Category Archives: etf

Volatility ETFs: Buy Or Sell Now?

Volatility in the stock market is represented by the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), also known as the fear gauge. This tends to outperform when markets are falling or when fear over the future is high. Notably, VIX has risen 9.6% over the past one-month period, reflecting that worries over the stock market have started to build up. Will the fear level continue to rise and push up the index? What is Pushing Fear Levels? After an impressive comeback, the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones dropped for the third consecutive week, representing the longest streak of weekly declines since January’s market meltdown. This slump has wiped off most of the gains from these indices, pushing the year-to-date gains down to 0.1% for the S&P 500 and 0.6% for the Dow Jones. The decline resumed after a spate of downbeat data across the globe, in particular China and the U.K., that brought global growth worries back on the table. Additionally, the growth momentum in the U.S. has slowed down and investors’ faith in central banks’ ability to boost growth across the globe has faded. Further, signs of sluggish growth in Europe and Asia, a pullback in industrial metals, the oil price drama, and Fed’s uncertain policy continue to weigh on stocks. This is especially true as Friday’s solid retail sales data for April reignited the case for two interest rates hikes this year while the weaker-than-expected April payrolls data early this month cast doubts over the health of the economy and pushed back the chances of a rate hike. The latest round of selling last week followed a slew of disappointing earnings reports from retailers that sparked off concerns over consumer spending. All these factors flared up volatility, pushing the volatility index higher. As per the ft.com , investors pulled out about $7.4 billion from global equities last week, sending the total outflow of five weeks to a five-year high of $44 billion. This reflects weakening faith in the global equity markets. Moreover, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) once again cut its global growth forecast to 3.2% from the earlier projection of 3.4%, citing that the ill effects of a persistent slowdown in China and lower oil prices have spilled over into emerging markets such as Brazil. The agency also highlighted economic weakness in developed countries like Japan, Europe and the U.S. This could lead to poor stock performance across the globe, providing further support to the volatility index. Against a woe-begotten backdrop, investors could look into volatility products that have proven themselves as short-time winners in turbulent times. They can use these products for hedging purposes to ensure safety when the stock market starts to plunge. Volatility ETFs in Focus A popular ETN option providing exposure to volatility, the iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN (NYSEARCA: VXX ), sees a truly impressive volume level of about 73.3 million shares a day. The note has amassed $1.6 billion in AUM and charges 89 bps in fees per year. The ETN focuses on the S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures Index, which reflects implied volatility of the S&P 500 Index at various points along the volatility forward curve. It provides investors with exposure to a daily rolling long position in the first and second month VIX futures contracts. VXX shed 7.4% over the past one-month period. Two more products – the ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (NYSEARCA: VIXY ) and the VelocityShares VIX Short-Term ETN (NASDAQ: VIIX ) – also track the same index. VIXY has $252.7 million in AUM and sees good average daily volume of more than 3.4 million shares while VIIX is the unpopular one of the two with just $9.1 million in its asset base and good volume of around 304,000 shares per day. While VIXY charges 85 bps in annual fee, VIIX is costlier, charging 0.89% annually from investors. Both products are down 7.3% in the same time frame. Another product – the C-Tracks ETN on CVOL (NYSEARCA: CVOL ) – linked to the Citi Volatility Index Total Return, provides investors with direct exposure to the implied volatility of the large-cap U.S. stocks. The benchmark combines a daily rolling long exposure to the third and fourth month futures contracts on the VIX with short exposure to the S&P 500 Total Return Index. The product has amassed $2.2 million in its asset base while charging 1.15% in annual fees from investors. The note trades in a relatively lower volume of about 147,000 shares per day and lost 5% over the past one month. Technical Look However, when we took a closer look to the technical charts, we found that the volatility index and the ETFs would remain range bound at least in the near term. In the chart below, we have considered the price movement of the ultra-popular VXX. The ETN touched its 52-week low of $14.64 on May 11 and its short-term moving average (9-Day EMA) is well below the mid and long terms (50- and 200-Day EMA), suggesting some pessimism for the product. Additionally, the bearish trend is confirmed by the parabolic SAR, which is currently trading above the current price of the fund. However, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) has been rising lately and currently stands at 42.97, indicating that the fund has clearly moved away from its oversold territory, reflecting some potential upside. Bottom Line Given global growth fears as well as mixed technical signals, it seems prudent for investors to wait until the stock market falls or more fear factors creep into the picture. Further, investors should note that these products are suitable only for short-term traders. This is because most of the time, the VIX futures market trades in a condition known as ‘contango’, a situation where near-term futures are cheaper than long-term futures contracts. Since the volatility ETFs and ETNs like VXX must roll from month to month in order to avoid ‘delivery’, the situation of contango can eat away returns over long periods. Original Post

When You Exit The Stock Market, Don’t Let The Door Hit You On Your Way Out

You cannot make this stuff up. The median stock in the S&P 500 has never been more overvalued on price-to-earnings growth (PEG) and price-to-sales (P/S). On a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) basis – where profitability expectations already reflect pie-in-the-sky speculation – the median company’s shares trade in the 96th percentile. That’s pretty darn pricey! Credit Goldman Sachs for the assessment. For that matter, give the financial conglomerate kudos for acknowledging the strong possibility that one might be wise to “sell in May” after all. Hedge fund legend Stanley Druckenmiller , who spoke at an investment conference in New York last week, forcibly advised exiting stocks as well. One of his reasons? The stock market in 1982 versus the stock market in 2016. He said, It is hard to avoid the comparison with 1982 when the market sold for 7-times depressed earnings with dozens of rate cuts and productivity rising going forward vs. 18-times inflated earnings, productivity declining and no further ammo on interest rates. Granted, overpriced stocks cannot and will not tell anyone the near-term direction of the market. What’s more, ultra-low borrowing costs a la zero percent interest rate policy largely drove risk assets like stocks to unbelievable extremes. On the other hand, front-loading investment returns over the past seven years has pilfered the potential gains one might have anticipated over the next seven years. The Federal Reserve’s own Richard Fisher confirmed the central bank’s front-loading endeavors back in January. Consider an analysis by Steve Sjuggerud. He analyzed data going back to 1870 with respect to what happened to annualized returns after seven incredible years like the current bull market. The anticipated gains over the next one, three, five and seven years were not particularly promising. In essence, the past’s remarkable returns confiscated the prospects for the future. In contrast, the worst decile rank for seven-year periods served up enhanced annualized gains going forward. Are these results surprising? Not really. It tells investors what they should already know; that is, the rewards for holding stocks at higher elevations are dismal, whereas the rewards for acquiring stocks at lower elevations are admirable. Virtually everyone who has ever looked at the relationship between high valuations and future returns understands that higher prices today imply lower future outcomes (and vice versa). Quantitative easing (QE), zero percent rate policy (ZIRP), negative rate policy (NIRP) did not alter the long-standing relationship; rather, central bank shenanigans pulled the gains from the future into the present, while decimating the hold-n-hope possibilities for the future. If I readily acknowledge that valuations alone do not predict the near-term and that stocks could “grind higher,” why have I been so adamant about maintaining a lower risk equity profile over the last 12 months? Weakness in the global economy, deterioration in market internals (including credit spreads) and the Fed’s directional shift since QE ended (December 18, 2014) have combined to create a toxic brew for “risk on” asset performance. Is it true that riskier stock assets have bounced back from two corrective beatings? In August-September of 2015 and again in January-February of 2016? Yes. Still, the percentages do not lie. Less risky asset types are clearly outperforming riskier ones… and that does not happen in powerful bull market uptrends. We should also be cognizant of the reason(s) for risky asset recovery. Is it because there has been widespread buyer demand from “mom-n-pop” retail investors, institutional advisers, pensions, mutual fund managers and/or hedge funds? On the contrary. Each of these groups have been “net sellers” for 16 consecutive weeks. Corporations are the only net buyers of their own shares and they remain the biggest source of stock demand. However, that dynamic may be changing. Corporations have started to slash spending due to revenue and profit weakness. Not only did the number of firms that cut dividends reach a seven-year high, but according to Bloomberg, corporate buybacks are set to fall below $600 billion for the first time in three years. Get a gander at the table below that shows the possibility of a slowdown based on announced buybacks over the first four months. Click to enlarge In earlier commentary, prior to the available buyback data from Bloomberg, I suggested that corporations would be incapable of perpetually spending 100% of free cash flow after dividends to artificially support share prices. The practice of ignoring capital expenditures has almost certainly hindered business growth for years to come. Take a look at the chart on corporate borrowing below. Corporations spent the majority of borrowed money on buying or maintaining land, buildings, and equipment in the 90s. Today? Most of the debt was spent on non-productive financial engineering. In other words, not only did corporations double their total debt levels since the Great Recession ended, but they barely spent any of that debt on anything other than stock buybacks or acquisitions. Click to enlarge Let’s review. Valuations sit at historic extremes. “Risk-off” has outperformed “risk-on” for an entire year. Buybacks have been remarkably influential in propping up the benchmarks, but may be less likely to do so for the remainder of 2016. Factor in global economic weakness that is showing little signs of turnaround as well as election uncertainty, and it is easy to see why preservation may be more critical than appreciation pursuits. I do not advocate getting out of stock assets completely. A tactical asset allocation shift that lowers one’s risk exposure is typically more beneficial than an “all-in” or “all-out” approach. That said, if you have not reduced your exposure yet, you might want to do so now. Otherwise, there’s a good chance the stock market door will hit you on the backside when you eventually scamper for cover. Click here for Gary’s latest podcast. Disclosure: Gary Gordon, MS, CFP is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. Gary Gordon, Pacific Park Financial, Inc, and/or its clients may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds, and/or any investment asset mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. At times, issuers of exchange-traded products compensate Pacific Park Financial, Inc. or its subsidiaries for advertising at the ETF Expert web site. ETF Expert content is created independently of any advertising relationships.

3 Strong Buy All-Cap Value Mutual Funds

Value mutual funds provide excellent choices for investors looking for bargains, i.e., stocks at a discount. Value mutual funds are those that invest in stocks trading at discounts to book value, and have low price-to-earnings ratio and high dividend yields. Value investing is always a popular strategy, and for a good reason. After all, who doesn’t want to find stocks that have low P/Es, solid outlooks and decent dividends? However, not all value funds solely comprise companies that primarily use their earnings to pay dividends. Investors interested in choosing value funds for yield should be sure to check the mutual fund yield. The mutual fund yield is the dividend payment divided by the value of the mutual fund’s shares. Below we share with you three top-rated all-cap value mutual funds. Each has earned a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy) and is expected to outperform its peers in the future. Investors can click here to see the complete list of all-cap value funds, their Zacks Rank and past performance. DFA Tax Managed U.S. Marketwide Value II (MUTF: DFMVX ) seeks long-term growth of capital. DFMVX invests 100% of its assets in its Master Fund, The Tax-Managed U.S. Marketwide Value Series. The Master fund is expected to invest the lion’s share of its assets in companies located in the U.S. DFA Tax-Managed US Marketwide Value II has a three-year annualized return of almost 9.1%. DFMVX has an expense ratio of 0.22% as compared to the category average of 1.10%. Pioneer Core Equity Fund A (MUTF: PIOTX ) invests the majority of its assets in equity securities of U.S. companies. PIOTX may invest a maximum of 10% of its assets in securities of non-U.S. issuers, which include up to 5% of its assets in securities of emerging economies. The fund may also invest in initial public offerings of equity securities. Pioneer Value A has a three-year annualized return of almost 6.3%. Craig Sterling is one of the fund managers of PIOTX since last year. Homestead Funds Value (MUTF: HOVLX ) seeks capital appreciation over the long run. HOVLX primarily focuses on acquiring common stocks of undervalued companies with market capitalization higher than or equal to $2 billion. The fund considers factors including earnings valuations and debt ratios to identify undervalued companies. Homestead Value has a three-year annualized return of almost 9.9%. As of December 2015, HOVLX held 48 issues, with 5.47% of its assets invested in Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (NYSE: BMY ). Original Post