Tag Archives: undefined

5 American ETFs Enjoying Independence

A marked growth in the U.S. economy has increased the confidence in its people. Yet the U.S. stock market is caught in a bull-bear tug of war this year. This is especially true as the S&P 500 recorded its worst performance in five years, gaining just 0.2% in the first half. Meanwhile, Dow Jones shed over 1% in the same time period. A massive decline thanks solely to the Greece crisis spoilt the market mood in the final days of the first half. The debt drama in Greece climaxed after the deal talk collapsed last weekend, forcing prime minister Alexis Tsipras to close the country’s banks and impose capital controls. Further, rounds of downbeat economic data, strong dollar, global economic slowdown concerns, and the prospect of higher interest rates kept the stock prices at check. Yet in such a sluggish backdrop, some specific zones like small caps, health care, technology and many others shone. The financial sector too is pinning all hopes on the likely interest rates hike later this year. In fact, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index and the small cap Russell 2000 Index have been on a tear, having returned respectively 5.3% and 4.1%. Nasdaq has been blessed this year. It crossed the 5,000 milestone for the first time in early March since the 2000 dot-com bubble and touched multiple highs at regular intervals. Robust performances were driven by growing demand for novel and advanced technologies, and better job prospects. Economically sensitive sectors like technology generally pick up in an expanding economic cycle and most of the tech companies are sitting on a huge pile of cash, which ensures their strength in the rising rate environment. On the other hand, small caps ensure higher returns when the American economy is arguably leading the way. These pint-sized stocks are closely tied to the U.S. economy and generate most of their revenues from the domestic market, making them safer bets than their large and mid cap counterparts during a global turmoil. Due to their less international exposure, these stocks remained relatively unscathed by the strong dollar and Grexit fears. Given this, we have highlighted five star-spangled ETFs with handsome returns of at least 10% in the first six months of 2015. These funds focus exclusively on American equities and could definitely be worth a look for investors seeking a domestic tilt to their portfolio following the Fourth of July Holiday. Also, these are free from external threats, and move independently from the major indices: ALPS Medical Breakthroughs ETF (NYSEARCA: SBIO ) This fund targets companies with one or more drugs in Phase II or Phase III FDA clinical trials by tracking the Poliwogg Medical Breakthroughs Index. It provides a well spread out exposure to 82 stocks in its basket with none holding more than 4.50% share. SBIO is a small cap centric fund, having amassed $124.7 million in its asset base since its debut six months ago. The product charges 50 bps in fees per year from investors and trades in average daily volume of around 78,000 shares. It has delivered excellent returns of about 38% in the first half driven by its dual nature – small cap exposure and non-cyclical sector. Aging population, Obamacare, an endless hunt for new drugs, merger mania and cost cutting efforts added to the further strength. Barclays Return on Disability ETN (NYSEARCA: RODI ) This product is also the new entrant in the space, having debuted last September. It provides exposure to the companies that have acted to attract and serve people with disabilities and their friends and family as customers and employees. The fund follows the Return on Disability US LargeCap ETN Total Return USD Index, which measures the 100 largest companies that are outperforming in the disability market. The note charges 45 bps in annual fees from investors and trades in a meager volume of under 1,000 shares. The ETN was up over 26% in the same timeframe. ARK Web x.0 ETF (NYSEARCA: ARKW ) This is an actively managed fund focusing on companies that are expected to benefit from the shift of technology infrastructure from hardware and software to cloud enabling mobile and local services. These companies will primarily be either developers or users in fields such as cloud computing, wearable technology, big data, cryptocurrencies, social media, services and data mining, Internet of Things and digital education. The fund holds 45 stocks in its basket with a tilt toward the top firm – Athenahealth (NASDAQ: ATHN ) – at 7% while other firms hold less than 5% share. It has amassed $11.4 million in its asset base within less than a year while sees average daily volume of around 2,000 shares. Expense ratio came in at 0.95%. The fund has added over 12% in the first six months of this year. Guggenheim S&P SmallCap 600 Pure Growth ETF (NYSEARCA: RZG ) This fund targets the small cap U.S. market and follows the S&P SmallCap 600 Pure Growth Index. Holding 133 securities in its basket, it is well spread out across components with each holding less than 2.2%. Health care, financials, consumer discretionary, information technology, and industrials are top five sectors with double-digit allocation each. The fund has amassed $182.8 million in its asset base while trades in light volume of about 18,000 shares a day on average. It charges 35 bps in fees per year from investors and gained nearly 12% in the same time period. PowerShares KBW Regional Banking Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: KBWR ) This fund offers exposure to the regional banking corner of the broad financial market. It tracks the KBW Regional Banking Index and holds 50 stocks in its basket. The product is widely diversified across components with none accounting more than 4.01% share. It is a small cap centric fund as these account for 79% of the portfolio while the rest goes to mid caps. The ETF is often overlooked by investors as depicted by its AUM of $41.5 million and average daily volume of under 6,000 shares. It charges 35 bps in annual fees and added nearly 11% in the first half of 2015. Original Post

Insurance ETFs Jump As ACE Agrees To Buy Chubb

A loud applause can be heard across the insurance industry, which is whole-heartedly rooting for the largest deal ever (in life and property casualty insurers’ space) on July 1, 2015. Swiss insurance company ACE Ltd. (NYSE: ACE ) announced that it would purchase high-end property insurer and its competitor Chubb Corp. (NYSE: CB ) in a $28.3 billion deal. Per the agreement, Chubb shareholders will get $62.93 per share in cash and 0.6019 in ACE shares, while ACE shareholders will be in possession of about 70% of the merged entity. The new company will take on Chubb’s name and will be led by ACE’s Chief Executive, Evan Greenberg. The deal is expected to be sealed in the first quarter of 2016 . Post announcement, Chubb skyrocketed over 26% and kept adding gains after market too. The merged entity will likely become ” a global leader in commercial and personal property and casualty (P&C) insurance”. It will help both the entities to unlock value, bolster the balance sheet and make better use of diversification. The combined entity will focus heavily on the growth criteria. Bloomberg noted that the insurance industry lately been thriving on an M&A spree, and that it has not seen such extravaganza in the last 12 years. Experts expect more such activity in the industry going forward. In any case, corporate America is seeing a flurry of mergers & acquisitions. In the first half of 2015, the activity hit a historic $1.03 trillion , never made possible by a country in a semi-annual time frame. While Chubb’s shares jumped over 26%, with more than 28 times its average daily volume, to close at $119.99, ACE shares closed 0.80% higher on the day, with 17 times higher the average daily volume, following the announcement of the deal. Below, we have highlighted four ETFs, two having exposure to the concerned companies and two that do not. Whatever the case, the news acted as a driver for the entire industry and pushed the funds higher yesterday (see all Financials ETFs here ). PowerShares KBW Property & Casualty Insurance Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: KBWP ) This fund closely tracks the KBW Property & Casualty Index, a modified market capitalization-weighted index, which seeks to reflect the performance of approximately 24 property and casualty insurance companies. The $13.2-million product charges a reasonable 35 basis points per year in fees. It currently pays out a decent dividend that yields 1.78% annually. More than half of its assets are invested in the top 10 holdings. The in-focus Chubb takes the second spot (7.68%) in the fund, while ACE Ltd. accounts for 7.52% of the basket, taking the fifth position. The fund was up 3.6% on Wednesday, and is up 4.4% so far this year. It holds a Zacks ETF Rank of #3 with a moderate risk outlook. iShares U.S. Insurance ETF (NYSEARCA: IAK ) IAK tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Select Insurance Index. The $121-million product holds 63 stocks in its basket. It has a moderate dividend yield of 1.47% and charges investors 43 basis points a year in fees. With a medium level of risk, the fund holds a Zacks ETF Rank of #3. The ETF is slightly top-holdings focused, with more than half of its assets invested in the top 10 securities. ACE Ltd. takes up 5.75% of the fund, acquiring the fourth spot, while Chubb takes the eighth position, with a 3.79% focus. The fund was up 2.3% yesterday, and is up 7.8% so far this year. PowerShares KBW Insurance Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: KBWI ) KBWI follows the KBW Insurance index, which comprises 24 insurance companies. The $7-million product charges investors just 35 basis points a year in fees. It pays a decent dividend that yields 1.54% annually. Though none of the in-focus players are among the fund’s top 10 holdings, the news itself gave a boost to this ETF. KBWI was up 2.11% on July 1, while the fund has advanced 1.4% in the year-to-date frame. It carries a Zacks ETF Rank of #3 and a high level of risk. SPDR S&P Insurance ETF (NYSEARCA: KIE ) KIE closely follows the S&P Insurance Select Industry Index, which is an equal-weight index. The product manages $69 million in assets, which are currently invested in 52 securities. The product charges a reasonable 35 basis points per year in fees. It currently pays out a decent dividend that yields 1.69% annually. In terms of holdings, over 37% of the assets are invested in the property and casualty insurance space. Neither Chubb nor ACE gets a space in its top 10 holdings. Still, the fund gained 2.1% on Wednesday. The fund is up 2.8% so far this year (as of July 1). KIE carries a Zacks ETF Rank of #3 and a medium level of risk. Original Post

16 Implications Of ‘The Phases Of An Investment Idea’

Registered investment advisor, bonds, dividend investing, ETF investing “}); $$(‘#article_top_info .info_content div’)[0].insert({bottom: $(‘mover’)}); } $(‘article_top_info’).addClassName(test_version); } SeekingAlpha.Initializer.onDOMLoad(function(){ setEvents();}); My last post has many implications. I want to make them clear in this post. When you analyze a manager, look at the repeatability of his processes. It’s possible that you could get “the Big Short” right once and never have another good investment idea in your life. Same for investors who are the clever ones who picked the most recent top or bottom… they are probably one-trick ponies. When a manager does well and begins to pick up a lot of new client assets, watch for the period where the growth slows to almost zero. It is quite possible that some of the great performance during the high-growth period stemmed from asset prices rising due to the purchases of the manager himself. It might be a good time to exit, or for shorts to consider the assets with the highest percentage of market cap owned as targets for shorting. Often when countries open up to foreign investment, valuations are relatively low. The initial flood of money often pushes up valuations, leads to momentum buyers, and a still greater flow of money. Eventually, an adjustment comes and shakes out the undisciplined investors. But when you look at the return series to analyze potential future investment, ignore the early years – they aren’t representative of the future. Before an academic paper showing a way to invest that would been clever to use in the past gets published, the excess returns are typically described as coming from valuation, momentum, manager skill, etc. After the paper is published, money starts getting applied to the idea, and the strategy will do well initially. Again, too much money can get applied to a limited factor (or other) anomaly, because no one knows how far it can get pushed before the market rebels. Be careful when you apply the research – if you are late, you could get to hold the bag of overvalued companies. Aside for that, don’t assume that performance from the academic paper’s era or the 2-3 years after that will persist. Those are almost always the best years for a factor (or other) anomaly strategy. During a credit boom, almost every new type of fixed-income security, dodgy or not, will look like genius by the early purchasers. During a credit bust, it is rare for a new security type to fare well. Anytime you take a large position in an obscure security, it must jump through extra hoops to assure a margin of safety. Don’t assume that merely because you are off the beaten path that you are a clever contrarian, smarter than most. Always think about the carrying capacity of a strategy when you look at an academic paper. It might be clever, but it might not be able to handle a lot of money. Examples would include trying to do exactly what Ben Graham did in the early days today, and things like Piotroski’s methods, because typically, only a few small and obscure stocks survive the screen. Also look at how an academic paper models trading and liquidity, if they give it any real thought at all. Many papers embed the idea that liquidity is free, and that large trades can happen where prices closed previously. Hedge funds and other manager databases should reflect that some managers have closed their funds, and put them in a separate category, because new money can’t be applied to those funds. That is to say, there should be “new money allowed” indexes. Max Heine, who started the Mutual Series funds (now part of Franklin), was a genius when he thought of the strategy 20% distressed investing, 20% arbitrage/event-driven investing and 60% value investing. It produced great returns in 9 years out of 10. But once distressed investing and event-driven because heavily done, the idea lost its punch. Michael Price was clever enough to sell the firm to Franklin before that was realized, and thus, capitalizing the past track record that would not do as well in the future. The same applies to a lot of clever managers. They have a very good sense of when their edge is getting dulled by too much competition and where the future will not be as good as the past. If they have the opportunity to sell, they will disproportionately do so then. Corporate management teams are like rock bands. Most of them never have a hit song. (For managements, a period where a strategy improves profitability far more than most would have expected.) The next-most are one-hit wonders. Few have multiple hits, and rare are those that create a culture of hits. Applying this to management teams – the problem is if they get multiple bright ideas or a culture of success, it is often too late to invest, because the valuation multiple adjusts to reflect it. Thus, advantages accrue to those who can spot clever managements before the rest of the market. More often this happens in dull industries, because no one would think to look there. It probably doesn’t make sense to run from hot investment idea to hot investment idea as a result of all of this. You will end up getting there once the period of genius is over and valuations have adjusted. It might be better to buy the burned-out stuff and see if a positive surprise might come. (Watch margin of safety…) Macroeconomics and the effect that it has on investment returns is overanalyzed, though many get the effects wrong anyway. Also, when central bankers and politicians take cues from the prices of risky assets, the feedback loop confuses matters considerably. if you must pay attention to macro in investing, always ask, “Is it priced in or not? How much of it is priced in?” Most asset allocation work that relies on past returns is easy to do and bogus. Good asset allocation is forward-looking and ignores past returns. Finally, remember that some ideas seem right by accident – they aren’t actually right. Many academic papers don’t get published. Many different methods of investing get tried. Many managements try new business ideas. Those that succeed get air time, whether it was due to intelligence or luck. Use your business sense to analyze which it might be, or if it is a combination. There’s more that could be said here. Just be cautious with new investment strategies, whatever form they may take. Make sure that you maintain a margin of safety; you will likely need it. Disclosure: None. Share this article with a colleague