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Looking For Juicy Income? New EU Dividend ETF Is Here

European stocks may have been battered by the long-running Greek debt crisis, but when it comes to earning juicy dividends, they don’t turn down investors. If you look at both the MSCI Europe Index (which tracks large- and mid-cap companies across 15 developed markets in Europe) and the STOXX Europe 600 Index (a benchmark of small, midsize and large companies in Europe), dividend yield is handsome at 3.4% (as of August 31, 2015). This compares with a dividend yield of 2.1% paid by Standard & Poor’s 500 Index companies (as of September 17, 2015). There are mainly two good reasons for the European companies to pay fat dividends. Firstly, it is the weaker euro which helps ballooning up exports and therefore the companies’ top lines. Secondly, the European Central Bank’s €1.1 trillion ($1.2 trillion) or €60 billion-a-month quantitative easing program has instilled positive sentiment into the economy. At this juncture, investors should definitely take a look at the newly launched MSCI Europe Dividend Growers ETF (NYSEARCA: EUDV ) by ProShares. EUDV tracks the performance of the MSCI Europe Dividend Masters Index focusing on 51 MSCI Europe companies that have increased dividend payments each year for at least 10 consecutive years. The index contains a minimum of 25 stocks which are equally weighted. No single sector can compose more than 30% of the index and no single country may compose more than 50% of the index. The index has a dividend yield of 3.07%. Seadrill Ltd. (NYSE: SDRL ), BHP Billiton Plc (NYSE: BBL ) and Amec Foster Wheeler Plc ( OTC:AMCBF ) are the top three holdings in the fund with a share of 2.16%, 2.13% and 2.07%, respectively. The top 10 companies constitute 20.4% of the fund. As far as sector allocation is concerned, Industrials (19.54%), Healthcare (17.6%) and Consumer Staples (17.43%) make up the top three positions. Considering country-wise allocation, the fund is heavily biased toward U.K. with a 49.49% share while France and Switzerland occupy the second and third positions with 11.6% and 9.61% shares, respectively. The fund charges 55 bps in fees. How Does It Fit In A Portfolio? The fund provides a good opportunity for income-hungry investors willing to put capital in a market that is experiencing heightened manufacturing and trading activities. In August, the Markit Eurozone Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (“PMI”), which measures the performance of the manufacturing sector, came in at 52.3, which is a tad lower than 52.4 in July, but much higher than 50.7 last year. Meanwhile, Services PMI rose to 54.4 in the month from 54.0 in July. A PMI reading below 50.0 indicates sluggish activity, but a reading above that level indicates increasing activity. On the other hand, Eurozone’s trade surplus in July surged 48.1% to €31.4 billion ($35.5 billion) from €21.2 billion ($24 billion) a year ago, setting a new record. Exports went up 7% on a year-on-year basis while imports rose only 1% in the month on falling energy costs. In the first seven months of the year, exports also escalated 7% year over year while imports grew 2%, leading to a surplus of €146.5 billion ($165.8 billion) compared with a surplus of only €97.1 billion ($109.9 billion) in the period January-July 2014. Enhanced manufacturing and trading activities bode well for the companies paying hefty dividend to its stakeholders making this fund a lucrative option. ETF Competition Although ProShares specifically targets companies that have a good track record of year-over-year dividend growth, there are a couple of funds worth mentioning here that also track the high dividend-paying equity market in Europe. These are the WisdomTree Europe SmallCap Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA: DFE ) and the First Trust Dow Jones STOXX European Select Dividend 30 Index ETF (NYSEARCA: FDD ). DFE tracks the WisdomTree Europe SmallCap Dividend Index targeting the small-cap dividend-paying companies in Europe and manages a robust asset base of $1 billion. On the other hand, FDD with an AUM of roughly $178 million replicates the STOXX Europe Select Dividend 30 Index targeting high dividend-yielding companies across 18 European countries. Notably, the STOXX Europe Select Dividend 30 Index consists of companies from the STOXX Europe 600 Index having a positive five-year dividend-per-share growth. DFE and FDD are almost equally costly with expense ratios of 0.58% and 0.60%, respectively. However, on the yield front, FDD does a better job at 4.55% compared with DFE (2.68%). Link to the original publication on Zacks.com

ETFs Driving Big Gains For Oil Shorts

Summary Money moving in and out of long and short oil ETFs, as low oil price visibility creates more uncertainty. Retail investors should focus on only holding for a very limited time period if they go short. There is nothing to suggest oil prices can rise to sustainable levels in the near future. Traders with a high tolerance for leveraged risk have been making a killing by shorting oil in 2015, led by a number of ETFs that have been, in some cases, up well over 200 percent on the year. There has been a lot more volatility than usual in these types of instruments, as headlines contradicting one another on the movement of the price of oil have money moving in an out of ETFs catering to short and long outlooks for oil. Some large players have been short oil all year, but for the retail investor, it would be wise to take a position in these ETFs for a very short period of time. Some ETFs even suggest and encourage that to their investors, saying in many cases they’re built to hold a position for only one day. All the volatility and inflows and outflows reinforce the fact no one really knows where the price of oil will go, with some like Goldman Sachs saying it could plunge to as low as $20 per barrel, and OPEC recently saying it’s looking at it rebounding to $80 per barrel. In the case of OPEC, that’s primarily because it believes a decrease in American production will begin to offset excess inventory, and start to drive up prices. That is based upon its assessment it has beaten down a lot of the tight or shale oil drillers, which it believes will be a sustainable event. I disagree with that because of the plethora of drilled but uncompleted (DUC) wells, which can quickly and inexpensively be brought online in response to an increase in the price of oil. The truth is, as the market is showing, it could go either way. ETF oil shorting products Before getting into a couple of products and some interesting facts about their performance and why money has been changing hands, it’s worth looking at a couple of elements related to these types of ETFs. As already mentioned, most if not all retail investors should be thinking very limited holding periods for ETFs that short oil. They are extremely volatile, and can move up or down very quickly. If using leverage to make the trade, when including daily rebalancing, the short term movement can be very different than what is expected of the long-term performance data of the ETF or ETN. At this time risk/reward is worth the plunge for those that have some spare capital and a high tolerance for risk. There has to be the belief the price of oil will continue to go down to enter this play. I’m not in this particular play at this time, but I’ve done it with other commodities, and there is a lot of money to be made if you’re right in your assessment of the market. That said, leverage is becoming more of a risk as things get murkier, as conflicting outlooks suggest the underlying catalysts for either direction are no longer as sure – at least in the mind of traders – as they were earlier in the year. That’s one of the major reasons, even as oil has remained under pressure, a lot of money has been taken off the table. VelocityShares 3x Inverse Crude Oil ETN (NYSEARCA: DWTI ) Since DWTI has been one of the top performers in the sector in 2015, we’ll take a look at it first. DWTI offers 3x or 300% exposure to how the S&P GSCI Crude Oil Index ER performs on a daily basis. It does have a fairly high annual fee of 1.35 percent. Since this and others are so volatile, I’m not going to even attempt to look at how much it’s up for the year. It changes significantly in a very short period of time, as you can see in the chart below. Its prospectus states it’s “suitable” to be held by most investors for one day. This is a short-term play where it simply doesn’t matter. Again, larger investors can hold longer if they believe the trend will remain down, but now that the price of oil has fallen so much over the last year, leveraged players are under increasing risk if things surprisingly and abruptly turn around. Daily average volume is a solid 1.8 million shares, but as with its share price, its asset base can be very volatile. (click to enlarge) source: YahooFinance PowerShares DB Crude Oil Short ETN (NYSEARCA: SZO ) Since SZO doesn’t use leverage, it is probably one of the safer instruments in this space, if the term ‘safe’ can be applied. It offers inverse exposure to WTI crude, tracking the Deutsche Bank Liquid Commodity Index, which covers how well a group of oil futures contracts are performing. Over the last three months it is up about 30 percent, and has an expense ratio of 0.75 percent. It trades far less than DWTI, with a 3-month daily average of approximately 35,000 shares. Not nearly as popular as DWTI, it only has net assets of about $28.59 million. (click to enlarge) source: YahooFinance ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil ETF (NYSEARCA: SCO ) My final short to look at is SCO; its goal is to attempt to provide double the daily inverse return of the performance of the Bloomberg WTI Crude Oil Subindex. Over the last three months it has generated a return of about 56 percent. Total expenses amount to 95 basis points. I wanted to highlight SCO because it has been one of the top performing ETFs this year, and yet over $175 million has been removed from assets, according to Bloomberg. That points to growing skittishness over the uncertainty the price of oil is going to go. (click to enlarge) source: YahooFinance The United States Oil ETF (NYSEARCA: USO ) Since USO is a long play on oil it is included to confirm there is a lot of money moving in and out of the long and short ETFs, and not all of it is intuitive. With USO, it has enjoyed near $2.75 billion in new cash investment, even though it has lost over 50 percent of its value so far in the last twelve months. There is no doubt this represents investors believing there is going to be a rebound in oil prices; at least in the short term. This, combined with the outflows from SZO, reiterate concerns over the risk associated with using leverage to short oil, and having no visibility on where the price of oil is going. (click to enlarge) source: YahooFinance Conclusion Shorting oil using ETFs has been very lucrative this year, and my thought is there is a more room to make money for those shorting oil within a limited time frame. For myself, I wouldn’t use leverage any longer because of the low visibility factor concerning oil prices, and I wouldn’t stay in longer than a day. I’m primarily speaking to retail investors here, although until there is more clarity in the short term, larger investors will likely play by similar rules, if they continue to use a shorting strategy in oil at all. My final thought concerning oil is a lot of the headlines are misleading because of the fact OPEC know larger shale producers can put production on hold if the price of oil continues to fall, and if it rebounds, can quickly respond within less than a month with its DUC wells. So the idea it can shut down a competitor like it has in the past, in my opinion, is a misguided one. Shale oil isn’t Russian oil or other types of oil that may take a lot of time to get back into production once it has been shut down. Companies with shale exposure can simply bide their time and wait until the price of oil moves up, and they can almost immediately start production. OPEC can do nothing to stop the larger shale companies. And even if the smaller capitalized companies go out of business, it doesn’t take away the fact the oil is still there. Larger companies will acquire the assets. OPEC has signaled it will continue to produce oil in order to maintain market share. While that has resulted in U.S. companies cutting back on production, there is so much supply out there, it will take a lot more to provide support for oil prices. There is a message being sent, but OPEC doesn’t have the teeth it had before shale, and going forward it has to deal with the fact that once production is lowered and prices start going up, shale companies will simply ramp up production and the cycle will continue. That means eventually OPEC will have to lower production if oil price are to increase at sustainable levels. With Russia so dependent on its oil for revenue, it’s not going to do so, which means this is a long-term trend that at this time, doesn’t have an answer outside of OPEC losing market share. For that reason these ETFs built to take advantage of low oil prices, will make money for those willing to take the risk and holding for very short periods of time. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Still Believe In Goldman’s $20 Oil? Go Short With These ETFs

Oil has become the most perplexing commodity this year with wild swings in recent weeks. The latest and worst culprit is the China meltdown with global repercussions that is weighing heavily on demand. Further, ever-increasing production and a large supply glut are tempering its appeal across the board. As the Fed kept the rates on hold at its latest meeting on Thursday, oil price tumbled about 5% the next day. This is because the Fed’s decision of no rates hike led to further worries over the health of the global economy and will likely put more pressure on the price of oil. Notably, both U.S. and Brent crude have plunged about 15% in the year-to-date time frame with some forecasting a bigger drop in the days ahead. In particular, Goldman predicts that crude price could slide to $20 per barrel if production cuts fail to clear supply glut and new investments in the oil shale industry are not reduced (read: ” Oil ETFs Slide Again: More Pain in Store? “). Behind the Lower Forecast The demand and supply dynamics for oil is becoming worse by the day. This is especially true, as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has pumped out maximum oil in more than three years to maintain market share. Iran is looking to boost its production once the Tehran sanctions are lifted and inventories continue being built up. Additionally, oil production in the U.S. is hovering around its record level and crude stockpiles remain about 100 million barrels above the five-year seasonal average. However, the International Energy Agency (IEA) believes that the recent oil slump would force both the U.S. and other non-OPEC producers like Russia and the North Sea to cut their production sharply next year. It expects non-OPEC supply to reduce by 0.5 million barrels per day, the biggest decline in more than two decades, to 57.7 million barrels per day next year. Meanwhile, shale oil production in the U.S. will drop by 385,000 barrels per day. On the demand side, the agency expects global oil demand to climb to a five-year high of 1.7 million barrels per day this year and moderate to an increase of 1.4 million barrels per day next year (read: ” Positive News Flow Sparks Off Rally in Oil ETFs “). Though reduced output from non-OPEC and higher demand could check the global supply glut, the oil market will still remain oversupplied. As a result, Goldman lowered its 2016 price target for Brent and crude (WTI) to $49.50 per barrel and $45 per barrel from $62 and $57, respectively. Further, it also warned of crude hitting as low as $20 per barrel. How to Play? Given the bearish fundamentals, the appeal for oil will remain dull in the months ahead. This might compel investors to make a short play on the commodity, especially if they believe in Goldman. For those investors, while futures contracts or short-stock approaches are possibilities, there are a host of risk inverse oil ETF options that prevent investors from losing more than their initial investment. Below, we highlight some of these ETFs and the key differences between them: The United States Short Oil ETF (NYSEARCA: DNO ) This is an unpopular and liquid ETF in the oil space with an AUM of $24.7 million and average daily volume of 32,000 shares. The fund seeks to match the inverse performance of the spot price of light sweet crude oil WTI. It charges 60 bps in fees per year from investors and has gained about 28.2% in the trailing 13-week period. PowerShares DB Crude Oil Short ETN (NYSEARCA: SZO ) This is an ETN option and arguably the least risky choice in this space as it provides inverse exposure to the WTI crude without any leverage. It tracks the Deutsche Bank Liquid Commodity Index – Oil – which measures the performance of the basket of oil futures contracts. The note is unpopular as depicted by an AUM of $28.5 million and average daily volume of nearly 35,000 shares a day. Expense ratio came in at 0.75%. The ETN gained 30.2% over the last 13-week period. ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil ETF (NYSEARCA: SCO ) This fund seeks to deliver twice (2x or 200%) the inverse return of the daily performance of the Bloomberg WTI Crude Oil Subindex. It has attracted $152.7 million in its asset base and charges 95 bps in fees and expenses. Volume is solid as it exchanges nearly 1.7 million shares in hand per day. The ETF returned about 56% over the last 13 weeks (read: ” Oil Tumbles to Six-Year Low: ETF Tale of Two Sides “). PowerShares DB Crude Oil Double Short ETN (NYSEARCA: DTO ) This is also an ETN option providing 2x inverse exposure to the Deutsche Bank Liquid Commodity Index-Light Crude, which tracks the short performance of a basket of oil futures contracts. It has amassed $47.7 million in its asset base and trades in a moderate daily volume of roughly 103,000 shares. The product charges 75 bps in fees per year from investors and is up 28.3% in the same time frame. VelocityShares 3x Inverse Crude Oil ETN (NYSEARCA: DWTI ) This product provides 3x or 300% exposure to the daily performance of the S&P GSCI Crude Oil Index Excess Return. The ETN is a bit pricey as it charges 1.35% in annual fees while average daily volume is good at over 1.8 million shares. It has amassed $222.6 million in its asset base and delivered whopping returns of nearly 72.2% in the same period. Bottom Line As a caveat, investors should note that such products are extremely volatile and suitable only for short-term traders. Additionally, the daily rebalancing – when combined with leverage – may make these products deviate significantly from the expected long-term performance figures. Still, for those ETF investors who believe in Goldman and are bearish on oil, either of the above products could make an interesting choice. Clearly, a near-term short could be intriguing for those with high-risk tolerance, and a belief that the “trend is a friend” in this corner of the investing world. Original Post