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How To Trade A China GDP Crash

The theme early in 2016 has been China and oil crashing, which both go hand in hand. If growth in China is slowing, global demand for oil will slow as well, thus creating lower oil prices. This factor, along with the recent rise in global supply, has oil in a free fall. At the moment, there is a lot of uncertainty creating negative sentiment in every global market, not just China. The Chinese economy is the second largest in the world and a key driver of growth for the world. A slowing China would facilitate a dull global economy and lower revenue for U.S. companies. Foreign sales account for over 30% of revenue for S&P 500 companies; a global slowdown will have a significant impact on the bottom line and stock prices. This potential sluggish growth and slowing investment in China has investors and traders speculating how bad China might be. They will get their answer soon. The Event Monday night, at 8pm CST, China will announce Q4 GDP. The number is expected to come in at 6.8% versus 6.9% last year. Industrial production, retail sales, and fixed asset investment are all expected out as well. These numbers will give us insight into why global markets have been hit with such extreme selling pressure. The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a government think tank, predicted the economy could expand at a slower pace between 6.6 percent and 6.8 percent in 2016. This would be due to weak external demand and cooling domestic investment. In addition to the GDP announcement, the Chinese New Year comes on Feb. 8th. Markets are closed for the whole week, and you can bet most investors do not want to have exposure over the holiday. I would expect if we see a bad GDP print, volatility and selling pressure will continue, at the very least, until the holiday. I grabbed a chart from tradingeconomics.com to show the declining trend in quarterly GDP. As you can see, this is not something new; China has been slowing and now we are at a crucial point. Let’s go over three potential scenarios into how to trade the number. Scenario 1: Chinese government fudges numbers and GDP comes in at 6.8% or above There is a lot of doubt when it comes to Chinese economic numbers. These accusations have been made before, but if China were to announce a number above consensus, nobody would believe it this time. There are signals that the Chinese economy is slowing down, their stock market being one of them. If China were to post 6.8% or a couple ticks above or below the consensus, we might see a calming of markets into the Chinese New Year. Scenario 2: 6-8% GDP print This is the most likely and the closer to 6.8% the calmer the markets. Scenario 3: Number comes in at 6% or lower This scenario shows us that China’s economy is significantly slowing and that the recent global stock market selloff was warranted. Due to doubt in government numbers, most people will speculate it’s even worse, so bad even that the government had to give the world a more realistic number. Global markets seem to be expecting a lower print, perhaps in the low 6% area. It is not the end of the world and does not mean markets go into a panic; however, if we see something in the low-high 5% area, or below that, there will be significant pressure on global markets. How to trade the number: ETFs There are 38 ETFs that enable you to play china in a variety of ways, but if you are trading this number, you might as well play the aggressive ones. The two ETFs below are for you if you are bullish. A trader can benefit if he thinks China is oversold and will print the number as expected…or because the government says it must be. Deutsche X-trackers Harvest CSI 300 China A-Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: ASHR ) will give you exposure to the Shanghai stock market. Direxion Daily CSI 300 China A Share Bull 2x Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: CHAU ) will move up and down twice as much as the CSI 300, giving you double exposure. If you are bearish and think China will print a significantly lower number, then go with Direxion Daily FTSE China Bear 3x Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: YANG ). This is Direxion’s triple leveraged ETF product that will go up as the Chinese market goes down. Be cautious on this one, leveraged bear products can have significant downside when markets rally. Below is a 10-year chart of ProShares UltraShort Financials ETF (NYSEARCA: SKF ) as an example. These leveraged bear ETFs should only be treated as short-term trades or hedges, not investments. How to invest the number: Three top-rated stocks JinkoSolar (NYSE: JKS ) is a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy) and a Chinese solar play. While a disappointing GDP number will hurt the overall story of Jinko, the company is diversified with a global network across Europe, North America and Asia. 2016 estimates have risen from $3.93 to $4.40 over the last 90 days, showing strong growth potential over the next year. The company also sports an “A” rating in value, in a strong rated industry, currently ranked 13 out of 265 (Top 5%) Zacks industries. Momo (NASDAQ: MOMO ) is a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) and Chinese social networking play. Momo is a free instant messaging application for smartphones and tablets. The company also sports an “A” rating in momentum and is currently ranked 95 out of 265 (Top 36%) Zacks industries. 2016 estimates have risen from $.23 to $.54 over the last 90 days. Weibo (NASDAQ: WB ) is a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) and a Chinese social media play. Weibo is a Chinese microblogging site similar to that of Twitter (NYSE: TWTR ) and Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ). The site is very popular in China and used by over 30% of China. The company is not a value play, but has momentum behind it with a Zacks “B” rating. 2016 estimates have risen from $.38 to $.49 over the last 90 days, showing us that the analysts believe the company has the ability to grow through monetization. Most of these stocks are down over 30% from last year’s highs and down big today as I type. There is a rather large risk that another leg down is coming on a bad GDP number. If that’s the case and scenario 3 plays out, I would suggest you take that opportunity to limp into these high-rated stocks for a long-term China play. Original post

1704 On The S&P 500 In 2016? Less Far-Fetched Than Investors Want To Believe

How does a favorable bullish uptrend become an unfavorable bearish downtrend? Does the transition happen overnight? Do commentators, analysts, money managers and market participants simultaneously concur that the environment for risk-taking is exceptionally poor? The transition from “good times” to “bad times” is far more gradual than many realize. Granted, prices on the Dow or the S&P 500 may fall apart in a matter of days, changing the narrative from “no reason to worry” to “don’t panic.” That said, there are a wide variety of indications that forewarn mindful investors six to twelve months in advance , including consecutive quarters of corporate profitability declines, economic deceleration, and waning participation in price gains across the majority of assets and asset types. 1. Corporate Profits Have Been Breaking Down For Quite Some Time . Peak profitability for the S&P 500 occurred with the third quarter results of 2014 (9/30). Operating earnings that exclude “non-recurring” charges like one-time losses and loan write-downs came in $114.5; reported, or actual earnings, came in near $106. Not only will operating earnings decline for two consecutive quarters on a year-over-year basis for 12/31/2015, but reported earnings will decline for three consecutive quarters on a year-over-year basis (i.e. Q2, Q3 and Q4 in 2015). An earnings recession – two consecutive quarters of year-over-year declines is a bad omen regardless of the earnings type that one looks at. According to one researcher, Keith McCullough, two consecutive quarters of declining profits always result in bearish price depreciation for the S&P 500 in the subsequent year. Similarly, I have pointed out in past articles that a relationship between a manufacturing recession via erosion of the Institute for Supply Management’s PMI strongly correlates with declining earnings per share (EPS). In other words, as much as cheerleaders look to play up ex-energy (EPS) or the 65%-70% service-oriented (ex-manufacturing, ex industrials, ex transports) economy, overall S&P 500 profitability weakness goes hand-in-hand with overall economic weakness. The last two bear markets tell the tale. Back in 2000, bulls continued to push the idea that consumers were resilient and forward earnings projections (ex tech) looked phenomenal. They missed the bearish turn of events entirely. Back in 2008, bulls opined that forward earnings estimates (ex financials) were attractive, and that manufacturer health was irrelevant. They missed the housing bubble as well as its subsequent bursting. Here in 2016, bulls are confident that the U.S. can shake off $30 oil, energy company stock/bond woes, a manufacturing recession and a sharp global economic slowdown without a 20% drop for the Dow or S&P 500. Unfortunately, there’s more to the story. 2. The U.S. Economy Continues To Slow And The Global Economy Is Getting Worse . In 2014, I talked about the best way to participate in a late-stage bull market. In June of 2015, I advocated lowering one’s overall allocation to riskier assets . Bearish? Cautious would be a more appropriate description for downshifting from 70% equity exposure to 50% equity exposure. One of the key reasons for reducing risk had been the consistency of the downtrend in the global manufacturing. Here is a chart of JP Morgan’s Global Manufacturing PMI that I described in numerous pieces in the summer of 2015. It should not come as a surprise that U.S. corporate earnings peaked near the top of the PMI Index level in September of 2014. Since that time, a super-strong dollar strangled profits as well as U.S. exports. Meanwhile, Fed “de facto” tightening via tapering asset purchases throughout 2014 coupled with its direction shift in overnight lending rates in late 2015 have strained gross domestic product (GDP) growth. Even worse, Russia and Brazil are fighting off nasty recessions. Japan is there as well. China’s slowdown may be accelerating. Oil producing nations are close to falling apart on $30 oil. And expectations for Europe continue to sink, as debts pile up and international trade diminishes. Indeed, it’s not difficult to spot the pattern on global nominal year-over-year GDP. When it’s negative, market-based asset prices, including those in the U.S., are more likely to deteriorate. What about the constant drumbeat that sensational U.S. job growth proves that the domestic economy is healthy? Not only are the majority of new jobs low-paying, part-time positions, but the erosion of 25-54 year-old workers from the labor force – from 83.5% in 2008 to 81% in 2016 – represents millions of non-retirees who are not being counted. What about the notion that the U.S. consumer is resilient? According to a wide range of resources, including data at Federal Reserve web sites, personal consumption expenditures (PCE) is the primary measure of consumer spending on goods and services in the U.S. economy. Some would say that PCE accounts for nearly two-thirds of domestic spending, which would make it a significant driver of economic growth. Here’s the problem. Year-over-year percent growth in PCE has been declining steadily since May-June on 2014, which is roughly in line with more significant reductions in the Federal Reserve’s asset buying program (QE3). 3. Weakness in Breadth Of U.S. Stock Market As Well As Majority Of Asset Types . By May of 2015, when the S&P 500 hit its all-time record (2130), investors had learned that reported profits had declined on a year-over-year basis – 3/31/2015 ($99.25) versus 3/31/2014 ($100.85). In the same vein, by May of 2015, investors were privy to significant deceleration in Global PMI, U.S. manufacturer woes as well as dissipating personal consumer expenditures (PCE). Yet there was more. The NYSE Advance/Decline (A/D) Line seemed to have peaked in late April. From late April through the August-September correction, the number of declining stocks outpaced the number of advancing stocks. In fact, in late July, market breadth had grown so weak, the A/D Line fell below its 200-day moving average for the first time since the euro-zone crisis – four years earlier. What’s more, less than 50% of S&P 500 stocks could claim bullish uptrends. Equally disturbing, the Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLI ), the iShares Transportation Average ETF (NYSEARCA: IYT ) as well as small caps via the iShares Russell 2000 ETF (NYSEARCA: IWM ) had already entered corrections; all had dropped below respective long-term trendlines. In other words, market breadth was extraordinarily weak. Obviously, a great many folks believed that an October snap-back rally had terminated the volatile 12% correction that occurred in the summertime. Not only did the S&P 500 fail to recover the highs from May of 2015, but virtually all asset types never made it back. And now, most of those assets are actually lower than they were at the August/September lows . Take a look at the widespread carnage that extends far beyond the S&P 500 or the Dow. U.S. small caps in the Russell 2000 (IWM) reside near 52-week lows. The same holds true for commodities via the PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking ETF (NYSEARCA: DBC ), Europe via the Vanguard FTSE Europe ETF (NYSEARCA: VGK ) and emerging markets via the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF (NYSEARCA: VWO ). Still choose to believe that rapid deterioration across asset types as well as within U.S. stocks themselves is irrelevant? Perhaps some data from the wildly popular Bespoke Research team might provide additional perspective. Internally, the average stock in every U.S. stock classification has already fallen more than 20% from a 52-week high (through 1/11/2016), meaning the average stock is in a bear market. Think this is a mathematical slight of hand because of energy stock depreciation? Wrong again. Every stock sector with the exception of consumer stables and utilities – safer haven assets less tied to economic cycles – is down more than the 20% bear market demarcation line. Is it possible for Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ), Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG ), Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT ), Home Depot (NYSE: HD ) and a host of influential companies to keep market-cap weighted S&P 500 ETFs like the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) from sinking 20%? It’s possible. Is it likely? Not unless the Fed has a change of heart on the direction of its monetary policy and not without unanticipated improvements in both corporate profits and the global economic backdrop. For Gary’s latest podcast, click here . 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.

ETF Investing Strategies To Brave Volatility In 2016

Global stocks were in a mess in 2015, stymied by the sudden currency devaluation in China, spiraling Chinese economic slowdown and the resultant shockwaves across the world. Also, the return of deflationary threats in Eurozone despite the QE measure, a sagging Japanese economy, the oil price rout and a slouching broader market complicated the scenario. Back home, putting an end to prolonged speculation, the Fed finally hiked the key interest rate by 25 bps at the tail end of the year. All these put the New Year in a critical juncture. The investing world may be at a loss of ideas on where to park money for smart gains. For them, below we detail possible asset class movements in 2016 and the likely smart ETF bets. Bull or Bear in 2016? The million-dollar question now is whether U.S. stocks will buoy up or drown in 2016. While policy tightening and overvaluation concerns give cues of an end to the bull run, a dubious performance in 2015 raises hopes that the stocks will rebound soon. After all, the Fed is not hiking rates to rein in inflation. The tightening is reflective of U.S. economic growth and lower risk of deflation, both of which are encouraging for stocks. Thus, stocks should offer decent, if not spectacular, returns next year. Investors can capitalize on a steady U.S. economy via the momentum ETF iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor (NYSEARCA: MTUM ) . To rule out the negative impact of a higher greenback, investors can also try out more domestically focused small-cap ETFs; but a value notion is desirable to weather heightened volatility. S&P Small-Cap 600 Value ETF (NYSEARCA: VIOV ) is one such fund. Investors dreading interest rate hike may also try out this rate-restricted ETF PowerShares S&P 500 ex-Rate Sensitive Low Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: XRLV ). Sectors to Hit & Flop Since investors will be busy in speculating the pace and quantum of Fed rate hikes in 2016, rate sensitive sector ETFs would be winners and losers. Financial sector ETF PowerShares KBW Bank ETF (NYSEARCA: KBWB ) and insurance ETF Dow Jones U.S. Insurance Index Fund (NYSEARCA: IAK ) generally perform better in a rising rate environment. Plus, Consumer Discretionary ETFs like Consumer Discret Sel Sect SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLY ) and tech ETFs like Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLK ) also perform well in the early rate hike cycle as per historical standard. Lower gasoline prices should also help consumers to create a wealth effect. On the other hand, high-yielding sectors and the sectors which are highly leveraged will falter in a rising rate environment. So Utilities Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLU ) and Vanguard REIT ETF (NYSEARCA: VNQ ) could be at risk. Having said this, we would like to note that these are just initial blows and after a few upheavals, the market movement should even out. Where Will Bond Markets Go? The year 2016 may mark the end of the prolonged bull run in the bond market as the first U.S. rate hike in a decade may make investors jittery in 2016. This is more likely if rates steadily move up in the coming months, with the Fed’s current projections hinting at four rate hikes in 2016. Agreed, interest rates environment remained benign even after the lift-off, owing to the global growth worries. But the scenario may take a turn in 2016 if economic data come on the stronger side, inflation perks up and wage growth gains momentum. On the other hand, the possibility of another solid year for fixed income securities can’t be ruled out, especially when stocks are not that cheap. However, investors should note that yield curve is likely to flatten ahead. Since the inflation scenario is still muted, long-term bond yields are expected to rise at a slower pace while short-term bond yields are likely to jump. Yield on the 6-month Treasury note soared 39 bps to 0.50% since the start of the year (as of December 29, 2015) while the yield on the two-year Treasury note jumped 43 bps to 1.09% and the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose just 18 bps to 2.32%. Thanks to the potential flattening of the yield curve, the inverse bond ETF iPath US Treasury Flattener ETN (NASDAQ: FLAT ) could be a hit next year. Now that interest rates will be topsy-turvy, floating rate ETFs like iShares Floating Rate Bond (NYSEARCA: FLOT ) should do better going ahead. Investors can also take a look at the interest rate-hedged high yield bond ETFs as solid current income from these securities can make up for capital losses. High Yield Interest Rate Hedged ETF (BATS: HYHG ) is one such option, yielding over 6.50% annually. However, one should also note that the high-yield bond market is presently undergoing a tough time due to the energy market default. So, less energy exposure is desired in the high-yield territory. About 14% of HYHG is invested in the energy sector. Drive for Dividends The Fed may hike key interest rates, but it has hardly left any meaningful impact on long-term treasury yields. So, the lure for dividends will remain intact. U.S.-based dividend ETFs including Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (NYSEARCA: VYM ) and Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: SCHD ) could be useful for investors in waiting out the volatility via current income. Want to Visit Abroad? Where? It’s better to stay diversified as far as the global market investing is concerned. Due to the divergence in monetary policies between the U.S. and other developed economies, many analysts are wagering on Europe and Japan (where substantial and prolonged QE reassures are on). Per an analyst , earnings in both regions “will make them attractive from a standpoint of possible capital appreciation.” Plus, the European markets were in occasional disarray this year due to economic hardships. This has made the stocks compelling. However, currency-hedging technique is warranted while visiting foreign shores. Europe Hedged Equity Fund (NYSEARCA: HEDJ ) and Japan Hedged Equity Fund (NYSEARCA: DXJ ) are two choices in this field. Investors can also stop over at China but with a strong stomach for risks. Golden Dragon Halter USX China Portfolio (NYSEARCA: PGJ ) should be a modest bet for this. Occasional Volatility to Crack the Whip Volatility has been pretty strong in the market in 2015 and the trend should continue in 2016. Investors can deal with this in various ways. First comes low volatility ETFs like SPDR S&P Low Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: SPLV ) and iShares MSCI Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: USMV ) , second are defensive ETFs like U.S Market Neutral Anti-Beta Fund (NYSEARCA: BTAL ) and AdvisorShares Active Bear ETF (NYSEARCA: HDGE ) , and last but not the least in queue are the volatility ETFs themselves such as C-Tracks on Citi Volatility Index ETN (NYSEARCA: CVOL ) and ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures (NYSEARCA: VIXY ) . Notably, as the name suggests volatility products are quite rowdy in nature and thus suit investors with a short-term notion. Original Post