Tag Archives: management

PRGTX: Superb Performance From This Best Of Breed Fund

Summary PRGTX has consistently ranked #1 in its category for the last 10 years. Relatively low expense ratio along with excellent stock picking. New manager Joshua Spencer has done a great job since assuming responsibility in 2012. Overall Objective and Strategy: Growth and Income The T. Rowe Price Global Technology Fund (MUTF: PRGTX ) invests at least 80% of net assets in global companies that are expected to generate a majority of their revenues from the development, advancement, and use of technology. They focus on leading global technology companies. The fund normally seeks to invest in at least 5 countries and allocate 25% of the fund’s investments to stocks of companies outside the U.S. The fund pursues long-term capital growth by investing in foreign and US companies that are expected to benefit from rapid advances in technology. Less diversified than a non-focused fund, so it has substantial reward potential coupled with significant risk. Foreign holdings can be affected by declining local currencies or adverse political or economic events. Fund Expenses The expense ratio for PRGTX is 0.91% which is below average for an actively managed sector fund. Morningstar has computed the average expense ratio of similar funds to be 1.49%, so you pick up about 60 basis points of relative outperformance through lower expenses alone. Minimum Investment PRGTX has a minimum initial investment of $2,500 (only $1,000 for IRA accounts). Past Performance PRGTX is classified by Morningstar in the “Specialty Technology” or ST category. Compared with other mutual funds in this category, PRGTX has performed extremely well, largely because of its lower expenses and outstanding stock selection. For all time periods over the last ten years it has achieved “best of breed” performance. These are the long-term annual performance figures computed by Morningstar. The one-year and three year performance has been excellent and was produced by the newest portfolio manager- Joshua K. Spencer who started in June 2012. PRGTX Category (NYSE: ST ) +/- Category Percentile Rank in Category YTD +21.51% +7.52% +0.63% 1 1 Year +23.42% +10.35% +2.66% 1 3 Year +29.37% +18.76% +0.43% 1 5 Year +21.13% +11.83% +0.97% 1 10 Year +14.78% +9.01% +2.17% 1 15 Year +6.07% +1.49% +1.10% 14 Source: Morningstar Mutual Fund Ratings Lipper Ranking : Funds are ranked based on total return within a universe of funds with similar investment objectives. The Lipper peer group is Global Science and Technology. 1 Yr#1 out of 47 funds 5 Yr#1 out of 39 funds 10 Yr#1 out of 19 funds Morningstar Rating : Overall 5 Stars (out of 196 funds) 3 Yr5 Stars(out of 196 funds) 5 Yr5 Stars (out of 195 funds) 10 Yr5 Stars (out of 153 funds) Fund Management The fund has been managed by Joshua K. Spencer since June 2012. Spencer has a BA in Economics from John Hopkins, and an MA Economics and an MBA from the University of Chicago in 2000. He began his career as a research analyst at Fidelity and moved to T Rowe Price in 2004. Volatility Measures Beta: 1.02 R Squared: 0.59 Sharpe Ratio: 1.68 Standard Deviation: 12.75 PRGTX is a concentrated fund and is not an index hugger. It has $2 billion in assets invested in 59 securities. These are the top ten holdings as of September 30, 2015: Top 10 Holdings % Weight Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ) 11.21% Tesla Motors Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA ) 5.43% LinkedIn Corp Class A (NYSE: LNKD ) 5.19% Ctrip Intl. Ltd. ADR (NASDAQ: CTRP ) 5.18% Tencent Holdings Ltd. ( OTCPK:TCEHY ) 4.95% Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ: MSFT ) 4.89% JD.com Inc ADR (NASDAQ: JD ) 4.86% Liberty Global PLC Class C (NASDAQ: LBTYA ) 4.67% Priceline Group Inc (NASDAQ: PCLN ) 4.25% NXP Semiconductors NV (NASDAQ: NXPI ) 4.15% Comments PRGTX has an outstanding record and is a great way to add technology exposure to a portfolio. Since 2005, it has had only one losing year in 2008. But it held up relatively well compared to the competition losing 44.02% versus a 45.33% loss for its category peers. The fund generally pays out year-end distributions in mid-December. Last year, it paid out $3.29 a share on 12/16/2014 ($1.27 long-term capital gain, $2.02 short-term capital gain), and it will likely pay out large distributions again this year. If you purchase PRGTX in an IRA account, there is no problem, but if you buy it in a taxable account it may pay to wait until after the distributions are paid out for 2015. These are the relevant dates: Declaration/Record Date December 15, 2015 Ex-Dividend Date December 16, 2015 Payment Date December 17, 2015

Will Holiday Shopping Save Retail ETFs?

Retail has lagged broader benchmarks this year. 1.2% sales growth this year. Home improvement retailers may ride recovering housing market. The SPDR S&P Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: XRT ) has lagged broader benchmarks this year, but with holiday shopping season here, it could be time for retail stocks and exchange traded funds to snap out of their funks. Economic data seems to support more upside for retail ETFs, as highlighted by last week’s better-than-expected October jobs report. While the retail sector has been rebounding over the past month, Morgan Stanley does not anticipate a jolly season for retailers. The investment bank expects holiday sales growth to slow this year, arguing that while consumers have plenty of cash, they are not that motivated to spend, reports Julie Verhage for Bloomberg . Morgan Stanley projects a 1.2% growth in sales this year, compared to 2.8% the previous year. Rivals to XRT include the Market Vectors Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: RTH ) and the PowerShares Dynamic Retail Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PMR ). RTH covers the 25 largest U.S. companies involved in retail distribution, wholesalers, on-line, direct mail and TV retailers, multi-line retailers, specialty retailers and food and other staples retailers. Top components include Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ), Home Depot (NYSE: HD ) and Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT ). Paul Hickey of Bespoke Investment Group “looked at the XRT, the ETF that tracks the performance of the retail group in the S&P 500. Hickey noted that since 2000, the XRT tends to outperform the broader markets in the month leading up to Thanksgiving. However, immediately following Thanksgiving, those stocks tend to fall, according to Hickey’s chart work,” reports CNBC . PMR follows a factor-based index, which weights components based on price momentum, earnings momentum, quality, management action and value. Top holdings include O’Reilly Automotives (NASDAQ: ORLY ), L Brands (NYSE: LB ) and Costco Wholesale (NASDAQ: COST ). Improved performance for the discretionary sector has bolstered an array of related sub-sectors, including specialty retail. Clothing, electronics and automobiles will likely see prices decline as the stronger dollar permeates the economy. The cheaper prices could help attract greater demand, bring more traffic into stores and bolster the retail space. Home improvement retailers “will likely experience mid-single digit revenue growth in the next fiscal year according to S&P Capital IQ Equity Analyst Efraim Levy, driven by new store additions and the benefits of a recovery in the housing market and improving consumer confidence,” according to S&P Capital IQ. (click to enlarge)

Introducing Currency Hedging to Global ex-U.S. Real Estate

At WisdomTree, we introduced in 2009 the concept of currency-hedged equities to the exchange-traded fund (ETF) structure-a concept that caught fire subsequent to the introduction of Abenomics in Japan in late 2012. 1 Since then, similar excitement has taken hold of eurozone equities and is beginning to take hold more broadly in developed international equities. 2 The Bottom Line: We believe investors have awakened to the “currency factor,” which we’ve seen can have rather significant impacts on the risk /return profile of different investments over time. Currency Hedging Meets Global ex-U.S. Real Estate Real estate occupies an interesting asset class in the current market environment. One of the more attractive potential attributes of real estate is that of rising income streams, thereby providing the potential to keep pace with inflation. We don’t have notable inflation today, but all of the central bank policies that contribute to making currency hedging interesting may lead to higher inflation in the future. The current low-interest rate stance, seen from the perspective of developed market central banks, could, however, make the relatively higher dividend yields of real estate attractive presently, as income-generating assets. The critical question: Does global ex-U.S. real estate represent an interesting valuation opportunity today compared to other asset classes? If so, accessing it while seeking to neutralize the challenges and headwinds that could come from a stronger U.S. dollar could be of particular interest. How Does WisdomTree Focus on Global ex-U.S. Real Estate? At WisdomTree, we have a history of designing Indexes that weight securities by their fundamentals, and the case of the WisdomTree Global ex-U.S. Real Estate Index is no different. This Index weights each constituent by dividends paid. What does this mean? Well, the simplest way to see that is by looking at the difference in dividend yield versus a similar universe of securities 3 : FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Global ex US Index : This Index has a dividend yield of approximately 3.3%, achieved by weighting constituents on the basis of float-adjusted market capitalization. WisdomTree Global ex-U.S. Real Estate Index: This Index has a dividend yield of approximately 4.4%, achieved by weighting constituents on the basis of the income they generated over the prior annual cycle. 4 Gauging the Attractiveness of Global ex-U.S. Real Estate It’s worth noting that, when looking at real estate globally, approximately 60% of the opportunity set is outside of the United States, as compared to equities broadly, where slightly more than half of the opportunity set lies abroad. 5 Low Interest Rates Could Continue: Taking the top five country exposures in the MSCI AC World ex-US Index , we see the following 10-year government bond yields: Japan, 0.3%; United Kingdom, 1.8%; France, 0.8%; Switzerland, -0.33%; and Germany, 0.4%. 6 Real Estate Is Currently Interesting Compared to Fixed Income: WisdomTree’s Global ex-U.S. Real Estate Index weights constituents by the income they generate, and while the risk profile of these assets is different from that of government bonds, the current income advantage may be of interest. Comparing the aforementioned country exposures, we see: Japan, 1.64%; United Kingdom, 3.05%; France, 4.30%; Switzerland, 4.39%; and Germany, 2.59%. 7 Don’t Let Currency Movements Swamp the Attractiveness of the Asset Class We’ve written extensively about currency exposure having the potential to add uncompensated risk over time. The WisdomTree Global ex-U.S. Real Estate Index has been around for more than four years, so we looked to quantify the currency impact from a risk and return perspective over that period. How WisdomTree’s Index Has Performed during a “Strong Dollar” Period (click to enlarge) For definitions of terms in the chart, please visit our glossary . On a cumulative basis, we see that the currencies represented in the WisdomTree Global ex-U.S. Index universe depreciated 20.0% over the period against the U.S. dollar. The difference in average annual returns between the WisdomTree Global ex-U.S. Index measured with currency and without currency impact amounted to nearly 5.6% per year. On a risk-adjusted basis, we see that the Sharpe ratio increased by 0.39 when the impact of currency was excluded. How to Strategically Allocate to Global ex-U.S. Real Estate In reality, we understand that this period was characterized by dollar strength. However, we pose this question: Is an allocation to global ex-U.S. real estate being made in order to take advantage of a particular movement in currency compared to the U.S. dollar, or is the allocation more due to the attributes of the asset class, such as the income-generating potential? Since we think that exposure to the income-generating assets is of primary importance, we think that approaches designed to mitigate the impact of currency movements could be of interest, and that is why we created the WisdomTree Global ex-U.S. Hedged Real Estate Index. Source Bloomberg. Developed international equities refers to the MSCI EAFE Index universe. Bloomberg, with data as of 10/28/15. Refers to the period of payments occurring over the 12 months prior to September 30 of each year, the annual screening date for this Index. Bloomberg, with data as of 10/28/15. Real estate universes: FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Global ex US Index and FTSE EPRA/NAREIT United States Index. Equity universe: MSCI ACWI Index. Bloomberg, with data as of 10/28/15. Bloomberg, with data as of 10/28/15. Important Risks Related to this Article Foreign investing involves special risks, such as risk of loss from currency fluctuation or political or economic uncertainty. Investments in emerging, offshore or frontier markets are generally less liquid and less efficient than investments in developed markets and are subject to additional risks, such as risks of adverse governmental regulation and intervention or political developments. Investments in real estate involve additional special risks, such as credit risk, interest rate fluctuations and the effect of varied economic conditions. Christopher Gannatti, Associate Director of Research Christopher Gannatti began at WisdomTree as a Research Analyst in December 2010, working directly with Jeremy Schwartz, CFA®, Director of Research. He is involved in creating and communicating WisdomTree’s thoughts on the markets, as well as analyzing existing strategies and developing new approaches. Christopher came to WisdomTree from Lord Abbett, where he worked for four and a half years as a Regional Consultant.