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4 Tactical/Momentum ETFs: A Disappointing 1-Year Anniversary

Summary Four ETFs, introduced late last year, have the ability to switch between stocks and bonds, on a tactical/momentum basis. How did these four funds fare during the August correction? Since inception, only one of the four ETFs has outperformed the global market portfolio. Introduction In a Nov. 2014 article entitled ” Comparing 4 Tactical/Momentum ETFs “, I introduced four newly-debuted tactical/momentum ETFs that have, at the minimum, the ability to switch between stocks and bonds depending on tactical factors such as momentum (thus equity-only momentum funds are not considered). I later provided a short update on the performance of the four ETFs in a Aug. 2015 article entitled ” An Update On 4 Tactical/Momentum ETFs “. In that article, I noted that while the four ETFs averaged only -1.19% over the preceding nine months, underperforming U.S. stocks (via the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY )) at +5.35%. However, that update article was published just before the S&P 500’s first 10% correction in several years. The last few months of market action has been…interesting, to say the least, and with the 1-year birthday of these four tactical/momentum ETFs having just recently elapsed, I thought that now would be a good time to review the performance and allocation of these four funds. The funds The four funds included in this analysis listed below. For more detailed information regarding these funds, please refer to my previous article . Cambria Global Momentum ETF (NYSEARCA: GMOM ). GMOM invests in the top 33% of a target universe of 50 ETFs based on measures of trailing momentum and trend. The fund rebalance monthly into ETFs with strong momentum and are in an uptrend over the medium term of approximately 12 months with systematic rules for entry and exit. Global X JPMorgan US Sector Rotator Index ETF (NYSEARCA: SCTO ). SCTO invests in a portfolio of one to five ETFs selected out of a pool of ten U.S. sector ETFs and the iShares 1-3 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: SHY ). The fund rebalances monthly to invest in a maximum of 5 U.S. sectors that have demonstrated the strongest positive recent performance. If less than 5 sectors have demonstrated positive performance over this time period, the remainder will go to SHY. Global X JPMorgan Efficiente Index ETF (NYSEARCA: EFFE ). EFFE invests in any combination of 13 ETFs drawn from 5 asset classes. The fund rebalances monthly, constructing an “efficient frontier” by calculating the 6-month returns and volatilities of multiple hypothetical portfolios based on different combinations of the index component universe, then selects the combination of assets that resulted in the highest return over the 6 month observation period with an annual realized volatility of 10% or less. Arrow DWA Tactical ETF (NASDAQ: DWAT ). Implements a proprietary Relative Strength Global Macro model developed by Dorsey Wright & Associates, holding approximately 10 broad-based positions. Assets include long/short exposure to domestic, international and emerging market equities and bonds (government, corporate, agency), real estate, currencies and commodities. Details of the four funds are shown in the table below (data from Morningstar ).   GMOM SCTO EFFE DWAT Yield [ttm] 2.33% 0.50% 0.68% 0.39% Total expense ratio 0.94% 0.86% 0.86% 1.52% Management fee 0.59% 0.69% 0.69% 1.22%* Acquired expense ratio 0.35% 0.17% 0.17% 0.30% Inception Nov 4,2014 Oct 22,2014 Oct 22,2014 Oct 1,2014 Assets $25.92M $13.47M $8.11M $7.80M Avg vol. 12K 11K 12K 7.6K Annual turnover 16% 63% – 111% *Composed of management fee 1.00%, other expenses 0.22%. All four funds have low but not negligible volume, and should provide sufficient liquidity for ordinary investors. Additionally, all four funds have increased in assets since a year ago. GMOM increased slightly from $23.85M to $25.92M, while SCTO increased from $11.54 to $13.47. DWAT showed a sizable increase from $5.18M to $7.80. However, the biggest winner over the pats year appears to be EFFE, which more than tripled in size, from $2.58M to $8.11M. Performance Let’s now take a look at the performance of the four tactical/momentum ETFs in 2015, with the U.S. market (via SPY) included for comparison. GMOM Total Return Price data by YCharts The analysis of this total return price chart reveals some interesting features. Firstly, none of the tactical/momentum ETFs were able to keep pace with SPY in the first eight months of the year, i.e. before the August correction. This might not be surprising for GMOM, even EFFE and DWAT, as these draw ETFs from a wide pool of asset classes and not only U.S. equities, which has been one of the best-performing markets during this difficult year. However, the egregious performance of SCTO is concerning. The fact that SCTO underperformed SPY by the largest margin over the first eight months of 2015 is especially surprising given that its investment universe is restricted to only U.S. industry sectors and what is essentially a cash proxy! How on earth did it lag SPY by nearly 10% over the first eight months of the year if its mandate is to “invest in a maximum of 5 U.S. sectors that have demonstrated the strongest positive recent performance.” Global X provides a monthly allocation report for SCTO. We can see from the report that has had significantly allocations to SHY (i.e. cash) during the first eight months of the year, ranging from 20% in Feb. 2015 to 80% in Jul. 2015. (click to enlarge) Can we understand the reasons for SCTO’s serious underperformance compared to both SPY as well as the other three tactical/momentum ETFs? Analysis of the monthly allocations of SCTO suggests that this may have been due to the ETF being too sensitive to fluctuations in the equity markets, causing it to switch very frequently between equity and cash. For example, SPY suffered a -2.96% loss in Jan. 2015, which caused SCTO to switch to 80% equities in defensive sectors such as REITs (NYSEARCA: RWR ), consumer staples (NYSEARCA: XLP ), healthcare (NYSEARCA: XLV ) and utilities (NYSEARCA: XLU ) and 20% cash at the start of February. Of course, SPY then posted a 5.62% return in February, led by high-beta stocks, and the defensively-positioned SCTO sorely lagged during this rally. Similarly, SCTO was 100% invested in equities when SPY suffered a -2.03% loss in Jun. 2015, then switched to 80% cash for July, during which SPY reversed course to the tune of a 2.26% gain. SCTO then switched BACK to 100% equities at the start of August, just in time for the correction. Talk about bad timing! But let’s step back and analyze all four of the ETFs during this period. Responding to the correction The following chart shows the total return performance of the four tactical/momentum ETFs as well as the U.S. equity market and the U.S. bond market (NYSEARCA: AGG ) from just before the August correction to the end of the year. GMOM Total Return Price data by YCharts All four tactical/momentum ETFs dropped sharply with SPY in August as the correction hit. This is not surprising given that most of these ETFs would be expected to have a sizable allocation to U.S. equities given its status as one of the better-performing markets in early 2015. However, what happens after the correction is illuminating. At the start of September, GMOM, SCTO and EFFE decrease suddenly in volatility, suggesting that they have shifted significantly to bonds or cash. This is confirmed at least for SCTO which showed a 100% allocation cash in September. This shift therefore allowed those three funds to avoid the equity market gyrations in September. On the other hand, the performance of DWAT tracked closely with SPY, suggesting that this fund had not yet made a switch away from equity holdings. As expected, none of four ETFs were able to capture the ferocious snap-back rally exhibited by SPY in October (+8.51%). DWAT increased by around half that of SPY, while SCTO also rose slightly due to its 18.6% allocation to REITs and 21.4% allocation to utilities, however, the rest of SCTO was in cash. Rather unfortunately, all four funds appear to have switched back into an equity-heavy portfolio in November and December, just as the rally subsided and choppy market behavior resumed. This can be deduced given that all four ETFs follow the ebbs and flow of the broader market during these two months. Discussion and conclusion To say that all four tactical/momentum ETFs have disappointed in their first year of existence would be an understatement. None of the four funds were able to avoid the August correction of 2015. Three of the four funds (GMOM, SCTO and EFFE) then switched to cash or bond-heavy portfolios in September, which caused them to completely miss the stock market rebound a month later. This phenomenon was more comprehensively analyzed for GMOM in my Nov. 11 article ” GMOM: Momentum Swings From Bonds Back To Stocks “. On the other hand, based on its price action compare to SPY, DWAT appeared to remain fully invested in equities in September, but reduced its equity exposure to approximately 50% in October. As DWAT is an actively-managed ETF, it is not clear whether the delayed reduction of equity exposure involved any discretionary decisions by the portfolio manager. The next chart shows the total return performance, over the past 13 months, of the four ETFs compared to both SPY and a global market portfolio (via the Cambria Global Asset Allocation ETF (NYSEARCA: GAA )) at -1.02%, which Seeking Alpha author GestaltU has proposed is a superior benchmark for global tactical asset allocation [GTAA] strategies than the S&P500. We can see from the chart below that DWAT has had the best total return performance of -2.77% out of the four tactical/momentum ETFs during this time span, followed by GMOM at -6.87%. EFFE and SCTO had the lowest total return performances of -8.02% and -8.96%, respectively. Thus, DWAT was the only ETF to outperform the global market portfolio GAA since last November, and all four ETFs underperformed SPY. GMOM Total Return Price data by YCharts Going forward, what can we expect from these ETFs? Currently, the four ETFs show very different equity/bond distributions (data from Morningstar). SCTO has the highest equity allocation at nearly 100%, followed by DWAT at 74%. GMOM has a nearly 50:50 split of equities and bonds. EFFE is the only ETF with more bonds (60%) than stocks (40%). However, given that at least three of the four funds (all except DWAT, whose schedule is unspecified) rebalance monthly, these allocations are likely to change in January. In terms of the North American (mainly U.S.) versus international allocation of their equity portion, all except GMOM are fully domestic. GMOM contains 87% U.S. equities and 13% international equities. On a personal level, I have sold my holdings of GMOM a few months ago. I have replaced this the iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor Index ETF (NYSEARCA: MTUM ) (as described in Left Banker’s article here ). My existing holding of the First Trust Dorsey Wright Focus 5 ETF (NASDAQ: FV ) has also done very well. Both have outperformed SPY over the past year. MTUM Total Return Price data by YCharts Note that those two ETFs are momentum-based but are not “tactical” in the sense that they cannot switch to bonds or cash, and moreover they are purely U.S. based. If the U.S. market enters a bear market, it is likely that those two funds will underperform the tactical/momentum ETFs described above. I am simply performance chasing the U.S. market here? Perhaps, but I lost patience in watching the NAV of GMOM gradually decline as it got caught between whipsaws. With my sale of GMOM, this will likely be my last article on tactical/momentum ETFs for the time being, unless their performance improves to such an extent that they warrant consideration for investment.

GMOM: Momentum Swings From Bonds Back To Stocks

Summary GMOM shifted from stocks to bonds in late August, but was too late to protect itself from the summer market plunge. GMOM missed the October snap-back relay in stocks, but has recently repositioned itself to be overweight in equities. The recent whipsaws has not been kind to GMOM, but it may regain its lustre in strongly trending markets. The Cambria Global Momentum ETF (NYSEARCA: GMOM ) is an actively managed ETF that seeks to exploit the momentum factor across different asset classes. Essentially, GMOM invests in the top 33% of a target universe of 50 ETFs based on measures of trailing momentum and trend. Assets include domestic and foreign stocks, bonds, real estate, commodities and currencies. The fund rebalances monthly into ETFs with strong momentum and are in an uptrend over the medium term of approximately 12 months with systematic rules for entry and exit. Seeking Alpha author Left Banker has penned an excellent pair of articles describing the construction of this ETF, and thus these details will not be rehashed here. Instead, this article seeks to highlight the fact that GMOM has just recently switched from a bond-heavy portfolio back into stocks. Locating the previous switch to bonds In his last feature article on GMOM in Feb. 2nd, 2015, Left Banker found that GMOM was broadly diversified across numerous asset classes, with about 46% in equity, 31% in bonds, 18% in real estate (including mREITs) and 6% in commodities. Fast-forward to Nov. 3rd, 2015, and the situation is drastically different. Nearly 94% of the portfolio was in bonds , with the remaining 6% or so in REITs. GMOM holdings on Nov. 3rd, 2015 iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ) 17.56% iShares 3-7 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEI ) 17.12% Vanguard Short-Term Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: BSV ) 17.08% iShares 1-3 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: SHY ) 12.11% Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF (NYSEARCA: BND ) 10.93% Vanguard Total International Bond ETF (NASDAQ: BNDX ) 6.44% iShares Residential Real Estate Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: REZ ) 6.22% Vanguard Short-Term Corporate Bond ETF (NASDAQ: VCSH ) 6.01% iShares MBS ETF (NYSEARCA: MBB ) 6.00% Total 99.47% As GMOM does not publish its historical holdings, I do not know the exact time that it made the switch from bonds to stocks. However, given the significant underperformance of both U.S. (the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY )) and international stocks (the iShares MSCI ACWI ex-U.S. Index ETF (NASDAQ: ACWX )) stocks compared to their respective bond counterparts, the Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF [BND] and the Vanguard Total International Bond ETF [BNDX] over the summer, I infer that change to the better-performing bond ETFs was made sometime during those months. To narrow down the precise timing of the switch further, I compared the total performance of GMOM with SPY and BND over the past three months. We can see that the stock market plunge in late August was acutely felt by GMOM, suggesting that GMOM was still heavily invested in equities at that time. However, GMOM did not track the market fluctuations experienced by SPY in the month of September, nor the snap-back rally in stocks in October. This suggests that the switch from equities to bonds took place sometime at the start of September. We can see from the graph above that while moving to a bond-heavy portfolio protected GMOM from the market gyrations experienced by SPY in September, it also caused GMOM to miss out on the fantastic rally in stocks the following month. This illustrates a general observation: momentum strategies tend to underperform in whipsaw situations. A similar set of circumstances was chronicled for the AlphaClone Alternative Alpha ETF (NYSEARCA: ALFA ), which uses the 200-day MA in order to time its hedges (which is a type of momentum strategy), in my recent article entitled ” ALFA Underwhelms As Hedge Fund Darlings Crater Plus An Untimely Hedge .” From bonds back to stocks Checking the holdings of GMOM a few days later, I discovered that a massive shift had taken place in the constituents of this ETF. The portfolio had shifted from 94% bonds to only 29%. REITs increased from 6% to 17%. Stocks increased from a measly 0% to 53% (70% if you include REITs as stocks). GMOM holdings on Nov. 6th, 2015 iShares Global Tech ETF (NYSEARCA: IXN ) 10.61% iShares Global Consumer Discretionary ETF (NYSEARCA: RXI ) 10.60% Vanguard REIT ETF (NYSEARCA: VNQ ) 10.60% Cambria Shareholder Yield ETF (NYSEARCA: SYLD ) 10.59% iShares Global Consumer Staples ETF (NYSEARCA: KXI ) 10.59% Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (NYSEARCA: VTI ) 10.57% PowerShares Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PCY ) 10.56% Vanguard Total International Bond ETF BNDX 6.43% iShares Residential Real Estate Capped ETF REZ 6.17% Vanguard Short-Term Corporate Bond ETF VCSH 6.02% iShares MBS ETF MBB 6.00% Total 98.73% The recent change in the portfolio is also shown graphically below. Obviously, the recent move back into equities is a direct consequence of the ferocious rally in the stock market over the past month and a half. With stocks knocking again on the door of all-time highs, one has to ask the question, is this really the best time to be overweight equities? If you answered “yes” to that question, then you are likely a momentum investor, and GMOM might be an ideal fund for you. If you answered “no,” you would do well to sell GMOM now that it has shifted again back into stocks (and you should also ask yourself why you were invested in this fund in the first place?). Summary The recent whipsaws in the stocks, and to a lesser extend bond, market has not been kind to a momentum fund such as GMOM. Indeed, while having performed comparably with U.S. and international stocks and bonds in the first six months or so of its lifetime since inception, it now trails all four major asset classes by a wide margin. If this whipsaw behavior were to continue, GMOM will likely continue to underperform. On the hand, strong trending markets (both bull and bear) in various asset classes should allow GMOM to focus on what it does best: exploiting the momentum premium. GMOM Total Return Price data by YCharts For more information about other momentum ETFs, see my previous articles ” Comparing 4 Tactical/Momentum ETFs ” and ” An Update On 4 Tactical/Momentum ETFs “.