Tag Archives: etfs

50 Real Estate Companies Increased Their Dividends By More Than 10% In 2015

Despite the modest pressure on REIT stocks in 2015 amid concerns regarding potentially higher interest rates, investors put $1.7 billion of fresh money into REIT ETFs, according to SSGA data. S&P Capital IQ thinks one of the appeals of a diversified approach to investing in REITS is their different asset class categories to mitigate risk in any one area of real estate and high cash flows to support dividends. During 2015, a wide array of REITs increased their dividends. The outlook for continued dividend increases in 2016 looks favorable to S&P Capital IQ aided by strong fundamentals. According to SNL Financial, 140 North American real estate companies, 118 of those based in the U.S., boosted their dividend last year, two more than did in 2014. Indeed, 50 of these companies hiked dividends by 10% of higher and in certain cases, the growth was much stronger . According to Christopher Hudgins of SNL, the largest increase last year was Ashford Hospitality Prime (NYSE: AHP ). The small-cap hotel and resort REIT doubled its dividend in June 2015 and ended the year with a $0.40 per share annual dividend (3.8% current yield). While such dividend growth should be providing some downside protection, AHP shares have been particularly volatile in recent months. Jake Mooney of SNL noted in early January that a significant investor in AHP called for a sale of the company in light of its discount to net asset value. But some investors in large-cap REITs also received double-digit increases to cash payments last year. For example, Public Storage (NYSE: PSA ), a specialized REIT, raised its dividend 21% in April 2015; PSA has a $43 billion market capitalization that grew during 2015 as the shares rose. PSA ended the year with a $6.80 per share annual dividend (2.7% yield). S&P Capital IQ noted that third quarter 2015 (latest available) occupancy rate at 95% and rent-per-square-foot growth was ahead of its peers. Funds from operation (FFO) are projected to rise 9% in 2016 according to S&P Capital IQ, providing ample room for a dividend increase. Another large-cap REIT with double-digit dividend growth is Prologis (NYSE: PLD ). In April 2015, the industrial REIT raised its dividend 11% to a $1.60 per share annual dividend (3.9% yield). S&P Capital IQ estimate 2015 FFO per share of $2.21 expanding 9.5% to $2.42 in 2016, driven by strong rate increases and the benefits of industrial property owner KTR Capital Partners transaction. S&P Capital IQ has a buy recommendation on PLD and sees the deal providing increased exposure to high quality e-commerce tenants. Despite net inflows during 2015, investors did not treat all REIT ETFs equally. Vanguard REIT Index (NYSEARCA: VNQ ), the largest ETF within the investment style with $27 billion, gathered $1.1 billion of fresh money according to etf.com data. Not that far behind with $674 million in inflows was Schwab US REIT (NYSEARCA: SCHH ), even though the ETF had a smaller $1.9 billion asset base. In contrast, iShares US Real Estate (NYSEARCA: IYR ) had $1.0 billion in outflows and now has $4.6 billion in assets. Meanwhile, Simon Property Group (NYSE: SPG ) raised its dividend 3% in 2015. S&P Capital IQ has a Buy recommendation on these shares and forecasts FFO to increase 8% in 2016 driven by improving retailer demand. With a 0.43% expense ratio IYR was at least three times more expensive than VNQ and SCHH. However, with 3.9% dividend yields, IYR and VNQ both had higher income appeal than SCHH’s 2.5% yield. We think investors seeking dividend income should look at IYR, SCHH and VNQ since they provide exposure to REITs that are positioned for future dividend growth. Additional disclosure: Please see disclosures http://t.co/AHwSBhyHHt

Reality Shares Builds Suite Of Dividend-Themed ETFs

Reality Shares, which launched its first ETF in late 2014, has followed up with an early 2016 launch of three similarly themed ETFs: Reality Shares DIVCON Leaders Dividend ETF (BATS: LEAD ) Reality Shares DIVCON Dividend Defender ETF (BATS: DFND ) Reality Shares DIVCON Dividend Guardian ETF (BATS: GARD ) The firm’s original ETF, the Reality Shares DIVS ETF (NYSEARCA: DIVY ), is described by the firm’s Executive VP Ryan Ballantyne as a “honey badger.” According to Morningstar, the fund’s NAV-based performance for 2015 was 2.24%, and ranked as the #1 ETF in Morningstar’s Multi-Alternative category. The new Leaders Dividend ETF is a long-only strategy “long only” and seeks to invest in large-cap U.S. companies with the highest probability of increasing their dividends within a year. The investment selection is based on Reality Shares’ proprietary DIVCON dividend health scoring system. Two Long/Short ETFs DFND and GARD, by contrast, employ long/short strategies that were first described in our October write-up on the funds’ pending launches. Both the Defender and Guardian ETFs track indices that are based on the idea that companies that increase their dividends tend to outperform the broad market, and companies that cut or suspend their dividends tend to underperform the broad market. Under Reality Shares’ proprietary methodology, the 500 largest U.S. companies are assigned ratings based on how likely they are to raise or cut their dividends, and selections for the long and short portfolios are made on these bases. The difference between the two ETFs is that while the Defender ETF always has both long and short exposure (75% long and 25% short), the Guardian ETF uses a dynamic hedge based on the company’s Guardian Indicator and may shift from 100% long exposure to a 50% long / 50% short position (a market neutral position) when the market is forecast to decline. Research Driven Indices All of Reality Shares’ dividend-themed ETFs follow the company’s custom DIVCON indices . The Reality Shares DIVS Index is the first index designed to isolate and capture dividend growth, rather than dividend income. For more information, visit realityshares.com . Past performance does not necessarily predict future results. Jason Seagraves contributed to this article.

3 Strong Buy Franklin Templeton Mutual Funds

Founded in 1947, Franklin Templeton Investments – a segment of Franklin Resources, Inc. – seeks to provide investment management strategies and integrated risk management solutions to individuals, institutions, pension plans, trusts and partnerships. With over 650 investment professionals in 35 countries, the company invests in public equity, fixed income and alternative markets. The company manages assets worth over $866.5 billion with more than 9,300 employees. Below we share with you 3 top-rated Franklin Templeton mutual funds. Each has earned a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy) and we expect the fund to outperform its peers in the future. Franklin Mutual Financial Services Z (MUTF: TEFAX ) seeks growth of capital. TEFAX invests a major portion of its assets in undervalued companies that are involved in the financial services domain. TEFAX may also invest in merger arbitrage securities and securities of distressed companies. TEFAX may invest a significant portion of its assets in non-US securities. The Franklin Mutual Financial Services Z fund has a three-year annualized return of 10.9%. Andrew B. Sleeman is one of the fund managers having managed TEFAX since 2009. Franklin California High Yield Municipal Advisor (MUTF: FVCAX ) invests a large share of its assets in municipal securities that pay interest, which is exempted from taxes collected by the government and the State of California. FVCAX may also invest all of its assets in instruments that provide return subject to minimum tax. FVCAX may invest a maximum of 35% of its assets in municipal bonds approved by the US territories including Puerto Rico. The Franklin California High Yield Municipal Advisor fund has a three-year annualized return of 5.2%. FVCAX has an expense ratio of 0.53% as compared to a category average of 0.90%. Franklin International Small Cap Growth A (MUTF: FINAX ) seeks capital growth over the long run. It invests the majority of its assets in a wide range of tradable equity and related securities of small foreign companies. FINAX focuses on purchasing common stock. FINAX invests in securities of companies with market capitalizations below $5 billion or similar to those included in the Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) Europe, Australasia, Far East (EAFE) Small Cap Index. The Franklin International Small Cap Growth A fund has a three-year annualized return of 5.9%. As of September 2015, FINAX held 40 issues with 5.12% of its assets invested in Optimal Payments PLC. Original Post