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Dynegy: Too Early To Buy

Summary Dynegy shares have been cut in half in 2015 as investors run for the exits. While metrics are improving, the company still doesn’t generate significant operational cash flow. Additionally, I have concerns over whether cash flow problems have impacted the company’s ability to properly maintain its assets. It’s still to early to buy. If you really want a piece of this company, buy the preferred shares instead. Dynegy (NYSE: DYN ) is a holding company that owns a large portfolio of power generation assets throughout the United States, with a heavy concentration of these assets located in the Northeast and Midwest. The company operates regulated utility operations while also competing in the wholesale electric business, where it provides electricity to utilities, power marketers, and industrial customers. Unlike traditional regulated utilities that are the sole source of power for their customers, the wholesale market pits many players against each other in the name of driving down costs. Dynegy operates approximately 26GW of generation assets, with the vast majority of production evenly split between modern combined cycle natural gas plants and legacy coal plants. In acquiring and developing these assets, the company has had both an interesting and volatile past. Dynegy emerged from bankruptcy in 2012 with a little help from the renowned Carl Icahn , only to make a $6.25B acquisition (12.4GW) of coal and gas-fired assets from Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK ) and Energy Capital Partners just a few short years later in 2014. While the debt load may appear large given the company’s size and recent bankruptcy, the acquisition was viewed favorably by most ratings agencies in regards to improving earnings by acquiring some retail regulated business. However, this debt didn’t come cheap – weighted average interest rate of the debt was 7.18%, quite high given our current position in the interest rate cycle. Operating Results (click to enlarge) As one of the largest merchant energy providers using natural gas, you might expect operating results to have been a little bit more favorable than this post-bankruptcy. There are some sparks of improvement for investors to grab on to, such as improving gross margins. The retail Duke Energy/Energy Capital Partner assets have improved the company’s margin profile, and spark spread improvements due to collapsing natural gas prices have also boosted margins. SG&A expenses have also grown quite slowly, indicative of the scale that is present in many utilities. Bigger is generally better in this sector. Like the income statement, cash flow generation hasn’t been much better. Dynegy generated negative operational cash flow in 2013 and 2012, and was only generated marginal cash flow in 2014. 2015 is set to be a better year, but the company still struggles to generate enough cash to sustain itself. Through this point in 2015, the company has barely spent any money at all on capital expenditures ($500M over three and a half years). Even after taking into account the change in the business from the acquisition, this still seems woefully low. Great Plains Energy (NYSE: GXP ), another company with heavy coal exposure and nearly identical enterprise value, has averaged $600-800M in annual capital expenditures. I’m not sure I buy into just $130M in capex to support the company’s 16 power plants in 2014. This company is a long way away from supporting itself from a cash flow perspective, never mind instituting a dividend that can be healthily supported. I do like the company’s natural gas operations. Citing industry trends, management itself notes that it expects ~50GW of coal power plants to be phased out of markets that Dynegy competes in due to a variety of factors, such as falling natural gas prices, increased capital expenditure requirements, and burdensome regulatory costs. However, I can’t help but feel this leads to a negative in and of itself as well. This bullishness on natural gas generation seems to run contrary to the assets picked up from the Duke Energy deal, as a sizeable (roughly 40%) portion of those assets were coal-fired. Duke Energy has been reluctant and slow to shift generation away from coal, and while these were non-core assets for Duke Energy (the company has decided to focus on its East Coast operations), Duke Energy management wouldn’t have taken a poor deal just to dispose of these assets. Conclusion Dynegy is too early in the turnaround stage for me to recommend it, and it is too early to go bottom fishing, despite the stock getting halved in price in 2015. While I’m not going to call it a short (I would have six months ago), the company is still years away from being what investors want in a utility: consistent cash flows, a healthy dividend, and a fair valuation. The preferred issue is probably the better play here if you’re deeply interested in the company. The preferred currently yields 8.49%, and is convertible into 2.58 shares of Dynegy if you choose to later on. At $59.22/preferred share at this point, if this thing ever does recover, you’ll be sitting pretty and will have been paid a healthy dividend to boot while you wait.

Low Vol U.S. Equity ETFs: 5 Risk Weighted Offerings

Summary This article examines 5 ETFs that strive to offer lower volatility and downside protection against the broad U.S. equity market. Each of the 5 ETFs considers prior volatility in selecting and weighting constituents. Three performance criteria and fees are analyzed. This article will examine 5 low/minimum volatility ETFs tracking indices whose goal is to create less risky portfolios in relation to their cap weighted equivalent. The way each underlying index builds a portfolio differs, but the common theme is that they use some measure of volatility as the sole basis for portfolio construction (with the exception of things like maximum weight for a stock and sector constraints). Selected constituents are then weighted based on their prior volatility, not their market cap. The recent market selloff of August and September provides us with some real life data for these funds. The oldest ETF discussed here is less than 5 years old, so real life data is limited. Although most of the underlying indices tracked go back farther, we will limit our analysis to their ETF manifestations and avoid back-tested un-investable indices. The following table introduces the ETFs with some basic information. They will be compared to the S&P 500, represented by the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA: VOO ). Name Ticker Inception AUM MER Vanguard S&P 500 ETF VOO September 7, 2010 $39.56 billion 0.05% PowerShares S&P 500 Low Volatility ETF SPLV May 5, 2011 $5.12 billion 0.25% iShares MSCI USA Minimum Volatility ETF USMV October 18, 2011 $6.82 billion 0.15% SPDR Russell 1000 Low Volatility ETF LGLV February 20, 2013 $30.16 million 0.12% iShares MSCI USA Size Factor ETF SIZE April 16, 2013 $201.90 million 0.15% Janus Equal Risk Weighted Large Cap ETF ERW July 29, 2013 $2.57 million 0.65% Source: Morningstar.com on November 27, 2015 A consideration of the methodologies and some basic portfolio characteristics will provide insightful background before we begin our analysis. The source for the methodology information is the respective ETF provider and underlying index provider websites. Vanguard S&P 500 ETF Methodology: The S&P 500 tracks 500 large U.S. companies that are weighted on a float-adjusted market cap basis. Probably the most popular benchmark in the world, we will use VOO as our benchmark and consider the ETFs in relation to it. Top Holdings Weight Apple Inc (NASDAQ: AAPL ) 3.70% Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ: MSFT ) 2.29% Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE: XOM ) 1.87% General Electric (NYSE: GE ) 1.59% Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ ) 1.52% Source: Morningstar.com on November 27, 2015 PowerShares S&P 500 Low Volatility ETF Methodology: The 100 stocks from the S&P 500 with the lowest standard deviation over the prior 252 trading days are weighted by the inverse of their volatility (lower volatility stocks get higher weights). Rebalancing and reconstitution occurs in February, May, August, and November. Top Holdings Weight Plum Creek Timber Co Inc (NYSE: PCL ) 1.26% Coca-Cola Co (NYSE: KO ) 1.26% Airgas Inc (NYSE: ARG ) 1.22% Clorox Co (NYSE: CLX ) 1.22% Waste Management Inc (NYSE: WM ) 1.16% Source: Morningstar.com on November 27, 2015 iShares MSCI USA Minimum Volatility ETF Methodology: Not much detail is given for the construction of the underlying MSCI index. We do know that the index is constructed using the proprietary Barra Optimizer to achieve the lowest absolute volatility with a certain set of constraints. The constraints include minimum and maximum constituent weights and sector weights relative to the original MSCI USA index. Rebalancing occurs in May and November. Top Holdings Weight McDonald’s Corp (NYSE: MCD ) 1.74% AT&T Inc (NYSE: T ) 1.66% Public Storage (NYSE: PSA ) 1.64% Paychex Inc (NASDAQ: PAYX ) 1.52% PepsiCo Inc (NYSE: PEP ) 1.49% Source: Morningstar.com on November 27, 2015 SPDR Russell 1000 Low Volatility ETF Methodology: Up to 200 stocks from the Russell 1000 with the lowest standard deviation over the past 252 trading days are weighted by the inverse of their volatility. Rebalancing occurs monthly. Top Holdings Weight Home Depot (NYSE: HD ) 2.17% Henry Schein Inc (NASDAQ: HSIC ) 2.10% Aflac Inc (NYSE: AFL ) 2.07% McDonald’s Corp 2.06% Travelers Companies Inc (NYSE: TRV ) 2.06% Source: Morningstar.com on November 27, 2015 iShares MSCI USA Size Factor ETF Methodology: This ETF tracks the MSCI USA Risk Weighted Index. The index considers the variance of the 3-year weekly historical local return of the MSCI USA Index. The weighting is computed as the ratio of the inverse of the security variance to the sum of the inverse of the security variances of all constituents in the parent index. Rebalancing occurs in May and November. Top Holdings Weight Synchrony Financial (NYSE: SYF ) 0.68% Chubb Corp (NYSE: CB ) 0.57% Arch Capital Group Ltd (NASDAQ: ACGL ) 0.53% Clorox Co 0.50% PepsiCo Inc 0.49% Source: Morningstar.com on November 27, 2015 Janus Equal Risk Weighted Large Cap ETF Methodology: Beginning with the S&P 500, stocks are weighted using a proprietary method such that the expected risk contribution of each stock is equal. Rebalancing occurs in January, April, July, and October. Top Holdings Weight Best Buy Co Inc (NYSE: BBY ) 2.43% L Brands Inc (NYSE: LB ) 1.67% Sysco Corp (NYSE: SYY ) 1.48% Motorola Solutions Inc (NYSE: MSI ) 0.88% Keurig Green Mountain Inc (NASDAQ: GMCR ) 0.86% Source: Morningstar.com on November 27, 2015 The sector makeup of the six ETFs differs substantially. Relative to the S&P 500, an underweight to energy and technology and overweight to basic materials, real estate, consumer defensive, and utilities are present in all of the low volatility ETFs. Sectors VOO SPLV USMV LGLV SIZE ERW Cyclical Basic Materials 2.79% 4.50% 3.46% 3.12% 4.43% 4.69% Consumer Cyclical 11.49% 3.10% 7.13% 5.89% 12.43% 18.55% Financial Services 14.97% 17.23% 10.75% 19.81% 18.85% 9.91% Real Estate 2.13% 6.71% 7.78% 12.75% 6.42% 4.61% Sensitive Communication Services 4.19% 4.10% 5.89% 5.82% 2.89% 2.42% Energy 7.11% 0.00% 2.52% 0.83% 3.60% 6.38% Industrials 10.96% 19.69% 9.44% 16.40% 14.02% 13.23% Technology 18.76% 0.00% 9.79% 5.68% 9.42% 11.51% Defensive Consumer Defensive 9.61% 20.13% 15.60% 11.97% 10.61% 11.54% Healthcare 15.05% 13.38% 19.80% 14.11% 9.78% 9.48% Utilities 2.93% 11.16% 7.84% 3.61% 7.54% 7.67% Source: Morningstar.com on November 27, 2015 The following holdings overlap matrix shows that these different approaches result in significantly different underlying holdings, even though the methodologies may seem similar. Holdings VOO SPLV USMV LGLV SIZE ERW VOO 100% 26% 38% 27% 50% 49% SPLV 26% 100% 43% 42% 29% 22% USMV 38% 43% 100% 35% 36% 25% LGLV 27% 42% 35% 100% 18% 12% SIZE 50% 29% 36% 18% 100% 66% ERW 49% 22% 25% 12% 66% 100% Source: ETF Research Center Overlap Analysis The correlation between them is noteworthy in that it is somewhat close to 1 with the exception of ERW. Correlation VOO SPLV USMV LGLV SIZE ERW VOO 1.00 0.85 0.93 0.90 0.96 0.33 SPLV 0.85 1.00 0.95 0.94 0.92 0.45 USMV 0.93 0.95 1.00 0.93 0.96 0.39 LGLV 0.90 0.94 0.93 1.00 0.94 0.46 SIZE 0.96 0.92 0.96 0.94 1.00 0.41 ERW 0.33 0.45 0.39 0.46 0.41 1.00 Source: Yahoo! Finance, monthly returns based on adjusted closing prices, 8/1/2013-10/31/2015 Evaluation Criteria Now that we have reviewed some of the basics, it is time to take a closer look at these ETFs in the context of past performance, with emphasis on their behavior in negative market periods. The measures chosen for evaluation are an attempt to answer the question: “What does an investor who chooses a low volatility fund care about?” The funds will be evaluated based on three performance criteria and their fees: Risk-adjusted returns relative to the S&P 500 as represented by VOO Up and down period performance relative to VOO Performance in periods where the S&P 500 faced a significant drawdown Fees Methodology: I used adjusted closing prices (adjusted for both dividends and splits) from Yahoo! Finance. Since this uses prices and not the NAV of the funds, I think it skews some of the results, mainly for the small and thinly traded ERW. With low volume, the underlying value of the fund’s holdings can deviate from its last traded price materially. This likely explains its low correlation to the other ETFs as well. Although prices describe the real investor experience, I would keep this in mind when evaluating the results, with particular emphasis on ERW. Criteria 1: Risk-adjusted returns relative to the S&P 500 as represented by VOO Low volatility ETFs should be held to a standard of exhibiting lower standard deviation than their relevant benchmark. However, the return side is important as well. If a fund produces low volatility but also low returns such that the risk-adjusted return is lower, the investor would have been better off holding the benchmark and some cash. We will divide the annualized return by the annualized standard deviation to determine risk-adjusted returns. This is essentially a Sharpe ratio, but ignores the risk free return because short term cash yields are so low (under 0.10% for 3 month T-bills for most of the period under examination). ETFs with a higher/lower value than VOO will receive a pass/fail on this criterion. VOO SPLV USMV LGLV SIZE ERW Return 11.72% 10.55% 12.51% 11.67% 11.50% 8.11% Std Dev 11.32% 10.42% 9.39% 10.53% 10.04% 7.62% Return/Std Dev 1.04 1.01 1.33 1.11 1.15 1.06 Result Fail Pass Pass Pass Pass Source: Yahoo! Finance, annualized monthly data based on adjusted closing prices, 8/1/2013-10/31/2015 Every fund exhibited lower standard deviation over the period examined. USMV even achieved higher returns, a nice bonus and a help in driving its return/standard deviation figure to be the highest of the bunch. Although SPLV managed a lower standard deviation than VOO, it was more than offset by its weaker performance. ERW is a concern here. The return of the fund is the lowest by far, and the only in single digits. In addition, its lack of trading volume has likely understated the true standard deviation of the NAV of the fund. The numbers say it still gets a pass, but extra caution should be placed on its results. Criteria 2: Up and down period performance relative to VOO This measure will provide detail on how the ETFs do in up and down periods. The ideal low volatility fund doesn’t go down very much in market declines but can hang in the market rallies. A passing grade will be given to a fund that outperforms in more than half of the months in which VOO had a negative return. The percentage outperformance in positive months for VOO will be presented as well, but will not be scored. Months SPLV USMV LGLV SIZE ERW Outperformance vs. VOO in up months 17 41% 35% 47% 41% 12% Outperformance vs. VOO in down months 10 80% 70% 80% 60% 100% Result Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Source: Yahoo! Finance, monthly returns based on adjusted closing prices, 8/1/2013-10/31/2015 All funds outperformed more than half of the time against negative return months for the S&P 500 ETF. It is noteworthy that USMV had a higher return with lower standard deviation over the period (see Criteria 1) than VOO despite only outperforming in roughly a third of positive months and 70% of negative months. In contrast, both SPLV and LGLV had better up and down performance but lower returns than VOO. Clearly, this metric doesn’t tell the whole story, but is helpful in assessing tendencies of relative performance as the broader market goes through positive and negative periods. Criteria 3: Performance in periods where the S&P 500 faced a significant drawdown Since the time period in question is relatively short, there aren’t any decreases in VOO that are particularly steep. Regardless, we will examine the three largest drawdown periods since August 2013. This deeper look into the magnitude of out or underperformance relative to the benchmark will focus on performance when it matters most for low volatility investors. Three months stick out since August 2013. The total losses in each month aren’t particularly deep, but the lowest points in each drawdown are significant. To pass, the ETF in question will need to both outperform and have a smaller maximum drawdown in at least two of the three months. Intraday high and low prices for the respective month will be considered in determining the maximum drawdown. VOO SPLV USMV LGLV SIZE ERW August 2013 Month Return -3.08% -5.04% -3.26% -4.71% -3.30% -3.03% Drawdown -4.65% -6.19% -4.43% -6.26% -4.35% -4.25% January 2014 Month Return -3.53% -2.57% -3.04% -1.61% -1.95% -1.88% Drawdown -4.34% -3.53% -3.83% -2.89% -2.81% -3.23% August 2015 Month Return -6.14% -5.01% -4.53% -6.18% -5.59% -4.56% Drawdown -13.25% -48.35% -38.18% -8.96% -9.59% -6.95% Result Fail Fail Fail Pass Pass Source: Yahoo! Finance, monthly returns based on adjusted closing prices, 8/1/2013-10/31/2015 The August 2015 numbers may have caused a double take. It is well known that the carnage of August 24, 2015 brought many ETFs down well below their NAVs. Although it didn’t take long for the massive discounts to correct themselves, this experience highlights a real concern for ETF investors. Anyone caught with a stop loss or market order sell would have been at risk for a nasty surprise. Interestingly enough, it was the two largest ETFs that were affected. Only SIZE and ERW managed to pass this test. The August 2013 drawdown was particularly challenging for the group, while the opposite is true for the one in January 2014. Besides the deviation between price and NAV for SPLV and USMV, the August 2015 drawdown provides positive evidence of the effectiveness of low volatility strategies. I would be inclined to give more value to this drawdown, as it was significantly larger than the other two. Criteria 4: Fees Nothing eats away at returns quite like fees. The table below takes a look at several factors that will affect how expensive these funds are to hold and trade. VOO SPLV USMV LGLV SIZE ERW MER 0.05% 0.25% 0.15% 0.12% 0.15% 0.65% Average Volume 2,000,000 1,500,000 1,200,000 3,632 12,475 1,064 Spread 0.02% 0.03% 0.05% 0.49% 0.21% 1.19% Premium/Discount -0.09% -0.07% -0.07% 0.33% -0.31% -0.82% Result Pass Pass Pass Pass Fail Source: Morningstar.com on November 27, 2015 Fortunately, most of the ETFs are very reasonably priced, even against the super cheap VOO. Only ERW’s expense ratio is uncomfortably high. The spread and discount are also troublesome, although not entirely surprising given the small assets of the ETF. All in all, fees need only be a consideration for those interested in ERW. Although it would be nice to see SPLV come down to the 0.15% range, all four other ETFs are priced fairly. The spread and discount may seem a little high on some of the ETFs in the table, but keep in mind I was taking these down on a holiday shortened trading day, so they are likely understating the liquidity of a regular trading day. Conclusion Examining the four criteria gave valuable insight beyond the basic characteristics of the ETFs. SIZE was the only ETF to pass all four criteria. SPLV was the only to fail two, while the remaining three ETFs failed one each. Criteria SPLV USMV LGLV SIZE ERW 1. Risk-adjusted returns Fail Pass Pass Pass Pass 2. Up and down performance Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass 3. Drawdown performance Fail Fail Fail Pass Pass 4. Fees Pass Pass Pass Pass Fail Does this mean I think SIZE is the best of the bunch and should outperform the others in the future, at least in negative market environments? I would hesitate to go that far. For one, the available data only goes back a few years and doesn’t include many strong drawdown periods. However, based on the characteristics of the funds and the behaviour exhibited in our examined timeframe, I would feel comfortable using a low volatility product in a supporting capacity within the U.S. equity allocation of a portfolio. These products may be even more appropriate for somebody who is concentrated in a sector that is underrepresented in the funds, such as energy or technology. The only ETF I have reservations about is ERW. This small ETF trades thinly, with high bid ask spreads and a high expense ratio. It has done well in the performance criteria but this was influenced by the fact that we were looking at prices and not NAV. With ERW not trading some days and having low volume on the others, sizable discounts and premiums are common. I have nothing against the methodology of the underlying benchmark, but unless liquidity improves, it would be hard to place it above any of the other options. My recommendation is to consider combining any of SPLV, USMV, LGLV, or SIZE within your U.S. equity allocation. Of those four, there is no clear winner at this point. I will leave it to the reader to choose among them, and they are certainly differentiated in sector allocation, holdings similarity, and correlation. I deem all four suitable for lowering volatility and protecting on the downside as part of a larger U.S. allocation in a portfolio. Disclaimer: This article was not intended to be taken as investment advice. Please conduct due diligence of any ETF investment you are considering, including but not limited to a review of the prospectus, underlying benchmark methodology (if applicable), portfolio characteristics, holdings, performance since inception, role in your existing portfolio, and outlook for future performance.

Managed Futures: Best And Worst Funds In October

By DailyAlts Staff Managed futures funds suffered category-wide losses of 1.82% in October, reversing course after posting gains of 1.21% the prior month. There were still standout performers within the category, though, as the top three managed futures funds notched monthly gains ranging from 1.20% to 2.53%. The category’s bottom three performers, meanwhile, averaged losses of 4.70% – indicating a wide dispersion of returns between the best- and worst-performing funds. (click to enlarge) Top Performing Funds for October The top three managed futures funds for October were: The Dunham Alternative Strategy Fund was the month’s best-performing fund, posting gains of 2.53%. The fund, which debuted in 2009 and recently had $23.4 million in assets under management (“AUM”), had five-year annualized returns of -0.36% for the period ending on October 31. Its one-year returns through that date was positive at +0.29% but still well under the category average of +5.24%. DAASX did significantly outperform its peers over the three months ending on Halloween, though, as it gained 0.04% compared to the category’s losses of 2.56%. It appears that the fund may be gaining steam. The Superfund Managed Futures Strategy Fund and the Grant Park Managed Futures Strategy Fund were the number-two and -three best-performing managed futures mutual funds in October, posting respective gains of 1.28% and 1.20%. It was something of a bounce-back month for both funds, which had each underperformed over the 12 months ending October 31: SUPIX ranked in the bottom three of September’s performers and lost 5.95% for the year ending Halloween, while GPFIX’s gains of 3.87% still trailed the category average of +5.24%. The funds had respective AUM of $4.9 million and $51.8 million, and were originally launched in 2013 and 2011, respectively. (click to enlarge) Bottom Performing Funds for October The managed futures funds that posted the worst one-month returns in October were: The AQR Managed Futures Strategy HV Fund was at the very bottom of the category, with its shares falling 4.93% for the month. Shareholders are likely able to take those losses in stride, though, since the fund gained an impressive 21.54% for the year ending October 31, ranking at the very top of the managed futures category. QMHIX originally launched in 2013, and its AUM recently stood at $505.9 million. The month’s other worst performers were also outperformers over longer periods: The Arrow Managed Futures Strategy Fund, which posted a 4.61% loss in October, had one-year gains of 7.89% for the year ending October 31; and the American Beacon AHL Managed Futures Strategy Fund, which was the month’s third-worst performer with losses of 4.56%, had one-year gains of 9.08%. Of the two funds, MFTNX is older but smaller, with its original launch in 2010 and AUM of $29.6 million, compared to AHLIX’s 2014 debut and $100.8 million in AUM. (click to enlarge) September’s Best and Worst: Follow-Up There were no repeat winners or losers in the top or bottom three from September to October. Indeed, all three of September’s top performers posted losses in October, and two of September’s three worst managed futures funds notched gains – one of September’s worst, the Superfund Managed Futures Strategy Fund, jumped into October’s top three. The Altegris Futures Evolution Strategy Fund (MUTF: EVOIX ), the 361 Global Counter-Trend Fund (MUTF: AGFZX ), and the LoCorr Managed Futures Strategy Fund (MUTF: LFMIX ) – which posted respective gains of 5.30%, 4.40%, and 3.78% in September – saw their shares fall by 2.56%, 1.34%, and 2.39% in October. Meanwhile, the Superfund Managed Futures Strategy Fund ( SUPIX ) and the Discretionary Managed Futures Strategy Fund (MUTF: FUTEX ) – the second- and third-worst performing funds in September, with respective losses of 1.58% and 0.77% – bounced back with respective gains of 1.28% and 0.19% in October. Remember: The category average for October was -1.82%, and with that in mind, even September’s worst performer – the 361 Managed Futures Strategy Fund (MUTF: AMFZX ), which lost 4.81% in September – outperformed the average, as it only lost 1.74% in October. Past performance does not necessarily predict future results.