Tag Archives: etf-hub

Highland Capital Launches 3 Hedge Fund Style ETFs

Dallas-based Highland Capital Management is expanding its presence in the ETF world with a focus on alternative investing. Early this year, the issuer filed for 17 alternatives ETFs all targeting four broad hedge funds styles – equity hedge, event driven, macro and relative value. The successful debut of these funds will make Highland one of the largest managers of alternative ETFs in the market. Out of these, Highland Capital recently rolled out a trio of products that aim at giving investors new options in the hedge fund space. The three funds – the Highland HFR Global ETF (NYSEARCA: HHFR ) , the Highland HFR Event-Driven Activist ETF (NYSEARCA: DRVN ) and the Highland HFR Equity Hedge ETF (NYSEARCA: HHDG ) – are designed in collaboration with HFR and are the first of their kind to replicate hedge fund positions in an ETF. The trio provides global hedge fund exposure by investing in equity and debt securities of the U.S. and international companies, charging investors 85 bps in annual fees. The introduction of these ETFs quadrupled the size of Highland Capital’s ETF lineup. HHFR in Focus This ETF seeks to tracks the HFRL Global Index, which uses all the four hedge fund strategies to select the stocks. These strategies may include event-driven, long/short equity, macro, relative-value and other strategies commonly used by hedge fund managers. DRVN in Focus This fund looks to target the stocks of event-driven strategies, which take advantage of transaction announcements and other specific one-time events. The strategy then utilizes an investment process that identifies equity opportunities in companies which are currently engaged in a corporate transaction, such as mergers, restructurings, financial distress, tender offers, shareholder buybacks, debt exchanges, security issuance or other capital structure adjustments. The ETF seeks to track the HFRL Event-Driven Index. HHDG in Focus This fund follows the HFRL Equity Hedge Index, which measures the performance of stocks based only on equity hedge strategies that combine long holdings of equity securities with short sales of stock, stock indices or derivatives related to equity markets. How Do They Fit in a Portfolio? The new products appear interesting choices for investors seeking some smart stock-selection techniques to avoid risks in the market. Hedge-fund replication ETFs have been gaining immense popularity in recent years as these seek to outperform the market over the long term. The funds try to either replicate the investing styles of renowned investors or mimic an index that aims to provide specific hedge fund strategies. This results in a solid and well-diversified portfolio having superior adjusted risk returns. After all, the hedge funds have proven their supremacy by making huge money in any market environment. Competition While there are a number of hedge-fund replication ETFs on the market that use a fund-of-fund approach, there are only a few that use a stock-selection methodology. The ultra-popular the Global X Guru Index ETF (NYSEARCA: GURU ) uses a proprietary methodology to compile the best ideas from a select pool of hedge funds by looking at the 13F document on a quarterly basis. The ETF has AUM of $266 million and expense ratio of 0.75%. The other popular name in this regard is the AlphaClone Alternative Alpha ETF (NYSEARCA: ALFA ) , which has garnered $161.6 million in its asset base while charging 95 bps in fees per year. It uses a proprietary ranking system, ‘Clone Score’, which ranks hedge funds and institutional investors based on the efficacy of replicating their publicity disclosed positions. The IQ ARB Merger Arbitrage ETF (NYSEARCA: MNA ) is an event-driven hedge fund that might give stiff competition to DRVN. This fund offers capital appreciation by investing in global companies for which there has been a public announcement of a takeover by an acquirer yet provides short exposure to global equities as a partial equity market hedge. The product has amassed $130 million in its asset base and charges 75 bps in annual fees. Given that all these products have been able to build up decent assets, it might not be difficult for the Highland products to see solid inflows and garner investor interest given that the interest rate hike might lead to uncertainty and bouts of volatility. Link to the original post on Zacks.com

Wall Street Lunch

Summary A mid-day update on arbitrage, event-driven opportunities, and value. Details of price changes and progress on POM, TWC, and DTV. In each case, there are still double-digit returns available. Lunch is for wimps. – Gordon Gekko Arbitrage Here are my collected thoughts on arbitrage, wandering from the academic to the practical definitions, with a heavy dose of the middle ground. The definition is indeed a tortured one. However, in both its strong and weak forms, the idea focuses on the key to investing: mispricing. In the recently launched Sifting the World , arbitrage will be a major focus. What arbitrage opportunities are available today? *Available as of today. The word “arbitrage” in academia means “certain profits,” whereas in practical investing, arbitrage often means “a trade we kind of like.” Some in the industry adhere to a perhaps reasonable middle ground: that arbitrage is not riskless, but unlike much of investing, it involves going long and short very similar securities and betting on a price difference. I can live with that. But it is clear that many use it in the loosest sense and, therefore, strip it of its meaning. – Cliff Asness Dresser-Rand / Siemens Update DHR has returned 4% since the last update. (click to enlarge) The buyer completed a $7.7 billion note placement as a component of the acquisition financing. The EU review is going well and is likely to result in approval this summer. Pepco / Exelon Update POM has returned over 8% since I last discussed it. (click to enlarge) Since then, it has remained an attractive long opportunity with a positive expected value. I have not added to my position, but I am holding onto it. From the outside looking in, this situation involves a lot of political noise. From the inside looking out, it is a negotiation like any other. There is a regulatory cost that needs to be paid, and both the applicants and the regulators have preferences on what that cost would be. The difference was surmountable. In the Maryland PSC approval, the commission majority split the difference with an order that was acceptable to both sides. Subsequent to the Maryland PSC approval, the deal was also approved in Delaware. Additionally, EXC completed its five-tranche $4.2 billion senior notes acquisition financing through Barclays (NYSE: BCS ) and Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS ). Time Warner Cable / Charter Update TWC returned over 30% since I first discussed it. (click to enlarge) It remains a safe position; I still have $13 million of TWC, based on confidence in the current deal. DirecTV / AT&T Update This position is up over 5% since the last update. (click to enlarge) The parties appear to be progressing towards regulatory approvals later this summer. Event-Driven Event-driven, my wife was sorry to learn, is not used in the same sense as event planning. It involves few parties or cocktails in the backyard. Instead, the ones I focus on tend to involve: Mutual conversions Odd lot tender offers Merger securities Squeeze outs Here is how it worked out so far. I am thrilled that Seeking Alpha’s exclusive research program will include several such authors. Value Value is like honesty and fidelity – few people own up to being in the opposite camp. Also, like honesty and fidelity, talking about it a lot does not make it so. The core of value investing is thinking about securities as pieces of a business, valuing that business, and then underpaying for it. The remaining problem involves finding a counterparty with something at stake besides the same value that you are trying to capture. Today, my favorite values include this and this . Conclusion Arbitrage, event-driven, and value are often categorized separately, but I think of them as points on a spectrum. In the case of arbitrage, the investment opportunity has an explicit process for unlocking value. In event-driven opportunities, there is still a catalyst, but it is somewhat less explicit and there is greater variance in the outcomes. Value investing has the greatest range in outcomes. However, successful value investing frequently results in securities becoming targeted by M&A and other corporate events. These events often unlock value, whether or not that was explicitly part of the original investment thesis. Editor’s Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks. Disclosure: The author is long TEG, POM, IGTE, HE, TWC, OWW, OVTI, BRLI, ODP, BHI, DTV, PRGO, KRFT. (More…) The author wrote this article themselves, and it expresses their own opinions. The author is not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). The author has no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Additional disclosure: Chris DeMuth Jr is a portfolio manager at Rangeley Capital. Rangeley invests with a margin of safety by buying securities at deep discounts to their intrinsic value and unlocking that value through corporate events. In order to maximize total returns for our investors, we reserve the right to make investment decisions regarding any security without further notification except where such notification is required by law.

4 Sector ETFs Outperforming In 2015

The broader U.S. market indices might have hit multi-year highs on several occasions this year, but are finding it hard to hold on to those gains. A mountain of woes including rate hike speculations, strength in the greenback, volatility in energy prices, seasonal slowdown in Q1 and global growth worries held back the broader market indices from shooting. To be clear, this year, the developed market caught investor attention due to a flurry of easy money. The S&P 500 has added over 1% so far this year (as of June 8, 2015) while the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped into the negative territory. Though rate hike talks have been doing rounds for long, better than expected job data for May intensified the hearsay. Most of the market participants are now expecting to see a normalization of the Fed rate policy in September. If the guesswork comes true, we should witness a whirlwind of changes in the market. Capital flows and investing sentiments would be reversed then for reasonable reasons. As a result, many investors might now be interested to find out which U.S. sector ETFs outperformed the overall tepid broader market so far this year. There is no doubt that corporate earnings last season were subdued and the adverse impact of this was reflected on the bourses. Still, some sector ETF choices held up. Below, we have highlighted the top four sector ETFs that have outplayed the broader market: Healthcare The healthcare industry, which was one of the top performing sectors last year, is carrying out its winning momentum this year as well. Great merger and acquisition activities, promising new drugs, rising demand in emerging markets, ever-increasing healthcare spending and the Affordable Care Act helped the space to cross all barriers. As a result, iShares U.S. Pharmaceuticals ETF (NYSEARCA: IHE ) and iShares U.S. Healthcare Providers ETF (NYSEARCA: IHF ) have returned over 17% and 15.5%, respectively, so far this year. In the broader the healthcare space, biotech ETFs need special mention for gigantic returns that these have been offering over the last few quarters. As a matter of fact, ALPS Medical Breakthroughs ETF (NYSEARCA: SBIO ) and SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (NYSEARCA: XBI ) have advanced over 39% and 30%, respectively, in the year-to-date frame (as of June 8, 2015). Technology The technology sector started the year with a bang, having posted the second-best revenue growth (7.4%) in the Q1 earnings season, per Zacks Earnings Trend. While most of the credit for the Tech sector outperformance goes to Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ), we cannot ignore the underlying momentum. Decent IT investment across the globe will likely lend a hand to the sector. Among the toppers, SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (NYSEARCA: XSD ) and PowerShares DWA Technology Momentum Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PTF ) deserve a special mention. While the semiconductor ETF performed strongly (up over 15%) on sector consolidation via the M&A route, PTF (up about 13%) surged on the relative strength of the underlying stocks. Housing The housing sector was crestfallen in the first quarter due to a harsh winter, but sprang back with fresh optimism in spring. Several housing related data in recent months came in at the firmer side, helping PowerShares Dynamic Building and Construction Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PKB ) to return over 10% so far this year (as of June 8, 2015). Auto The U.S. automotive sector has been delivering stellar performances over the last one year. A lower interest on auto loans, cheap energy prices and an improving job market were the key drivers behind the sector’s growth. To add to this, consumers were offered plenty of discounts to improve sales. Thanks to this trend, auto ETF First Trust NASDAQ Global Auto Index ETF (NASDAQ: CARZ ) is up 7.8% so far this year. However, we expect the hot trend to cool off a bit as the Fed raises interest rates sometime this year. Bottom Line Investors should note that this is just a recap of the sector’s ETF winners year to date. The upcoming months might see a trend reversal as many investors reshuffle their holdings to position for an imminent rate hike. Rate sensitive sector ETFs, including housing and auto, might see a pullback then. Original Post