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No Bull. Economic Weakness Continues To Pressure Corporate Profitability

Is the U.S. economy really in great shape? The U.S. Federal Reserve does not seem to think so. They started the year with an intention of raising the overnight lending rate four times – from 0.25% to 1.25%. In March, they announced that it would more likely be a mere two. And today, the Atlanta Fed downgraded its Q1 estimate for gross domestic product (GDP) to a new low for the year (0.4%). Granted, GDP for the fourth quarter of 2015 came in at a better-than-expected 1.4% after its third revision. However, that is significantly lower than the average economic performance since 2009 of 2.1%. And then there’s Gross Domestic Income (NYSE: GDI ). This measure looks at the income earned while producing goods and services (as opposed to measuring them on expenditures). GDI finished Q4 2015 at a sub-standard 0.9%, confirming widespread weakness. (Note: Theoretically, GDP and GDI should match one another, but they deviate due to different methods of calculation.) If one ignores the average rate of U.S. expansion in history, disregards the current 6-month slowdown in GDP/GDI, and overlooks the Federal Reserve’s emergency measures for monetary policy accommodation, one might applaud the economic “progress” made between 2009 and 2016. Conversely, realistic observers know that things are not that rosy. For example, U.S. government debt has swelled from roughly $11 trillion to $19 trillion. That’s a great deal of stimulus to keep the economy afloat. The Fed’s balance sheet has bloated from $800 billion to nearly $5 trillion. That’s an incredible amount of stimulus designed to bolster borrowing activity. Yet the big bang from the $12 trillion-plus injection is an economy that can barely hold its head above water. Apologists point to other data points that suggest the U.S. economy is dandy. “Robust job growth,” they say. Of course, they neglect to mention that low-quality positions in leisure, hospitality, retail and customer service account for most of the gains, whereas high-paying positions, particularly in manufacturing, continue to evaporate. That data shows up in average hourly earnings, where stagnation in wages are indicative of a shift toward lower-paying jobs with fewer hours. There’s more. Approximately 14 million jobs have been created since the end of the financial crisis in 2009. Sounds impressive, right? Unfortunately, the size of the labor force grew by roughly 16 million potential participants in the same seven-year period. Now we have 94 million working-aged Americans (16-64) who are not even counted in the labor force – those who have no job and who are not currently looking for a job. Granted, many younger folks are going to school and many older folks have retired. Nevertheless, the bulk of these 94 million individuals (16-64) simply believe that they do not have viable employment options. “But Gary,” you argue. “The economy here would be doing okay if it weren’t for the problems with overseas economies.” That may very well be true. On the other hand, this possibility only clarifies the fact that we live in a world that is more interconnected than ever before. Most of the world’s economies still depend on their product exports. It follows that when the world’s manufacturing is free-falling, the U.S. economy is going to feel it. “We are a consumption-based society with resilient consumers,” you respond. Unfortunately, the idea that resilient U.S. consumers can overcome global manufacturer woes is as erroneous as the notion that U.S. companies can escape the negative impact that weak currencies have had on corporate profits . They can’t and they aren’t. Global manufacturing woes have been adversely affecting the quality of the jobs that people have stateside. In fact, American consumer resilience is little more than “code” for acknowledging that we increase our debts at a much faster clip than we increase our take-home pay. Specifically, at the turn of the century, household consumer credit as a percent of average income had risen to 26%. Today? This percentage has jumped to 34%. Over-leveraged households imply that there will be some constraints on consumption, contributing to the overall weakness in the current economic backdrop. Think that the economic weakness is not going to have an impact on risk taking? Think again. Even the U.S. central bank’s about-face on rate hikes in 2016 – even the 14% surge in the S&P 500 SPDR Trust (NYSEARCA: SPY ) off of its mid-February lows – may not encourage as much “risk on” activity as many investors hope for. Consider the year-to-date performance of the FTSE Custom Multi-Asset Stock Hedge Index (MASH) as it relates to the S&P 500. MASH, with “risk-off” assets such as SPDR Trust (NYSEARCA: GLD ), Currency Shares Yen Trust (NYSEARCA: FXY ) as well as PIMCO 25+Year Zero Coupon (NYSEARCA: ZROZ ) and iShares National Muni Bond (NYSEARCA: MUB ) are collectively outperforming the stock benchmark with significantly less volatility. 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.

Best Performing Bond ETFs Of Q1

Chances for the 33-year bull run in the bond market to fall flat in 2016 increased when the Fed enacted a rate hike in December 2015 after almost a decade. But in reality, bonds kept bouncing throughout the first quarter on a low-yield environment in most developed markets across the world. Thanks to China-led global market worries and the 12-year plunge in oil prices, the global market went berserk to start this year. All these buried risk-on sentiments and boosted relatively safer fixed-income securities in the quarter, pulling bond yields down. In fact, the impact of the global financial market turmoil was so deep-rooted that the Fed halved its number of rate hike estimates for 2016 from four to two in its March meeting. Also, Fed chair Yellen reaffirmed a ‘cautious’ stance on future policy tightening. Needless to say, the very move dragged down the U.S. benchmark bond yields and pushed up its prices. Notably, yields on 10-year Treasury notes dropped 41 bps to 1.83% (as of March 30, 2016) in the quarter, leading U.S. Treasury valuation to soar. Meanwhile, deflationary threats led the central banks of Japan and Eurozone to widen their already ultra-easy monetary policies. At its January-end meeting, BoJ set its key interest rate at negative 0.1%. BoJ then hinted at further cuts in interest rates if the economy fails to improve desirably. In Europe, the ECB president Mario Draghi turned super dovish in March by raising the monthly bond purchase size to EUR 80 billion from 60 billion previously. Also, ECB lowered the deposit facility rate to negative 0.4%, down from the previous rate of negative 0.3%. It also cut its main refinancing rate and marginal lending rates by 0.5% each to zero percent and 0.25%, respectively. Quite expectedly, the twin boosters of easy money policy globally and a delayed rate hike in the U.S. made fixed-income securities a winner in the first quarter. It would thus be interesting to note the ETFs that were the leaders in the bond space during the quarter. Returns are as per xtf.com . 25+ Year Zero Coupon U.S. Treasury Index Fund (NYSEARCA: ZROZ ) ZROZ follows the BofA Merrill Lynch Long US Treasury Principal STRIPS Index, which focuses on Treasury principal STRIPS that have 25 years or more remaining to final maturity. It charges just 15 basis points in expenses while the 30-day SEC yield is 2.62% currently (as of March 29, 2016). ZROZ has added 14.3% so far this year (as of March 30, 2016). The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #2 (Buy) with a High risk outlook. DB German Bund Futures ETN (NYSEARCA: BUNL ) German bonds and the related ETFs also made an impressive rebound as these offer safety. Following extremely lower yields due to accommodative ECB policies, “German government bond yields are set to record their biggest quarterly fall in 4-1/2 years ” on March 31, 2016. The note looks to provide investors exposure to the U.S. dollar value of the returns of a German bond futures index, replicating the performance of a long position in Euro-Bund Futures. The note is up 14.3% so far this year (as of March 30, 2016). Vanguard Extended Duration Treasury ETF (NYSEARCA: EDV ) The fund seeks to match the performance of the Barclays U.S. Treasury STRIPS 20-30 Year Equal Par Bond Index. This means that this benchmark zeroes in on fixed income securities that are sold at a discount to face value, and then the investor is paid the face value upon maturity. The fund charges 10 bps in fees. This Zacks Rank #2 ETF yields 2.71% annually. The fund has returned 13% so far this year (as of March 30, 2016). DB Japanese Govt Bond Futures ETN (NYSEARCA: JGBL ) Very low bond yields following Bank of Japan’s decision to push key interest rates to the negative territory to engineer the sagging economy were behind JGBL’s surge. Many analysts are of the view that ” negative bond yields are here to stay in 2016″ for Japanese bonds. The product looks to track the DB USD JGB Futures Index, which is intended to measure the performance of a long position in 10-year JGB Futures. JGBL advanced about 9.9% so far this year (as of March 30, 2016). PIMCO 15+ Year U.S. TIPS ETF ( LTPZ ) The fund tracks the BofA Merrill Lynch 15+ Year US Inflation-Linked Treasury Index and is up 9.6% so far this year (as of March 30, 2016). As U.S. inflation improved in the quarter, TIPS ETFs came into the limelight. Original Post

Top And Flop Country ETFs Of Q1

The international stock markets had a rough run in the first quarter of 2016, with the Vanguard FTSE All-World ex-US ETF (NYSEARCA: VEU ) losing 0.6%, thanks to deflationary worries in the developed market, oil price issues, the Chinese market upheaval and its ripple effects on the other markets (see all World ETFs here ). While these issues made the country ETF losers’ list long, the space was not bereft of winners either. Several countries’ stock markets performed impressively in this time frame on country-specific factors. Plus, a soggy greenback boosted the demand for emerging market investing, increasing foreign capital inflows into those countries. In fact, the lure of international investing may be seen in the second quarter too, as the Fed is likely to opt for a slower-than-expected interest rate rise. Overall, Latin America won the top three winners’ medals, while the losers were scattered across the world. Investors may wish to know the best- and worst-performing country ETFs of the first quarter. Below, we highlight the top- and worst-performing country ETFs for the January to March period. Leaders iShares MSCI All Peru Capped (NYSEARCA: EPU ) – Up 30.8% The Peruvian market was on a tear in the first quarter, courtesy of the sudden spurt in commodity prices. After a rough patch, metals like gold and silver finally got back their sheen this year on a lower greenback. Even copper returned positively, as evident from the 2.6% return by the iPath DJ-UBS Copper Total Return Sub-Index ETN (NYSEARCA: JJC ). Being a large producer of precious metals, Peru greatly benefited from this trend, offering the pure play EPU a solid 30.8% return. iShares MSCI Brazil Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: EWZ ) – Up 27.2% While the economic growth prospects of Brazil are weakening, heightened political chaos is pushing up its market. Brazilian stocks have generally reacted positively to any political drama related to president Dilma Rousseff. Speculation that Rousseff is incapable of dissuading the impeachment proceedings that have been called against her, and the prospect of a change in governance set the Brazil ETFs on fire. Global X MSCI Colombia ETF (NYSEARCA: GXG ) – Up 22% The Colombian economy is a major exporter of commodities, from the energy sector (oil, coal, natural gas) to the agricultural sector (coffee). It has also a strong exposure to the industrial metal production market. Thus, a rebound in the commodities market led to the surge in this ETF. Though from a year-to-date look oil prices are down, commodities bounced in the middle of the quarter. This might have given a boost to the Colombia ETF. Losers WisdomTree Japan Hedged Financials ETF (NYSEARCA: DXJF ) – Down 24.1% At its January-end meeting, the BoJ set its key interest rate at negative 0.1% to boost inflation and economic growth. The BoJ then hinted at further cuts in interest rates if the economy fails to improve desirably. However, the introduction of negative interest rates weighed on the financial sector, as these stocks perform favorably in a rising rate environment. Also, the currency-hedging technique failed in the quarter due to a falling U.S. dollar. This was truer for the Japan equities, as the yen added more strength by virtue of its safe-haven nature. The twin attacks dulled the demand for the hedged Japan financials ETF, which lost 24.1% in the quarter. Deutsche X-trackers MSCI Spain Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: DBSP ) – Down 21.6% The Spanish economy is bearing the brunt of deflationary threats despite the ECB’s massive policy easing. Consumer prices in Spain are likely to decline 0.8% year over year in March 2016, the same as in February, as per Trading Economics . This led the Spain ETF to lose 21.6% in the first quarter. SPDR MSCI China A Shares IMI ETF (NYSEARCA: XINA ) – Down 19.21% Since the first quarter was mainly about the nagging economic slowdown in China, most of the China ETFs had a tough time. Within the bloc, XINA lost the most in the quarter, shedding over 19%. Original Post