Tag Archives: checkbox

3 Key Questions To Ask When Considering An ETF

Thinking about investing in exchange-traded funds (ETFs)? Be sure you can answer these questions before you do. Choosing investments for your portfolio is a complex-and sometimes emotional-process. It requires research, a clear understanding of your financial goals and time horizon, and, of course, money. And it can be overwhelming: should you go with stocks, bonds or mutual funds? How about gold? One security that has seen a surge in popularity over the past few years is the exchange-traded fund (ETF) . An ETF is an investment vehicle composed of pooled funds that owns shares of an asset, such as stocks, bonds or commodities, and trades on an exchange, just like a stock. In some cases, an ETF will track an index (the S&P 500, for example), which means it tries to match the index’s performance rather than beat it. According to a 2015 Charles Schwab Investor Study , millennial portfolios have the largest share of ETFs of any investing generation: on average, 40% of a millennial’s investments will be in ETFs. In fact, millennials dig ETFs so much that 61% of millennial investors surveyed said they would increase their ETF holdings in 2016. ETFs appeal to investors for several reasons. First, there’s the price tag. The minimum investment for a mutual fund can range from $500 to $3000 ; the minimum investment for an ETF is the fund’s market price, which can be as low as a couple of dollars. Then there’s the risk factor. Due to their composition, ETFs have more potential to mitigate losses in the event of a downturn than an investment concentrated in a single stock . ETFs also tend to be more tax-efficient than mutual funds because their structure minimizes the opportunity for taxable events-selling holdings, for instance-which can incur capital gains. Considering that there are over 1,500 ETFs available on the market, how do you go about choosing the right one? The following three questions are key when it comes to the ETF selection process. What is the underlying index? Some ETFs track easily recognizable indexes such as the S&P 500 or the Nasdaq 100. Others, such as the Global X Millennial Generation ETF , track new indexes that investors know very little about. Because ETFs usually track an index, it’s often quite easy to find out what their holdings are. Pay attention to what stocks and bonds are included in an ETF, as well as the weight assigned to the holdings. This will allow you to determine which ETFs offer the asset allocation you want. What are the true costs? Each ETF has an expense ratio. This number, which is expressed as a percentage, is a fund’s annual expenses divided by its average assets for the year. The expense ratio lowers your returns, and it isn’t the only cost associated with ETF investing. Given that ETFs trade like stocks, every purchase and sale incurs brokerage commission fees. Do the math and figure out which ETFs seem best positioned to give you the biggest bang for your buck. How liquid is it? The ease with which you can buy or sell shares of an ETF matters a lot: it’s the difference between making money and losing it. When an ETF has low liquidity, it becomes more difficult for an investor to sell their shares and make a profit. So what affects an ETF’s liquidity? Holdings, the holdings’ trading volume, the ETF’s trading volume and the market climate all play a role. Take a look at these factors to get a sense of how liquid or illiquid an ETF is. Keep in mind: the more the underlying holdings are traded, the more liquid they are, which, in turn, makes the ETF more liquid. Like any investment, there are pros and cons associated with investing in ETFs, but if you want to add some to your portfolio, be sure to ask the aforementioned questions. Doing so will help you choose the best ETFs for your investment needs.

If ROIC Is So Great, Then Why Doesn’t Everyone Use It?

That’s the question we get when we argue that return on invested capital ( ROIC ) does a better job of explaining changes in shareholder value than any other metric . Why do investors, executives, and the financial media focus on reported earnings and other metrics such as EBITDA that ignore the balance sheet? Why aren’t executives around the world adopting ROIC in order to boost returns? Anyone asking those questions should read the 1996 CFO Magazine article ” Metric Wars .” Back in the mid-90’s, ROIC-based models such as Economic Value Added (NYSE: EVA ) and Cash Flow Return On Investment (CFROI) were all the rage, with corporate giants such as Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO ), AT&T (NYSE: T ), and Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG ) linking them to executive compensation and highlighting them in communications with shareholders. Fierce competition ensued, as a variety of consultants developed and marketed their own shareholder value models, all, at their core, based around the idea that companies need to earn a return on capital above their cost of capital. That revolution was short-lived. Coca-Cola and AT&T stopped regularly highlighting EVA in filings after 1998. Some of the consulting companies mentioned in the CFO piece no longer exist, such as Finegan & Gressle, while others like The Boston Consulting Group no longer highlight the same metrics. It would be easy to assume that ROIC-based models had their chance in the marketplace and failed because they weren’t good enough, but that would be wrong. The story of the “Metric Wars” shows that it was the marketing strategy, not the underlying model, which was flawed. The Consultant’s Concoction The lack of resources and technology available at the time required the proponents of these metrics to do many hours of manual work to provide the metrics for the client and its comp group. As a result, the firms wanted to differentiate their models or build barriers to entry around them so that competitors could not piggyback on their original work. Transparency was not in the consultants’ best interests. If everyone could see the inner workings of their formulas, clients wouldn’t have any incentive to pay big money for their model over a competitor’s. As a result, the various firms guarded their models and would attack a competitor’s formula as a “consultant’s concoction.” This was an understandable development, as the recurring revenue stream from a consulting client can be very valuable. Unfortunately, it also led to lot of significant problems for the ultimate end-users of that data. Excess Complexity: consultants needed to make the work seem really difficult so clients would not replicate and competitors could not decipher it. Lack Of Transparency: since each company’s formula was its bread and butter, they kept the details of how they were calculated hidden. It was hard for those on the outside to understand or trust the process. No Comparability: with no single standardized formula, it was impossible for companies or investors to benchmark results to their peers. Short Shelf Life: the analyses were only as fresh as the last engagement, and since the “proprietary” formulas could change from year to year, clients might not always have the most up-to-date analysis. Little Differentiation: While all the different consultant’s formulas had their own tweaks, they were based around the same basic idea. With so little fundamental differentiation, the various consultants spent a great deal of time and effort tearing each other down and nitpicking competing formulas, ultimately spreading more confusion. Add this to the tech bubble attitude of the late 90’s, when stock valuations became more about stories and potential rather than any fundamental research, and the work these consultants were doing fell by the wayside. Today, only Stern Stewart and Credit Suisse (which bought CFROI or HOLT in 2001) remain as survivors from the Metric Wars. Neither has had a ton of success monetizing their formulas since then, in part because they remain committed to their “concoctions” for consulting business, and also because they rely on inconsistent and limited data feeds that lack analysis of the financial footnotes or management disclosure and analysis. A Different Strategy What New Constructs does today is not so different from what Stern Stewart, The Boston Consulting Group, and others did 20 years ago. We’re working off the same conceptual framework and implementing many similar calculations. What’s changed is the level of rigor we put into building technology to gather high-quality data and build best-in-market models with scale. Our point of differentiation is the scale and speed with which we can build the models and provide analytics. Our highly educated and trained analysts leverage our proprietary technology to deeply analyze 10-Ks and 10-Qs in a matter of seconds on average. While we make thousands of adjustments in our models to close accounting loopholes and portray the true economics of the underlying business, every adjustment is not only 100% transparent but also overrideable by clients. Anyone can go to the Education tab of our website and get detailed explanations of the metrics we use, how we calculate them, and the various adjustments we make to accounting data. Our data is comparable across different companies, so anyone can easily use our screeners to compare profitability and valuation. During the Metrics Wars, the technology simply didn’t exist to create such a large database and deliver that much information without charging a prohibitively large fee to clients. Because of these limitations, those companies failed even though their underlying framework was sound. In the intervening years, the burgeoning financial punditry has helped propagate the myth that the market only cares about reported earnings. The rise of the E*Trade baby and amateur investors only furthered the focus on simplistic data points that could be easily calculated and consumed. More sophisticated fundamental research became harder and harder to find. Today, there is a noticeable gap for the many investors out there that want high-quality fundamental research. Most of the available research out there doesn’t attempt to assess the true drivers of value. Wall Street analysts lack the independence to deliver truly objective research, and what little truly high-quality research exists tends to be too expensive for the average investor to access. Our goal is to remove the noise that clouds the connection between corporate performance and valuation by providing an analytical framework that is intuitive yet rigorous. For over 95% of the world’s market cap, we provide apples-to-apples corporate performance and valuation metrics. We are ready to join the Metric Wars. Disclosure: David Trainer and Sam McBride receive no compensation to write about any specific stock, sector, style, or theme. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

5 Top-Rated Oppenheimer Mutual Funds

Founded in 1959, OppenheimerFunds currently has $204 billion worth of assets (as of January 29, 2016) under management, invested in 89 mutual funds across a wide range of categories, including equity, fixed income, alternative and multi-asset funds. With over 2,000 employees and 170 investment professionals, the company serves clients, including financial advisors, individual investors and institutional investors, across 77 countries. OppenheimerFunds is a subsidiary of MassMutual, which is one of the leading asset managers, with around $600 billion assets under management along with its affiliates. Below we share with you five top-rated Oppenheimer 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 Oppenheimer mutual funds, investors can click here . Oppenheimer Global Opportunities Fund A (MUTF: OPGIX ) primarily invests in a wide range of domestic and foreign equity securities. It focuses on acquiring stocks, but may also purchase debt securities. The fund may invest a maximum of 25% of its assets in “below-investment grade” securities or “junk bonds.” Moreover, it may invest in developing or emerging countries and in small- and mid-cap companies. The fund has a three-year annualized return of 5.6%. Frank V. Jennings is the fund manager of OPGIX since 1995. Oppenheimer Equity Fund A (MUTF: OEQAX ) seeks growth of capital. It invests the lion’s share of its assets in equity securities of domestic companies. Though the fund primarily focuses on acquiring securities of mid- and large-cap companies, it may also invest in securities of small-cap companies. Moreover, it may invest in securities of companies located in foreign lands. The fund has a three-year annualized return of 5.8%. OEQAX has an expense ratio of 0.98%, compared to the category average of 1.18%. Oppenheimer Discovery Fund A (MUTF: OPOCX ) primarily emphasizes investing in common stocks of domestic companies with solid growth potential. It invests in securities of companies having a market capitalization similar to those listed in the Russell 2000 Growth Index. The fund has a three-year annualized return of 2.8%. As of December 2015, OPOCX held 105 issues, with 2.50% of its assets invested in Bright Horizons Family Solutions Inc. (NYSE: BFAM ) Oppenheimer Rochester AMT-Free Municipals Fund A (MUTF: OPTAX ) seeks tax-exempted income. The fund invests a large chunk of its assets in securities that are expected to provide returns exempted from regular federal and state income taxes. The assets of OPTAX are not invested in municipal securities, the interest income on which is not free from the federal “alternative minimum tax” (AMT). The fund has a three-year annualized return of 4.3%. OPTAX has an expense ratio of 0.87%, compared to the category average of 0.97%. Oppenheimer International Growth Fund A (MUTF: OIGAX ) may invest all of its assets in non-U.S. companies with impressive growth prospects. It invests more than 65% of its assets in common and preferred stocks of companies located in at least three different countries other than the U.S. The fund has a three-year annualized return of 1.5%. As of December 2015, OIGAX held 106 issues, with 1.78% of its assets invested in Continental AG ( OTCPK:CTTAY ). Original Post