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What Do 2014 Winners Say About 2015?

Summary The yield curve flattened in 2014 as short-term rates increased and long-term rates declined. Utilities benefited from lower long-term rates and is set to finish the year as the best performing sector. The U.S. dollar rally in 2014 looks like the early stage of a much larger rally. One of the biggest trends in 2014, for both length of time and the size of the move, was the bull market in long-term government bonds. The 30-year U.S. Treasury bond will finish the year near its highest level in decades. The 10-year treasury yield of nearly 2.2 percent is off the lows set in 2012, but near the levels reached at the depth of the 2008 financial crisis. There may even be room to move lower because that yield looks plentiful next to German and Japanese 10-year government bonds, which yield a paltry 0.55 percent and 0.33 percent, respectively. Investors who purchased iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury (NYSEARCA: TLT ) at the start of the year would be sitting on gains of more than 26 percent as of December 29. That is competitive with the best performing S&P 500 sectors in 2014 and gives it a better than 10 percent lead on both the S&P 500 Index and the Nasdaq this year. As for those best performing sectors, utilities and healthcare are set to grab the top two spots. (click to enlarge) In the currency market, a bull rally in the U.S. dollar kicked off in mid-summer against the yen and euro, and this extended to emerging market currencies by the start of autumn. The U.S. dollar heads into 2015 in a widespread bull market against all major currencies, with even the Chinese yuan showing signs of weakness. A Look Back At Interest Rates In 2014 This year started with investors expecting a rise in interest rates after the Federal Reserve began tapering its asset purchases in December 2013. The Fed ended its third round of quantitative easing (QE3) in October, but history proved superior to expectations: each time the Federal Reserve has exited quantitative easing, interest rates moved lower, not higher, and this time was no different. Rates peaked at the start of the year and never looked back, beginning an almost uninterrupted slide that has yet to finish. (click to enlarge) Economic growth failed to spur general rate increases. GDP growth dipped in the first quarter, then picked up strongly in the subsequent quarters, eventually climbing to 5.0 percent annualized growth in the third quarter. Despite these robust growth numbers, long-term bonds will close out 2014 at or near their highs for the year. Interest rates didn’t fall across the board though. The 2-year treasury yield has been rising since the Federal Reserve announced the taper in May 2013. The 5-year treasury yield didn’t gain in 2014, but it didn’t fall either. (click to enlarge) (click to enlarge) Rising short-term rates and stable or falling long-term interest rates makes for a flatter yield curve. A flat yield curve usually occurs in the middle of an economic expansion, when the economy is firing on all cylinders. Sector Performance Utilities and healthcare are the best performing S&P 500 sectors by a wide margin in 2014. Utilities last delivered a sector topping performance in 2011, when long-term interest rates sank to their lowest point in decades and stocks generally struggled-the S&P 500 Index gained only 2.1 percent that year. Going back further, utilities topped the list of S&P 500 sectors in 2006 as well. Investors with good memories will remember many early recession calls at that time due to a flat yield curve. Healthcare and utilities get lumped in with consumer staples as “defensive” sectors, but the strength seen in these sectors doesn’t indicate a weak market ahead. Healthcare has benefited mightily from the performance of the non-defensive biotechnology sector. SPDR Biotechnology (NYSEARCA: XBI ) is up more than 44 percent this year, for example, well ahead of the healthcare sector. If investors were looking for defensive plays, the sector would be led by pharmaceuticals or healthcare providers rather than biotechnology. Utilities are generally a conservative choice for investors, but the utilities sector was in a downtrend from 2009 to 2014. Working in the sector’s favor is a strong economy and lack of exposure to foreign markets. (click to enlarge) Currency Markets The U.S. Dollar Index broke out to a multi-year high in 2014 and will finish the year near its highs. The greenback was aided by six factors. First, the Federal Reserve tightened monetary policy with its exit from QE. Second, the European Central Bank is moving towards loosening monetary policy with its own version quantitative easing. Third, the Bank of Japan did a surprise expansion of QE on Halloween. Fourth, the collapse in oil prices dragged emerging market currencies lower. Fifth, China’s rebalancing has weakened emerging markets by reducing commodities demand. Sixth, the U.S. economy is among the strongest of the developed economies. The chart below is a price ratio of PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Index Bullish Fund (NYSEARCA: UUP ) versus SPDR S&P 500 (NYSEARCA: SPY ). It shows that since July, investors could have earned more by investing in the U.S. dollar (going short a basket of foreign currencies that make up the dollar index) than from stocks. This is surprising for a bullish phase of the market-since 2008, U.S. dollar rallies have typically come along with stock market corrections. (click to enlarge) There is a lot of positive sentiment around the U.S. dollar, but structurally the global economy is still short the U.S. dollar. Well into 2014, for instance, Chinese property developers were borrowing in U.S. dollars . An extended U.S. dollar rally could be the only fuel needed for an even bigger and longer U.S. dollar rally if borrowers in emerging markets are forced to hedge their dollar exposure or repay debt. Rising interest rates in the United States, a bias towards rate cuts in China, plus easy money in Europe and Japan, puts the greenback in a strong position in 2015. What It All Says for 2015 Although sector performance in 2014 flashes a caution light, the yield curve is flattening, not flat. The yield curve would need to flatten much more before it would signal a possible recession, but the Federal Reserve isn’t going to raise rates enough to flatten out the yield curve in 2015. The U.S. economy continues to expand and the political situation is favorable for stocks. The Republican Congress and President Obama are unlikely to agree on much, but they do agree on trade deals and possibly even some tax reform. If the U.S. dollar rally continues into 2015, the macro environment will bear a striking similarity to the late 1990s. A continued rise in short-term interest rates is coming, at least until the Federal Reserve signals otherwise. It remains to be seen how long-term interest rates behave, but they could remain low whether short-term rates rise or fall. Far lower interest rates in Europe and Japan, in addition to the rising U.S. dollar, could keep a lid on interest rates if foreigners move capital into the U.S. bond market. Weakness in high yield debt, the fallout from low oil prices, will also work in favor of government bonds. Among S&P 500 sectors, utilities are most affected by the 10-year interest rates. This chart shows the 10-year treasury bond yield versus the price ratio of SPDR S&P 500 and SPDR Utilities (NYSEARCA: XLU ). The falling black line indicates XLU beating SPY, which has occurred for most of 2014 as interest rates declined. Utilities are unlikely to lead again in 2015, but as long as the rate environment isn’t a drag on returns, the strong economy and relatively high yield of the sector could keep it among the better performing sectors next year. (click to enlarge) If both short-term and long-term interest rates increase, the sector that stands to benefit the most is financials. Any broad ETF such as iShares US Financials (NYSEARCA: IYF ) or SPDR Financials (NYSEARCA: XLF ) delivers good exposure. The strong dollar and strong economy work in its favor, and if the dollar rally is a major trend in 2015, financials will benefit as foreign capital flows into the U.S. through American financial institutions. Under performing sectors such as energy and materials could rebound in 2015 after a dismal 2014, but if the global economy doesn’t pick up, a rally could be short lived. A major issue that could affect healthcare stocks in 2015 is the Supreme Court ruling on Affordable Care Act subsidies. The law as written does not allow subsidies for states without exchanges and if the Supreme Court were to rule against them, the history of the Obama Administration’s handling of the law suggests a period of confusion will follow. A Republican Congress doesn’t make the administration’s job any easier – if a fix requires Congressional approval, they may not get it. Finally, an important test for the euro will come in January. The European Central Bank meets in January and Greece’s election is at the end of the month. Sentiment is negative right now because the market expects the ECB to implement some type of QE policy and Greece to elect an anti-austerity government. If one or both of those things don’t occur, the U.S. Dollar Index, which has nearly 58 percent of its basket in the euro, could run out of steam at least temporarily. Barring such an outcome, the strong U.S. dollar will continue to weigh on stocks denominated in foreign currency. A QE policy in Europe would likely boost equity markets though, so funds that hedge away currency exposure, such as WisdomTree Europe Hedged Equity (NYSEARCA: HEDJ ), will do better than their unhedged competition.

China Internet ETFs Look To Rebound In 2015

Summary Investors can use China-related ETFs to position for a turnaround in Chinese tech names. Closer look at a Chinese tech-specific ETF and broad China ETFs with tech exposure. An overview of the Chinese technology space. By Todd Shriber & Tom Lydon Despite the fervor surrounding Alibaba’s (NYSE: BABA ) September initial public offering, 2014 has been a disappointing year for exchange traded funds with exposure to Chinese Internet stocks. The silver lining in that scenario is that investors can scoop up ETFs such as the KraneShares CSI China Internet Fund (NASDAQ: KWEB ) and the Powershares Golden Dragon Halter USX China Portfolio (NYSEARCA: PGJ ) at favorable prices in anticipation of a significant 2015 rebound by Chinese Internet stocks. BitAuto Holdings (NYSE: BITA ) and Vipshop Holdings (NYSE: VIPS ) “may both advance an additional 32% in the next 12 months, according to average analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg,” according to an article written for the news agency by Belinda Cao and Elena Popina . KWEB, the lone U.S.-listed ETF devoted exclusively to Chinese Internet stocks, allocates about 7.2% of its combined weight to Vipshop and Bitauto. The ETF has traded slightly lower this year. PGJ, the PowerShares offering, is not a dedicated China Internet ETF , but the fund does allocate a combine 58% of its weight to the technology and consumer discretionary sectors. That includes a 10% combined weight to Vipshop and BitAuto. While KWEB and PGJ have struggled this year, more traditional China ETFs with large weights to state-controlled enterprises have jumped amid rallies for those stocks, particularly financial services shares. For example, the iShares China Large-Cap ETF (NYSEARCA: FXI ) , the largest China country-specific ETF, is up 8.5%. Still, market observers see companies with exposure to the Chinese consumer, such as those held by KWEB and PGJ, as favorable plays for investors in 2015. “China’s 632 million Internet users still represent less than half of the country’s population, whose middle class was estimated at 200 million people by Alibaba Chief Executive Officer Jack Ma. Government data indicate the user total could rise to 850 million by 2015,” according to Bloomberg. Much of the 2015 potential and promise for China Internet ETFs will boil down to Alibaba’s ability to impress investors. The stock is KWEB’s largest holding at 10% of the fund’s weight. Although Alibaba is not currently a member of PGJ’s lineup, it could be in the future and it is unlikely that the ETF would rally in significant fashion if Alibaba languishes. The average analyst price target on Alibaba is just over $120 with two analysts forecasting prices of at least $130 . The stock currently trades around $106. The newly minted Emerging Markets Internet & Ecommerce ETF (NYSEARCA: EMQQ ) is another idea for investors to consider in the search for Chinese Internet exposure. EMQQ, which debuted in November, is not a dedicated China ETF, but the Emerging Markets Internet & Ecommerce Index devotes a significant portion of its weight to Chinese Internet names, including Alibaba, Tencent Holdings ( OTCPK:TCEHY ), JD.com (NASDAQ: JD ), Baidu (NASDAQ: BIDU ) and Vipshop. Those stocks combine for a third of the index’s weight . Nearly 30 of EMQQ’s holdings are Chinese companies. EMQQ’s underlying index allocates a combined 7.5% to Vipshop and BitAuto. KraneShares CSI China Internet Fund (click to enlarge) Todd Shriber owns shares of Alibaba.

Best ETF Strategies For 2015

Stocks are on their way to close this year on a strong note–with the S&P 500 index up 15% year to date-the third consecutive year of double-digit growth for the index. With the economy growing at the fastest clip in more than a decade, stocks are expected to continue their upward move, as companies will be able to boost their profits. Plunging energy prices and low interest rates will further benefit stocks. At the same time, after a bull run of almost six years, stocks are not cheap. And with the Fed expected to start raising rates sometime next year, many wonder how long the stock market party can go on. As we head into 2015, it may be a good time to look at the investment landscape and reposition your investment portfolio for the new year. Can the Bull Run Continue in 2015? U.S. stocks are still more attractive compared to most other asset classes and investors should continue to favor them in coming months as well. The Fed has gone out of its way in assuring investors that it will be “patient” in raising rates. Some may argue that rising rates will kill the stock market rally, but history tells us that the initial phase of rate increase is almost always accompanied by higher stock prices. And the reasons are clear-the increase in rates reflects an improving economy and lower risk of deflation-which are positive for stocks. Thus, stocks are the place to be in next year. Top Sectors for 2015 My favorite sectors for 2015 are Technology, Retail and Financial. Many U.S. corporates have accumulated huge piles of cash on their balance sheets and as the economy gathers steam, they should be more inclined to increase spending on R&D and Capex, benefiting tech firms. Low oil prices and slowly rising wages are good for U.S. consumers. Strong holiday sales suggest that consumer spending will grow as plunging oil prices increase disposable incomes. Financials have come a long way since the great recession with much healthier balance sheets and improved risk management systems in place. With improving economy, the sector has been able to grow earnings and increase dividend payouts. The Vanguard Technology ETF (NYSEARCA: VGT ), SPDR Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: XRT ) and SPDR Financials ETF (NYSEARCA: XLF ) are worth considering. Many energy stocks and ETFs look enticingly cheap now but I think it would be better to wait till we see some signs of oil prices bottoming out, unless you can stomach high volatility in anticipation of gains over much longer period. What to Expect from the Bond Market? Robust economic growth in the U.S. in the face of soft economic conditions in many other parts of the world, coupled with accommodative monetary policy worked great for bonds. In fact, the unexpected rally in the Treasury bond market this year surprised most. Treasury bonds-in particular longer term– may continue to benefit from heavy buying by foreign investors, as long as interest rates remain ultra-low in Europe and Japan, the U.S. dollar continues to strengthen and long term inflation expectations remain benign. Shorter term yields however may rise in anticipation of fed funds rate hike and thus the trend of yield curve flattening may continue next year. Municipal bonds were also big winners this year as investors poured $23.9 billion into municipal debt funds due to their tax benefits and relatively “safe” status. With flat supply expected in 2015 , municipal bonds may continue to outperform. Emerging Markets-Winners and Losers? With the plunge in oil prices, emerging markets landscape has undergone a significant change. Countries like China and India are among the biggest beneficiaries of cheap oil. China is the second largest importer of oil in the world and each $1 decline in oil price saves the country $2.1 billion annually. India relies on imports for 75% of its energy needs and oil accounts for about a third of its imports. Further, the government spends a lot on fuel subsidies. Declining oil prices will not only help the country narrow down its trade and budget deficit but also bring down inflation. With easing inflation, the central bank will be able to lower interest rates, boosting economic growth. Take a look at WisdomTree India Earnings ETF (NYSEARCA: EPI ). Indonesia and Thailand are also set to gain from the precipitous decline in oil prices. On the other hand, Russia and Venezuela in particular are likely to experience further pain next year. Prepare for Higher Volatility Markets saw some bouts of high volatility this year but in general the indexes maintained their positive momentum. Investors should however prepare themselves for more twists and turns in 2015 as the Fed moves closer to normalization of monetary policy. Geopolitical risks may further add to the uncertainty. Consider adding some low volatility ETFs-like SPDR S&P Low Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: SPLV ) and iShares MSCI Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: USMV ) to the portfolio. These not only shine during highly volatile market environments but also deliver superior risk adjusted returns over longer term.