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Direxion To Shut Down BARS, The 3x Gold Bear ETF – ETF News And Commentary

Direxion – a renowned player in the leveraged and inverse leveraged ETF world – which was recently in the news for opting for a reverse split of its 2 leveraged ETFs – Direxion Daily Junior Gold Miners Bull 3x Shares (NYSEARCA: JNUG ) and Direxion Daily Russia Bull 3x Shares (NYSEARCA: RUSL ) – has now decided to shut down an inverse ETF targeting the gold bullion market. The product, Direxion Daily Gold Bear 3x Shares (NYSEARCA: BARS ), which was launched in April this year will cease trading on December 26 and its assets will be liquidated on December 30. BARS tracks the Gold Benchmark Futures Contract to provide three times the daily inverse performance of gold futures (read: Direxion Opts for Reverse Split for 2 Leveraged ETFs ). Given that the fund has returned roughly 8% since its inception, the closure comes as somewhat of a surprise. However, Direxion believes that the fund’s inability to garner sufficient assets has forced it to close the fund. BARS currently manages less than $5 million assets and is quite pricey with 1.56% as expenses. The high expense fee might have been a factor for the fund’s failure to lure sufficient investor interest. Moreover, BARS faced stiff competition from other bear products on gold such as ProShares UltraShort Gold (NYSEARCA: GLL ), PowerShares DB Gold Double Short ETN (NYSEARCA: DZZ ) and VelocityShares 3x Inverse Gold ETN (NASDAQ: DGLD ). While GLL has managed to garner $88.4 million since its inception, DZZ and DGLD currently manage assets worth $73 million and $16.9 million respectively (see all Precious Metals ETFs here ). It’s worth noting that Direxion Daily Gold Bull 3x Shares ( BAR ) , which was launched together with BARS and manages an AUM base of just $2.8 million and is as pricey as BARS, will continue to trade. Apart from the recent closure, Direxion had announced closures of five of its inverse 3x ETFs this September. The ETFs in question are Direxion Daily Brazil Bear 3x Shares (BRZS), Direxion Daily FTSE Europe Bear 3x Shares (EURZ), Direxion Daily Japan Bear 3x Shares (JPNS), Direxion Daily South Korea Bear 3x Shares (KORZ) and Direxion Daily Natural Gas Related Bear 3x Shares (GASX) (see all Leveraged Equity ETFs here ). Including the recent fund closure, more than 65 ETF products have been shut down or are scheduled to be closed this year. In comparison with this, we have seen roughly 192 new product launches this year, as per ETF.com. With the recent launches, the fast evolving U.S. ETF industry now has more than 1,660 products in the market with a total market cap of $1,943.05 billion.

One Of The Best ETFs I’ve Found So Far: SCHD

Summary I’m taking a look at SCHD as a candidate for inclusion in my ETF portfolio. The risk level, measured in standard deviation of daily returns is great. The ETF looks even better if combined with other major funds such as SPY. Investors should be seeking to improve their risk adjusted returns. I’m a big fan of using ETFs to achieve the risk adjusted returns relative to the portfolios that a normal investor can generate for themselves after trading costs. I’m working on building a new portfolio and I’m going to be analyzing several of the ETFs that I am considering for my personal portfolio. One of the funds that I’m considering is the Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: SCHD ). I’ll be performing a substantial portion of my analysis along the lines of modern portfolio theory, so my goal is to find ways to minimize costs while achieving diversification to reduce my risk level. What does SCHD do? SCHD invests in large dividend companies. It has shined in my first look at the fund. I was originally planning a 10 to 15% position for a dividend ETF, but now I’m contemplating raising that position up as high as 20 to 25%. At this point, the portfolio is still in the planning and funding stage. Does SCHD provide diversification benefits to a portfolio? Each investor may hold a different portfolio, but I use (NYSEARCA: SPY ) as the basis for my analysis. I believe SPY, or another large cap U.S. fund with similar properties, represents the reasonable first step for many investors designing an ETF portfolio. Therefore, I start my diversification analysis by seeing how it works with SPY. I start with an ANOVA table: (click to enlarge) At first look it may seem like the correlation of 91.42% would mitigate the diversification benefits of using SCHD with a major fund like SPY, but 91% still offers some meaningful benefits as long as the ETF can stand on its own strengths. In my opinion, SCHD passes that test and is a very viable candidate. Standard deviation of daily returns (dividend adjusted, measured since late 2011) This is the strongest area for the ETF. The returns are remarkably stable relative to most equity investments. Generally speaking, standard deviation of daily returns is the realm of SPY. Most ETFs look fairly poor when compared to just holding the S&P 500. The only reason those other equity ETFs can be useful under modern portfolio theory is diversification benefits when used as a fairly small percent of the portfolio. For the period I selected for comparison, the standard deviation on daily returns for SPY is 0.7754%. For SCHD the standard deviation of daily returns is 0.6651%. Mixing it with SPY I also run comparison on the standard deviation of daily returns for the portfolio assuming that the portfolio is combined with the S&P 500. For research, I assume daily rebalancing because it dramatically simplifies the math. With a 50/50 weighting in a portfolio holding only SPY and SCHD, the standard deviation of daily returns across the entire portfolio is 0.7124%. That is a very attractive risk position for a portfolio that only contains two ETFs. Why I use standard deviation of daily returns I don’t believe historical returns have predictive power for future returns, but I do believe historical values for standard deviations of returns relative to other ETFs have some predictive power on future risks and correlations. Yield The distribution yield is 2.52%. The SEC 30 day yield is 2.84%. For a dividend investor that wanted to minimize trading costs, that is a fairly strong yield on an ETF with less systematic risk than SPY. Expense Ratio The ETF is posting .07% for an expense ratio, which is very low. Market to NAV The ETF is trading at a .05% premium to NAV currently, but that is fairly close. A twentieth of one percent is not exposing an investor to a large risk in that regard. This value can change suddenly, so investors should check before submitting a trade. Largest Holdings The biggest holdings are around 4 to 5% of the portfolio. I prepared the following chart to break it down: (click to enlarge) I’m fairly happy with the construction of the top of the portfolio. At present, I’m not very optimistic on Verizon (NYSE: VZ ) or AT&T (NYSE: T ) because I think the industry risk is still being priced into the companies after Sprint (NYSE: S ) became much more aggressive. However, in the longer term (5 to 20 years) I think it makes sense to include them in the fund. Conclusion I’m currently screening a large volume of ETFs for my own portfolio. I’ll do a little more digging on SCHD later and post what I find. The portfolio I’m building is through Schwab, so I’m able to trade SCHD with no commissions. I have a strong preference for researching ETFs that are free to trade in my account. I’m expecting that SCHD will end up with a significant position in my portfolio.

Gary Gordon Positions For 2015: Tactical Asset Allocations For ETF Investors

This is the third piece in Seeking Alpha’s Positioning for 2015 series. This year we have once again asked experts on a range of different asset classes and investing strategies to offer their vision for the coming year and beyond. As always, the focus is on an overall approach to portfolio construction. Gary A. Gordon, MS, CFP® is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc. , a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. He has more than 24 years of experience as a personal coach in “money matters,” including risk assessment, small business development and portfolio management. Gary is often asked to consult as an educator. He has taught financial concepts in Mexico, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan and the United States. As a Certified Financial Planner™ (CFP®), Gary has distinguished himself as a reputable and trusted investor advocate. He writes commentary for ETF Expert, Seeking Alpha and TheStreet. Gary’s participation on local and national radio has spanned more than a decade, and he currently hosts the ETF Expert Show. Seeking Alpha’s Carolyn Pairitz recently spoke with Gary to find out how he goes about selecting specific ETFs and plans to use them to position clients in 2015. Carolyn Pairitz (CP): How would your clients describe your investing style/philosophy? Gary Gordon (GG): My clients would recite my mantra… There are four possible investing outcomes (i.e., big gain, small gain, small loss, big loss) and three of them are good. Successful investing is about controlling the investing outcome so that you ensure a big gain, small gain or small loss, and take action to avoid the big loss. The humongous loss is the only thing that can destroy a lifetime of wealth-building. By way of example, I may own rental property in California where I live, perhaps for its capital appreciation potential as well as its annual cash flow. And along the way, I may experience price gains and dips, good renters and bad. But the one thing that my financial well-being would not be able to tolerate is an earthquake that decimates the property. It follows that, I may not enjoy paying the earthquake insurance premium each year, but I understand the criticality of doing so. The exact same insurance principles go for investing in market-based securities. Stop-limit loss orders, technical trendlines, put options, non-correlated assets, hedges – no technique or asset type will eliminate downside risk completely nor appear particularly worthwhile in extremely bullish uptrends. Yet the tactical asset allocation decision-making to insure against the only thing that can kill a portfolio – the big loss – keeps my clients on track to achieve their financial freedom goals. CP: Which global issue is most likely to adversely affect U.S. markets in 2015? GG: Ironically enough, I have the same answer for 2015 that I provided in 2014’s interview: Deflation. Europe and Japan are both still struggling to beat deflationary pressures back; their 2014 efforts to stimulate their respective economies with asset purchases and negligible/non-existent or even negative overnight lending rates have pummeled their currencies more than anything else. Indeed, the U.S. stock bull got knocked for a loop in October because of deflationary recession scares around the globe. So what did the U.S. Fed do? One of its committee members publically questioned whether or not the institution should even end QE3. Only then did U.S. large cap stocks rapidly recover from what might have been far worse than an intra-day 9.8% correction. For better or worse, our market continues to rely on central bank manipulation. The Fed will be exceedingly “patient” in 2015, and may even decide by late 2015 to talk about ways to be accommodative yet again. They may have no choice. Consider the fact that, while Russia’s direct impact on the U.S. economy is small, the country matters a whole lot to Europe’s well-being. And Europe is reeling even without Russian woes. In essence, if world markets determine that the European Central Bank (ECB) is not aggressive enough with its stimulus, a region-wide recession would certainly drag on U.S. equities. CP: Have any ETFs that have launched this year caught your eye? GG: I like the work that Meb Faber does in the value space. The Cambria Global Value ETF (NYSEARCA: GVAL ) is remarkably intriguing in theory, though I do not buy assets based solely on low P/Es or low P/S ratios. Russia started the year as the least expensive global equity market, and it only got cheaper. And then there’s the fact that I lived in Asia on and off for roughly 4 ½ years, so the Deutsche X-trackers Harvest CSI 300 China A-Shares ETF (NYSEARCA: ASHR ), which technically launched in 2013, has also been intriguing. Gaining access to stocks listed in China, the world’s second largest economy, is something that everyone should be thinking about. CP: What do you hope to see from the ETF industry in 2015? Any product filings you are particularly excited to see launch? GG: I anticipate interest in an exchange-traded vehicle that tracks the index that I created with FTSE-Russell, the FTSE Custom Multi-Asset Stock Hedge Index. Obviously, I hope to see it launch because it would be beneficial to me personally, but I am equally hopeful for those who want an alternative to shorting, leverage, inverse funds or T-bills. Let’s be real for a moment. The U.S. economy cannot continue to accelerate if the world continues to decelerate. Investors cannot ignore the mountain of stock overvaluation evidence indefinitely, no matter how many rabbits the world’s central banks pick out of their collective hats. And periods of amplified exuberance always find themselves, later or sooner, at a place of heart-pounding panic. An exchange-traded vehicle for the FTSE Custom Multi-Asset Stock Hedge Index should reduce the anxiety associated with stock downturns. CP: Could you please describe this stock hedge index in more detail? What was your process for developing it? GG: My colleague and I started from a place where we investigated the currencies, commodities, foreign debt and U.S. debt (basically, all non-equity investments), that have a history of exceptionally low correlations to stocks. And then, in combination, demonstrate as close to the holy grail of zero correlation as possible. We looked at performance as well as fund flow movement in times of moderate to severe stock stress. Historically speaking, currencies like the dollar, the franc and the yen – all for very different reasons – have served as admirable hedges. Gold, more or less, had been the commodity of choice. Meanwhile, Japanese government bonds, German bunds and a fairly wide range of longer-maturity U.S. bonds worked remarkably well too. To be clear, owning a fund that tracks this index, or choosing multiple assets to emulate it, is not meant for benchmarking a “bear fund.” Bear funds look to profit from short positions or the stock market falling. The FTSE Custom Multi-Asset Stock Hedge Index is designed to hedge against stock ownership and the risks associated with it. Similarly, owning a single asset like T-bill cash or a U.S. Treasury bond ETF alone does not offer the benefit of diversification across multiple asset avenues. Only now, is multi-asset stock hedging even available in an index. And while it is most likely to perform well when stocks are not… this isn’t a prerequisite. For example, the FTSE Custom Multi-Asset Stock Hedge Index (through 12/15/14) was up 6.5%, even in a year when large-cap U.S. stocks have performed well. CP: Going into 2015, which asset classes are you overweight? Which are you underweight? GG: Remember, we use tactical asset allocation and we are not static buy-n-holders. We are currently overweight U.S. mega-caps through funds like the iShares 100 ETF (NYSEARCA: OEF ) and the Vanguard Mega Cap Growth ETF (NYSEARCA: MGK ), as well as U.S. minimum volatility through iShares USA Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: USMV ). And yes, I believe “low vol” is an asset class, though “low vol” by sector, not by the market at large. Otherwise, you own a whole of utilities and non-cyclicals, rather than a fairly well-distributed mix across the economic segments. I have also been picking through the energy rubbish bin. On the debt side of the equation, much like 2014, we currently own bond assets that have relative value when compared to foreign debt. There is plenty of value in owning the Vanguard Long Term Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: BLV ) and/or the Vanguard Extended Duration Treasury ETF (NYSEARCA: EDV ). People may think that is nuts, but those are the same folks who completely missed the 2014 boat. So let me toot my own horn on this one, I was one of the very few who said rates would go down, the yield curve would flatten, and that these funds would be big time winners. We also own muni debt via the SPDR Barclays Municipal Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TFI ) as well as closed-end funds like the Blackrock MuniAssets Fund (NYSE: MUA ). I have been underweight small caps, foreign, emerging since July of 2014. And while I own held-to-maturity high yield bond investments in the Guggenheim Series, in general, widening credit spreads have made me steer clear of high yield bonds. CP: What advice would you give to a ‘do-it-yourself’ investor in the present investing environment? GG: Be mindful of where things stand. We are talking about the fourth longest bull market since 1897. The other three? They did not make it past eight years. Either we will break records with this bull market, or more likely, we will see a bear market in 2015 or 2016. The problem is not participating in stocks during periods of amplified exuberance and overlooked overvaluation – that’s how money was made in the ’90s and in the mid-2000s. So you should definitely participate. The problem is failing to take action to minimize downside risks – that’s how investors got creamed in 2000-2002 and 2008-2009. Whether someone does it for you or whether you do it yourself, you must have a plan to avoid the bulk of an upcoming disaster. 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.