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Time To Extract Value From CEF Investment Recommendation

Payoff Pitch Update – Time to Extract Value from CEF Investment Recommendation On July 20, 2015 we wrote a strategic article entitled “Finding Value in the Ninth Inning of the Great Bond Rally” which made the case for an investment in closed end mutual funds (CEF’s) backed by municipal bonds. This article reviews the original investment thesis, updates the reader on the performance and attributes of the securities we recommended and concludes with new advice on the position. In the original article, we analyzed 50 muni-backed CEF’s in order to select a manageable sub-set of securities offering the most potential. The analysis supporting the recommendation relied upon many self-imposed factors and risk constraints, many of which we will not rehash in this article and some of which we did not detail in the prior article. There are three factors, however, which are worth reviewing as we evaluate and potentially change our investment recommendation. They are as follows: Discount to Net Asset Value (NAV) – Closed end funds frequently trade at a premium or discount to their net asset value (current market value of the securities held by the fund). One of the driving factors behind our investment decision was the fact that many muni-backed CEF’s were trading at historically large discounts to their NAVs. We believed at that time, barring severe credit dislocations in the municipal bond sector that CEF investors would benefit from the normalizing discounts. Interest Rate Forecast – We have written numerous times that we expect the U.S. economy will continue to be plagued with weak economic growth and increasing deflationary pressures. Such an environment typically bodes well for fixed income assets, specifically those that are investment grade. This theory which would result in even lower interest rates was another factor supporting our recommendation. Municipal Yield Spread to Treasuries – Like all bonds, municipals trade at a yield spread, or differential, to U.S. Treasury bonds. Statistically, the relationship between municipal bond yields and Treasury bond yields exhibits a strong correlation. The spread can help astute investors create more dependable risk/reward forecasts. When the original paper was written, we calculated that municipal bonds were trading at a premium versus U.S. Treasury bonds. While the risk existed that the yield spread would normalize, we thought the advantages of the discount to NAV and our overriding interest rate forecast would more than offset the potential yield spread risk. Performance and Investment Attributes Since recommending the trade, the selected CEF’s have performed very well. The first table below highlights the performance of the CEF’s and the second set of tables, on the following page, compares the original attributes table to an updated version. Click to enlarge Data Courtesy: Bloomberg — A negative number in the premium/discount to NAV column represents a discount Within the tables are a few points worth detailing. First, the CEF’s, on average, have a total return of +10.39% or nearly +20% annualized. The graph below compares the cumulative total return of the CEF’s to that of the S&P 500 (-8.64%), IEF a 7-10 year U.S. Treasury ETF (+2.82%), and MUB a municipal bond ETF (+3.51%). The returns include both price appreciation and dividends. Cumulative Total Return CEF’s vs Popular Investment Alternatives Data Courtesy: Bloomberg Second, the discount to NAV, for all of the securities, improved. The CEF’s, on average, witnessed a 3% decrease in the discount. Think of this as appreciation in the value of the fund above and beyond changes to the value of the fund’s holdings. While all of the securities still trade at attractive discounts, they are currently trading back in line with their 3 year average. Third, the CEF’s also benefited from a drop in yields during this holding period. The lower CEF yields were a function of the aforementioned decrease in the discount to NAV, as well as a general move lower in municipal and Treasury yields. During the period, the average yield on the selected CEF’s fell by .43% while comparable Treasury yields fell by .22% and the Bond Buyer GO 20 Municipal Bond Index fell by .32%. The bonds underlying the funds, likely saw yields on average decrease more than Treasury bonds during this period. In bond market parlance one would say the municipal -Treasury yield spread tightened or became richer, to the benefit of municipal bond holders. Investment Review As previously mentioned at the time we wrote the article we were comfortable with the risk that municipal bond yields might underperform Treasury bond yields. Our thought being that any widening of municipal/Treasury spreads would likely be more than offset by our expectation for lower yields in general and the normalization of discounts to NAVs. Given the improvement in the discounts to NAV and lower yields, we need to re-address the risk that municipal yields underperform Treasury yields. Said differently, it is worthwhile here to assess the risk that the municipal-Treasury yield spread could widen or cheapen. The scatter plot below compares municipal-Treasury spreads as a percentage of Treasury yields through different interest rate environments since 2000. While there are many ways to evaluate the spread, the method shown is attractive as it accounts for spreads with consideration for the absolute level of rates. The effectiveness of this model is supported by an R-squared of .93, which denotes a very tight relationship between the factors. Data points that lie below the regression trend line are instances where the spread is considered tight or rich, with the difference between municipal yields and Treasury yields being lower than average. The opposite holds true for data points above the line. Municipal/Treasury Spreads as a % of Treasury Yields – January 2000 – Current Data Courtesy: St. Louis Federal Reserve (NASDAQ: FRED ) – Ten Year Treasury CMT vs Bond Buyer G.O. 20 Index The current spread is represented by the red dot, and the spread from July 2015 is yellow. By comparing the two highlighted data points, one notices the spread tightened further over the last 6 months. Statistically this can be quantified by measuring the distance between each dot and the trend line. During this period the spread moved from 1.40 standard deviations to 2.25 standard deviations below the trend line. The current spread, is now the tightest (furthest from the trend) that it has been since at least the year 2000. Current recommendation Given that the factors driving our original recommendation (discount to NAV and lower yields) are not as compelling today as they were in July, coupled with a probable widening of the municipal-Treasury spread, we are not as comfortable with the risk-reward scenarios as we were. To further appreciate the tight spread, consider that if the spread were to instantly revert back to trend, the prices on the bonds underlying the CEF’s, on average, would decline by about 3%. Given that the CEF’s employ leverage the likely price drop of the CEF’s would be greater than the drop in the bond prices underlying the CEF’s. Due to our concern over the potential for spread widening and weakened prospects for further discount normalization we are recommending that investors sell LEO (Dreyfus Strategic Municipal Fund) as the discount to NAV is nearing zero. We also recommend investors sell half of their shares in the other holdings. Take well-earned profits and remain vigilant on the remaining holdings, perhaps consider employing a stop loss order to sell shares. The remaining CEF’s still offer a sound value proposition.

What Powerball, Stocks, And Contrarianism Have In Common

“You’ve got to kick fear to the side, because the payoff is huge.” – Mariska Hargitay We all know that the lottery is random, and that the odds are one in 292 million. Maybe you’ll get lucky and win it all, or maybe you’ll split the payout because multiple people luckily choose the same winning numbers. But keep in mind that the higher the lottery jackpot goes, the more likely you are to split the pot with others. Lottery participation is not linear. Every new dollar increase in the jackpot game after game does not bring with it a set new number of people who play. Rather, the larger the jackpot, the more exponential the number of people who play becomes. That means the more attention the lottery gets, the odds of splitting the payout with others actually increases. Meaning if you really want to play the lottery, the best way to do so given the same odds of choosing the right numbers is actually to bet on a jackpot that is high, but not high enough to attract a large number of new players. And this relates to the stock market how? The more an investment is talked up (largely because that investment has already moved and made a boat load of money), the more likely you are to split the payout among others listening to the same reasons to buy that particular investment. The more people know about a big payout, the more likely you are to split the pot and not make as much as you hoped. There is a high correlation to the amount of attention the Powerball and stock market gains receive from the media and the jump in the number of new entrants who come in afterwards This is where contrarianism comes into play. Few people pay attention to losing investments. Those who do will often be too scared to buy in after a large drawdown, even though the very definition of “buy low, sell high” is based on those depressed prices that happen peak to trough. Some will argue that if a stock, asset class, or strategy is down, it must be down for a good reason. As we know from several quantitative studies of markets, however, that “good reason” may be either 1) legitimate, 2) random, or 3) based on a cycle that simply doesn’t favor that investment. We show the latter point as being a major one in our award winning papers related to predicting stock market volatility. Being a contrarian isn’t about going against the crowd. It’s about betting on a jackpot which few other players are betting on, so the odds of you splitting the payout are much lower. Let’s apply this to today’s market. Ask yourself very simply – where have most people overweighted their portfolios? What is the overarching narrative? Where are most people betting? Likely on the “cleanest dirty shirt” on the global landscape, which is the US stock market. Why? Because Fed policy and the Age of QE, combined with ever faster information flow from the internet has resulted in a similar Powerball mentality among a large portion of the investor landscape. Make no mistake about it – though we may hear stories about investors “selling” US stocks (NYSEARCA: SPY ) in this volatility, you can’t unwind 5+ years of divergence from the rest of the world in 5+ trading days. Where does the contrarian look to now? Reflation through a bounce in commodities (NYSEARCA: DBC ) and emerging markets (NYSEARCA: EEM ), both of which no one seems to want to buy a ticket on. Of course that doesn’t mean you buy that ticket right here, right now. But that also doesn’t mean you should ignore what on the surface looks like a low payout right now. 6 11 19 48 54 06 QP

Can Aerospace And Defense ETFs Protect Your Portfolio In 2016?

Near the end of 2015, President Barack Obama signed a $1.1 trillion budget full of federal spending and tax breaks for fiscal 2016. The new budget deal is a reprieve from situations involving government shutdowns and lengthy stop-gap spending measures through fiscal 2016. It also came as an unusual compromise between the Democrats and the Republicans who have often in the past been in a deadlock. The new budget increases defense spending, a logical step given the increasing unrest in the Middle East and other regions. As threats turn into ever new shapes involving asymmetric, air-sea power, cyber, urban, non-state organizations, and many more, the defense capabilities of a country need to morph accordingly to contain the adversaries. A politically unstable planet has led to various nations stepping up their defense capabilities. The direct beneficiary of a volatile geo-economy is undoubtedly the aerospace and defense players. The U.S. defense firms have particularly tasted success in the ‘rest of the world’. Countries allied to U.S. policy are spending substantially on sophisticated artillery to wage the war against terror and sectarian forces. The crisis has been acutely felt with the meteoric rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), a situation that President Obama had once coined “the network of death.” Moreover, per a Treasury Department report, the U.S. budget deficit narrowed to $439 billion in fiscal 2015, the lowest level since 2008, as the economy continued to recover from the financial crisis and revenue growth outpaced a rise in spending. The third-quarter earnings season had seen an earnings beat ratio (percentage of companies coming out with positive surprises) of 77.8% among the aerospace and defense companies. They were not only up against fiscal 2015 budget constraints but were also subject to tepid economic growth throughout the quarter. Growth remained challenged for most of the third quarter, thanks to a strong dollar and weak energy prices. Moreover, persistent slowdown in China deepened global economic woes. In spite of the macro issues, the top contractors, such as, Lockheed Martin Corp. (NYSE: LMT ), The Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA ), Northrop Grumman Corp. (NYSE: NOC ), General Dynamics Corp. (NYSE: GD ), Textron Inc. (NYSE: TXT ), and Raytheon Co. (NYSE: RTN ) held up well on the back of mounting geopolitical risk and strong commercial sales. Though economic data has turned more positive lately and geopolitical uncertainty has improved the outlook of the broader defense space, there are still issues at play. A “disproportionate” cut to modernization and research and development funding could act as a major impediment for the defense industry. In Dec. 2015, Frank Kendall, undersecretary for acquisition, technology and logistics, said in a conference hosted by the Potomac Officers Club that the Pentagon expects to make “disproportionate” cuts to modernization and research and development funding in its fiscal 2017 budget request. This may imply a possible slowdown in production rates of Lockheed Martin’s F-35 fighter jet – the single largest weapons program of the Pentagon. Moreover, the strong U.S. dollar, which is a reflection of growth and monetary policy divergence between the U.S. and its trading partners, is a significant headwind for the defense players. The strong dollar is not only showing up as a currency translation drag, but is also having a bearing on foreign military sales. ETFs to Tap the Sector Below, we have highlighted the aerospace and defense ETFs, which primarily have a U.S. bias. Investing in these funds in basket form greatly reduces the risk of investing in particular stocks. iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF (NYSEARCA: ITA ) With a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold), ITA has provided a return of 21.53% over the three-year period ended Dec. 31, 2015. This fund tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Aerospace & Defense Index, providing exposure to companies related to the aerospace and defense industry in the U.S. equity markets. This index has a 100% focus on U.S. companies. The fund has an annual dividend yield of 1.10%. The ETF, launched in May 2006, presently has nearly $684.1 million in AUM and is heavily weighted toward the Industrials sector (97%) with the balance going to Technology. This fund holds 38 stocks with about 55.01% invested in the top 10 holdings. Among individual holdings, the top stocks in ITA include Boeing, United Technologies Corp. (NYSE: UTX ) and Lockheed Martin comprising 7.82%, 7.73% and 6.83%, respectively, of total net assets. With a tilt toward large-cap companies, this fund charges investors 43 basis points a year. PowerShares Aerospace & Defense Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PPA ) This ETF tracks the SPADE Defense Index, holding 53 securities in its basket and has an expense ratio – an annual fee – of 0.66%. The Index is designed to identify a group of companies involved in the development, manufacturing, operations and support of U.S. defense, homeland security and aerospace operations. The index was launched in October 2005. This fund has a Zacks Rank #3 and is highly focused on U.S companies (100%). The fund has so far managed assets of $299.7 million with a focus on large-cap companies. The top 10 companies hold 53.25% share of total net assets. In terms of holdings, Lockheed Martin, Honeywell International Inc. (NYSE: HON ) and United Technologies occupy the top three positions in the basket comprising 6.54%, 6.31% and 6.30%, respectively, of total net assets. SPDR S&P Aerospace & Defense ETF (NYSEARCA: XAR ) This fund follows the S&P Aerospace & Defense Select Industry Index, focusing on the aerospace and defense sector of the S&P Total Market Index. The Index is one of the 19 S&P Select Industry Indices, each designed to measure the performance of a narrow sub-industry or group of sub-industries as defined by the Global Industry Classification Standards. With a Zacks ETF Rank #3, this fund charges investors just 35 basis points a year in fees for its exposure. Hence, it is considered the cheapest option in the aerospace and defense ETF market. With holdings of 34 stocks, the top spots are taken up by Orbital ATK Inc. (NYSE: OA ), Transdigm Group Incorporated (NYSE: TDG ) and Honeywell International Inc. comprising 4.27%, 4.03% and 4.01%, respectively, of total net assets. Launched in September 2011, XAR has 100% focus on U.S companies. The fund has managed assets of $160 million so far and has an annual dividend yield of 1.00%. The top 10 companies hold 40.03% share of total net assets. To Sum Up Despite global headwinds, the defense biggies have been proactive in meeting evolving customer needs, particularly for affordable products, besides engaging in corporate restructuring. Moreover, tensions arising out of geopolitical conflict around the globe and demand for defense products in the Middle East and other Asian nations will ensure a steady inflow of foreign contracts. In this context, the above-mentioned ETFs with a favorable Zacks ETF Rank might be a good idea to play defense. Original Post