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ETF Deathwatch For December 2015: AccuShares Join The List

The quantity of ETFs and ETNs on Deathwatch jumped by 23 for December. There were 28 additions and only five removals. Of those coming off, three were the result of improved health, while the other two were closed, delisted, and liquidated. The net increase pushes the membership count to a 35-month high of 366, consisting of 266 ETFs and 100 ETNs. Heading up the new arrivals are the two AccuShares ETFs, which are now more than six months old, making them eligible for Deathwatch. These two ETFs attempt to track the spot price of the VIX Volatility Index and fail miserably at doing so. They are teeter-totter ETFs, constructed much like the ill-fated MacroShares. As such, they were doomed from the start. But AccuShares added new twists that made them even worse than MacroShares in my opinion. AccuShares introduced the concept of “Corrective Distributions” that try to keep the demand for “up” shares in balance with the “down” shares. However, these distributions were both numerous and large, quickly depleting their asset bases. To overcome this, the funds made distributions of offsetting shares two months in a row: The owners of AccuShares Spot CBOE VIX Up (NASDAQ: VXUP ) received a “Corrective Distribution” of one share of AccuShares Spot CBOE VIX Down (NASDAQ: VXDN ), and owners of VXDN received a share of VXUP. It is almost impossible to bet on the direction of the VIX when offsetting positions are forced into your account. So far, the VXUP has made per-share distributions of $44.67 plus two shares of VXDN . Owners of VXDN have received $15.12 and two shares of VXUP (it’s a vicious circle). Between all the distributions, reverse splits, and offsetting shares, performance is nearly impossible to determine, and they do not even attempt to do so on the website. These products need to close before anyone else gets hurt. Once again, the majority of the new names added to ETF Deathwatch this month carry the smart-beta label. This suggests the market is currently saturated with smart-beta products, and investors need time to understand and digest all that are currently available. Three of the new additions are China-oriented funds, indicating this is another group approaching saturation. From a quantity standpoint, Global X had the most products added this month with eight of its ETFs, including all four of its new “scientific beta” line, joining the list. The average asset level of products on ETF Deathwatch increased from $6.8 million to $6.9 million, and the quantity of products with less than $2 million held steady at 73. The average age increased from 48.0 to 48.2 months, and the number of products more than five years old surged from 114 to 130. Here is the Complete List of 366 Products on ETF Deathwatch for December 2015 compiled using the objective ETF Deathwatch Criteria . The 28 ETPs added to ETF Deathwatch for December: AccuShares Spot CBOE VIX Down Shares AccuShares Spot CBOE VIX Up Shares AdvisorShares Madrona Global Bond (NYSEARCA: FWDB ) Columbia Large Cap Growth (NYSEARCA: RPX ) DB Crude Oil Long ETN (NYSEARCA: OLO ) Deutsche X-trackers MSCI All China (NYSEARCA: CN ) EGShares India Small Cap (NYSEARCA: SCIN ) ELEMENTS Morningstar Wide Moat Focus ETN (NYSEARCA: WMW ) Elkhorn S&P 500 Capital Expenditures (NASDAQ: CAPX ) ETRACS S&P 500 Gold Hedged Index ETN (NYSEARCA: SPGH ) Global X JPMorgan Efficiente (NYSEARCA: EFFE ) Global X MSCI Pakistan ETF (NYSEARCA: PAK ) Global X NASDAQ China Technology (NASDAQ: QQQC ) Global X Scientific Beta Asia ex-Japan ETF (NYSEARCA: SCIX ) Global X Scientific Beta Europe ETF (NYSEARCA: SCID ) Global X Scientific Beta Japan ETF (NYSEARCA: SCIJ ) Global X Scientific Beta US ETF (NYSEARCA: SCIU ) Global X YieldCo Index ETF (NASDAQ: YLCO ) Guggenheim International Multi-Asset Income (NYSEARCA: HGI ) iPath Pure Beta Coffee ETN (NYSEARCA: CAFE ) iShares B – Ca Rated Corporate Bond (BATS: QLTC ) iShares FactorSelect MSCI USA (NYSEARCA: LRGF ) iShares Treasury Floating Rate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TFLO ) Market Vectors Gulf States (NYSEARCA: MES ) PowerShares China A-Share (NYSEARCA: CHNA ) PowerShares KBW Insurance (NYSEARCA: KBWI ) WisdomTree China ex-State-Owned Enterprises (NASDAQ: CXSE ) WisdomTree Japan Quality Dividend Growth (NYSEARCA: JDG ) The 3 ETPs removed from ETF Deathwatch due to improved health: Credit Suisse Long/Short Liquid Index (Net) ETN (NYSEARCA: CSLS ) First Trust Morningstar Managed Futures Strategy (NYSEARCA: FMF ) ProShares Managed Futures Strategy (NYSEARCA: FUTS ) The 2 ETPs removed from ETF Deathwatch due to delisting: EGShares Blue Chip ETF (NYSEARCA: BCHP ) EGShares Brazil Infrastructure (NYSEARCA: BRXX ) ETF Deathwatch Archives Disclosure: Author has no positions in any of the securities mentioned and no positions in any of the companies or ETF sponsors mentioned. No income, revenue, or other compensation (either directly or indirectly) is received from, or on behalf of, any of the companies or ETF sponsors mentioned.

Yen ETF Gains On Bank Of Japan Stimulus Changes

Unexpected modifications in the quantitative easing program by Bank of Japan (BOJ) on Friday helped the Japanese currency yen to move higher against the U.S. dollar. BOJ took some moderate steps to boost the sluggish Japanese economy and achieve its inflation target rate. Following the announcement, the yen gained nearly 1.2% against the dollar. BOJ’s New Steps in Focus Japan’s central bank announced a number of judicious changes without expanding the volume of its annual asset purchasing program it has been following for the last three years. Though it maintained the volume of bond purchasing at around 80 trillion yen ($660 billion) per year, the bank opted for raising the Japanese government bonds’ (JGBs) average maturity from 7-10 years to 7-12 years. The bank also revealed its plan of purchasing all JGBs to be issued next year. BOJ also announced that under this program, it will allocate 300 billion yen of assets annually in purchasing ETFs that seek to follow the JPX-Nikkei Index 400, which comprises companies that carry out operation without violating the corporate-governance criteria. The central bank’s intention was to boost capital expenditure and wages – an important parameter of an economy – through this step. This was in addition to the BOJ’s annual allocation of 3 trillion yen in ETFs, which started in late 2014. Will It Work? The changes in economic stimulus came on the back of concerns that BOJ’s quantitative easing program that started three years ago has done little for the economy. Despite the bond purchasing program – popularly known as Abenomics – that had aimed at achieving economic growth, the economy slid into contraction territory in the second quarter with a year-on-year GDP decline of 0.5%. However, according to the latest estimate, the economy rebounded strongly in the last quarter to witness a GDP growth rate of 1%, contrary to the earlier estimate of a contraction of 0.8%. Meanwhile, it was reported that the output expanded at an annual pace of 1.6% in the last three quarters. Also, spending by households in the last quarter saw an increase of 0.5%, indicating that the QE program is not a complete failure. Though the bank’s inflation target of 2% has not yet been achieved, BOJ indicated that it will do whatever it takes to reach the goal. Haruhiko Kuroda, Governor of BOJ said: “I’d like you to understand that we have taken those measures so we will be able to quickly adjust policy if we ever reach a conclusion that [further] action is needed to achieve the price-stability target at an early time.” He even added: “If risks to growth and price rises materialize, and if additional easing becomes necessary as a result, I certainly think we will have to undertake bold measures.” Yen ETF – FXY Gains Divergence in economic policies between the two major economies, the U.S. and Japan, played an important role in boosting the yen against the U.S. dollar on Friday. Last week, the Fed announced the first rate hike in almost a decade. The Fed finally pulled the trigger, raising benchmark interest rates by a modest 25 bps to 0.25-0.50% for the first time since 2006. Like the yen, CurrencyShares Japanese Yen ETF (NYSEARCA: FXY ) that tracks the value of the yen against the price of the greenback also gained 1.2% on Friday following the BOJ announcement. This $252.8 million fund charges 40 basis points as fees. FXY also returned 0.9% in the past six months as the yen, which is considered a classic safe haven asset continue to attract investor focus. FXY has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold) with a High risk outlook. Apart from FXY, popular Japanese ETFs such as iShares MSCI Japan (NYSEARCA: EWJ ), WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: DXJ ) and Deutsche X-trackers MSCI Japan Hedged Eq (NYSEARCA: DBJP ) will also remain on investors’ radar in the coming months as they will track the prospect of the changes in economic stimulus. However, EWJ, DXJ and DBJP declined 1.3%, 2.7% and 2.6%, respectively, following the yen’s gain.

WisdomTree Going Beyond Hedged International ETFs

WisdomTree Investments (NASDAQ: WETF ), the industry’s fifth largest ETF provider, has a long list of successful products, be it currency hedged, pure domestic or international equity funds. In fact, WisdomTree has been the king in the currency hedged ETF world with blockbuster funds – Europe Hedged Equity Fund (NYSEARCA: HEDJ ) and Japan Hedged Equity Fund (NYSEARCA: DXJ ) – having AUM of $19.4 billion and $16.2 billion, respectively. Encouraged by the incredible success of these two funds, WisdomTree now plans for their unhedged versions. These ETFs will simply provide exposure to the export-oriented dividend-paying European and Japanese stocks excluding the currency derivatives, making them WisdomTree’s first unhedged international ETFs. While a great deal of the key information – such as expense ratio or ticker symbol – was not available in the initial release, other important points were released in the filing. We have highlighted those below for investors, who may be looking for a new income play targeting Europe and Japan from WisdomTree should it pass regulatory hurdles: WisdomTree Europe Equity Fund in Focus The proposed ETF looks to offer exposure to European equity securities, particularly shares of European exporters, which tend to benefit from the falling euro. This could easily be done by the WisdomTree Europe Equity Index, which consists of dividend-paying companies that derive at least 50% of their revenue from countries outside of Europe and have at least $1 billion in market capitalization. Though this planned fund will likely get first mover advantage due to the inclusion of export-oriented, dividend paying companies, it will face stiff competition from FTSE Europe ETF (NYSEARCA: VGK ) and First Trust STOXX European Select Dividend Index Fund (NYSEARCA: FDD ) . VGK is the most popular and liquid ETF in the European space with AUM of over $14.9 billion and tracks the FTSE Developed Europe Index. It charges 12 bps in fees per year from investors. On the other hand, FDD follows the STOXX Europe Select Dividend 30 Index, providing exposure to high-dividend yielding companies across 18 European countries that have a positive five-year dividend-per-share growth rate and a dividend to earnings-per-share ratio of 60% or less. It has amassed $158.7 million in its asset base and has an expense ratio of 0.60%. Further, the success of the proposed ETF depends on European economic prospects, which look bright at present. This is especially true as the economy is on the mend with the rounds of monetary easing. The European Central Bank (ECB) is pumping trillions of euros into the sagging Eurozone economy, courtesy its QE program that began in March and will run through September 2016. Additionally, cheap oil, higher exports, and weak euro are providing a further boost to the region. If the current trends continue, the WisdomTree proposed fund, if approved, will not find it difficult to attract investor attention. WisdomTree Japan Equity Fund in Focus This proposed ETF looks to target export-oriented, dividend-paying Japanese equity securities by tracking the WisdomTree Japan Equity Index. The Index consists of dividend-paying companies incorporated in Japan and traded on the Tokyo Stock Exchange that derive less than 80% of their revenue in Japan. Similar to its Europe counterpart, this fund will also get first mover advantage but iShares MSCI Japan ETF (NYSEARCA: EWJ ) could pose a major threat. EWJ is an ultra-popular fund targeting the Japanese economy with an AUM of over $19.9 billion and charging 48 bps in fees per year. Currently, the Japanese economy is experiencing a slowdown despite the slew of monetary easing measures and the Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s reform policy popularly referred to as Abenomics. However, earnings of Japanese companies have improved since the launch of Abenomics and a weaker currency is making its exports more competitive leading to higher exports. This lethal combination will drive stock prices higher for exporters, making the proposed ETF a compelling choice, once approved. Original Post