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Buying The Dip With Japan ETFs

Ex-U.S. developed markets, including Japan, have provided no shelter from the recent storm that was ravaged global equity markets. Before leaving Japanese stocks and the aforementioned ETFs for dead, investors might want to consider the view that Asia’s second-largest economy could lead a rebound in developed markets stocks. Recently slowing momentum for currency hedged ETFs does not mean investors should abandon the asset class altogether. By Todd Shriber, ETF Professor Ex-U.S. developed markets, including Japan, have provided no shelter from the recent storm that was ravaged global equity markets. With the CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust (NYSEARCA: FXY ) up 2.8 percent over the past month on the back of safe-haven buying of the Japanese currency, the U.S. Dollar Index is off 1.5 percent, a decline that has plagued popular currency hedged ETFs. Over the same period, the WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund (NYSEARCA: DXJ ) and the Deutsche X-trackers MSCI Japan Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: DBJP ) are off an average of 8.3 percent, a decline that is 260 basis points worse than that of the MSCI EAFE Index. Before leaving Japanese stocks and the aforementioned ETFs for dead, investors might want to consider the view that Asia’s second-largest economy could lead a rebound in developed markets stocks. Looking Into Japan On the surface, many investors might criticize the lack of inflation, weak macro data and Japan’s corporate exposure to EM as good reasons why Japan’s equity market should have played catch up. However, investors are ignoring a really significant divorce between Japanese earnings revisions and a number of macro indicators. “This ought to mean that Japanese equities ‘bounce’ further than its peer group as sentiment rebounds,” according to a Jefferies note out Wednesday. Jefferies has Buy ratings on 13 big-name Japanese stocks, including familiar names such as Bridgestone ( OTCPK:BRDCY ) , Nintendo ( OTCPK:NTDOY ) and Yamaha Motor ( OTCPK:YAMHF ) . Two of those 13 stocks are top 10 holdings in DXJ, an ETF that is among the top 10 asset-gathering funds this year. Of those 13 stocks, four are among the $1.2 billion DBJP’s top 10 holdings. Recently slowing momentum for currency hedged ETFs does not mean investors should abandon the asset class altogether. In fact, some market observers see opportunity with some of these funds, even as some professional investors get skittish about the dollar rally . Best Positioned? Jefferies sees Japan as better positioned than two of its primary Asian export rivals, South Korea and Taiwan. Markets seem to agree as DBJP and DXJ are each positive year-to-date, while the comparable South Korea and Taiwan ETFs are sporting losses in excess of 15 percent . “The bottom line is that Japanese earnings have surprised in their strength relative to macro indicators. The fact that companies have been able to maintain pricing power and keep inventories-to-shipments in-line has meant that they have not entered a pricing battle. Equally, it seems that there is some evidence that capacity tightness is leading to some fresh capital investment helped by steady profit growth,” adds Jefferies. An alternative way to play a rebound in Japanese stocks is with the newly-minted Deutsche X-trackers Japan JPX-Nikkei 400 Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: JPNH ) , which debuted last week, follows the JPX-Nikkei 400 Index, a benchmark that gives investors a fundamental approach to Japanese stocks. “The JPX-Nikkei 400 Index employs a rigorous screening process based on return on equity, cumulative operating profit and market capitalization to select high-quality, capital-efficient Japanese companies,” according to a statement issued by Deutsche AWM. Four of JPNH’s top 20 holdings are among the 13 Japanese stocks earning buy ratings from Jefferies. Disclaimer: Neither Benzinga nor its staff recommend that you buy, sell, or hold any security. We do not offer investment advice, personalized or otherwise. Benzinga recommends that you conduct your own due diligence and consult a certified financial professional for personalized advice about your financial situation. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) 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.

Long-Term ETF Performance

We post the ETF matrix below on a regular basis to highlight short-term movements in various asset classes. But today we’ll take a look at long-term performance: YTD, over the last 3 years, and since the bull market began on March 9th, 2009. Keep in mind that these are simple price returns and don’t include dividend payments. Over the last 3 years, the US Health Care ETF (NYSEARCA: XLV ) is up the most of any ETF in our matrix with a gain of 101.5%. Consumer Discretionary (NYSEARCA: XLY ) is up the second most with a gain of 80%, and the Nasdaq 100 (NASDAQ: QQQ ) ranks third at +77.8%. Not all sectors are up significantly over the last 3 years – the Energy ETF (NYSEARCA: XLE ) is up just 4.39%. And not all ETFs in our matrix are in the green over the last 3 years either. The yen ETF (NYSEARCA: FXY ) is down 37.5%, while Brazil (NYSEARCA: EWZ ) and Russia (NYSEARCA: RSX ) are both down 30%+ as well. Commodities ETFs are also deep in the red across the board, with oil (NYSEARCA: USO ) leading the way lower at -50%. During the current bull market going back to March 2009, the Consumer Discretionary ETF ( XLY ) is up the most at +391.25%. The Nasdaq 100 ( QQQ ) is up 343%), while the S&P 500 (NYSEARCA: SPY ) is up 211.9%. Outside of the US, India (NYSEARCA: INP ) has done the best at +201.9%, followed by Hong Kong (NYSEARCA: EWH ) at 157%. Brazil ( EWZ ) is actually down 5% since 3/9/09. Out of the entire ETF matrix, the UNG natural gas ETF is down the most since 3/9/09 with a decline of 89%. Hopefully you’ve avoided that one! Share this article with a colleague