Tag Archives: seeking-alpha

Africa: Portfolio Worthy?

Originally published on Dec. 17, 2014 The association with Africa in past months is often linked to Ebola. But, don’t let that overshadow the prosperous investment opportunity offered by the continent. Africa is on the rise as witnessed in recent political stability, a growing middle class, and economic growth outpacing most of the world. Indeed, the GDP of Africa has had steady growth since 2000 averaging over 5% each year, and is projected to finish this year up 5.1% and 2015 up 5.8%. Here are three reasons to consider adding African stocks to your portfolio. Rapid Growth in Developed Countries While some countries are still in transition, Nigeria, Kenya, and Mozambique are growing exponentially, with projected GDP growth in 2015 climbing close to the 19% mark. The opportunity seems to be in the water. With China’s recent investment in the South African Ocean economy, other foreign investors are sure to follow suit with these countries’ large shore lines and port communities; there is a huge opportunity for expanded growth. The Major Players China surpassed the United States in import/export business in 2009 and has since been investing their excess liquidity into infrastructure. Heineken ( OTCPK:HINKF ) has been pouring capital expenditures to the tune of $690 million a year to improve facilities and training in Africa. Other well known internationally-based companies such as Nestle ( OTCPK:NSRGF ) and Unilever (NYSE: UL ) also hold profitable investments in Africa. The United States and Canada Although the United States has lagged behind in African investments, the U.S. recently pledged $14 b illion from U.S. businesses such as GE (NYSE: GE ), Marriott (NASDAQ: MAR ), Chevron (NYSE: CVX ), Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO ), IBM (NYSE: IBM ) and MasterCard (NYSE: MA ). Canada’s Actic, a private equity investor in emerging markets, and Cordiant, an emerging market asset manager, most recently launched a $126 million investment fund for Africa. With a growing middle class of 350 million strong in 2010 and home to six nations with the world’s fastest growing economies, Africa is poised to be an attraction for investors looking for positive growth. Sources: http://blog.trade.gov/2014/07/31/u-s-africa-business-success-stories-how-a-supplier-of-powerboats-to-the-u-s-military-started-doing-business-in-nigeria/ http://www.marketwatch.com/story/you-arent-investing-in-africaand-youre-missing-out-2014-12-02 http://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/112614/etfs-and-mutual-funds-investing-africa.asp http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2014/08/us-announces-14bn-investment-africa-201485155458455909.html http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/personalfinance/2014/08/03/investing-in-africa/13420007/ http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/05/09/us-heineken-nl-africa-idUSBREA480QG20140509 http://www.timeslive.co.za/politics/2014/12/05/chinese-have-invested-r120-billion-in-south-africa-zuma http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21575769-strategies-putting-money-work-fast-growing-continent-hottest

SDOG Looks Great For Retirees Seeking Dividend Yields With Stability

Summary I’m taking a look at SDOG as a candidate for inclusion in my ETF portfolio. The expense ratio is a bit high, but the total returns have been similar to SPY. The dividend yield (3.20%) makes this ETF particularly attractive to retiring investors that want stronger yields. I’m putting SDOG in my list of potential ETFs to use for building my portfolio. I’m not assessing any tax impacts. Investors should check their own situation for tax exposure. Investors should be seeking to improve their risk adjusted returns. I’m a big fan of using ETFs to achieve the risk adjusted returns relative to the portfolios that a normal investor can generate for themselves after trading costs. I’m working on building a new portfolio and I’m going to be analyzing several of the ETFs that I am considering for my personal portfolio. One of the funds that I’m considering is the ALPS Sector Dividend Dogs ETF (NYSEARCA: SDOG ). I’ll be performing a substantial portion of my analysis along the lines of modern portfolio theory, so my goal is to find ways to minimize costs while achieving diversification to reduce my risk level. What does SDOG do? SDOG attempts to track the total return (before fees and expenses) of the S-Network Sector Dividend Dogs Index. At least 90% of the assets are invested in funds included in this index. SDOG falls under the category of “Large Value”. Does SDOG provide diversification benefits to a portfolio? Each investor may hold a different portfolio, but I use (NYSEARCA: SPY ) as the basis for my analysis. I believe SPY, or another large cap U.S. fund with similar properties, represents the reasonable first step for many investors designing an ETF portfolio. Therefore, I start my diversification analysis by seeing how it works with SPY. I start with an ANOVA table: (click to enlarge) The correlation is about 93% according to the regression. That is low enough that it appears to offer some diversification benefits. Extremely low levels of correlation are wonderful for establishing a more stable portfolio. I consider anything under 50% to be extremely low. However, for equity securities an extremely low correlation is frequently only found when there are substantial issues with trading volumes that may distort the statistics. Standard deviation of daily returns (dividend adjusted, measured since January 2013) The standard deviation is great. For SDOG it is .6611%. For SPY, it is 0.6851% for the same period. SPY usually beats other ETFs in this regard, so a lower volatility level is very impressive. Because the ETF has fairly low correlation for equity investments and a low standard deviation of returns, it should do fairly well under modern portfolio theory. Liquidity looks fine Average trading volume is high enough for me, a bit over 140,000. Mixing it with SPY I also run comparisons on the standard deviation of daily returns for the portfolio assuming that the portfolio is combined with the S&P 500. For research, I assume daily rebalancing because it dramatically simplifies the math. With a 50/50 weighting in a portfolio holding only SPY and SDOG, the standard deviation of daily returns across the entire portfolio is 0.6608%. With 80% in SPY and 20% in SDOG, the standard deviation of the portfolio would have been .6726%. If an investor wanted to use SDOG as a supplement to their portfolio, the standard deviation across the portfolio with 95% in SPY and 5% in SDOG would have been .6816%. Why I use standard deviation of daily returns I don’t believe historical returns have predictive power for future returns, but I do believe historical values for standard deviations of returns relative to other ETFs have some predictive power on future risks and correlations. Yield & Taxes The distribution yield is 3.20%. That appears to be a respectable yield. I’m quite happy with the yield and the strong yield makes this fund worth considering for retiring investors that plan to live off the yield. I prefer a strong dividend yield to “creating your own dividends” by selling shares because one of the reasons for ETF investing is that it removes the human emotions. There is less temptation to freak out and sell when the market is down if the investor is simply living from the dividends and doesn’t need to check in on the portfolio. I’m not a CPA or CFP, so I’m not assessing any tax impacts. Expense Ratio The ETF is posting .40% for an expense ratio (net and gross). I want diversification, I want stability, and I don’t want to pay for them. The expense ratio on this fund is higher than I want to pay for equity securities, but not high enough to make me eliminate it from consideration. I view expense ratios as a very important part of the long term return picture because I want to hold the ETF for a time period measured in decades. Market to NAV The ETF is at a .05% premium to NAV currently. Premiums or discounts to NAV can change very quickly so investors should check prior to putting in an order. The ETF is large enough and liquid enough that I would expect the ETF to stay fairly close to NAV. Generally, I don’t trust deviations from NAV and I will have a strong resistance to paying a premium to NAV to enter into a position. Largest Holdings The diversification within the ETF is mediocre. The top 10 are all over 2%, which isn’t terrible but feels pretty weak for an ETF with an expense ratio of .40%. What exactly are investors receiving for that expense ratio? The best argument for accepting the expense ratio, in my opinion, is that the dividend yield may be strong enough to keep people from selling their shares when the market is down. If the strong dividend yield can convince casual investors to avoid human errors, then the expense ratio is a fine price to pay. (click to enlarge) Conclusion I’m currently screening a large volume of ETFs for my own portfolio. The portfolio I’m building is through Schwab, so I’m able to trade SDOG with no commissions. I have a strong preference for researching ETFs that are free to trade in my account, so most of my research will be on ETFs that fall under the “ETF OneSource” program. The best part is clearly the dividend and the worst part is the expense ratio. For someone that is living off the yield and trying to keep their hands off the investment, SDOG is a very viable option. The reasonable level of liquidity is a huge benefit if a life event forces the shareholder to sell, but the strong dividend yield should reduce the temptation to mess with the account. I’m going to keep SDOG in my list of contenders for a spot in the portfolio. I intend to allocate part of the portfolio to an ETF that is similar to SPY but with an emphasis on stronger dividends. SDOG will be competing with other ETFs like (NYSEARCA: SCHD ) for that role. Additional disclosure: Information in this article represents the opinion of the analyst. All statements are represented as opinions, rather than facts, and should not be construed as advice to buy or sell a security. Ratings of “outperform” and “underperform” reflect the analyst’s estimation of a divergence between the market value for a security and the price that would be appropriate given the potential for risks and returns relative to other securities. The analyst does not know your particular objectives for returns or constraints upon investing. All investors are encouraged to do their own research before making any investment decision. Information is regularly obtained from Yahoo Finance, Google Finance, and SEC Database. If Yahoo, Google, or the SEC database contained faulty or old information it could be incorporated into my analysis. The analyst holds a diversified portfolio including mutual funds or index funds which may include a small long exposure to the stock.

Best Multi-Asset ETFs For 2015

Summary MDIV remains the go to choice for a multi-asset ETF. Actively managed INKM saw its first test during a down market and it passed the test, outperforming the competition and emerging with an increased cash position. IYLD could find itself at the top of the heap at the end of 2015 if volatility remains elevated throughout the year. In last year’s article, The Best Multi-Asset ETF , I looked at which multi-asset ETFs were best under different conditions. Since the October 6 date of publication, there’s been a lot of volatility in the energy and currency markets, and several multi-asset ETFs were negatively impacted. For those who want a background on an individual fund, each of the seven ETFs was covered separately: Performance in Q4 2014 First, let’s look at a chart of the underlying assets held by most multi-asset ETFs. In the chart below are ETFs directly held by some multi-asset funds, or proxies which cover asset classes found in multi-asset funds. Along with MDIV are the SPDR S&P Dividend (NYSEARCA: DVY ), the iShares S&P U.S. Preferred Stock (NYSEARCA: PFF ), the iShares Cohen & Steers Realty Majors (NYSEARCA: ICF ), the iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond (NYSEARCA: HYG ), the JPMorgan Alerian MLP Index (NYSEARCA: AMJ ), the iShares MSCI EAFE (NYSEARCA: EFA ), the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets (NYSEARCA: EEM ) and the Guggenheim Canadian Energy Income (NYSEARCA: ENY ). (click to enlarge) That is a wide range of returns for a three-month period, partially because the start of the chart occurs during the early autumn sell-off in global markets. ICF doubled the return of its nearest competitor, which was dividend paying stocks. MDIV is in the middle of the pack along with preferred shares, junk bonds, and the EAFE. The big losses came from MLPs and Canroys, victims of the collapse in oil prices. Here’s a chart showing how multi-asset ETFs performed since October 6. (click to enlarge) Performance Review MDIV was given the title of Best Multi-Asset ETF because it spreads investments across asset classes such as REITs, MLPs, common stocks, preferred stocks, and junk bonds. The fund doesn’t take on extra risk to bump up its yield, incorporates some volatility factors in its model to reduce volatility, and should generally fall in the middle of the multi-asset ETF pack. MDIV gained 8.07 percent in 2014, and it mainly went sideways from October 6 on, gaining about 1.5 percent. MLPs are 20 percent of the portfolio and they under performed by a wide margin over the past three months, but REIT shares are also 20 percent of assets and they rallied more than MLPs fell. Overall, MDIV performed as expected, falling in the middle of the pack while delivering a positive return. GYLD was named the runner-up because it takes a global approach to the multi-asset model. However, enhanced risk was highlighted: GYLD used exposure to Venezuelan bonds and Canroys to achieve a higher yield. These assets were among the worst performers over the past three months and it led to a roughly 6 percent loss for the ETF. GYLD also fell 3.48 percent in 2014. As long as the U.S. dollar remains in a bull market, GYLD will struggle relative to domestic multi-asset ETFs, but energy is having a bigger impact on the portfolio. If energy remains weak, GYLD will lag the field. CVY was dubbed the “not-so-multi-asset-ETF” due to its hefty weight in common stocks, but it also made use of Canroys and MLPs to boost the portfolio’s total yield. The result was a heavy energy tilt: as of September 30, the most recent sector breakdown, CVY had 27 percent of assets in energy. This cost the fund over the past three months, and lowered CVY’s 2014 return to negative 4.33 percent. YDIV was the other poor performer over the past three months due to it being an international fund holding non-U.S. dollar assets. Australian and Canadian assets made up nearly 40 percent of assets back in September and 39 percent of the fund was in the two countries as of January 2, 2015. Australia and Canada are influenced by commodity prices, and Australian resource exports are hurt by the slowing Chinese economy. YDIV also has some assets in Chinese banks and Hong Kong companies, which raises the potential exposure to a China slowdown to more than 40 percent of assets. YDIV was going to underperform domestic multi-asset funds in 2014 no matter what simply due to being an international fund holding non-dollar assets, but it only fell 0.79 percent in 2014, and only 3.38 percent in the past three months because it isn’t directly exposed to commodities, specifically energy. This helped it beat both GYLD and CVY last year, two funds that were much more exposed to energy. IYLD was one of the stronger performers over the past three months because it mainly invests in bonds, to the tune of 75 percent of assets. Domestic dividend paying equities make up 10 percent of assets, with another 10 percent in international dividend paying equities, plus 5 percent in international real estate. IYLD also benefited from declining interest rates at the long-end; its 5 percent holding in the iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury (NYSEARCA: TLT ) was up 27 percent in 2014. IYLD rallied 10.29 percent for the full year and it climbed 1.88 percent in the past three months. The last two funds covered were FDIV and INKM, both actively managed. INKM’s performance was sub-par from its inception in April 2012, but financial markets enjoyed mostly smooth sailing for most of its life. Since October, INKM has beaten the multi-asset competition, gaining 3.41 percent in the past three months and 8.80 percent in 2014. INKM’s managers have adjusted the portfolio since September 25 (when I covered it here ). The fund raised cash from near 0 percent to 4 percent. High yield bonds are up from 6 percent to 9 percent. Equity exposure was cut from near 42 percent to 37 percent. Among individual holdings, the SPDR Barclays Long Term Treasury (NYSEARCA: TLO ) has climbed from 5.15 percent in September to 6.21 percent exposure. The SPDR Emerging Markets Dividend (NYSEARCA: EDIV ) was cut from 5.82 percent to 2.84 percent. The SPDR Dow Jones International Real Estate (NYSEARCA: RWX ) was raised from 4.85 percent to 6.23 percent. The SPDR Barclays High Yield Bond (NYSEARCA: JNK ) was increased from 6.09 percent to 8.95 percent. The SPDR Barclays Emerging Markets Local Bond (NYSEARCA: EBND ) was cut from 4.00 percent to 2.96 percent. One of the big questions with a fund such as INKM was how it might perform if markets moved against high-yield assets, such as due to rising interest rates. Long-term rates didn’t rise in late 2014, but energy prices tumbled, the dollar rallied sharply and high-yield bonds sold off. INKM managers navigated the past three months well and if they can keep it up, this fund will be a serious contender for investor capital. The 30-day SEC yield is still one of the lowest of the group at 3.25 percent, but if managers are able to mitigate losses during unfavorable periods for multi-asset ETFs, it could turn into a long-term outperformer. The other actively managed multi-asset ETF has a short history of only 5 months, but FDIV delivered similar results to INKM in the past three months, gaining 1.77 percent. Interestingly, FDIV’s managers moved in the opposite direction of INKM’s managers. Back on September 29, FDIV had 16.30 percent of assets in high-yield bonds and senior loans. As of January 2, the portfolio exposure to high-yield bonds was cut to 12.48 percent, with exposure to international sovereign bonds increased about 2 percentage points, MLP exposure increased 1 percentage point and dividend paying equities increased 1.5 points. FDIV has a 30-day SEC yield of 3.88 percent. After a rough period for multi-asset ETFs, both actively managed funds look more attractive today than they did three months ago. Best Fund For The Start of 2015 Assuming the U.S. dollar continues to strengthen, emerging markets and commodities remain weak and long-term interest rates do not rise, the following multi-asset ETFs look most attractive. For investors not worried about rising rates or trouble in high-yield bonds, but concerned about weakness in equities or MLPs, IYLD is a solid choice. It has 75 percent exposure to fixed income and a 5.83 percent yield, with dividends paid monthly. MDIV remains the go-to option for long-term passive investors. It won’t deliver big returns, but it yields 5.93 percent and also pays dividends monthly. If energy recovers and equities climb in 2015, MDIV will likely outperform IYLD. Given its track record over the past three months, INKM also looks attractive for total return investors who want active management. Of course, if you expect a big rebound in energy, GYLD or CVY look more attractive. GYLD currently yields 6.70 percent, but beyond risk of capital losses, there’s also the risk of dividend cuts if energy prices continue on their present trajectories.