Tag Archives: economy

IBB: Price Gouging Assertion Is Overblown

Summary Price gouging by Turing Pharmaceuticals and the subsequent comments by Hillary Clinton have exacerbated this sector decline. This price gouging incident has elicited widespread backlash, and in my opinion, rightfully so; however, this criticism has been unfairly painted across the entire sector. Attempts to heavy regulate the sector with government intervention will likely end in a futile effort in arresting drug price increases. The unprecedented secular growth streak in biotech has been more than tested as of late with the biotechnology officially in bear territory. IBB is down 25% from its 52-week high, from $400 to $295 per share during the recent market weakness, presenting a potential buying opportunity. Price gouging assertion and Hilary Clinton Recently, Turing Pharmaceuticals and its CEO Martin Shkreli garnered criticism after the company boosted the price of Daraprim from $13.50 to $750 per pill, resulting in a greater than 5,400% increase after acquiring the drug in August. This price gouging of a decades’ old drug drew fire from the general public on social media, and in particular, the presidential candidate and democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton (Figure 1). Figure 1 – Tweet by presidential candidate and democratic front runner Hillary Clinton referring to the drug price gouging This price gouging incident has elicited widespread backlash, and in my opinion, rightfully so; however, this criticism has been unfairly painted across the entire sector. It’s noteworthy to point out that democratic lawmakers have requested pricing policies and further information on pricing of drugs by Canadian drug marker Valeant Pharmaceuticals (NYSE: VRX ). Despite the public backlash and public statements by lawmakers, I believe this is a temporary headwind rooted in the public relations arena. Although the aforementioned example of Daraprim is an isolated and extreme example, at the end of the day, these companies are in business to make a profit, retain fiduciary responsibilities and return value to shareholders. Many contend that these prices are not sustainable, and the cost to the overall healthcare system is a huge financial burden. Qualitatively, this is true; however, this situation draws parallels to the housing market, education costs and social security. All of these areas of our economy are facing similar fates with unsustainable financial barriers to entry and unfunded liabilities. Attempts to heavy regulate the sector with government intervention will likely end in a futile effort in arresting drug price increases for the following terse reasons: 1) Companies spend billions of dollars in acquiring a company and/or billions of dollars and years of research and development costs to bring a given therapy to the market. 2) These costs must be reasonably factored into the pricing of the product. If government intervention is successful, this will hinder innovation and M&A activity since the back-end reward will no longer generate lucrative rewards. 3) Unlike education costs, housing price increases and social security, drug pricing is negotiated with many insurers and organizations that dispense drugs at a substantial discount to the market price and often along with rebate programs. 4) Loss of exclusivity; drug companies must also capitalize on their window of exclusivity to their drugs. Depending on patent expiration, after varying time on the market, patents will inevitably expire, and these drugs will no longer possess exclusivity and face generic competition. 5) Taken together in concert with the fact that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is now law of the land, no one will be paying the market price of any drug since the annual deductible and maximum out-of-pocket is established depending on the tier of coverage he/she chooses. 6) Lastly, an often overlooked benefit is the cost savings to the overall healthcare system. This occurs when curative drugs or drugs that increase the overall survival and/or improve the quality of life are introduced to the market. These highly effective drugs can effectively remove patients from the system whereby eliminating years of high-cost medical treatment and hospitalization. While drug prices continue to rise, there’s substantive rational in the form of input costs, loss of exclusivity, curative treatments, increase in quality of life and removal of some patients from the overall healthcare system, thus reducing the overall cost burden of the given healthcare system. For the reasons stated above, I personally feel that these attempts by lawmakers will end in a futile endeavor. Overview The culmination of extraneous events such as sustained lower oil prices, an ostensibly imminent rate hike and weakness in China have indiscriminately plummeted the biotech sector in lock-step with the broader indices. Now, a second and more specific wave of sector-related stories such as price gouging by Turing Pharmaceuticals and the subsequent comments by Hillary Clinton has exacerbated this sector decline. These former events are ostensibly unrelated to the biotechnology sector; yet, this group has been taken along for the downhill ride with the broader indices. The latter events have been detrimental to all biotechnology stocks as this is a direct threat to pricing power and our capitalism-based structure. The unprecedented secular growth streak in biotech has been more than tested as of late with the biotechnology officially in bear territory. These latest events, some unrelated and others directly related to the biotech sector, may provide a unique opportunity to add to a current position or initiate a position over time as this correction continues to unfold. Based on annual and cumulative performance throughout both bear and bull markets, the iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (NASDAQ: IBB ) may provide the opportunity investors have been waiting for in the face of our current market conditions. IBB is down 25% from its 52-week high, shares have plunged from $400 to $295 per share during the recent market weakness, presenting a potential buying opportunity. Debunking the bubble thesis Many content that this sector is in bubble territory based on its overall high P/E ratio, lack of adequate cash flows, and in some cases, lack of any marketable products. Thus, many companies are not deserving of this generous P/E. Many also try to draw parallels to the dot.com bubble that occurred in the early 2000s and use this as a proxy for the current biotech “bubble”. I would counter that after the most recent correction of ~25% this narrative holds much less weight and that traditional metrics on which to evaluate stocks are not applicable when evaluating clinical-stage biotech companies. Clinical-stage biotech companies are solely evaluated and priced based on potential sales of pipeline candidates and/or valuation to a potential acquirer. Holding clinical-stage biotech companies to the same standards as a traditional Dow Jones stock isn’t appropriate, and thus, I feel that this argument is flawed. Comparison to the dot.com bubble is not an accurate proxy either as the Internet companies relied heavily on user growth, subscribers, ad revenue and crowd-sourced content. This is in sharp contrast to biotech companies that innovate in the many different disease states and may have a multi-billion life-saving blockbuster drug around the corner to drastically change the trajectory of the company and its future. Additionally, major M&A activity has always been a driving factor in this sector due to the fact that companies are willing to pay very high premiums for the rights to potential blockbusters or a robust pipeline to replenish its own outdated pipeline. Taken together, I feel that after the recent sell-off and lack of any substantive argument against the biotech sector, this may be a great entry point. Perennial performer in bear and bull markets Despite the headwinds outlined above, the biotech sector has exhibited its resilience in both bear and bull markets with secular growth over the past decade. The returns for IBB have been very impressive in both annual and cumulative performance, unparalleled by any major index. Over the past 10- and 5-year time frames, IBB has posted cumulative returns of over 310% and 265%, respectively. These results are unrivaled by any major index, outperforming on a 10-year cumulative basis by 3-fold or greater when compared to the S&P 500, NASDAQ, and Dow Jones (Figure 2). These returns are accentuated during the previous 5 years. IBB notched cumulative returns of 265%, outperforming the S&P 500, NASDAQ and Dow Jones by roughly 2.5-fold or greater over this 5-year time frame (Figure 3). (click to enlarge) Figure 2 – Google Finance; comparison of IBB returns relative to the S&P 500, NASDAQ, Dow Jones over the previous 10 years (click to enlarge) Figure 3 – Google Finance; comparison of IBB returns relative to the S&P 500, NASDAQ, Dow Jones over the previous 5 years IBB has displayed impressive resilience in the face of the market crash in 2008, the bear markets of 2011 and the choppy market thus far in 2015. During the market crash of 2008, IBB posted an annual return of -12.2% while the S&P 500, NASDAQ and Dow Jones posted returns of -37.0%, -40.0% and -31.9%, respectively (Figure 3). During the bear market of 2011, IBB posted an annual return of 11.7% while the S&P 500, NASDAQ and Dow Jones posted returns of 2.1%, -0.8% and 8.4%, respectively (Figure 4). Thus far, during the choppy market of 2015, IBB posted an annual return of 4% while the S&P 500, NASDAQ and Dow Jones posted returns of -6.3%, -1.4% and -8.6%, respectively (Figure 5). These data suggest that IBB outperforms during bear markets as well as bull markets to establish itself as a secular growth sector. (click to enlarge) Figure 4 – Morningstar comparison of IBB’s annual returns relative to the NASDAQ over the previous 10 years (click to enlarge) Figure 5 – Google Finance; comparison of IBB’s annual performance thus far in 2015 relative to the S&P 500, NASDAQ and Dow Jones Conclusion As the confluence of broader disconnected factors and price gouging inquiries by leading politicians continue to bring down the biotechnology sector, it may be time to consider capitalizing on this correction via adding to existing positions or initiating a new position in this cohort given this opportunity. As the United States continues to absorb an ageing population alongside growing overall healthcare costs, more specifically prescription drug costs, the biotech sector looks poised to benefit and continue to outperform the broader market. Data suggests, provided a long-term position that volatility within the biotech sector is negated by its long-term performance that is unparalleled by any major index. This sector provides high returns unrivaled by any major index with moderate risk (based on its resilience during the bear markets of 2008 and 2011 and thus far in 2015) and volatility. IBB may be providing investors with a great opportunity to add or initiate a position for any long portfolio desiring exposure to the biotechnology sector with a long-term time horizon given the recent market conditions. Disclosure The author currently holds shares of IBB and is long IBB. The author has no business relationship with any companies mentioned in this article. I am not a professional financial advisor or tax professional. I wrote this article myself and it reflects my own thoughts and opinions. This article is not intended to be a recommendation to buy or sell any stock or ETF mentioned. I am an individual investor who analyzes investment strategies and disseminates my analyses. I encourage all investors to conduct their own research and due diligence prior to investing. Please feel free to comment and provide feedback, I value all responses.

The Generation Portfolio: Main Street Capital And Williams Companies

Summary This week, I added Williams Companies (WMB) and Main Street Capital (MAIN) to the Generation Portfolio; The nonfarm payroll report on Friday suggested that a rate hike is less likely to occur this year, which helped the rate-sensitive positions in the portfolio and hurt the banks; With earnings season about to start, we should get a better read on the economy and perhaps some more buying opportunities. Background This is the latest addition in a weekly column that I write. The main focus is on a stock portfolio that I manage for others, The Generation Portfolio . I also comment about recent market events and my outlook for the market with reference to the Fed, the global economy and whatever else may impact future share prices. My general theory about the markets is that they have become increasingly herd-like. By that, I mean that the huge growth in index funds is the “elephant in the room” that (to mix analogies) has become to traders like the weather: something that always has an impact but that really can’t be changed. Buy and sell decisions made by index fund holders affect good and bad stocks indiscriminately. Whereas in the past the herd tended to build up speed slowly over time, index funds accelerate waves of buying and selling to daily and, increasingly, intra-day moves that used to take weeks or even months. While I have nothing against index funds, which are perfectly suited to casual investors, their status as a panacea is highly suspect. They are particularly dubious in volatile markets when massive buy and sell orders swamp order desks. This, in my view, has created new opportunities and dangers in the market for the individual, which is to the advantage of nimble investors. Thus, this series focuses on stock-picking, not funds. The Week That Was The week of 28 September 2015 was like the month of April: in like a lion, out like a lamb. The market was down sharply on Monday, serving as an echo of the extreme volatility that has characterized the market since late August. It then stabilized on Tuesday before moving steadily higher for the remainder of the week. The key event was the October jobs report on Friday morning. It missed expectations, and even worse, reduced the jobs for previous months by a total of 59k workers. After a period of volatility, the major averages continued moving higher, closing the week near the highs. Transactions I made the following purchases for the Generation Portfolio this week: Williams Companies (NYSE: WMB ); Main Street Capital (NYSE: MAIN ). I made those on Monday, then sat tight for the remainder of the week as volatility decreased. Generation Portfolio To Date The Generation Portfolio currently stands as follows. The Generation Portfolio as of 3 October 2015 Stock Purchase Date Purchase Price Recent Price Change Since Purchase WFC 8/25/2015 51.75 51.30 (0.95%) DIS 8/25/2015 98.75 103.00 4.30% BMY 8/25/2015 59.75 62.52 4.30% MFA 8/25/2015 7.05 6.89 (2.27%) OHI 8/31/2015 33.95 35.40 3.86% CVX 9/02/2015 77.90 81.55 4.69% PG 9/03/2015 69.95 72.42 3.53% CYS 9/04/2015 7.68 7.41 (3.52%) KO 9/09/2015 38.50 40.39 4.91% MPW 9/10/2015 10.89 10.99 0.92% WMT 9/10/2015 64.40 64.97 0.85% VTR 9/10/2015 52.80 56.06 6.17% KMI 9/11/2015 29.95 29.60 (1.07%) WPC 9/14/2015 56.75 58.12 2.41% T 9/17/2015 32.50 32.64 0.43% VZ 9/17/2015 44.95 42.90 (4.69%) MMM 9/18/2015 139.90 143.20 2.36% JPM 9/22/2015 60.89 60.75 (0.20%) PX 9/23/2015 101.30 101.41 1.83% VER 9/25/2015 7.87 7.75 (1.27%) WMB 9/28/2015 39.48 41.02 3.90% MAIN 9/28/2015 27.47 27.55 0.98% All prices and percentages are those supplied by the broker (TD Ameritrade) as of the close on Friday, 2 October 2015. Percentages may differ from those suggested by the latest closing prices most likely due to after hours action. A large legacy position in Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F ) and some other legacy positions are not shown. There are 15 positive positions at the moment and 7 negative ones. According to a spreadsheet that I maintain, the Generation Portfolio overall currently is up by between 1-2%. This is similar to last week, though then the market closed on a low and this week it closed on a high. The dividend flow, which is one of the prime aims of the Generation Portfolio, has begun. Dividends Received To Date Stock Date Received Type Amount VTR 9/30/2015 Ordinary 146.00 KO 10/01/2015 Qualified 82.50 TOTAL     228.50 For now, at least, I am receiving the dividends in cash and will reinvest them as they accumulate. Some dividends have accrued but have not yet been paid, such as a large dividend for CYS. They will be accounted for as they reach the account. General Strategy The Generation Portfolio was 100% in cash (save for legacy positions) for about six months after I sold off positions in early 2015. During the period of market turbulence that began in late August 2015, I finally began adding positions. As I discussed in a previous article, I side with those who prefer wide diversification, both between sectors and within them. Given a choice, I would rather own smaller positions of two Quality Stocks (as I define them here ) in a sector rather than place all of my chips on just the leader. Accordingly, the Generation Portfolio is shaping up to have about 40 positions, each with a projected weighting of roughly 2% (though that is just an average). It currently has 22 positions, and all pay dividends. In accordance with the overall objective mentioned above, the overwhelming majority of positions will pay solid, dependable dividends. I like the tax advantages and strong cash flow of REITs and BDCs, so they form a substantial subset of the Generation Portfolio. This will give the Generation Portfolio a certain rate sensitivity, which will be somewhat offset by some bank positions. I have no problem at all about investing in several companies with similar risk profiles as long as there is overall diversification. It’s all about tactics, and bad tactics can ruin the best strategy. Analysis of Holdings There have not been any huge surprises yet, but the volatility of some of the positions has surprised me. After I picked up WMB on Monday, for instance, it went on a crazy ride due to market reaction to it being acquired. At one point during the week, it was down over 10% and was not looking like a particularly good pickup. However, the deal was valued at well over my entry point, and the market seemed to recognize that more and more as the week went by. Fortunately, the position now shows a nice profit. I wrote an article about MAIN this week which summarized my view of the stock. This position also surprised me with the ferocity of its move to the downside. My analysis of the chart, though, suggested that the move lower would be short and sweet, and fortunately it was. This position also showed a gain after being down several percent. The REITs had a fairly good week due to growing agreement that a Fed rate hike in 2015 is unlikely. There are many good reasons for this, which I summarized here , and the week jobs report on Friday added to that consensus. The banks went slightly lower as anticipated, so those two positions to some extent cancelled each other out in terms of volatility. The big winners to date are Ventas, a health care REIT, and Coke. The Coke position is even better due to the dividend already received. The biggest losers are Verizon and Wells Fargo. I’m not concerned about WFC, which is performing fine as a counterweight to the REITs, but VZ needs to pick up the pace should the market continue higher and leave it behind or else it gets sent to the cornfield. General Discussion The market has remained enthralled by what I kindly refer to as rate hysteria. However, earnings season kicks off this week, with PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP ) reporting on Tuesday and Alcoa Inc. (NYSE: AA ) on Thursday. Next week will see the flood of earnings, so they shouldn’t be a major factor for the time being. So, before the focus really zooms in on earnings, the market may still be transfixed by rates. The FOMC minutes get released on Wednesday afternoon, and the market will probably be somewhat subdued until they are behind us. (click to enlarge) The nonfarm payrolls report released on Friday, at least in my opinion, put the dagger in the heart of the hopes (or fears) that the Fed would begin its rate hike cycle at its meeting later this month. It also severely damaged the view that a rate hike would occur in December. There is no sign of any trend higher in job growth, and in fact, the trend over the past six months has been lower. With inflation remaining quiet and not expected to increase to the Fed’s target of 2% until 2018, it appears unlikely that the Fed would advance its dual mandate of stable prices and full employment by increasing rates now. In fact, doing so would hurt employment by raising the dollar, which would hurt US exports (and thus cost the US jobs) and decrease inflation (by making foreign goods less expensive). A recent Bloomberg article found that opinion is split about when the Fed will raise rates. Economists still think it will happen in December. (click to enlarge) However, as the same article points out, federal funds futures show only a 40% chance of that happening. I said back in February, when many were still expecting a rate hike in March or at the latest June, that all we could say at that time was that it was more likely than not that the Fed would raise rates by the end of 2015. At this point, though, I have to agree with the futures market. The data do not support a rate hike in 2015. Not only is a rate hike unlikely, but the odds of a recession arriving before the end of next year are growing with each weak jobs report. This past week’s report was full of disturbing information disguised by the deceptively low 5.1% official unemployment rate: the number of unemployed persons (7.9 million) remained little changed despite Chair Yellen’s requirement that there be further improvement in the labor market before any rate hike; the number of newly unemployed (less than five weeks) grew; the civilian labor force participation rate fell again, to 62.4%, after holding steady at 62.6% for the previous three months; average hourly earnings were actually down a penny, and the average workweek also was down; the July nonfarm payroll totals were revised down 22k, and August was revised down 37k, suggesting accelerating declines; Average job growth in 2015 so far has been 198k, versus 260k in 2014, a decline of 24%. There was scattered good news in the report – the number of part-time workers forced into that for economic reasons declined – but the report in general was very weak. It would be counterproductive, given all this weakness, for the Fed to raise rates and make it harder for most companies to make money. Since my view is that rates are unlikely to increase any time soon, I feel comfortable maintaining and adding rate-sensitive positions. In general, I am most comfortable with defensive positions that have good brand visibility and pay dividends. The dividends eventually will be plowed back into new positions, in line with my philosophy of treating accounts as businesses requiring both profitability and healthy cash flow. Actionable Ideas I will continue looking for value in Quality Stocks with good defensive attributes. I am eyeing Big Lots (NYSE: BIG ), which I wrote an article about this week and has an oddly high attraction to short sellers. It would have to dip a bit to make it more interesting, though. Some of the stalwarts like General Mills (NYSE: GIS ) also remain on my radar screen, depending upon price action. Conclusion So far, the Generation Portfolio has performed well. It has maintained its value despite the market volatility and begun to produce a healthy cash flow stream. With earnings season right around the corner, the market may finally shift its focus away from the Fed and worries about a rate hike. Earnings should give us a much better view of the real state of the economy, which, from recent data such as the October nonfarm payrolls report, appears to be drifting in slow-growth mode.

My ETF Pick List: ETFs For Risk And Value Seekers

Summary As the economy is slowing down, it is worth having a look at options to protect your portfolio such as a short ETF. People overestimate their investing skills and therefore are at risk of losing money which can be prevented. ETFs offer the opportunity to investors who simply lack the time or expertise of a certain fund, industry or country but would like to reap the benefits. The water industry has taken a hit the last few weeks, creating numerous buy opportunities. Some people advocate not to invest in ETFs because you diversify too much of your wealth, and as a result, you might diminish your return. Moreover, you pay an additional cost for buying an ETF (the expense ratio). Yet, statistics have always shown that passive traded funds have beaten active funds over an extended period of time . In the same article, it is also shown that a higher expense ratio is often linked to lower performance rates. Furthermore, investors overestimate their ability to predict market events and, therefore, take too much risk in the market. Reasons enough to have a look at what ETFs have to offer. In this article, I will keep it simple and show a wide availability of ETFs which I consider having significant potential for any kind of investor, retiree to value and risk seekers. I always divide a small portion of my portfolio to ETFs to diversify but also to improve my mathematical odds in regards to obtaining better than average returns. The mathematical probability that you pick a winner out of 30 stocks is lower than obtaining a positive return out of an ETF which tracks 30 stocks at once. Furthermore, I sometimes lack the experienced expertise in a specific sector and, therefore, an ETF is a perfect solution to that problem. ETFs for risk-seeking investors As some people are worried about the progress of economies in the world, such as Germany (and as a result slowing down growth and tumbling markets ) I picked a few ETFs which could take advantage of this situation. This is useful for investors who lack knowledge about how to use option strategies or futures to short a market. One can short the American stock market by, for example, buying the ProShares Short QQQ ETF (NYSEARCA: PSQ ) or buying the ProShares Short Dow 30 ETF (NYSEARCA: DOG ). Keep in mind that short ETFs comes at a higher price as their expense ratio is higher than a normal ETF. In Europe, one could use the ProShares UltraShort FTSE Europe ETF (NYSEARCA: EPV ) to short the stock market of England. Plenty of choices and whenever the market tumbles down I would recommend any of these ETFs if you don’t want to be exposed to higher leverage such as with options or futures. As the bull market has been strong the last few years, the short ETFs have been performing dreadfully: While the opposite ETF, the PowerShares QQQ Trust ETF (NASDAQ: QQQ ), has seen outstanding performance over the last 5 years: Just to prove an important point, this is the performance of QQQ in comparison to Ford (NYSE: F ), Boeing (NYSE: BA ), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT ) and Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM ), 4 large American multinationals: The graph clearly proves the point that holding these 4 large American multinationals would not have outperformed the market over a period of 5 years. This builds a case towards ETF-based investing, especially as the world of academia has shown many times that investors overestimate their ability to predict market events and, therefore, take too much risk on the stock market. One more argument to prove my point is an example of the economy of Brazil. Once a growth economy, now their currency is hitting a shattering low while unemployment is at a 5-year peak. The ProShares UltraShort MSCI Brazil Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: BZQ ) has been through the roof as a result: This was a much easier choice in comparison to cherry picking any of the stocks on the Brazilian market. ETFs to protect against rising interest rates Furthermore, there are products called Exchange Traded Notes, debt instruments which allow the investor to protect themselves against either rising or diminishing interest rates such as these steepeners and flatteners , the iPath U.S. Treasury Steepener ETN (NASDAQ: STPP ) and the iPath U.S. Treasury Flattener ETN (NASDAQ: FLAT ). ETFs for investors seeking value Deep value is hard to find when the stock market is priced at a high P/E. Finding a winner in a bucket of stocks is even more difficult. This is especially the case when it comes to more unknown stocks in sectors which are being ignored by most investors. One of those sectors is the water industry. The water industry comprises of firms that provide drinking water and waste-water services (including sewage water treatment) and irrigation solutions to homes, businesses and manufacturers. The Water Industry (click to enlarge) Source : Water UN The water industry does not receive as much coverage as the solar industry and electric car industry. In my view, this is because the water industry is a bit more boring than the solar and electric car industry. Yet, in my view, it shouldn’t be and there are good reasons for that. Only half a percent of fresh water is being used worldwide while over 1 billion people are still having severe water supply issues: Source : Water UN The water scarcity problem will become much more severe in the coming years: (click to enlarge) Source : Water UN There are 3 water ETFs that play their own individual role in battling the issues of water scarcity. I’ve covered all 3 on Seeking Alpha before: the First Trust ISE Water Index ETF (NYSEARCA: FIW ), the PowerShares Global Water Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PIO ) and the PowerShares Water Resources Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PHO ). Their overall share prices have fallen over the last few months, opening a potential entry point. Conclusion This article is important as it perfectly addresses many of the issues numerous investors currently face – not having the expertise to invest in a sector due to lack of time, wary of investing due to the bull market and the realization that many investors don’t obtain profitable returns overall. Investors tend to overestimate their skills and not every investor is successful. Yet, by following a simple basket of stocks, you enhance your chances of obtaining a positive return while lowering your overall risk. The Brazil ETF clearly indicates that you can also obtain solid above average returns with ETFs. ETFs are an important part of my portfolio due to the above-mentioned reasons. Yet I also hold numerous stocks and financial derivatives in my portfolio (as I work in that specific industry) and consider myself knowledgeable on the industry those firms are active in. When it becomes too specific, I consider ETFs as a good alternative choice. Therefore, I consider the water ETFs as a good value investment for the future. The underlying fundamentals of the water scarcity problems are so underestimated currently in the world that it’s simply a waiting game until investments in these firms will grow significantly. Now is the time to buy these firms. Scarcity of water will spur bright technologists and scientists to invent large scale new technologies in this industry. This will become a very profitable commerce in the future.