Tag Archives: etf

3 Dividend ETFs to Buy Today

By Aaron Levitt, InvestorPlace Contributor In light of the Federal Reserve’s recent interest rate increase, dividend stocks have continued to take it on the chin. The prevailing idea is that investors will be able to find “safer” high-yielding alternatives than in shares of firms that pay dividends. However,

Most Factor Anomalies Are Not Persistent

Smart-beta indices are constructed to exploit “anomalies” that reward exposure to risk factors beyond what would be expected as “necessary compensation” under the Capital Asset Pricing Model (“CAPM”). Of course, any factor that results in nominal outperformance must be considered on a risk-adjusted basis, since taking on higher risk should engender a greater reward – and investment researchers at S&P Dow Jones Indices think at least some factor “anomalies” aren’t anomalies at all, but just rewards for greater-than-understood risk-taking. Even still, among the remaining anomalies, the researchers think many are “disappearing,” “statistical,” or “attenuated” – and only a few are truly “persistent.” Writing on behalf of S&P Dow Jones, academic Hamish Preston and S&P Dow Jones Index Investment Strategy professionals Tim Edwards and Craig Lazzara express these views in an October 2015 research paper titled ” The Persistence of Smart Beta .” Disappearing Anomalies Disappearing anomalies don’t last. A great example shared by the paper’s authors is the so-called “Weekend Effect” that was popularized by Frank Cross in 1973. Mr. Cross discovered that if investors had bought stocks at their closing prices each Monday and sold them at their closing prices each Friday – avoiding the weekend and the Monday trading session – they would have dramatically outperformed a “buy and hold” strategy from 1950 to the time of his research. But then, almost immediately after the Weekend Effect became well known, the anomaly didn’t just disappear, it reversed. The Weekend Effect rebounded in 1984, only after another academic research paper called it into question – and then, when a paper called “The Reverse Weekend Effect” was published in 2000, the old Weekend Effect returned. As soon as investors gained knowledge of the Weekend Effect, it reversed. When knowledge of the reversal became widespread, the reversal reversed. Now, it’s taken as a given that the Weekend Effect was a coincidence – hence, it was a disappearing anomaly. Statistical Anomalies Perhaps a better approach is for investors to keep knowledge of anomalies they discover secret – that way, they may be less likely to disappear. This is what David Dolos did when he discovered that applying the price movements of the 1720 South Sea Bubble – second only to Tulip Mania in episodes of old-school irrational exuberance – to the Dow Jones Industrial Average inexplicably produced outsized returns. Mr. Dolos never told anyone about his discovery, and he reaped the rewards in anonymity until 2007, when the system broke down. Why? Well first off, David Dolos didn’t exist. The story is made up, and although the 1720 South Sea Bubble was real, the South Sea Bubble effect was data-mined into existence. As the paper’s authors note, modern computing power can easily produce “false positives” – i.e., anomalies that are purely statistical in nature. In order for an anomaly to be persistent, it must make logical sense. Attenuated Anomalies Momentum is one of the most popular factors. Academic research supports its outperformance, and the concept of momentum stocks – stocks that are going up – outperforming non-momentum stocks makes logical sense. The momentum anomaly is known to anyone who cares to know about it, and yet this knowledge hasn’t caused the anomaly to disappear – instead, it has reinforced it. The downside is that since investors have become aware of the momentum anomaly, its drawdowns have been bigger. This is what the S&P Dow Jones authors mean by an “attenuated anomaly.” In 1997, Mark Carhart published a study that showed adding momentum to the famous Fama-French three-factor model boosted returns. This caused more money to flow into momentum stocks, ultimately leading to bigger drawdowns during crashes. Persistent Anomalies Are there any truly persistent anomalies? The authors say there is at least one: Low volatility. But they conclude with a word of caution: “So far, the investment and attention directed toward low-volatility strategies has not been sufficient to temper their returns or attenuate their risk/return profile.” So far. As the well-known disclaimer goes: ” Past performance does not necessarily predict future results. ” For more information, download a pdf copy of the white paper. Jason Seagraves contributed to this article.

5 Strong Buy T. Rowe Price Mutual Funds

Founded in 1937 by Thomas Rowe Price, Jr., T. Rowe Price currently manages $725.5 billion worth of assets (as of September 30, 2015). This renowned publicly owned investment management firm manages more than 100 mutual funds across a wide range of categories. Additionally, T. Rowe Price offers other financial services, including a wide variety of investment planning, guidance tools, subadvisory services and retirement plans. With over 5,000 employees and more than 5,900 associates, the company serves clients throughout the globe. Below, we share with you 5 top-rated T. Rowe Price 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 T. Rowe Price mutual funds, investors can click here to see the complete list of T. Rowe Price funds. T. Rowe Price Media And Telecommunications Fund No Load (MUTF: PRMTX ) invests a major portion of its assets in securities of companies involved in operations related to media, technology and telecommunications. It primarily invests in common stocks of large- and mid-cap companies. The fund has a three-year annualized return of 15.4%. Paul D. Greene II is the fund manager of PRMTX since 2013. T. Rowe Price Blue Chip Growth Fund No Load (MUTF: TRBCX ) seeks capital appreciation over the long run. The fund invests the lion’s share of its assets in common stocks of growth-oriented blue chip companies. It focuses on acquiring securities of large- and mid-cap companies with strong fundamentals. The T. Rowe Price Blue Chip Growth Fund has a three-year annualized return of 16.3%. TRBCX has an expense ratio of 0.72%, as compared to the category average of 1.18%. T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Fund No Load (MUTF: PRWCX ) invests a minimum of half of its assets in stocks. The rest of its assets are expected to get invested in other securities, including convertible securities, debt securities issued by both government and corporate bodies, and bank loans. It may also invest a maximum of 25% of its assets in securities issued in foreign countries. The T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation Fund has a three-year annualized return of 11.5%. As of September 2015, PRWCX held 265 issues, with 4.21% of its assets invested in Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc. T. Rowe Price Growth and Income Fund No Load (MUTF: PRGIX ) seeks long-term growth of capital and income. It uses bottom-up analysis to invest in both growth and value stocks of companies. To select growth stocks, the fund focuses on companies that are expected to provide above-average growth. The T. Rowe Price Growth and Income Fund has a three-year annualized return of 13.4%. Jeffrey Rottinghaus has been the fund manager of PRMTX since June 1, 2015. T. Rowe Price CA Tax Free Bond Fund No Load (MUTF: PRXCX ) invests a large share of its assets in debt securities that are expected to provide interest income free from federal and California state income taxes. It seeks high tax-exempted income through prudent portfolio management. The T. Rowe Price CA Tax-Free Bond Fund has a three-year annualized return of 4.3%. PRXCX has an expense ratio of 0.49%, as compared to the category average of 0.90%. Original Post