Tag Archives: etfs

JPMorgan Adds To Suite Of Diversified Return ETFs

JPMorgan’s Diversified Return ETFs are strategic beta funds that seek to improve the risk-adjusted returns of diversified portfolios. Each is based on a FTSE Diversified Factor index designed to exclude expensive and low-quality stocks with weak momentum characteristics. JPMorgan’s first Diversified Factor ETFs began trading in June 2014. By December 2015, the suite had grown to include the following funds: Diversified Return Global Equity (NYSEARCA: JPGE ) Diversified Return International Equity (NYSEARCA: JPIN ) Diversified Return Emerging Markets Equity (NYSEARCA: JPEM ) Diversified Return US Equity (NYSEARCA: JPUS ) Core European Exposure The fifth member of the lineup, the JPMorgan Diversified Return Europe Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: JPEU ), began trading on December 21. The ETF is designed to serve a foundational role in a developed Europe stock portfolio by combining portfolio construction with stock selection in attempting to produce higher returns with lower volatility than traditional market cap-weighted indices. “The European recovery provides a growth opportunity for long-term investors,” said Robert Deutsch, J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s Global Head of ETFs, in a recent statement. “JPEU is constructed to allow investors to participate in the upside while also providing less volatility in down markets” Like all JPMorgan Diversified Return ETFs, JPEU tracks a FTSE Diversified Factor Index – in this case, the FTSE Developed Europe Diversified Factor Index. The index was “thoughtfully constructed” based on JPMorgan’s “active insights and risk management expertise,” according to the statement, and is rebalanced quarterly. “We are excited to partner with J.P. Morgan ETFs and together meet the growing demand among investors for a broader set of international options, by offering the FTSE Developed Europe Diversified Factor Index,” said Ron Bundy, CEO of North America benchmarks for FTSE Russell. “We continue to apply FTSE Russell’s expertise in global strategic beta indices to expand on this very important long-term relationship.” European Equity Experience JPMorgan’s James Ford and Richard Morillot, both vice-presidents, are the co-managers of the fund. JPMorgan has been investing in European markets since 1964 and manages $37 billion in European equities. “We are pleased to combine the investment expertise of J.P. Morgan with the index design capabilities of FTSE Russell, to create a product that will be attractive to investors looking for exposure to European markets, but are concerned with volatility,” said Mr. Deutsch.

Do Historical Comparisons Matter? Strong Similarities Between 1937 And 2015

The case for the continuation of the U.S. bull market heavily rests on the shoulders of steady economic growth and low interest rates (on an absolute basis). Many believe that, as long as these circumstances exist, stocks will provide venerable results. Market participants might want to consider a similar period in history – a time when the 10-year Treasury offered paltry yields, GDP grew at a reasonable clip and the Fed tightened monetary policy. The case for the continuation of the U.S. bull market heavily rests on the shoulders of steady economic growth and low interest rates (on an absolute basis). Many believe that, as long as these circumstances exist, stocks will provide venerable results. However, market participants might want to consider a similar period in history – a time span when the 10-year Treasury offered paltry yields, gross domestic product (GDP) grew at a reasonable clip and the Federal Reserve tightened monetary policy. In late 1936, GDP had been growing steadily and the 10-year yield averaged 2.6%. The Fed chose to modestly compress the money supply after years of extraordinary stimulus. Indeed, the 1929-1932 “Great Depression” seemed as though it had been been vanquished. Unfortunately, by the second quarter of 1937, investors became alerted to signs of economic deceleration. Risky assets began to falter. The Fed quickly reversed course from tightening to easing, even engaging in market-based asset purchases. To no avail. An insipid recession occurred in spite of the central bank’s rapid policy reversal. Before all was said or done – by the time the 1937-1938 bear had finally ended – stocks had already plummeted 51.5%. Here in 2015, we have experienced steady economic growth for six-plus years with GDP expanding at approximately 2.2% per year. It has been an anemic recovery, but an expansion nonetheless. ( Indications of economic deceleration abound .) Meanwhile, the U.S. stock bull has been remarkably robust, both in duration and magnitude. One researcher estimates that the current bull market period has been more powerful (since 3/09) than 90% of the preceding rallies since 1900. (See chart below.) Similar to the circumstances in late 1936, when the economy appeared relatively healthy, stocks performed admirably, and the Fed started to tighten monetary policy after a long hiatus, the 2015 Fed recently embarked on its first overnight lending rate hike. Those who ignore the similarities say that it is only 25 basis points; they believe that members of today’s Federal Reserve are smarter than their predecessors and that they would not endeavor to normalize borrowing costs unless the economy were strong enough to withstand the shift. Me? I am skeptical. Here are three additional similarities between 1937 and right this moment: 1. The Last Time Stocks, Bonds, And Cash Did Not Work . Asset allocation is not working . Granted, the iShares S&P 500 (NYSEARCA: IVV ) is up 3% through December 2009, with 1% coming on today’s (12/29) price jump and the rest of it coming from dividends. Yet the iShares Mid-Cap ETF (NYSEARCA: IJH ) that tracks mid-sized corporations in the S&P 400 logged -0.5% through 12/29 and the iShares Russell 2000 (NYSEARCA: IWM ) that tracks small-cap stocks registered -2.3% through 12/29. The more that one diversifies, the worse things get. Add foreign stocks via iShares All-World excluding U.S (NASDAQ: ACWX ) for -4.0%. Inject iShares High Yield Corporate Bond (NYSEARCA: HYG ) for -5.2%. Dare to emerge with Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets (NYSEARCA: VWO ) for -14.7%. In fact, Bloomberg tracked 35 ETFs that invest in different asset types to uncover a median loss (-5.0%). Even the all-in-one solution via iShares Core Growth Allocation (NYSEARCA: AOR ), which offers 60% in stocks and 40% in bonds, served up a negative result (-0.7%). According to research compiled by Bianco Research LLC in conjunction with Bloomberg, you have to go back to 1937 to find a 12-month run where asset allocation performed as poorly. Coincidence? Could be. Or perhaps investors in 1937 struggled with the same concerns about a return OF capital as opposed to a return ON capital. 2. Overvaluation Then, Overvaluation Now . Nobel laureate in economics, James Tobin, proposed that the combined market value of all companies listed on the exchanges should be roughly equal to their replacement costs. He then developed the “Q Ratio,” which divides the total price of U.S. stocks by those replacement costs of corporate assets. Tobin’s Q hit 1.1 earlier this year, suggesting that stocks traded 10% above the value of companies’ assets. Not so bad? That reading has only been surpassed by the year 2000. Moreover, if one assumes the year 2000 was a moment of ridiculous dot-com euphoria, you’d have to go back to 1937 to find a reading that suggests similar overvaluation. Keep in mind, this ratio has only surpassed the 1.0 threshold on one-tenth of trading sessions, most of which occurred in the late 1990s. The average (mean) Q ratio is approximately 0.68. 3. “Spread Spike” For High Yield Bonds . Back in May of 1937, the high-yield bond spread rocketed 85 basis points. Here in 2015? We have two occasions where high-yield bond spreads have spiked by more than 1%. Normal market fluctuations? Hardly. When investors abandon the credit markets, they are concerned about a wave of corporate defaults. And they’re not just worried about energy defaults either. High yield corporate credit is struggling clear across all sectors of the economy. (See Bloomberg chart below.) Are the circumstances in 2015 identical to those in 1937? Of course not. Every well-read market participant recognizes that history has a habit of rhyming, not repeating. Nevertheless, keeping a higher allocation to cash than you might otherwise keep is sensible in this late-stage stock bull. Disclosure : Gary Gordon, MS, CFP is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. Gary Gordon, Pacific Park Financial, Inc, and/or its clients may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds, and/or any investment asset mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. At times, issuers of exchange-traded products compensate Pacific Park Financial, Inc. or its subsidiaries for advertising at the ETF Expert web site. ETF Expert content is created independently of any advertising relationships.

4 Best-Rated Global Mutual Funds For Portfolio Diversification

Global mutual funds are excellent options for investors looking to widen exposure across countries. Central banks of major regions including the Eurozone, China and Japan opted for economic stimulus measures such as rate cuts and monetary easing to boost their respective economies. In this environment, these countries thus provide lucrative investment propositions. Meanwhile, the recent lift-off by the Fed indicated that the U.S. economy is on track to stable growth in the near term. Thus a portfolio having exposure to both domestic and foreign securities will likely help in reducing risk and enhancing returns. However, investors need to be careful while investing in these funds, given the heightened uncertainty. Below we share with you four top-rated global 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 global mutual funds, investors can click here to see the complete list of global funds . The Fidelity Worldwide Fund (MUTF: FWWFX ) seeks capital appreciation. FWWFX primarily focuses on acquiring common stocks issued throughout the globe across a wide range of regions. FWWFX considers factors including economic conditions and financial strength before investing in a company. The Fidelity Worldwide fund returned 4.6% over the past three months. As of October 2015, FWWFX held 321 issues, with 2.93% of its assets invested in Alphabet Inc Class A. The American Funds New Perspective Fund (MUTF: ANWPX ) invests in securities of companies throughout the globe in order to take advantage of changes in factors including international trade patterns and economic relationships. ANWPX primarily focuses on acquiring common stocks of companies that have impressive growth prospects. ANWPX may also invest in companies that are expected to pay out dividend in the future to generate income. The American Funds New Perspective A fund returned 6.9% over the past three-month period. ANWPX has an expense ratio of 0.75% compared with the category average of 1.28%. The Polaris Global Value Fund (MUTF: PGVFX ) seeks growth of capital. PGVFX utilizes a value-oriented approach to invest in common stocks of both U.S. and non-U.S. companies, which also include firms from emerging nations. PGVFX defines emerging or developing markets as those which are not listed in the MSCI World Index. The Polaris Global Value fund returned 5.4% over the past three months. Bernard Horn, Jr. is one of the fund managers of PGVFX since 1998. The Harding Loevner Global Equity Portfolio (MUTF: HLMGX ) invests the lion’s share of its assets in securities including common and preferred stocks of companies located in both U.S. and foreign lands. HLMGX allocates its assets to a minimum of 15 countries, including emerging nations. HLMGX may also invest in Depositary Receipts. The Harding Loevner Global Equity Advisor fund returned 7% over the past three-month period. HLMGX has an expense ratio of 1.20% compared with the category average of 1.28%. Link to the original post on Zacks.com