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Season Of The Glitch

When I look over my shoulder What do you think I see? Some other cat lookin’ over His shoulder at me. – Donovan, “Season of the Witch” (1966) Josh Leonard: I see why you like this video camera so much. Heather Donahue: You do? Josh Leonard: It’s not quite reality. It’s like a totally filtered reality. It’s like you can pretend everything’s not quite the way it is. – “The Blair Witch Project” (1999) Over the past two months, more than 90 Wall Street Journal articles have used the word “glitch”. A few choice selections below: Bank of New York Mellon Corp.’s chief executive warned clients that his firm wouldn’t be able to solve all pricing problems caused by a computer glitch before markets open Monday. – “BNY Mellon Races to Fix Pricing Glitches Before Markets Open Monday”, August 30, 2015 A computer glitch is preventing hundreds of mutual and exchange-traded funds from providing investors with the values of their holdings, complicating trading in some of the most widely held investments. – “A New Computer Glitch is Rocking the Mutual Fund Industry”, August 26, 2015 Bank says data loss was due to software glitch. – “Deutsche Bank Didn’t Archive Chats Used by Some Employees Tied to Libor Probe”, July 30, 2015 NYSE explanation confirms software glitch as cause, following initial fears of a cyberattack. – “NYSE Says Wednesday Outage Caused by Software Update”, July 10, 2015 Some TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. customers experienced delays in placing orders Friday morning due to a software glitch, the brokerage said.. – “TD Ameritrade Experienced Order Routing, Messaging Problems”, July 10, 2015 Thousands of investors with stop-loss orders on their ETFs saw those positions crushed in the first 30 minutes of trading last Monday, August 24th. Seeing a price blow right through your stop is perhaps the worst experience in all of investing because it seems like such a betrayal. “Hey, isn’t this what a smart investor is supposed to do? What do you mean there was no liquidity at my stop? What do you mean I got filled $5 below my stop? Wait… now the price is back above my stop! Is this for real?” Welcome to the Big Leagues of Investing Pain. What happened last Monday morning, when Apple was down 11% and the VIX couldn’t be priced and the CNBC anchors looked like they were going to vomit, was not a glitch. Yes, a flawed SunGard pricing platform was part of the proximate cause, but the structural problem here- and the reason this sort of dislocation WILL happen again, soon and more severely- is that a vast crowd of market participants- let’s call them Investors- are making a classic mistake. It’s what a statistics professor would call a “category error”, and it’s a heartbreaker. Moreover, there’s a slightly less vast crowd of market participants- let’s call them Market Makers and The Sell Side- who are only too happy to perpetuate and encourage this category error. Not for nothing, but Virtu and Volant and other HFT “liquidity providers” had their most profitable day last Monday since… well, since the Flash Crash of 2010. So if you’re a Market Maker or you’re on The Sell Side or you’re one of their media apologists, you call last week’s price dislocations a “glitch” and misdirect everyone’s attention to total red herrings like supposed forced liquidations of risk parity strategies. Wash, rinse, repeat. The category error made by most Investors today, from your retired father-in-law to the largest sovereign wealth fund, is to confuse an allocation for an investment. If you treat an allocation like an investment… if you think about buying and selling an ETF in the same way that you think about buying and selling stock in a real-life company with real-life cash flows… you’re making the same mistake that currency traders made earlier this year with the Swiss Franc (read “ Ghost in the Machine ” for more). You’re making a category error, and one day- maybe last Monday or maybe next Monday- that mistake will come back to haunt you. The simple fact is that there’s precious little investing in markets today- understood as buying a fractional ownership position in the real-life cash flows of a real-life company- a casualty of policy-driven markets where real-life fundamentals mean next to nothing for market returns. Instead, it’s all portfolio positioning, all allocation, all the time. But most Investors still maintain the pleasant illusion that what they’re doing is some form of stock-picking, some form of their traditional understanding of what it means to be an Investor. It’s the story they tell themselves and each other to get through the day, and the people who hold the media cameras and microphones are only too happy to perpetuate this particular form of filtered reality. Now there’s absolutely nothing wrong with allocating rather than investing. In fact, as my partners Lee Partridge and Rusty Guinn never tire of saying, smart allocation is going to be responsible for the vast majority of public market portfolio returns over time for almost all investors. But that’s not the mythology that exists around markets. You don’t read Barron’s profiles about Great Allocators. No, you read about Great Investors, heroically making their stock-picking way in a sea of troubles. It’s 99% stochastics and probability distributions – really, it is – but since when did that make a myth less influential? So we gladly pay outrageous fees to the Great Investors who walk among us, even if most of us will never enjoy the outsized returns that won their reputations. So we search and search for the next Great Investor, even if the number of Great Investors in the world is exactly what enough random rolls of the dice would produce with Ordinary Investors. So we all aspire to be Great Investors, even if almost all of what we do- like buying an ETF- is allocating rather than investing. The key letter in an ETF is the F. It’s a Fund, with exactly the same meaning of the word as applied to a mutual fund. It’s an allocation to a basket of securities with some sort of common attribute or factor that you want represented in your overall portfolio, not a fractional piece of an asset that you want to directly own. Yes, unlike a mutual fund you CAN buy and sell an ETF just like a single name stock, but that doesn’t mean you SHOULD. Like so many things in our modern world, the exchange traded nature of the ETF is a benefit for the few (Market Makers and The Sell Side) that has been sold falsely as a benefit for the many (Investors). It’s not a benefit for Investors. On the contrary, it’s a detriment. Investors who would never in a million years consider trading in and out of a mutual fund do it all the time with an exchange traded fund, and as a result their thoughtful ETF allocation becomes just another chip in the stock market casino. This isn’t a feature. It’s a bug. What we saw last Monday morning was a specific manifestation of the behavioral fallacy of a category error, one that cost a lot of Investors a lot of money. Investors routinely put stop-loss orders on their ETFs. Why? Because… you know, this is what Great Investors do. They let their winners run and they limit their losses. Everyone knows this. It’s part of our accepted mythology, the Common Knowledge of investing. But here’s the truth. If you’re an Investor with a capital I (as opposed to a Trader with a capital T), there’s no good reason to put a stop-loss on an ETF or any other allocation instrument. I know. Crazy. And I’m sure I’ll get 100 irate unsubscribe notices from true-believing Investors for this heresy. So be it. Think of it this way… what is the meaning of an allocation? Answer: it’s a return stream with a certain set of qualities that for whatever reason – maybe diversification, maybe sheer greed, maybe something else – you believe that your portfolio should possess. Now ask yourself this: what does price have to do with this meaning of an allocation? Answer: very little, at least in and of itself. Are those return stream qualities that you prize in your portfolio significantly altered just because the per-share price of a representation of this return stream is now just below some arbitrary price line that you set? Of course not. More generally, those return stream qualities can only be understood… should only be understood… in the context of what else is in your portfolio. I’m not saying that the price of this desired return stream means nothing. I’m saying that it means nothing in and of itself. An allocation has contingent meaning, not absolute meaning, and it should be evaluated on its relative merits, including price. There’s nothing contingent about a stop-loss order. It’s entirely specific to that security… I want it at this price and I don’t want it at that price, and that’s not the right way to think about an allocation. One of my very first Epsilon Theory notes, “ The Tao of Portfolio Management ,” was on this distinction between investing (what I called stock-picking in that note) and allocation (what I called top-down portfolio construction), and the ecological fallacy that drives category errors and a whole host of other market mistakes. It wasn’t a particularly popular note then, and this note probably won’t be, either. But I think it’s one of the most important things I’ve got to say. Why do I think it’s important? Because this category error goes way beyond whether or not you put stop-loss orders on ETFs. It enshrines myopic price considerations as the end-all and be-all for portfolio allocation decisions, and it accelerates the casino-fication of modern capital markets, both of which I think are absolute tragedies. For Investors, anyway. It’s a wash for Traders… just gives them a bigger playground. And it’s the gift that keeps on giving for Market Makers and The Sell Side. Why do I think it’s important? Because there are so many Investors making this category error and they are going to continue to be, at best, scared out of their minds and, at worst, totally run over by the Traders who are dominating these casino games. This isn’t the time or the place to dive into gamma trading or volatility skew hedges or liquidity replenishment points. But let me say this. If you don’t already understand what, say, a gamma hedge is, then you have ZERO chance of successfully trading your portfolio in reaction to the daily “news”. You’re going to be whipsawed mercilessly by these Hollow Markets , especially now that the Fed and the PBOC are playing a giant game of Chicken and are no longer working in unison to pump up global asset prices . One of the best pieces of advice I ever got as an Investor was to take what the market gives you. Right now the market isn’t giving us much, at least not the sort of stock-picking opportunities that most Investors want. Or think they want. That’s okay. This, too, shall pass. Eventually. Maybe . But what’s not okay is to confuse what the market IS giving us, which is the opportunity to make long-term portfolio allocation decisions, for the sort of active trading opportunity that fits our market mythology. It’s easy to confuse the two, particularly when there are powerful interests that profit from the confusion and the mythology. Market Makers and The Sell Side want to speed us up, both in the pace of our decision making and in the securities we use to implement those decisions, and if anything goes awry … well, it must have been a glitch. In truth, it’s time to slow down, both in our process and in the nature of the securities we buy and sell. And you might want to turn off the TV while you’re at it.

The Complete Guide To Retail ETFs

As a pioneer in retail business, the United States provides ample growth opportunities for all types of retail companies. From growth perspective, retail ranks among the dominant U.S. industries and employs an enormous workforce. Retail sales represent approximately 30% of consumer spending, which itself accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy. The U.S. economy is sending out signals of growth, driven by lower oil prices and an improved job market. In July, 215,000 people were hired, reflecting improved employment prospects. According to the recent data from Bureau of Labor Statistics, the unemployment rate for July was constant at 5.3% reached in the previous month, its lowest level since Sept. 2008. This improvement in the job scenario is likely to boost consumer confidence and provide them with a sense of security when it comes to purchasing power, thereby increasing consumer spending. According to a recent Conference Board data, the Consumer Confidence Index rebound in August increased to 101.5 from July’s reading of 91.0. Moreover, consumer spending increased 3.1% in the second quarter from the initial estimate of 2.9%, and also improved considerably from the first quarter’s spending rate of 1.8%. July retail sales growth of 0.6% also validates the pickup in consumer activity. Additionally, real GDP expanded at a 3.7% seasonally-adjusted annual rate in the second quarter of 2015, according to the “second” estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. This fared way better than the “advance” estimate of a 2.3% increase and 0.6% growth recorded in the first quarter. The positive revision in GDP numbers reflects a rise in consumer spending, higher business spending, increased investment in intellectual property products and larger inventory levels at businesses. An expected rebound in the economy, combined with declining unemployment rate, cheap gasoline prices, higher consumer confidence and improving consumer spending, the retail space is bubbling with optimism. ETFs present a low cost and convenient way to get a diversified exposure to this sector. Below we have highlighted a few ETFs tracking the industry: SPDR S&P Retail (NYSEARCA: XRT ): Launched in June 2006, SPDR S&P Retail is an ETF that seeks investment results corresponding to the S&P Retail Select Industry Index. This fund consists of 103 stocks, the top holdings being Netflix Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX ), Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN ) and Casey’s General Stores Inc. (NASDAQ: CASY ), representing asset allocation of 1.33%, 1.29% and 1.22%, respectively, as of Aug. 28, 2015. The fund’s gross expense ratio is 0.35%, while its dividend yield is 1.04%. XRT has $1,118 million of assets under management (AUM) as of Aug. 31, 2015. Market Vectors Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: RTH ): Initiated in Dec. 2011, Market Vectors Retail ETF tracks the performance of Market Vectors US Listed Retail 25 Index. The fund comprises 26 stocks, the top holdings being Amazon.com Inc. ( AMZN ), Home Depot Inc. (NYSE: HD ) and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (NYSE: WMT ), representing asset allocation of 12.78%, 8.66% and 7.75%, respectively, as of Aug. 31, 2015. The fund’s net expense ratio is 0.35% and dividend yield is 0.39%. RTH has managed to attract $216.9 million in AUM till Aug. 31, 2015. PowerShares Dynamic Retail (NYSEARCA: PMR ): PowerShares Dynamic Retail, launched in Oct. 2005, follows the Dynamic Retail Intellidex Index and is made up of 30 stocks that are primarily engaged in operating general merchandise stores such as department stores, discount stores, warehouse clubs and superstores. The fund’s top holdings are O’Reilly Automotive Inc. (NASDAQ: ORLY ), The Home Depot Inc. ( HD ) and CVS Health Corp. (NYSE: CVS ), reflecting asset allocation of 5.66%, 5.34% and 5.24%, respectively, as of Sept. 1, 2015. The fund’s net expense ratio is 0.63%, while its dividend yield is 0.61%. PMR has managed to attract $24.7 million in AUM as of Aug. 31, 2015. Original Post

Time For Semiconductor ETFs?

The semiconductor space was a hot spot and one of the best-performing sectors in 2014, courtesy of encouraging industry fundamentals. But its fundamentals have slackened of late, with the struggling PC market. The second quarter of 2015 witnessed PC shipments falling 9.5% year over year, marking the steepest decline since third-quarter 2013, per Gartner. A strong greenback, higher inventories in the semiconductor and electronics supply chain and the launch of Windows 10 were held responsible for this decline, per the research agency. This, coupled with semiconductor giant Intel Corporation’s (NASDAQ: INTC ) underperformance wreaked havoc in the space. Notably, the INTC stock is down over 23% this year (as of September 1, 2015). Compelling Valuation Semiconductor stocks and the related ETFs have seen a considerable slide this year that erased its prior year’s gains and slipped into the negative territory in the one-year frame. Now, semiconductor analysts believe that most of the downside is reflected in the current level. Chip stocks have declined 25% and are now due for their way up as per analysts . Semiconductor ETF Market Vectors Semiconductor ETF (NYSEARCA: SMH ) presently trades at a P/E (TTM) of 17 times against the broader technology ETF Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF ‘s (NYSEARCA: XLK ) P/E (TTM) of 18 times and high-flying Internet ETF First Trust Dow Jones Internet ETF’s (NYSEARCA: FDN ) P/E of 41 times. Moreover, the space might witness a surge in sales in the latter part of 2015 as it includes the all-important shopping season and is likely to see a significant increase in the purchase of smartphones. In fact, World Semiconductor Trade Statistics (WSTS) also approves of this pattern as the agency forecast that the semiconductor market will be mainly propelled by smartphones and automotive this year. Moreover, some analysts opine that the PC market is set for a rebound helping the companies like Intel. All semi ETFs including SMH, iShares PHLX Semiconductor ETF (NASDAQ: SOXX ) , SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (NYSEARCA: XSD ) and PowerShares Dynamic Semiconductors Fund (NYSEARCA: PSI ) gained about 2.3%, 2.4%, 4.7% and 2.7%, respectively, in the last five trading sessions. Caution Having said this, we would like to note that the fundamentals are yet to improve for the semiconductor sector. The sector is still hovering in the bottom 18% region of the Zacks Industry Rank. The world semi market is expected to grow 3.4% year over year this year (per WSTS), while growth for 2016 and 2017 will likely be 3.4% and 3%, respectively. Also, not all semiconductor ETFs are as cheap as SMH, as other ETFs including XSD and PSI presently have a P/E (TTM) of 27 times and 23 times. All of the above-mentioned ETFs have weighted alpha of negative 9.34, 10.68, 4.84 and 3.51 respectively hinting at further bearishness. Still, investors eyeing this apparently rebounding space might watch these semiconductor ETFs closely. SOXX in Focus This ETF follows the PHLX Semiconductor Sector Index and offers exposure to 30 domestic firms. It is highly concentrated on the top 10 firms with about 60% of total assets. Two-thirds of the portfolio is dominated by large-cap stocks while mid-caps take the remainder, with just 3% going to small caps. The fund has amassed $331 million in its asset base and trades in average volume of roughly 600,000 shares a day. The product charges 47 bps in fees a year from investors. SOXX has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold). SMH in Focus This fund provides exposure to 26 securities by tracking the Market Vectors US Listed Semiconductor 25 Index. Of these, two firms – Intel and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing dominate the fund’s return with a combined 35% of total assets while other firms hold no more than 6.06% share each. From a market cap look, the product focuses on large cap stocks, as together these account for about 81% of the portfolio. The product has managed assets worth $354 million and charges 35 bps in annual fees and expenses. It is heavily traded with volume of more than 4.3 million shares per day. This fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #3. XSD in Focus This fund tracks the S&P Semiconductor Select Industry Index, holding 47 stocks in its portfolio. It is widely spread across each security as none of these allocates more than 3.09% of the assets. The product has a definite tilt toward small-cap stocks at 54%, followed by 28% in mid-caps and 18% in large caps. The fund is less popular and illiquid with AUM of $108.1 million and average daily volume of under 100,000 shares. It charges 35 bps in fees per year. The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #3. PSI in Focus This Zacks ETF Rank #3 fund tracks the Dynamic Semiconductor Intellidex Index, holding 30 securities in the basket with none holding more than 5.93% of assets. Here again, the ETF is skewed toward small caps at 46% while large caps and mid-caps account for 36% and 18%, respectively. The product, with AUM of $62 million is often overlooked by investors and hence sees a lower average daily volume of 45,000 shares. Expense ratio came in at 0.63%. Original Post