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Why You Should Hunt For Value Rather Than Chase Momentum

“Everything old is new again.” I’ve been acquiring Wal-Mart in the low $60s for many of my clients. A dividend aristocrat with a 3%-plus yield, the stock is paying me to be patient. An old-timer like Hess Corp trading at 2012 prices and less than 1x book (P/B 0.75) is worthy of consideration, especially with its 1.8% dividend yield. I expect U.S. equities to retest their late August lows. Still, there’s nothing wrong with having a “buy lower” value orientation. I raised my daughter in Orange County, California. Beaches, boats, palm trees, friends with fancy cars – life could have been a whole lot more difficult. Spoiled senseless? Not really. She worked three jobs (martial arts assistant instructor, science tutor, husbandry intern at the Dana Point Ocean Institute), while maintaining a 4.4 GPA at her high school. Today, she’s a biology major with a marine minor at the University of California at San Diego. My kid is nineteen years old now. And even though she hasn’t lived at home for about a year, I cannot say that I am crazy about seeing her one weekend a month. So my wife and I asked her to join us in New York this past week. That’s right. Before heading back to DNA replication in one of her two lab internships – before resuming sorority obligations, hanging out with her surf-loving boyfriend and attending biodiversity lectures – my not-so-little piece of my heart had an opportunity to see her father’s hometown. “What do you think?” I asked, barely recognizing the area myself. She hadn’t really paid much attention to the east coast slice of suburbia when she visited 17 years earlier. “Everything seems extremely old,” she replied. She didn’t say “quaint” or “unique,” and it hurt my feelings for some reason. I let her know that not every car is a Tesla. I told her that some brick buildings have character – a whole lot more charm than stucco. I even felt the need to mention that some of the oldest and most successful public companies – Alcoa (NYSE: AA ), Bristol-Myers Squibb (NYSE: BMY ), MetLife (NYSE: MET ), Hess Corp (NYSE: HES ) – had their headquarters in the state of New York. Not surprisingly, my kid gave me one of those “you don’t get it” stares. Perhaps, if I had brought up names like Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ) or Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ) or Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX ), we would have been speaking the same language. And yet, that’s when it hit me. Pizazz at any price is a hallmark of latter-stage stock market bulls. Indeed, whereas every major sector ETF of the economy trades below its 200-day moving average, First Trust Internet (NYSEARCA: FDN ) trades above its trendline; whereas nearly all of the major sectors are negative year to date, FDN is up more than 10%. I realize that there are a whole lot of folks who believe in the forward growth potential of Internet juggernauts like Facebook ( FB ) and Netflix ( NFLX ). I don’t blame you for thinking that they cannot lose 50%, 60%, 70% of their value over the next few years. The thing is, in my 25 years of experience, peaking margin debt is the least kind to the flashiest and the sexist of stocks. Ever heard the phrase, “everything old is new again”? Well, that’s why I’ve been acquiring Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT ) in the low $60s for many of my clients. Can’t compete with Amazon, you say? I say that a dividend aristocrat with a 3%-plus yield is paying me to be patient. And what’s wrong with paying 2012 prices while we wait? Ditto for Hess Corp ( HES ). I realize that the doom-n-gloom on the commodity has been “spot on.” That said, the U.S. and the global community still depend on oil; that is, whether people around the world are using it for power or a country requires exporting the commodity for its survival, “black gold” will stage a comeback. It follows that an old-timer like Hess Corp ( HES ) trading at 2012 prices at less than 1x book (P/B 0.75) is worthy of consideration, especially with its 1.8% dividend yield. Don’t get me wrong. I expect U.S. equities to retest their late August lows. And I would not be surprised to see the corrective activity break to bearish levels of 20% below all-time records. The vast majority of the 15 warning signs that I outlined prior to the August-September sell-off are still in play. Still, there’s nothing wrong with having a “buy lower” value orientation. If a 33% discount on WMT stock is not enough protection, you might choose a stop-limit order to keep a loss manageable. If you fear $30 oil and worry that HES won’t be able to stand the heat, consider dollar-cost averaging into a diversified sector ETF like iShares Energy (NYSEARCA: IYE ). The one thing that you shouldn’t do? Join the biotech bandwagon or the Internet parade without a plan to step aside. Only 15% of S&P 500 stocks are trading above the 50-day moving average. Market breadth this weak tends to beget more selling pressure. Equally disconcerting? The American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) has investor bullishness at a 2-month high of 34.7%. Historically, you will get a whole lot more folks throwing up the white surrender flag before a corrective phase finishes. 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.

Dot-Com Stocks: This Time, It Really Is Different

Summary As of this writing, the S&P 500 Index is down for the year. But there is one sector of the market that has defied the market selloff: Internet stocks. The First Trust Dow Jones Internet Index ETF is one of the best ways to tap into the Internet sector. Unlike the dot-com bubble of the late-1990s, today’s Internet stocks are profitable and worth a careful look by investors seeking to capitalize on this high growth sector. Until recently, the U.S. market was going up and long investors were making money. Concerns about China and a Federal Reserve rate hike were in the air but nothing to worry about too much. Now, all of a sudden, panic has taken hold in China, which has dragged down global markets, including the United States. But one part of the market has stayed aloft: Internet stocks. The First Trust Dow Jones Internet Index ETF (NYSEARCA: FDN ) is a good way to invest in a diversified basket of these stocks. Resisting the global selloff Worries about slowing growth in China and a looming rate hike by the Federal Reserve have led to a broad-based selloff in the financial markets. Practically everything has gone down this year, except for short and intermediate-term U.S. Treasury bonds. One exception has been Internet stocks. The following graph shows the relative performance of the U.S. market, as measured by the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ), and the Internet sector measured by FDN, as of this writing: Source: YCharts Back in the late 1990s, the dot-com boom created a stock market bubble. Venture capitalists were throwing money at any Internet-related start-up with dot-com at the end of its name. Tech investors watched in awe as their investments soared and the tech-heavy NASDAQ Index breached 5,000. Eventually, the dot-com bubble burst. The NASDAQ crashed in the early 2000s. Tech investors learned the hard way about risk. It wasn’t until earlier this year – 15 years later – that the NASDAQ reached 5,000 again . This time, it really is different Today, many dot-com companies have become household names, including Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ), Google (NASDAQ: GOOG ) (NASDAQ: GOOGL ), and Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ). Moreover, as the Internet sector has grown into a more mature industry, dot-com stocks have become profitable. Since 2006, FDN has handily outperformed the U.S. market, as shown in the following graph: Source: YCharts The proliferation of mobile Internet-connected devices such as smartphones has created a new consumer culture oriented around technology. People not only communicate but also conduct commercial transactions using smartphones and other mobile devices. Some young people I know have never sent a letter through the U.S. mail. The First Trust Dow Jones Internet Index ETF FDN offers exposure to some of the biggest and best Internet stocks in the marketplace. Rather than investing in individual Internet stocks with high idiosyncratic risk, FDN provides a more diversified basket of stocks, which helps reduce risk. Currently, FDN holds 43 companies. The ten largest holdings are as follows: Google Amazon.com Facebook Priceline Group (NASDAQ: PCLN ) Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX ) Salesforce.com (NYSE: CRM ) PayPal Holdings (NASDAQ: PYPL ) Yahoo! (NASDAQ: YHOO ) LinkedIn Corp (NYSE: LNKD ) Equinix (NASDAQ: EQIX ) The Internet sector is somewhat obscured by Wall Street classifications that do not break out dot-com stocks as a separate, specialized sector. The underlying index used as the basis for FDN requires that companies in the index derive at least 50% of their revenue from the Internet. The companies in FDN include Internet search engines, e-commerce businesses, Web infrastructure companies, and cloud computing providers. FDN is by far the largest Internet ETF of its kind with over $3 billion in assets. This provides FDN investors with high liquidity when buying or selling shares. The next closest competitor is the PowerShares NASDAQ Internet Portfolio ETF (NASDAQ: PNQI ) with only an estimated $200 million in assets. PNQI holds 95 companies compared to FDN’s 43. In addition, PNQI holds foreign Internet companies such as Baidu (NASDAQ: BIDU ), while FDN does not. FDN carries a slightly lower expense ratio of 0.54% of assets compared to PNQI at 0.60%. Risk analysis The fact that FDN has stayed aloft despite the market downturn provides some evidence that it could help to diversify your portfolio. The growth potential of these stocks is so great that FDN has resisted a global market correction. On the other hand, Internet stocks are more volatile than the market as a whole. Therefore, rather than using FDN as a core holding, investors should consider FDN as a way to overweight the technology portion of a diversified portfolio. Price-to-earnings valuations in the Internet sector are high right now at about 22 times earnings compared to the S&P 500 at about 19 times earnings. While valuations are nowhere near bubble territory, FDN is richly valued. The bottom line Internet stocks have come a long way since the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s. Today, Internet stocks are profitable and mainstream, so much so that these stocks have resisted the recent market turmoil. Investors seeking exposure to this specialized part of the financial markets may wish to consider buying shares of the First Trust Dow Jones Internet Index ETF. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Building A Bulletproof Stock Portfolio

Summary An investor can “bullet-proof” his portfolio while maximizing his expected return using the hedged portfolio method. When creating a hedged portfolio, you can start from scratch or start with a list of stock picks. We explore the second method here starting with divided growth stocks. We also provide an example hedged portfolio, designed for an investor unwilling to risk a drawdown of more than 15%. This portfolio has a negative hedging cost. Another Cause For Uncertainty In a recent article (“Investing Alongside Buffett, Klarman and Other Top Investors While Limiting Your Risk”), we mentioned that the reactions to the economic data released Friday exemplified the uncertainty about the current economic environment, centered on the question of whether the Federal Reserve would raise rates soon. However, one of the top trending articles on Seeking Alpha over the weekend (“Something is Still Ridiculously Wrong”) argued that focussing on the when the Fed will raise rates is missing the point. In that article, written a couple of weeks before Friday’s jobs report data was released, Seeking Alpha contribor and mutual fund manager Michael Gayed, CFA, wrote that the bigger concern is that the Fed’s efforts at reflation haven’t helped the real economy, and that could have ominous implications, That is dangerous on many levels, and if the stock market begins to care about the fact that all of these tools central banks are using aren’t actually filtering to the economy, then the future is likely to be extraordinarily more volatile than the past. Dealing With Uncertainty Gayed’s article generated an extraordinary number of comments – 851, as of Monday night – with opinions divided as to his prognosis. One of the top commenters predicted that when his favored candidate is elected President, the stock market will hit new highs. Another top commenter praised Gayed for sounding his warning. Once again, we’re left with the uncertainty that no one knows what direction the market will take from here, and the question of how to invest confidently given that uncertainty. One way to deal with this sort of uncertainty about market direction is to invest in a handful of securities you think will do well, and to “bullet proof” them by hedging against the possibility that you end up being wrong. That approach is systematized in the hedged portfolio method, which we detailed in a previous post (“Backtesting The Hedged Portfolio Method”). An advantage of the hedged portfolio method is that, as our research suggests, it can generate competitive returns over time at a broad range of risk tolerances. Maybe You Can Do Better It’s possible you can get even better returns with the hedged portfolio method by selecting your own securities. And if you’re going to do that, Seeking Alpha can be a good starting point for ideas. For example, Seeking Alpha contributor Chuck Carnevale recently offered an interesting list of dividend growth stocks (“12 Attractive Fast-Growing Dividend Growth Stocks”). For his article, prompted by a question by a younger reader interested more in the potential for dividend growth than current yield, Carnevale screened for companies with above average earnings and dividend growth that he felt were trading currently at attractive valuations. Carnevale’s article included this chart listing the twelve stocks he came up with, along with some of the key metrics he used to screen for them: (click to enlarge) Carnevale’s article is worth a read for some additional color on these stocks and his screening methods and tools. But we’ll start with the assumption that most of these are solid stocks, and we’ll use them as a starting point to construct a hedged portfolio for an investor who is unwilling to risk a drawdown of more than 15%, and has $500,000 that he wants to invest. First, though, let’s address the issue of risk tolerance, and how it affects potential return. Risk Tolerance and Potential Return All else equal, with a hedged portfolio, the greater an investor’s risk tolerance — the greater the maximum drawdown he is willing to risk (his “threshold”, in our terminology) – the higher his potential return will be. So, we should expect that an investor who is willing to risk a 15% decline will have a chance at higher returns than one who is only willing to risk, say, a 5% drawdown. Constructing A Hedged Portfolio In the article about backtesting mentioned above, we discussed a process investors could use to construct a hedged portfolio designed to maximize potential return while limiting risk. We’ll recap that process here briefly, and then explain how you can implement it yourself. Finally, we’ll present an example of a hedged portfolio that was constructed this way with an automated tool. The process, in broad strokes, is this: Find securities with high potential returns (we define potential return as a high-end, bullish estimate of how the security will perform). Find securities that are relatively inexpensive to hedge. Buy a handful of securities that score well on the first two criteria; in other words, buy a handful of securities with high potential returns net of their hedging costs (or, ones with high net potential returns). Hedge them. The potential benefits of this approach are twofold: If you are successful at the first step (finding securities with high potential returns), and you hold a concentrated portfolio of them, your portfolios should generate decent returns over time. If you are hedged, and your return estimates are completely wrong, on occasion — or the market moves against you — your downside will be strictly limited. How to Implement This Approach Finding promising stocks In this case, we’re going to start with Chuck Carnevale’s list of dividend growth stocks. To quantify potential returns for these stocks, you can, for example, use analysts’ price targets for them and then convert these to percentage returns from current prices. In general, though, you’ll need to use the same time frame for each of your potential return calculations to facilitate comparisons of potential returns, hedging costs, and net potential returns. Our method starts with calculations of six-month potential returns. Finding inexpensive ways to hedge these securities First, you’ll need to determine whether each of these top holdings are hedgeable. Then, whatever hedging method you use, for this example, you’d want to make sure that each security is hedged against a greater-than-15% decline over the time frame covered by your potential return calculations (our method attempts to find optimal static hedges using collars as well as protective puts going out approximately six months). And you’ll need to calculate your cost of hedging as a percentage of position value. Selecting the securities with highest net potential returns In order to determine which securities these are, out of the list above, you may need to first adjust your potential return calculations by the time frame of your hedges. For example, although our method initially calculates six-month potential returns and aims to find hedges with six months to expiration, in some cases the closest hedge expiration may be five months out. In those cases, we will adjust our potential return calculation down accordingly, because we expect an investor will exit the position shortly before the hedge expires (in general, our method and calculations are based on the assumption that an investor will hold his shares for six months, until shortly before their hedges expire or until they are called away, whichever comes first). Next, you’ll need to subtract the hedging costs you calculated in the previous step from the potential returns you calculated for each position, and exclude any security that has a negative potential return net of hedging costs. Fine-tuning portfolio construction You’ll want to stick with round lots (numbers of shares divisible by 100) to minimize hedging costs, so if you’re going to include a handful of securities from the sort in the previous step and you have a relatively small portfolio, you’ll need to take into account the share prices of the securities. Another fine-tuning step is to minimize cash that’s leftover after you make your initial allocation to round lots of securities and their respective hedges. Because each security is hedged, you won’t need a large cash position to reduce risk. And since returns on cash are so low now, by minimizing cash you can potentially boost returns. In this step, our method searches for what we call a “cash substitute”: that’s a security collared with a tight cap (1% or the current yield on a leading money market fund, whichever is higher) in an attempt to capture a better-than-cash return while keeping the investor’s downside limited according to his specifications. You could use a similar approach, or you could simply allocate leftover cash to one of the securities you selected in the previous step. Calculating Expected Returns While net potential returns are bullish estimates of how well securities will perform, net of their hedging costs, expected returns, in our terminology, are the more likely returns net of hedging costs. In a series of 25,412 backtests over an 11-year time period, we determined two things about our method of calculating potential returns: it generates alpha, and it overstates actual returns. The average actual return over the next six months in those 25,412 tests was 0.3x the average potential return calculated ahead of time. So, we use that empirically derived relationship to calculate our expected returns. An Automated Approach Here we’ll show an example of creating a hedged portfolio starting with Chuck Carnevale’s twelve fast-growing dividend growth stocks using the general process described above, facilitated by the automated hedged portfolio construction tool at Portfolio Armor . In the first step, we enter the ticker symbols in the “Tickers” field, the dollar amount of our investor’s portfolio (500000), and in the third field, the maximum decline he’s willing to risk in percentage terms (15). In the second step, we are given the option of entering our own return estimates for each of these securities. Instead, in this case, we’ll let Portfolio Armor supply its own potential returns. A couple minutes after clicking the “Create” button, we were presented with the hedged portfolio below. The data here is as of Friday’s close. Why These Particular Securities? The site included all of the entered securities for which it calculated a positive potential return, net of hedging costs. In this case, that turned out to be just two stocks, Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ), and Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ: GILD ). Since it aims for including six primary securities in a portfolio of this size, and only two of the ones we entered had positive net potential returns, Portfolio Armor included four of the stocks with the highest net potential returns at the time in its universe in the portfolio. Those were Advance Auto Parts (NYSE: AAP ), Alliance Data Systems (NYSE: ADS ), Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ), and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: REGN ). In its fine-tuning step, Portfolio Armor added Celgene (NASDAQ: CELG ) as a cash substitute. Let’s turn our attention now to the portfolio level summary for a moment. Worst-Case Scenario The “Max Drawdown” column in the portfolio level summary shows the worst-case scenario for this hedged portfolio. If every underlying security in it went to zero before their hedges expired, the portfolio would decline 14.43%. Negative Hedging Cost Note that, in this case, the total hedging cost for the portfolio was negative, -0.96%, meaning the investor would receive more income in total from selling the call legs of the collars on his positions than he spent buying the puts. Best-Case Scenario At the portfolio level, the net potential return is 16.22% over the next six months. This represents the best-case scenario, if each underlying security in the portfolio meets or exceeds its potential return. A More Likely Scenario The portfolio level expected return of 5.62% represents a conservative estimate, based on the historical relationship between our calculated potential returns and backtested actual returns. By way of comparison, if you created a hedged portfolio on Friday using the same dollar amount ($500,000) and decline threshold (15%), but without entering any ticker symbols (i.e., you let Portfolio Armor pick all the securities), the expected return for that hedged portfolio would have been 7.42%. Each Security Is Hedged Note that each of the above securities is hedged. Celgene, the cash substitute, is hedged with an optimal collar with its cap set at 1%; Advance Auto Parts is hedged with optimal puts; and the remaining securities are hedged with optimal collars with their caps set at each underlying security’s potential return. Here is a closer look at the hedge for Gilead Sciences: Gilead is capped here at 5.67%, because that’s the potential return Portfolio Armor calculated for it over the next several months. As you can at the bottom of the image above, the cost of the put protection in this collar is $2,220, or 3.63% of position value. But if you look at the image below, you’ll see the income generated from selling the calls is $3,300, or 5.39% of position value. So, the net cost of this optimal collar is negative.[i] Possibly More Protection Than Promised In some cases, hedges such as the ones in the portfolio above can provide more protection than promised. For an example of that, see this recent instablog post on hedging Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA ). Hedged Portfolios For Smaller Investors The hedged portfolio shown above was designed for someone with $500,000 to invest, but the same process, with a couple of minor adjustments, can be used for those with smaller amounts to invest. We walked through creating a hedged portfolio for someone with $30,000 to invest in an article last month (“Keeping a Small Nest Egg from Cracking”). [i]To be conservative, this optimal collar shows the puts being purchased at their ask price, and the calls being sold at their bid price. In practice, an investor can often buy the puts for less (i.e., at some point between the bid and ask prices) and sell the calls for more (again, at some point between the bid and ask). So the actual cost of opening this collar would have likely been less (i.e., an investor would have likely collected more than $1080 when opening this hedge). Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.