It may also invest in securities of medium quality and that are rated below investment grade. The Federated Municipal High Yield Advantage F fund is non-diversified and has returned 5.5% over the past one year. Lee R. Cunningham II is one of the fund managers, and has managed FHTFX since 2009. Delaware National High-Yield Municipal Bond Fund A (MUTF: CXHYX ) invests a major portion of its assets in municipal bonds, interest from which is exempted from Federal income tax. CXHYX focuses on acquiring securities rated below high or medium quality, which are expected to have impressive income prospects with high risk. The Delaware National High-Yield Municipal Bond Fund A has returned 5.7% over the past one year. As of June 2015, CXHYX held 393 issues, with 2.37% of its assets invested in Buckeye Ohio Tob Settlement Fi To 5.875%. American Century High-Yield Municipal Fund Investor (MUTF: ABHYX ) seeks a high level of tax-free current income. The fund invests a majority of its assets in municipal debt securities expected to pay interest income exempted from Federal tax. It emphasizes in investing in securities that are believed to provide high return. ABHYX may invest in securities with interest that is not free from Federal alternative minimum tax. The American Century High-Yield Municipal Fund Investor is non-diversified and has returned 5% over the past one year. ABHYX has an expense ratio of 0.60%, as compared to a category average of 0.95%. Original Post

Combining Value And Momentum In Stock Selection And Market Timing

By Jack Vogel, Ph.D. Recently, we wrote two posts about how to combine Value and Momentum for stock selection purposes ( Part 1 and Part 2 ). We followed this piece with a post on combining value and momentum for market timing purposes. In this post, we review the use of combined Value and Momentum for both stock selection and market timing. First, let’s examine the combination of Value and Momentum in stock selection. A concept that has been around for many years . Setting Up a Value and Momentum Portfolio First, let’s set up the experiment. We will examine all firms above the NYSE 40th percentile for market cap (currently around $1.8 billion) to avoid weird empirical effects associated with micro/small cap stocks. We will form the portfolios at a monthly frequency, with a 3-month holding period – so we use overlapping portfolios, a la Jagadeesh and Titman (1993) . We focus on the following 2 variables: Momentum = Rank firms on three momentum variables: 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month momentum. The average of the 3 ranks is the “momentum” rank. Value = Rank firms on three value variables: EBIT/TEV, Book-to-Market (B/M), and E/P (inverse of P/E). The average of the 3 ranks is the “value” rank. Every month, we select the top 100 Value stocks and the top 100 Momentum stocks (and hold them for 3 months). We then equal-weight the holdings. Value and Mom EW (net) = Top 100 Value firms and Top 100 Momentum firms formed monthly and held for 3 months. Portfolio is equal-weighted. Returns are net of a 1.00% annual management fee and 2.00% annual transaction costs. SP500 = S&P 500 Total return. LTR = Total Return to Merrill Lynch 7-10 year Government Bond Index. RF = Total Return to Risk-Free Rate (U.S. T-Bills). Results are net of a 1.00% annual management fee and 2.00% annual transaction costs. Index returns (S&P 500, LTR, and RF) are gross of any fees or transaction costs. All returns are total returns and include the reinvestment of distributions (e.g., dividends). Indexes are unmanaged, do not reflect management or trading fees, and one cannot invest directly in an index. Results (1/1/1964-12/31/2014): (click to enlarge) The results are hypothetical results, are NOT an indicator of future results, and do NOT represent returns that any investor actually attained. Indexes are unmanaged, do not reflect management or trading fees, and one cannot invest directly in an index. Additional information regarding the construction of these results is available upon request. Takeaways: Combining Value and Momentum outperformed the market (after fees) over the past 50 years. However, the Value and Momentum portfolio does have larger drawdowns and higher volatility than the passive index. On a risk-adjusted basis, the combination value/momentum portfolio is favorable. Interesting, but active equity strategies have drawdown problems As previously discussed , we can examine what happens when we overlay a timing signal on top of the combination value and momentum stock selection system outlined above. Below, I describe the two market timing rules: Valuation-Based Signal: We use 1/CAPE as the valuation metric, or the “earnings yield,” as a baseline indicator; however, we adjust the yield value for the realized year-over-year (yoy) inflation rate by subtracting the year-over-year inflation rate from the rate of 1/CAPE. h.t., Gestaltu . A higher real yield spread is better than a low real yield spread. To summarize, the metric looks as follows if the CAPE ratio is 20 and realized inflation (Inf) is 3%: Real Yield Spread Metric = (1/20)-3% = 2% Some details: The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) publishes the CPI on a monthly basis since 1913; however, the data is one-month lagged (possibly longer). For example, the CPI for January won’t be released until February. So when we subtract the year-over-year inflation rate from the rate of 1/CAPE, we do 1-month lag to avoid look-ahead bias. We use the S&P 500 Total Return index as a buy-and-hold benchmark. 80th Percentile Valuation-based asset allocation: Own stocks when the valuation < 80th percentile, otherwise hold risk-free. In other word, get out of the market if the real yield spread metric is extreme. Momentum-based signal: Long-term moving average rule on the S&P 500 (Own stocks if above 12-month MA, risk-free if below the 12-month MA). Using the Combination Signal: Both signals are calculated using S&P 500 data (Momentum and Valuation). However, if the signals say we should be invested in stocks, we are invested in the Value and Momentum portfolio. Results of all portfolios are net of a 1.00% annual management fee and 2.00% annual transaction costs. All returns are total returns and include the reinvestment of distributions (e.g., dividends). Results (1/1/1964-12/31/2014): Here we show the results to 4 portfolios: Value and Mom EW (net) = Top 100 Value firms and Top 100 Momentum firms formed monthly and held for 3 months. Portfolio is equal-weighted. Returns are net of a 1.00% annual management fee and 2.00% annual transaction costs. Value and Mom EW (Value RM - net) = Top 100 Value firms and Top 100 Momentum firms formed monthly and held for 3 months. Portfolio is equal-weighted. Valuation-based market timing rule applied: Own stocks (Value and Momentum portfolio) when the valuations aren't extreme, otherwise hold risk-free. Returns are net of a 1.00% annual management fee and 2.00% annual transaction costs. Value and Mom EW (MA RM - net) = Top 100 Value firms and Top 100 Momentum firms formed monthly and held for 3 months. Portfolio is equal-weighted. Momentum-based market timing rule applied: Own stocks (Value and Momentum portfolio) if they are above the 12-month MA, own risk-free if below the 12-month MA. Returns are net of a 1.00% annual management fee and 2.00% annual transaction costs. Value and Mom EW (Value and Mom RM - net) = Top 100 Value firms and Top 100 Momentum firms formed monthly and held for 3 months. Portfolio is equal-weighted. Valuation and Momentum-based market timing rules are applied, each having a 50% signal weight. Returns are net of a 1.00% annual management fee and 2.00% annual transaction costs. (click to enlarge) The results are hypothetical results, are NOT an indicator of future results, and do NOT represent returns that any investor actually attained. Indexes are unmanaged, do not reflect management or trading fees, and one cannot invest directly in an index. Additional information regarding the construction of these results is available upon request. Takeaways: Both the Valuation and Momentum-based market timing rules decreased drawdowns (maximum drawdown and sum of drawdowns). Combining the Value and Momentum market timing rules yields the lowest drawdown, as well as the highest Sharpe and Sortino ratios. Conclusion: Combining Value and Momentum appears to work for both stock selection and market timing. One can argue that there are "better" ways to combine Value and Momentum. However, a simple approach (documented above) seems to work, at least historically. There are few caveats that come to mind: The results above are hypothetical, and the future could change. Valuation-based timing is tough (see introduction of that post), and we've cherry-picked a system that happens to work in-sample, whereas others we've tried don't seem to work that well. These systems can drift violently from standard benchmarks (i.e., one needs to be prepared for tracking error). Value and momentum stocks are much more volatile than a passive index and require a disciplined sustainable investor . Let us know your thoughts! Original Post

3 Safe-Haven ETFs To Watch On Market Correction

The global investing world, especially the risky assets, went into a tailspin recently on a host of factors including lack of transparency in the Fed tightening timeline, the rout in the Chinese economy and its repercussions in its stock market, the yuan devaluation earlier this month, an impending snap election in Greece, slowdown in the Japanese economy and an acute plunge in oil prices. In short, concerns over global growth are widespread, causing a correction in the global stock markets. The U.S. stock-index futures recorded the deepest weekly decline in about four years past week. The tumult was triggered off on August 11 when China devalued its currency yuan and eventually spread into almost all asset classes. Since then, the global market correction ate away over $5 trillion of equity value, per Bloomberg. Commodity prices dived to a 16-year low, and credit risk in Asia rose to the highest level since March 2014. Given these woes, risk-averse investors are treading cautiously as most are dumping stocks and junk bonds in favor of safe haven assets to protect their portfolio from capital erosion. Below we have highlighted three safe haven ETFs that investors can consider adding to their portfolio in the current volatility. These products are likely to gain should the turmoil worsen and volatility in the market continue to escalate. Treasury Bonds iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TLT ) Though U.S. treasuries were out of favor a few days back due to worries over Fed tightening, heightened global uncertainty brought this safe asset into the limelight. Dimming prospects of the sooner-than-expected Fed rate hike, global growth worries and severely low oil price which put a lid on global inflation led treasury valuation to soar. Yields on the U.S. benchmark 10-year notes slipped to 2.05% on August 21 from this year’s 2.50% high recorded on June 10 while yields on the U.S. benchmark 20-year notes plunged to 2.44% from the high of 2.98% on June 26. The ultra-popular long-term Treasury ETF – TLT – tracks the Barclays Capital U.S. 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index and has AUM of $4.92 billion. Expense ratio comes in at 0.15%. Holding 29 securities in its basket, the fund focuses on the top credit rating bonds with average maturity of 26.82 years and effective duration of 17.35 years. TLT was up 1.9% last week and 5.7% in the last one-month frame (as of August 21, 2015). The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold). Apart from TLT, investors can also consider the 25+ Year Zero Coupon U.S. Treasury Index ETF (NYSEARCA: ZROZ ) and the Vanguard Extended Duration Treasury ETF (NYSEARCA: EDV ) . These two ETFs were up 2% and 2.9% in the last one week (as of August 21, 2015). In the last one-month frame, each of these two ETFs gained over 9.4%. Gold SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: GLD ) Gold is often viewed as a safe haven asset to protect against financial risks, and has performed well lately (despite deteriorating fundamentals) on heightened market volatility. The metal logged the largest weekly gains (as of August 21, 2015) since January. Funds tracking the yellow metal, such as GLD, can be a good choice for investors seeking safety. GLD tracks the price of gold bullion measured in U.S. dollars. The fund is the most popular and liquid bet in its space with an asset base of $25.1 billion and an average trading volume of about six million shares a day. The fund charges 40 basis points as fees and gained more than 4% in the past one week and 6% in the last one-month frame (as of August 21, 2015). Apart from GLD, investors can also consider the iShares Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: IAU ) , another popular choice in this space that returned almost similar to GLD last week. Both GLD and IAU have a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold). Currency CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: FXY ) The Japanese currency, yen, is often considered a classic safe haven asset. Yen surged to a six-week high on August 21, 2015 as China-led worries wrecked havoc on the global equity and commodity markets. Also, reduced expectations of a September Fed rate hike dampened the dollar to some extent and boosted yen. The sentiment regarding risk-aversion was so strong that yen gained despite the ultra-loose monetary policy in Japan. Investors can target this currency via FXY, which measures the value of the yen against the price of the greenback. This $106 million-fund charges 40 basis points as fees. FXY was up 1.11% on August 21 and added 1.7% in the past week as of the same date. FXY has a Zacks ETF Rank #4 (Sell) as easy Japanese monetary policy will not favor the currency for long. In fact, the fund lost about 0.1% after hours. Link to the original post on Zacks.com