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Why Low Interest Rates Do Not Imply Perpetual Increases In Stock Prices

Some investors have come to believe that ultra-low interest rates alone have made traditional valuations obsolete. The irony of the error in judgment? Experts and analysts made similar claims prior to the NASDAQ collapse in 2000. (Only then, it was the dot-com “New Economy” that made old school valuations irrelevant.) The benchmark still trades below its nominal highs (and far below its inflation-adjusted highs) from 16 years ago. Without question, exceptionally low borrowing costs helped drive current stock valuations to extraordinary heights. In fact, favorable borrowing terms played a beneficial role in each of the stock bull markets over the last 40-plus years, ever since the post-Volcker Federal Reserve began relying on the expansion of credit to grow the economy. Indeed, we can even take the discussion one step further. Ultra-low interest rates had super-sized impacts on the last two bull markets in assets like stocks and real estate. Bullishness from 2002-2007 occurred alongside household debt soaring beyond real disposable income ; excessive borrowing at the household level set the stage for 40%-50% depreciation in stocks and real estate during the October 2007-March 2009 bear. Bullishness from 2009-2015 occurred alongside a doubling of corporate debt – obligations that moved away from capital expenditures toward non-productive buybacks and acquisitions. Would it be sensible to ignore the near-sighted nature of how corporations have been spending their borrowed dollars? Click to enlarge It is one thing to recognize that ultra-low borrowing costs helped to make riskier assets more attractive. It is quite another to determine that valuations have been rendered irrelevant altogether. For one thing, the U.S. had a low rate environment for nearly 20 years (i.e., 1935-1954) that is very similar to the current low rate borrowing environment. The price “P” that the investment community was willing to pay for earnings “E” or revenue (sales) still plummeted in four bearish retreats. In other words, low rates did not stop bear markets from occurring in 1937-1938 (-49.1%), 1938-1939 (-23.3%), 1939-1942 (-40.4%), or 1946-1947 (-23.2%). Click to enlarge Economic growth was far more robust between 1936 and 1955 than it is in the present. What’s more, during those 20 years, valuations were about HALF of what they are today. If low rates alone weren’t enough to DOUBLE the “P” relative to the “E” back then, why would one assume that low rates alone right now are enough to justify exorbitant valuations in 2016? When top-line sales and bottom-line earnings are contracting? When economies around the globe are struggling? Equally important, the inverse relationship between exorbitant valuations and longer-term future returns since 1870 has taken place when rates were low or high on an absolute level; the relationship has transpired whether rates were falling or rates were climbing. It follows that central bank attempts to aggressively stimulate economic activity and revive risk asset appetite did not prevent 50% S&P 500 losses and 75% NASDAQ losses in 2000-2002, nor did aggressive moves to lower borrowing costs prevent the financial collapse in 2008-2009. Clearly, valuations still matter for longer-term outcomes. In all probability, in fact, fundamentals began to matter 18 months ago. Take a look at the performance of the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) versus the iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ) over the 18 month period. Even with borrowing costs falling over the past year and a half – even with lower rates providing a boost to corporations, households and governments – “risk on” stocks have underperformed “risk off” treasuries. It gets more interesting. The prices on riskier assets like small caps in the i Shares Russell 2000 ETF (NYSEARCA: IWM ), foreign stocks in the Vanguard FTSE All-World ex-US ETF (NYSEARCA: VEU ) and high yield bonds via the SPDR Barclays Capital High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: JNK ) have fallen even further than SPY. In complete contrast, the price of other risk-off assets – the CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: FXY ), the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TLT ), the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: GLD ) have surged even higher than IEF. By the way, 18 months is not arbitrary. That is the period of time since the Federal Reserve last purchased an asset (12/18/2014) as part of its balance sheet expansion known as “QE3.” Since the end of quantitative easing, then, indiscriminate risk taking has fallen by the wayside. Larger U.S. companies may have held up, though the prospect for reward has been dim. Smaller stocks, foreign stocks and higher-yielding assets have not held up particularly well; their valuations may be on their way toward mean reversion. In the big picture, then, are you really going to get sucked in to the idea that low rates justify perpetual increases in stock prices? The evidence suggests that, until valuations become far more reasonable, upside gains will be limited. Additionally, until and unless the Federal Reserve provides more shocking and more awe-inspiring QE-like balance sheet expansion a la “QE4,” where the 10-year yield is manipulated down from the 2% level to the 1% level, low rate justification for excessive risk-taking would be misplaced. What could the catalyst be for indiscriminate risk taking? What could spark a genuinely strong bull market uptrend? Reasonable valuations that are likely to result from a bearish cycle. Fed policy reversal might then force the 10-year yield to 1% or even 0.5%, and we could then discuss how they “justify” still higher valuations than exist in 2016. Nevertheless, unless the Fed has found methods for eliminating recessions outright and permanently inspiring credit expansion, bear markets will still ravage portfolios of the unprepared investor. 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.

Avoid The Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Fund (FRSGX)

Each quarter we rank, the 12 investment styles in our Style Ratings For ETFs & Mutual Funds report. For the second quarter of 2016 rankings, we noticed a new trend: in five of the past six quarters, the Mid Cap Growth style has received our Dangerous rating. Within that group, we found a particularly bad fund. Of the five worst funds in this style, one in particular stands out for the high level of its assets under management (AUM). When a low quality fund has low AUM, we are comforted that investors are avoiding the poor fund. But, when a fund has over $3.4 billion AUM and receives our Very Dangerous rating, it’s clear that investors are missing pertinent details. The missing details are deep analysis of the fund’s holdings, which is the backbone of our ETF and Mutual Fund ratings . After all, the performance of a fund’s holdings drive the performance of a fund. As such, Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Funds (MUTF: FRSGX ) are in the Danger Zone due to alarmingly poor holdings and excessively high fees. Poor Holdings Makes Outperformance Unlikely The only justification for mutual funds to have higher fees than ETFs is “active” management that leads to out-performance. How can a fund that has significantly worse holdings than its benchmark hope to outperform? Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Fund investors are paying higher fees for asset allocation that is much worse than its benchmark, the iShares Russell Mid-Cap Growth ETF (NYSEARCA: IWP ). Per Figure 1, at 49%, Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Fund allocates more capital to Dangerous-or-worse rated stocks than IWP at just 32%. On the flip side, IWP allocates more (at 19% of its portfolio) to Attractive-or-better rated stocks than FRSGX at only 7%. Figure 1: Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Fund Portfolio Asset Allocation Click to enlarge Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings Furthermore, 7 of the mutual fund’s top 10 holdings receive our Dangerous rating and make up over 12% of its portfolio. Two stocks in particular raise enough red flags that we have featured them previously: Constellation Brands (NYSE: STZ ) and Willis Towers Watson (NASDAQ: WLTW ). If Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Fund holds worse stocks than IWP, then how can one expect the outperformance required to justify higher fees? Chasing Performance Is Lazy Portfolio Management Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Fund managers are allocating to some of the most overvalued stocks in the market. We think the days where investing based on past price performance (or momentum) leads to success have passed for the foreseeable future. Managers have to allocate capital more intelligently, not based on simple cues like momentum. The price-to-economic book value ( PEBV ) ratio for the Russell 2000 (NYSEARCA: IWM ), which includes all small and mid cap stocks, is 3.5. The PEBV ratio for FRSGX is 4.6. This ratio means that the market expects the profits for the Russell 2000 to increase 350% from their current levels versus 460% for FRSGX. Our findings are the same from our discounted cash flow valuation of the fund. The growth appreciation period ( GAP ) is 32 years for the Russell 2000 and 22 years for the S&P 500 – compared to 50 years for FRSGX. In other words, the market expects the stocks held by FRSGX to earn a return on invested capital ( ROIC ) greater than the weighted average cost of capital ( WACC ) for 18 years longer than the stocks in the Russell 2000 and 28 years longer than those in the S&P 500, home of some of the world’s most successful companies. This expectation seems even more out of reach when considering the ROIC of the S&P is 18%, or double the ROIC of stocks held in FRSGX. Significantly higher profit growth expectations are already baked into the valuations of stocks held by FRSGX. Beware Misleading Expense Ratios: This Fund Is Expensive With total annual costs ( TAC ) of 3.36%, FRSGX charges more than 84% of Mid Cap Growth ETFs and mutual funds. Coupled with its poor holdings, high fees make FRSGX even more Dangerous. More details can be seen in Figure 2, which includes the two other classes of the Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth fund (MUTF: FSMRX ) that receive our Very Dangerous rating. For comparison, the benchmark, IWP charges total annual costs of 0.28%. Figure 2: Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Fund Understated Costs Click to enlarge Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings. Over a 10-year holding period, the 2.42 percentage point difference between FRSGX’s TAC and its reported expense ratio results in 27% less capital in investors’ pockets. To justify its higher fees, the Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Funds (MUTF: FRSIX ) must outperform its benchmark by the following over three years: FRSGX must outperform by 3.1% annually. FRSIX must outperform by 1.71% annually. FSMRX must outperform by 1.15% annually. The expectation for annual out performance gets harder to stomach when you consider how much the fund has underperformed already. In the past five years, FRSGX is down 24%, FRSIX is down 35%, and FSMRX is down 27%. Meanwhile, IWP is up 44% over the same time. Figure 3 has more details. The bottom line is that with such high costs and poor holdings, we think it unwise to invest in the belief that these mutual funds will ever outperform their much cheaper ETF benchmark. Figure 3: Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Funds’ 5 Year Return Click to enlarge Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings. The Importance of Proper Due Diligence If anything, the analysis above shows that investors might want to withdraw most or all of the $3.4 billion in Franklin Small-Mid Cap Growth Funds and put the money into better funds within the same style. The top rated Mid Cap Growth mutual fund for 2Q16 is Congress Mid Cap Growth Funds (IMIDX and CMIDX). Both classes earn a Very Attractive rating. The fund has only $375 million in AUM and IMIDX and CMIDX charge total annual costs of 0.95% and 1.23% respectively, both less than half of what FRSGX charges. Without analysis into a fund’s holdings, investors risk putting their money in funds that are more likely to underperform, despite having much better options available. Without proper analysis of fund holdings, investors might be overpaying and disappointed with performance. This article originally published here on May 9, 2016. Disclosure: David Trainer and Kyle Guske II receive no compensation to write about any specific stock, sector, style, or theme. 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.

Bank ETFs Surge: Will The Momentum Last?

Finally, the battered banking stocks found reasons to turn around. As soon as the April Fed minutes hinted at a June rate hike possibility, banking, along with many other financial stocks, rallied on May 18. The going was tough for bank stocks and ETFs for quite some time, mainly due to the twin attacks of a delay in any further Fed rate hike after a liftoff in December and the energy sector slump. But things are now falling in space for this woebegone sector. Hawkish Tone in Fed Minutes Citing plenty of positive drivers in the market, including a healing labor market, a bullish inflation outlook, strong retail, consumer sentiment and housing data, the Fed minutes brought back the sooner-than-expected rate hike talks on the table. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note jumped 11 bps to 1.87% on May 18, while the yield on the 2-year U.S. Treasury note rose 8 bps to 0.90%. This steepening of the yield curve was a tailwind for banking stocks, as these improve banks’ net interest margins. This is because the interest rates on deposits are usually tied to short-term rates, while loans are often tied to long-term rates. Revival in Oil Prices U.S. banks have significant exposure to the long-beleaguered energy sector, where chances of credit default are higher. In February, the S&P cut its outlook on several regional banks with substantial energy sector exposure, citing a likely increase in non-performing assets. Among the biggies, Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC ) reported around $42 billion oil and gas credit in February. The situation was the same for JPMorgan (NYSE: JPM ), whose energy loan accounts for 57% of the investment-grade paper . JPMorgan’s $44 billion energy sector exposure was a cause for concern given the below-$30-oil-per-barrel mark a few months back. However, those days of crisis seem to have passed, with oil prices showing an impressive rally lately and hovering around a seven-month high on falling supplies and the possibility of rising demand. Political imbalance in countries like Nigeria and Venezuela and expected moderation in the shale boom should put a brake in the supply glut. This increased hopes for a revival in the energy sector, which, in turn, is likely to benefit the banking sector too. JPMorgan Ups Dividend This leading financial firm announced a dividend hike on May 17, 2016, after the market closed. The company declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.48 per share, representing a more than 9% rise over the prior payout. Per analysts , the strength in its consumer businesses helped the bank to opt for this. JPM shares jumped about 3.9% in the key trading session of May 18, benefitting the ETFs that invest heavily in the company. Notably, JPMorgan’s first-quarter 2016 earnings of $1.35 per share beat the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.26. Net revenue of $24.1 billion was also ahead of the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $23.9 billion. Needless to mention, this announcement uplifted the big banks’ financial image. All these showered ample gains in banking stocks on May 18. Below, we highlight a few (see all Financial ETFs here ): SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (NYSEARCA: KRE ) – Up 4.24% SPDR S&P Bank ETF (NYSEARCA: KBE ) – Up 4.15% PowerShares KBW Regional Banking Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: KBWR ) – Up 4.14% First Trust Nasdaq ABA Community Bank ETF (NASDAQ: QABA ) – Up 3.87% PowerShares KBW Bank Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: KBWB ) – Up 3.76% iShares U.S. Regional Banks ETF (NYSEARCA: IAT ) – Up 3.73% Apart from banking sector ETFs, other financial ETFs also shined on May 18. Among the lot, the iShares U.S. Broker-Dealers ETF (NYSEARCA: IAI ), up 3.11%,deserves a special mention. Notably, this ETF is also a beneficiary of the rising rate environment. Going Forward Since all the drivers are likely to remain in place for some time, the road ahead for banking ETFs should not be edgy. Even if the Fed does not act in June, it should act by September. Moreover, after two years of struggle, tension in the oil patch is likely to take a breather, as supply-demand dynamics look favorable for the near term. However, if bond yields decline on risk-off trade sentiments emanated from global growth issues, financial ETFs might come under pressure. Original Post