Tag Archives: investing

Transport ETFs Modestly Up On Q3 Earnings

Unlike the second quarter, the transportation sector is headed for a solid Q3 earnings season, lagging only auto. This is especially true as total earnings from 97.8% of the sector’s total market capitalization reported are up 22.5% while revenues declined 1.2%. This is much better than Q2 earnings growth of 9.4% and revenue decline of 1.9% for the same period. Further, earnings surprises were predominantly solid with 84.6% of the companies beating earnings estimates and 30.8% beating on revenues compared with earnings and revenue beat ratios of 58.3% and 8.3%, respectively for Q2. For a better understanding, let’s dig into earnings results of some well-known industry players: Transportation Earnings in Focus The world’s largest package delivery company – United Parcel Service (NYSE: UPS ) – beat our earnings estimate by a couple of cents but revenues of $14.2 billion fell shy of our estimate of $14.35 billion. The company now expects earnings per share on the high end of the previous guidance of $5.05-$5.30 for fiscal 2015, which represents 6-12% growth on an annual basis. The Zacks Consensus Estimate at the time of earnings release was pegged at $5.27. Union Pacific (NYSE: UNP ) , the U.S. largest railroad, reported earnings of $1.50 per share outpacing the Zacks Consensus Estimate by seven cents but revenues of $5.56 billion fell short of our estimate of $5.65 billion. Other major railroads like CSX Corp. (NYSE: CSX ) and Kansas City Southern (NYSE: KSU ) also missed on revenues. At CSX, revenues lagged the Zacks Consensus Estimate by $68 million while at KSU revenues missed by $8 million. However, CSX outpaced our earnings estimate by couple of cents while KSU missed our earnings estimate by a penny. Ryder Systems (NYSE: R ) , the leader in supply chain management and fleet management services, topped the bottom line but lagged the top line. Earnings per share of $1.74 came above the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.72 while revenues of $1.67 billion were below our estimate of $1.72 billion. The two largest U.S. airlines – Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL ) and United Continental (NYSE: UAL ) – beat our earnings estimates by three cents and four cents, respectively. Revenues for Delta were slightly below the Zacks Consensus Estimate but above for United Continental (read: Highflier Airlines Earnings: Time for JETS ETF ). Last but not the least, earnings for the leading trucking carrier – J.B. Hunt (NASDAQ: JBHT ) – also came in above the Zacks Consensus Estimate by three cents and revenues were $30 million below our estimate. ETFs in Focus Despite the slew of earnings beat, many stocks have seen rough performances. As a result, the transport ETFs has been modestly up over the past 15 days. Both the iShares Dow Jones Transportation Average Fund (NYSEARCA: IYT ) and the SPDR S&P Transportation ETF (NYSEARCA: XTN ) are up 0.4% and 0.2%, respectively. Both funds have a Zacks ETF Rank of 3 or ‘Hold’ rating with a High risk outlook (see: all the Industrials ETFs here ). IYT The fund tracks the Dow Jones Transportation Average Index, giving investors exposure to a small basket of 21 securities. The fund has a certain tilt toward large cap stocks at 49% while mid and small caps account for 31% and 20% share, respectively, in the basket. The product is heavily concentrated on the top firm – FedEx (NYSE: FDX ) – at 11.9%, followed by UPS (8%), UNP (6.8%) and KSU (6.3%). From a sector perspective, air freight & logistics takes the top spot with more than one-fourth of the portfolio while trucking, airlines and railroads round off to the next three spots with double-digit exposure each. The fund has accumulated nearly $965 million in AUM while sees solid trading volume of more than 409,000 shares a day. It charges 43 bps in annual fees. XTN This fund uses an almost equal weight methodology for each security by tracking the S&P Transportation Select Industry Index. Holding 49 stocks in its basket with AUM of $270 million, each security accounts for less than 3.4% of total assets. The ETF is skewed toward small caps at 55% while the rest is evenly split between mid and large caps. About one-third of the portfolio is dominated by trucking, while airlines takes another one-fourth share. Airfreight & logistics, and railroads also make up for a double-digit allocation each. The fund charges 35 bps in fees per year from investors and trades in a moderate volume of nearly 96,000 shares a day. Link to the original post on Zacks.com

Financial Markets Have Not Been Handing Out Participation Trophies

In the financial markets, different asset types are always competing for our investing dollars. Moreover, when a particular asset class like U.S. stocks has only a handful of companies holding up a benchmark like the S&P 500, the probability for a revolt by the collective will of all corporate shares rises immensely. This is precisely what transpired in the August-September sell-off. The internal weakness across components of popular benchmarks like the Russell 1000, S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 should not be ignored. I watch more football than I should. It may have something to do with the ability to see any game or any highlight on DirecTV in real time. Or perhaps there are few parenting responsibilities with my 19-year old daughter attending college 60 miles south of our Orange County home. Or maybe it’s a semi-conscious desire to avoid working out at the nearby LA Fitness. Regardless, I could barely keep my eyes open during Monday night’s contest between the Colts and the Panthers. Tedious? I thought it was a “Snooze Fest.” I found myself cheering more for a Kia car commercial than the yawn producing match-up on the field. In case you missed the advertisement, the camera focuses in on a father who is beaming with pride. His son’s team has just finished an entire season without losing a single game. The dad asks his child to see the trophy and it reads, “Participant.” Disdainfully, he proceeds to remove the flimsy tag and write in the word, “Champs.” Yes, I am one of those old school thinkers who believes that participation is its own reward and that it does not need to be acknowledged. You should get an “A” for performance, not for effort. You should get a raise for what you bring to a conference table beyond your backside. “Showing up” is not deserving of the same pay, the same grades or the same accolades as those who are achieving more. My ideas of morality and social sensibility notwithstanding, there are times when things still get out of whack. Imagine a classroom where two standouts receive “As” and thirty-two others receive “Fs.” Where are the Bs, Cs and Ds? Chances are, a teacher is failing his/her students. Similarly, picture a company with three executives earning tens of millions and three thousand employees earning minimum wage. Where are the highly compensated folks, the relatively well-paid skilled producers and the modestly compensated workers? In this scenario, the extent of the income inequality is likely to end in revolt. In the financial markets, different asset types are always competing for our investing dollars. Moreover, when a particular asset class like U.S. stocks has only a handful of companies holding up a benchmark like the S&P 500, the probability for a revolt by the collective will of all corporate shares rises immensely. This is precisely what transpired in the August-September sell-off. Market participation (a.k.a. “market breadth”) broke down well in advance of the sell-off. Of course, the October rally has seen participation in a bullish uptrend improve dramatically. Nearly 72% of S&P 500 stocks now exhibit bullish uptrends. That’s not far from the 75% participation that existed in the first five months of 2015. On the other hand, equal-weighted ETFs continuing to warn that things are less than hunky-dory. Consider the performance of the Guggenheim S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF (NYSEARCA: RSP ) at different periods in the current U.S. stock bull. Year-to-date, RSP is underperforming the S&P 500 SPDR Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ). This suggests that market-cap leading components (e.g., Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ), Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT ), etc.) have been doing the heavy sledding and that, when one weights all of the companies in the S&P 500 evenly, the bull market is less healthy across the entire landscape than many would like to admit. Now gander at the outperformance of RSP over SPY in the three years prior. During the three-year run (2012-2014), strong gains across the participant components of the S&P 500 indicated a broader willingness to take risk than in the present environment. Ironically, the circumstances within the NASDAQ 100 are eerily similar. Take a look at the performance of the First Trust NASDAQ-100 Equal Weight Index ETF (NASDAQ: QQEW ) versus the PowerShares QQQ Trust ETF (NASDAQ: QQQ ) at different periods. Year-to-date, QQEW is underperforming QQQ. Once again, this is evidence of less-than-ideal participation. During the three years prior, however, QQEW kept pace with QQQ. The relative underperformance of equal-weighted ETFs can be observed across numerous sectors as well. Year-to-date since the summertime, the G uggenheim S&P Equal Weight Technology ETF (NYSEARCA: RYT ) is struggling relative to the market-cap weighted Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLK ). Less participation (a.k.a. less market breadth) is typically an undesirable omen. Once again, take note of the healthier participation in the previous three years. None of these observations definitively prove that the current rally is doomed in the near-term. On the contrary. As discussed last in last week’s commentary on our current allocation for moderate growth and income clients , we embraced the successful retest of the August lows for SPY and QQQ in late September. We bumped the 50% equity component up to 60%, which is roughly 5% shy of a 65-35 standard. That said, the internal weakness across components of popular benchmarks like the Russell 1000, S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 should not be ignored. If that weakness intensifies, as it did in in May, June and July of 2015, we would likely raise cash levels as we did in the summertime. What’s more, investors should keep in mind that bond investors are still somewhat skeptical about the sustainability of the stock rally beyond calendar year 2015. The spread between high yield (BBB) and comparable treasuries is still elevated and the spread is still greater than what it was in mid-September. (click to enlarge) For Gary’s latest podcast, click here . 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.

BlackRock Launches Double-Smart-Beta ETF Suite

5 new smart-beta ETFs launched by iShares. IShares adds another layer of smart-beta to currency-hedged ETFs. Minimum volatility helps further stabilize returns on already-popular ETFs. By Remzi Gokmen and Tom Lydon Blackrock has added to it’s iShares ETF suite by bulking up its smart-beta offerings with 5 new ETFs. The new exchange traded funds look to double their smart-beta approach by combining the minimum volatility strategy with a currency-hedged one. Their minimum volatility ETFs aim to curb some of the spikes that occur in a up and down market while staying invested while the currency-hedging approach has exploded this year with the forex market at heightened volatility and the dollar appreciating and cutting into investor’s international returns. Below are the names and tickers for the new suite. All will trade on the BATS exchange. iShares Currency Hedged MSCI ACWI Minimum Volatility ETF (BATS: HACV ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI EAFE Minimum Volatility ETF (BATS: HEFV ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI EM Minimum Volatility ETF (BATS: HEMV ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI Europe Minimum Volatility ETF (BATS: HEUV ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI Europe Small-Cap ETF (BATS: HEUS ) Robert Nestor, Managing Director and Head of iShares Smart Beta Strategy at Blackrock, said: Our minimum volatility suite allows investors the opportunity to gain broad market exposure and the potential for long-term growth, with the potential for less risk. Extending the suite to include currency hedged funds means those investors looking for broad minimum volatility exposure now have the added flexibility to do so on a hedged or unhedged basis, depending on their preferences. The iShares minimum volatility suite has enjoyed a great year with $2.8bn of net inflows this year and a total of $15.1bn in assets under management. iShares expansion into the smart-beta space has been exponential as they now have $125bn in assets under management in their smart beta products globally. The ETFs will track MSCI indexes that their minimum volatility cousins are already indexing. Diana Tidd, Managing Director and Global Head of MSCI Equity Index Products said: With the continued growth of global investing, the importance of managing currency exposures has moved to the forefront of many investors’ minds. Likewise, a growing number of investors are targeting specific factor exposures such as low volatility. MSCI’s Minimum Volatility 100% Hedged to USD Indexes reflect the performance of the combination of these two investment strategies. We are pleased BlackRock has further expanded their suite of iShares ETFs based on MSCI Minimum Volatility Indexes. The lone product in the suite that doesn’t feature a minimum volatility approach is HEUS. HEUS takes a small-cap spin to their European currency-hedged strategy. Small-caps tend to surge in recovery environments and Mario Draghi’s recent economic stimulus measure’s may stoke smaller enterprises’ growth. A snapshot of a popular iShares minimum volatility ETF shows some good signs. HEMV will duplicate the results of the iShares MSCI Europe Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: EUMV ) with the currency-hedged spin, and EUMV kicked above its 200 day moving average in the October rally. (click to enlarge)