Tag Archives: feeds

Fed To Hike In June? Expected ETF Moves

Taking most investors by surprise, minutes from the Fed April meeting pointed to interest rate hike possibilities in June. While this seemed unfeasible a few days back, a volley of upbeat economic data lately sparked off possibilities for further policy tightening. Also, plenty of positive vibes were felt in the market, including a healing labor market and the latest uptick in global sentiments buoyed by stabilization in China and oil. All these opened the door for a likely hike in June. Most Fed officials sought signs of economic improvement in the second quarter including a strong employment and inflation scenario. Inflation rose at the quickest clip in three years in April, as the consumer price index jumped a seasonally adjusted 0.4% (read: TIPS ETF (NYSEARCA: TIP ) Hits New 52-Week High). Upbeat Data Points Though April’s non-farm payroll reading of 160,000 was below the estimated 205,000 and the prior-month reading of 208,000, the unemployment rate was unchanged at 5%. Other key indicators including workweek and average hourly earnings showed increases. Hourly earnings in April rose 0.3% month over month and 2.5% year over year. Meanwhile, overall retail sales expanded 1.3% in April from March, representing the largest gain since March 2015. April retail sales beat economists’ forecast of a 0.8% rise . The University of Michigan indicated that its consumer sentiment index rose 6.8 points to 95.8 in early May, marking the strongest reading since June (read: Retail Sales Back to Health; ETFs to Watch ). Since consumer spending makes up about 70% of the U.S. GDP, April retail sales data indicates that the U.S. economy is progressing at a decent clip to end Q2 and is less likely to falter like it did in Q1. In the first quarter, the economy grew at an annual rate of just 0.5%, marking a two-year low. The housing market is also giving bullish signals. Lately, the economy was gifted with strong new home construction and building permits data. All these might encourage the Fed to take the next policy tightening decision sooner than expected. The last hike was seen in December 2015. Investors’ Perception Following the release of the minutes, investors’ bet over the possibility of a June hike shot up to 34% from 19% (according to CME Group) as indicated by the prices for futures contracts on the Fed’s benchmark overnight lending rate. And by late Wednesday, traders wagered on a 56% possibility of a hike by July, up from 20% on Tuesday. Possible ETF Moves Some subtle moves in various markets and asset classes are likely to be observed if the Fed goes hawkish in June or July. Below we discuss a few ETFs that were among the biggest movers and could remain in focus ahead. PowerShares DB USD Bull ETF (NYSEARCA: UUP ) As widely expected, the U.S. dollar will likely gain strength. The U.S. dollar ETF UUP was up about 0.7% on May 18. iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ) The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury jumped 11 bps to 1.87% on May 18, following the Fed minutes. The ultra-popular bond ETF IEF shed over 0.8%. But since global growth worries are still extensive with Brexit fears looming large, the intermediate and long-term U.S. Treasury bonds should be in fine fettle. SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (NYSEARCA: KRE ) Banking stocks should rally if the Fed hikes in June as these perform better in a rising rate environment. KRE added 4.24% on May 18, 2016. PowerShares FTSE RAFI Emerging Markets Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PXH ) Emerging markets ETFs will likely be losers if the Fed goes ahead with a hike. Dearth of cheap money inflows would hit this space. PXH was down about 1.4% on May 18. iShares Select Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA: DVY ) The dividend ETFs, one of the biggest beneficiaries of subdued Treasury yields, might stall a bit if the Fed hikes sooner than expected. However, it all depends on how the global market shapes up and investors’ appetite for risk. Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (NYSEARCA: VTI ) Normally, the initial reaction of a rate hike is a slide in stock prices. However, the reaction should vary across capitalization and the turbulence should settle down with time. Total stock market ETF was down 0.01% on May 18, and may be under pressure immediately after the tightening move. Link to the original post on Zacks.com

A Quick Example Of Rebalancing Theory At Work

I know I go on and on about disciplined rebalancing. In this article , I also address the concept that each asset class in your portfolio can be viewed as a form of “currency,” and can be expensive or cheap. Today, I merely wanted to share a quick real-world example of how this worked in my personal portfolio. The picture below is a 6-month graph from Yahoo Finance. The blue line represents the Vanguard REIT Index ETF (NYSEARCA: VNQ ), the red line the Vanguard Utilities ETF (NYSEARCA: VPU ) and the green line the S&P 500 average. Click to enlarge You will quickly notice that both VNQ and, even more dramatically, VPU have outperformed the S&P. As a result, the “overweight” indicator recently flashed up for both of them in my portfolio, to the tune of about 7-8% overweight. The red arrows represent my two recent sales to bring them back in line; VNQ on 5/9 and VPU on 5/13. Want to know a little secret? As I write this, both are now slightly underweight in my portfolio. The sharp drop you see in both at the very end of the graph is because the Fed minutes released today appear to indicate that a June rate hike is back on the table. As a result, all interest-rate-sensitive asset classes took a beating. So, now I have an opportunity to watch for a chance to possibly buy back in at lower prices. Not because I’m brilliant. Simply because I monitored and acted on my weightings in a disciplined manner.

Oppenheimer Fundamental Alternatives Fund – The Market Knows More Than Ms. Borré

I recently came across a video advertisement for the Oppenheimer Fundamental Alternatives Fund (MUTF: QVOPX ), which is currently headed up by the alpha seeking Michelle Borré. Her pitch revolves around understanding both empirical “hard” data and the human “soft” data to extrapolate information about the future prospects of the market, all while trying to minimize volatility and still produce a solid positive return. This all sounds very appealing, but history has shown that these ideas and, more importantly, being able to anticipate or control them, have largely led to subpar investment performances. In this article , the entire Oppenheimer fund family was examined. The results were not too promising to say the least. Let’s dive deeper and isolate the Fundamental Alternatives Fund to see if there is any merit to the statements being made in their video. What we will show, not only empirically but also theoretically, is that Oppenheimer’s idea of being able to evade volatility or provide a superior understanding of human nature that they can extrapolate any sort of “alpha” from it is built on a false foundation. Let’s start by looking at their past performance based on a comparison to their Morningstar assigned benchmark. The alpha chart below shows their annual alpha (relative performance to the benchmark) since inception in 1999. Click to enlarge What is noticeable is that, overall, the historical performance has not been great. In 13 out of the 17 years, the fund had a negative alpha. On average, it lost by 2.36% per year. If we look at the performance since Ms. Borré took the helm (Nov. 2011), we can also see that she has also not provided superior performance with only 1 out of 4 years showing a positive alpha. Past results are not indicative of the future, but there is nothing substantial here that gives us a promising outlook on this fund’s ability to do what they say they are going to do. This is where theory can provide a more robust explanation of why we would not expect this fund, or any actively managed fund, to turn around in terms of their performance. First, there is the whole idea of trying to minimize volatility while still providing above average returns. Within equities, this involves hedging particular risks associated with stocks, and trying to pick next winner. For example, in its more simplistic form, if we wanted to gain exposure to the financial sector but wanted to remove the risks associated with the financial sector (Beta), we can go long a particular financial stock that we thought was undervalued and short a particular financial stock that was overvalued. We can even go broader and go long a group of financial stocks and short a group of financial stocks. By being long and short within financials, we are removing the systematic risks associated with financials while having a positive exposure to what we think will go up and a negative exposure to what we think we will go down. We are essentially doubling down on our ability to forecast the future. The problem with this approach is that it is very unlikely that Ms. Borré, or anyone, knows any more about a particular stock than the combined information of the thousands, if not millions of investors watching that stock. Remember, the price of a particular stock at any given time represents millions of estimations about the particular value of a given company not only based on information that is currently public, but also future forecasts and even some insider knowledge as well. To be successful in outperforming a market consistently over time, you must have better estimation faculties, quicker access to information, or have inside information, and then exploit that information in a cost effective way. As Mark Hulbert said in his 2008 NY Times article , “the prescient are few”. The chart below summaries the study Hulbert discussed in his article. Click to enlarge This idea also applies to trying to understand human nature or behavior and extrapolate information that can successfully be exploited in investment strategies. It should go without saying that not all investors are trading based on rational expectations as traditional economic theory suggests that people do. We can all think of someone in our life that makes decisions based purely on emotion with no logic at all. We are humans, not robots. The questions is whether or not we can anticipate these events (such as the herding effect we see with large overall movements in markets) and be ahead of anyone else that is trying to take advantage of the same exact “animal spirits” within the markets. Once again, we fall victim to our own estimation limitations as well as not having all and complete information. It is always easy in hindsight to say, “well that looked like irrational exuberance,” but very few actually successfully capture that irrationality in an investment strategy. I published an article that highlighted investment strategies that are based on exploiting behavioral biases. There is no empirical evidence that these strategies have been successful in that endeavor. There is an entire support team at IFA that helps put together these articles. Oppenheimer has been successful in building up their investment assets over time. We have shown that this success is largely built on advertisements, such as the one with Ms. Borré explaining her strategy. While it all sounds very good, a successful implementation of these ideas is not supported by empirical research, has not worked in the past AND more importantly, is not expected to work in the future. Market prices are moved by news and news is random and unpredictable. Let go of the idea that you or a manager you select will have wisdom greater than the market. Just index and relax. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.