Tag Archives: investing

International Treasury ETFs: Winners Amid Gloom

Recent developments in the domestic and global markets have led to a rise in volatility across all asset classes. None of the economies around the world are looking up with the most developed economies facing recessionary threats. The U.S. is also losing momentum and the emerging economies, mainly China, is facing hard-landing fears. Developed market inflation remains abysmally low while emerging markets, normally known for sky-high inflation, have also been seeing price level abating. The major reason behind this weakening in price level goes to the energy sector rout as crude prices lost around 75% in the last two years. Moreover, most of the commodities are slouching on lower global demand and ample supplies. Central banks across the board are striving to beef up asset values, charge up their sagging economies and boost inflation. Following the European Central Bank, Bank of Japan recently introduced negative interest rates. A reduction in rates would spur activities in economy which in turn should translate into higher growth. All these sparked-off a rally in international treasuries and the related ETFs. First, risk-off trade has led investors to flee the risky asset classes and seek solace in the so-called safer bond segment and then rock-bottom interest rates dragged down the Treasury bond yields giving a push to their prices. Yields on Decline Yields on Japan’s benchmark 10-year government bond recently slid to below zero ( negative 0.007% ) for the first time. The dropdown in yields mainly came in the wake of a negative interest rate policy adopted by BoJ. In fact BoJ chief indicated a slash in the Japanese interest rates – deeper into the negative territory if needed. However, as investors rushed toward a safe refuge following global market sell-off on February 8, which was triggered by the European banks’ sell-off, global government bonds came under the spotlight. The 10-year German and U.S. government bond yields also slid to multi-month levels lately. The benchmark U.S. treasury yields fell to as low as 1.75% on February 8, 2016, down 49 bps from the start of this year. More than $7 trillion of government bonds – accounting for 29% of the Bloomberg Global Developed Sovereign Bond Index – offered negative yields globally as of February 8, 2016. If the trend of negative interest rates continues, the negative-yielding bonds load is likely to increase. Given this, the International Treasury ETFs could provide investors with an opportunity of capital gains and safer bids. ProShares German Sovereign/Sub-Sovereign (NYSEARCA: GGOV ) The fund looks to track the performance of the Markit iBoxx EUR Germany Sovereign & Sub-Sovereign Liquid Index. The fund has a weighted average maturity of 5.86 years and a modified duration of 5.52 years. It charges 45 bps in fees and yields 0.17%. The fund is up 4.6% so far this year (as of February 8, 2016). SPDR Barclays Capital International Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: BWX ) BWX measures the performance of investment grade sovereign debt securities located outside the U.S. The ETF targets the longer end of the yield curve and has an average maturity of 9.48 years. The ETF is more sensitive to interest rate movements as indicated by an average duration of 7.77 years. From a holdings perspective, BWX allocates 23.32% of its total assets in the Japanese Government bonds. The fund allocates more than half of its assets in European nations. BWX is up 3.3% in the year-to-date frame. iShares S&P/Citigroup International Treasury Bond (NASDAQ: IGOV ) The ETF tracks the S&P/Citigroup International Treasury Bond Index Ex-US which measures the performance of foreign currency denominated treasury bonds issued by developed countries other than the U.S. Like BWX, IGOV also mostly places its bets on the Japanese government bonds which account for almost 22.6% of its total assets. The ETF has a weighted average maturity of 9.44 years and effective duration of 7.66 years. IGOV yields 0.1% annually and has added 4.3% so far this year (as of February 8, 2016). iShares S&P/Citigroup 1-3 Yr International Treasury Bond ETF (NASDAQ: ISHG ) This product targets the shorter part of the yield curve. Its weighted average maturity is 1.74 years and effective duration is 1.71 years. From a weightings perspective, the ETF holds 23.08% in Japanese short-term bonds and around 65% in the European nations’ near-dated securities. ISHG yields 0.09% annually and has added 2.6% so far this year (as of February 8, 2016). DB 3x Japanese Govt Bond Futures ETN (NYSEARCA: JGBT ) JGBT focuses on the triple-leverage performance of a long position in the 10-year Japanese Government Bond Futures. The assets of 10-year JGB Futures are Japan-government issued debt securities with a remaining term to maturity of not less than 7 years and not more than 11 years as of their date of issue and the futures contract delivery date. The fund is up 7.2% so far this year. Original post

What Should You Do In The Next Bear Market Rally?

Bull markets have corrections. Specifically, long-term uptrends often hit roadblocks where stock assets may pull back by 10%, 14%, even 19%. Those who may have been holding some cash typically benefit from buying into weakness at significantly lower prices. Bear markets have bear market rallies . Selling pressure typically abates long enough to allow buyers to push stocks higher by 10%, 14%, even 19%. During long-term downtrends, however, attempts at “bargain purchases” can exacerbate portfolio losses and damage psychological resolve . Consider what transpired in 2008. In the first half of the year between March and May, the Dow rallied 11% off its lows from 11,740 to 13,028. The ten weeks of “good vibes” had convinced many people that the worst was behind them. They were wrong. Now look at the epic one-week period from October 27, 2008 through November 4, 2008. The Dow catapulted from 8175 to 9675 for a monster 18% rally. Surely the worst had to be in the rear-view mirror, right? Unfortunately, many buyers who bought in those early days of November later found themselves with assets worth roughly 70 cents on the dollar. (Again, attempts to eat directly out of a bear’s paw can exacerbate overall portfolio loss as well as kill one’s psychological commitment to market-based investing.) Not surprisingly, there was a third head-fake. The Dow’s late November mark of 7550 jumped all the way back up to 9034 by the first trading day of 2009. That’s a 19.6% bear market rally that, ultimately, failed to inspire investor confidence. “But Gary,” you protest. “The Dow and the S&P 500 are currently trading between 13%-14% off of there all-time highs. How do you know this isn’t just another stock market correction in a longer-term uptrend?” I don’t know for sure. Nobody can. I may have made the case for the strong probability that the market had hit the top in the summertime. (Review August’s Market Top? 15 Warning Signs , or July’s 5 Reasons To Lower Your Allocation To Riskier Assets .) Nevertheless, there are no certainties when it comes to percentage moves for stocks, bonds, currencies or commodities. There’s more. If the Fed came to the rescue on a shining white unicorn with QE4 tomorrow, then a bear market for these two indexes might be stopped in its tracks. That is not an endorsement for quantitative easing; rather, it is an acknowledgement that an open-ended 4th iteration of electronic money creation could indeed inflate asset prices yet again. On the flip side, the evidence for why the bear market likely began in May of 2015 is colossal. For example, in bear markets, impressive rallies fail to recapture former high-water marks. Both the S&P 500 and the Dow failed to eclipse respective highs initially set in May – first in July, then again in October. What’s more, the long-term (200-day) moving averages of the indexes began sloping downward in August-September. The failed rallies as well as the negative slope for the Dow Jones Industrials are shown in the chart below. Failed rallies and downward sloping trendlines are only part of the story. In a bull market, investors embrace a wide variety of different risk assets. People go after growth, momentum, small caps, foreign, high yield, MLPs, REITs, IPOs; there is very little in the way of discrimination. As a bull market matures, many gravitate to the safest and largest stocks, eschewing asset groups that they once owned with reckless abandon; they crowd into fewer and fewer companies in fewer and fewer economic sectors. As a bull market transitions to a bear market, falling prices across an array of individual securities and key economic sectors eventually drag down market-cap weighted benchmarks. An observer of U.S. stocks can see the transition from indiscriminate risk-taking to guarded skepticism via breadth indicators. For example, when the bull market is robust, an equal-weighting of stocks in the S&P 500 usually outperforms the market-cap weighted index. As participation in the bull market wanes, and as fewer and fewer corporate shares succeed, equal-weighted proxies typically under-perform their market-cap weighted benchmarks. Not surprisingly, then, by July of 2015, the Guggenheim S&P Equal Weight ETF (NYSEARCA: RSP ) had struggled to make any progress for eight months, even as the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) was close to an all-time record high. Similarly, RSP outperformed SPY right up to April of 2015. The RSP:SPY price ratio demonstrates that it has been in a downtrend ever since. Another measure of breadth is the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Advance/Decline (A/D) Line. It measures the extent to which advancing stocks are outpacing declining stocks, and vice versa. When the Dow and the S&P 500 are near their highs, but the A/D Line is falling, participation in the bull market is becoming increasingly narrow. It follows that narrow participation by stocks listed on the NYSE regularly precedes bearish downturns. In July of 2015, the NYSE A/D Line’s 50-day moving average crossed below its 200-day moving average for the first time since the beginning of the euro-zone crisis in 2011. (See Remember July of 2011? The Stock Market’s Advance Decline Line Remembers .) The Fed launched “Operation Twist” to lower longer-term borrowing costs in late September of 2011 and, in October of 2011, the European Central Bank (ECB) provided a series of bailouts to ailing countries and banks in the European Union. Today, there are no plans for extraordinary U.S. central bank stimulus, only “gradual” stimulus removal. The ongoing deterioration in the A/D Line since July increases the likelihood that the bear will officially come out of hibernation. Unfortunately, the problems are not solely technical in nature. There are precious few bright spots for the U.S. economy. Manufacturing has contracted for 4 consecutive months. The services sector (non-manufacturing) is at a 27-month low. Major financial institutions have raised the odds of a U.S. recession to 40%-50%. Even strength in jobs data ignore the declines in both household income and labor force participation . There’s another way to gauge economic weakness versus economic strength. Specifically, one can examine the spread between 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yields and 2-Year Treasury bond yields. The spread tends to widen during expansion; it typically narrows when there is economic distress. The current spread of less than 1 basis point (.99) is the narrowest since 2009. Meanwhile, going into 2015, nearly every traditional measure of valuation (e.g, price-to-earnings P/E, price-to-sales P/S, CAPE PE10, Tobin’s Q, market-cap-to-GDP, etc.) placed stocks at extremely overvalued levels. Going into 2016, very little had changed because corporate earnings had declined for three consecutive quarters and corporate revenue had declined for four consecutive quarters. The contraction in both top-line sales and bottom-line profits may not mean as much when treasury spreads are widening and/or market breadth is strengthening. However, when these market internals are deteriorating, fundamental valuation suddenly starts to matter again. Many of my moderate growth and income clients at Pacific Park Financial, Inc. remain significantly less exposed to stock risk than they had eighteen months earlier. Then, the reward for a typical allocation of 65%-70% stock (e.g., large-cap, mid-cap, small-cap, foreign, etc.) was worthy of the risk. Since that time, a gradual scaling back toward our current allocation of 45%-50% stock – only large-cap U.S. stock – has been decidedly beneficial. We continue to own lower volatility securities via the iShares MSCI USA Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: USMV ), better balance sheet corporations via the iShares MSCI USA Quality Factor ETF (NYSEARCA: QUAL ) and dividend aristocrats via the SPDR Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA: SDY ). Would I make a tactical decision to lower the current allocation to stock even further? If market internals (e.g., breath, credit spreads, etc.) continue to weaken alongside increasing economic strain, I would use the inevitable bear market rallies to lower the allocation from 45%-50% U.S. stock to 35%-40% U.S. stock. Moreover, I might increase exposure to ETFs that track the FTSE Multi-Asset Stock Hedge Index . The “MASH” Index currently boasts a 20% differential with the S&P 500 over the past 3 months. 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.

ETF Deathwatch For February 2016: Here Come The Currency-Hedged ETFs

Last year, hedging was a popular strategy employed by new ETFs coming to market. I referred to it as a “land rush,” with sponsors throwing caution to the wind in their quest to achieve first-mover status. In my year-end summary , I identified 74 new ETFs following this theme. Of these, 57 have currency hedges, 12 use various equity hedges (mostly long/short portfolios), and five use interest-rate hedging to help mitigate the impact of rising interest rates on bond holdings. With no real investor demand for many of these funds, I predicted many would end up here on ETF Deathwatch. This month, more than half of the 25 products added to ETF Deathwatch are hedged ETFs. Two of the additions are interest-rate hedged, one is an equity-hedged fund, and ten use currency hedging. Additionally, two others are based on currency themes (strong U.S. dollar and weak U.S. dollar), although they do not use any direct currency hedging. At the end of 2015, there were 87 currency-hedged ETFs with a median asset level of just $5.25 million, well below the level required for profitability. If this supply glut wasn’t enough, funds using currency hedging 2.0 are now coming on stream. These second-generation currency-hedged ETFs automatically adjust their currency exposure based on market conditions. This is a feature I believe many investors will appreciate, and it will further reduce demand for funds using the old first-generation static approach to hedging. Thirteen products came off of ETF Deathwatch this month. Nine were the result of improved health, and four are no longer with us. The net increase of 12 puts the total count at 398, consisting of 295 ETFs and 103 ETNs. The average asset level of products on ETF Deathwatch dropped from $6.9 million to $6.3 million, and the quantity of products with less than $2 million jumped from 83 to 91. The average age decreased from 48.8 to 47.8 months, and the number of products more than five years old decreased from 137 to 134.Here is the Complete List of 398 ETFs and ETNs on ETF Deathwatch for February 2016 compiled using the objective ETF Deathwatch Criteria . The 25 ETFs and ETNs added to ETF Deathwatch for February: ALPS Enhanced Put Write Strategy (NYSEARCA: PUTX ) ALPS Sector Leaders (NYSEARCA: SLDR ) ALPS Sector Low Volatility (NYSEARCA: SLOW ) Deutsche X-trackers MSCI ACAP x-Japan Hedged (NYSEARCA: DBAP ) ELEMENTS S&P Commodity Trends Indicator ETN (NYSEARCA: LSC ) ETRACS ISE Exclusively Homebuilders ETN (NYSEARCA: HOMX ) GaveKal Knowledge Leaders Developed World (NYSEARCA: KLDW ) GaveKal Knowledge Leaders Emerging Markets (NYSEARCA: KLEM ) Global X SuperDividend Alternatives (NASDAQ: ALTY ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI ACWI (NYSEARCA: HACW ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI ACWI ex U.S. (NYSEARCA: HAWX ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI Australia (NYSEARCA: HAUD ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI Canada (NYSEARCA: HEWC ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI EAFE Small-Cap (NYSEARCA: HSCZ ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI Mexico (NYSEARCA: HEWW ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI United Kingdom (NYSEARCA: HEWU ) iShares Interest Rate Hedged 10+ Year Credit Bond (NYSEARCA: CLYH ) iShares Interest Rate Hedged Emerging Market Bond (NYSEARCA: EMBH ) Market Vectors Morningstar International Moat (NYSEARCA: MOTI ) PureFunds ISE Big Data ( BDAT ) SPDR BofA Merrill Lynch Emerging Markets Corp Bond (NYSEARCA: EMCD ) WisdomTree Global ex-U.S. Hedged Dividend (NYSEARCA: DXUS ) WisdomTree International Hedged Equity (HDWM) WisdomTree Strong Dollar U.S. Equity (NYSEARCA: USSD ) WisdomTree Weak Dollar U.S. Equity (NYSEARCA: USWD ) The 9 ETPs removed from ETF Deathwatch due to improved health: Deutsche X-trackers Muni Infrastructure Revenue Bond (NYSEARCA: RVNU ) First Trust International Multi-Asset Diversified Income (NASDAQ: YDIV ) First Trust Low Duration Mortgage Opportunities (NASDAQ: LMBS ) FlexShares Credit-Scored US Corporate Bond (NASDAQ: SKOR ) iShares MSCI International Developed Value Factor (NYSEARCA: IVLU ) Oppenheimer ADR Revenue (NYSEARCA: RTR ) Sit Rising Rate ETF (NYSEARCA: RISE ) SPDR S&P 1500 Momentum Tilt (NYSEARCA: MMTM ) WisdomTree Europe Quality Dividend Growth (NYSEARCA: EUDG ) The 4 ETPs removed from ETF Deathwatch due to delisting: CS X-Links Commodity Benchmark ETN (NYSEARCA: CSCB ) Columbia Large Cap Growth (NYSEARCA: RPX ) Columbia Select Large Cap Growth (NYSEARCA: RWG ) Columbia Select Large Cap Value (NYSEARCA: GVT ) ETF Deathwatch Archives Disclosure: Author has no positions in any of the securities mentioned and no positions in any of the companies or ETF sponsors mentioned. No income, revenue, or other compensation (either directly or indirectly) is received from, or on behalf of, any of the companies or ETF sponsors mentioned. Original Post