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Smart Beta ETFs That Stood Out Amid Market Volatility

The ‘smart beta’ rage has lately taken the charge of the ETF world. Simply put, the days of plain vanilla ETFs or market-cap weighted ETFs are gone and products with several winning attributes are coming on stream. By now, investors are quite familiar with what the smart-beta concept actually is. As the name suggests, this approach calls for a strategic procedure rather than a plain vanilla market-cap oriented method of portfolio construction. Smart beta funds normally follow the passive investment strategy but with a slight twist which enables it to generate market-beating returns. Many people call it an enhanced investing strategy. A survey conducted by Create-Research shows that smart beta ETFs make up for around 18% of the U.S. ETF market. Another survey pursued by FTSE Russell reveals that 68% of financial advisors are eyeing smart beta ETFs while 70% are focusing on multiple strategic beta techniques. Investors dream of sweeping off the market and scooping up capital gains through this approach. The love for smart beta products was best reflected when renowned investment house Goldman Sachs recently forayed into the ETF industry with a host of smart-beta products (read: Can Goldman Dominate the Smart Beta ETF Industry? ). Below we have highlighted five ‘Smart Beta’ options that outperformed the broader U.S. market ETF SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ), which has lost about 1.7% so far this year (as of March 4, 2016) (read: How You Can Beat the Market with Dividend Aristocrat ETFs ). PowerShares DWA Utilities Momentum ETF (NYSEARCA: PUI ) As bond yields fell on a flight to safety triggered off by global growth concerns and oil price declines at the initial part of the year, rate-sensitive sectors like utilities soared. The sector is known for its relatively high dividend payout and defensive but capital-intensive nature. As a result, a low-yield environment is a winning backdrop for it. While all utilities ETFs performed well in the stormy first two months of 2016, PUI – comprising utility companies that are showing relative strength – fared better. PUI is up 8.2% in the year-to-date frame (as of March 4, 2016). PowerShares S&P 500 High Dividend Low Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: SPHD ) The drive for high current income along with focus on low volatile stocks has made this high dividend low volatility ETF a winner this year. The underlying index of the fund looks to track the performance of 50 securities selected from the S&P 500 Index that have historically provided high dividend yields with lower volatility. The fund yields 3.47% annually and is up 7.1% so far this year (as of March 4, 2016) (read: 3 Safe High Dividend ETFs to Beat the Volatile Market ). ALPS Emerging Sector Dividend Dogs ETF (NYSEARCA: EDOG ) The fund benefited from the return of the emerging markets and investors’ lure for dividends. The underlying index of the fund picks five stocks in each of the 10 sectors that make up the S-Network Emerging Markets which offer the highest dividend yields. The fund is equal-weighted in nature. The fund yields 4.48% annually and is up 12.3% so far this year (as of March 4, 2016) (read: Emerging Markets Back On Track: 5 Outperforming ETFs ). IQ Global Resources ETF (NYSEARCA: GRES ) Since commodities have enjoyed a phenomenal run in the year-to-date frame, this fund has found a place in the top-performers’ list. The IQ Global Resources ETF focuses on momentum and valuation factors to identify global companies that function in commodity-specific market segments and whose equity securities trade in developed markets, including the U.S. These segments include the major commodity sectors, plus Timber, Water and Coal. The fund has added 11.3% so far this year (as of March 4, 2016). The fund yields 2.60% annually. PowerShares S&P Mid-Cap Low Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: XMLV ) As volatility spiked to start 2016, this mid-cap low volatility fund gained considerable investor attention. The fund measures the performance of 80 of the least volatile stocks from the S&P MidCap 400 Index over the past 12 months. XMLV is up over 3.4% and yields 1.83% annually. Original Post

Low Interest Rates Alone Cannot Prevent A Bear Market In Stocks

The most common definition of a bear market in stocks? A major index needs to fall 20% from a high watermark. And while that is precisely what has happened for most gauges of stock health – MSCI All-Country World Index, Nikkei 225, STOXX Europe 600, Shanghai Composite, U.S. Russell 2000, U.S. Value Line Composite – the Dow and the S&P 500 remain defiant. Yet, there’s another way to view bulls and bears. In particular, chart-watchers often use the slope of a benchmark’s long-term moving average. It is a bull market when the 200-day moving average is rising. During these times, investors often benefit when they buy the dips. In contrast, when the 200-day is sloping downwards, it may be a “Grizzly.” During these days, investors successfully preserve capital when they raise cash by selling into rallies. There’s more. During stock bears, stocks frequently hit “lower highs” and “lower lows.” That’s exactly what investors have experienced since May of 2015. There’s little doubt that – at the moment – we are witnessing the “rolling over” of the 200-day moving average. The exceptionally popular measure of market direction is sloping downward, giving support to the notion that a bearish downtrend is in command. Technical analysis notwithstanding, there are other reasons to believe that the stock bear will maul and mangle. Fundamental analysts note that the Q1 2016 S&P 500 earnings are set to record a decline of -8.0%. That is going to register a fourth consecutive quarter for year-over-year declines in corporate earnings per share – the first such sequence since 2008 (Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4). “But Gary,” you protest. “It’s only the energy companies. You should just exclude them from consideration.” (Like technology in 2000? Financials in 2008?). Actually, it’s not just the energy sector. Seven of the 10 key economic sectors will serve up profits-per-share disappointments. Telecom, healthcare and consumer discretionary companies may be the only sectors to provide a positive boost in the upcoming earnings season. Still, get a gander at the earnings expectations at the start of the year vs. the earnings expectations at the beginning of March. It only took two months for analysts to lower their expectations for every single stock segment – percentage revisions that have not dropped this fast since the Great Recession. Keep in mind, reported earnings for the S&P 500 peaked at $105.96 on 9/30/2014. At that time, the S&P 500 closed at 1,972 and traded at a P/E of 18.6. With the most recent 12/30/2015 S&P 500 earnings at $86.46, and the 3/8/2016 close of 1979, the market trades at a P/E of 22.9. That’s correct. The market is essentially flat since September of 2014, but it is far more expensive in March of 2016 . Nearly 20% more expensive since profits peaked . It is exceptionally difficult to make a case for the overall market to be “attractive” or “fairly valued.” Not that perma-bulls haven’t tried. The most common argument is the attractiveness of stocks relative to the alternatives in fixed income. Ultra-low interest rates not only force savers into equities, they argue, but it also primes the pump for companies to buy back shares of their own stock through the issuance of corporate debt. However, history has a similar circumstance when the U.S. had a low rate environment for nearly 20 years (i.e., 1935-1954). In that period, valuations were about HALF of what they are today. If low rates alone weren’t enough to DOUBLE the “P” relative to the “E,” why are low rates enough to justify higher stock prices regardless of valuations in 2016? When top-line sales and bottom-line earnings are contracting? It is also worth noting that low rates alone did not stop bear markets occurring in 1937-1938 (-49.1%), 1938-1939 (-23.3%), 1939-1942 (-40.4%), or 1946-1947 (-23.2%). Click to enlarge By way of review, the technical picture is inhospitable. The fundamental backdrop is unsavory. And even the perma-bull panacea of low interest rates cannot obliterate historical comparisons entirely. “Well, Gary,” you decry. “Back then, we were still coming out of the Great Depression. We don’t have anything like that right now… and we are not going into recession.” I’m glad that you brought up the Great Depression. For starters, Federal Reserve policy error in 1937-1938 went a long way toward reigniting recessionary forces – dynamics not unlike the depression-like disaster that plagued America from 1929 to 1932. Today, six-and-a-half years removed from the Great Recession, Fed policy error (December 2015) remains a distinct possibility. Members of the Fed’s Open Market Committee currently believe that they can raise borrowing costs in 2016 without reversing the Fed’s wealth effect ambitions . They may learn, however, that they will be returning the country to zero percent rate policy (ZIRP) and quantitative easing (QE) to squelch a 20%-plus decline in key barometers like the S&P 500. What’s more, the stock bears in 1939-1942 (-40.4%) and in 1946-1947 (-23.2%) are not attributable to recessions or the Great Depression. Those stock bears had low interest rates and booming economies. Is the U.S. economy booming right now? The surprising popularity of anti-incumbent candidates like Sanders and Trump suggests that the real economy – jobs included – is shaky at best. This simple chart that plots both manufacturing and non-manufacturing (services) demonstrates that economic weakness is an actuality, not a doom-n-gloom delusion. One might even choose to consider the most recent business headlines. Chinese exports plummeted by their largest amount since 2009. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned today that the world is looking at an increasing “risk of economic derailment.” And stateside, the NFIB’s Small Business Optimism Index fell for the fourth time in five months. It now sits at its lowest level in two years while demonstrating its steepest peak to trough drop since 2009. Instead of getting more stimulus from the U.S. Federal Reserve, like “Twist” and “QE3,” the Fed is pushing “gradual stimulus removal. ” In sum, the rallies of September-October (2015) and February-March (2016) share more in common with bear market bounces than buy-the-dip opportunities. Technicals, fundamentals, economics and Federal Reserve policy collectively favor a lower-than-usual allocation to risk. For my moderate growth-and-income clients, our 45-50% allocation to domestic large caps exists in stark contrast to 65-70% in a broadly diversified equity mix (e.g., large, small, foreign, emerging, etc.). Some of our core positions? The Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (NYSEARCA: VYM ), the iShares S&P 100 ETF (NYSEARCA: OEF ) and the iShares MSCI USA Quality Factor ETF (NYSEARCA: QUAL ). We have pure beta exposure to the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) as well. On the income side of the ledger? We have benefited immensely from a commitment to investment-grade holdings, including the Vanguard Long-Term Corporate Bond Index ETF (NASDAQ: VCLT ), the iShares 3-7 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEI ) and munis via the SPDR Nuveen Barclays Muni Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TFI ). For Gary’s latest podcast, click here . 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.

Despite An Uptick In Equities; Fund Investors Remain Risk Adverse

By Tom Roseen Generally ignoring mixed economic news, equity investors continued to follow the lead of oil prices throughout the fund-flows week ended March 2, 2016. On Thursday, February 25, markets rallied, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average posting a 212-point gain after investors learned that Venezuela’s oil minister had said he was meeting next month with other oil ministers, with a goal of stabilizing oil prices. Technology and financial issues led the rally as investors took a risk-on approach, helped by news of a jump in durable goods orders; investors ignored the details that shipments of nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft were negative and that the Shanghai Composite dropped 6.4% for the day. Throughout the flows week investors cheered the comments of St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard, who reiterated that the pressure to raise interest rates has eased. Preliminary Q4 2015 GDP growth was revised upward during the week to 1.0%, which helped offset a dip in oil prices on Friday. Despite better-than-expected earnings reports from the likes of J.C. Penney and Kraft Heinz, investors continued to bid up gold. On Monday, February 29, investors continued to push up utilities issues and gold prices, underscoring the markets’ continued volatility. Nonetheless, oil futures rose sharply on reports of a possible production freeze, and investors’ global economic fears declined slightly after China lowered its reserve-requirement for that nation’s banks. On Tuesday stocks rallied, with investors bidding up financial and technology stocks on news that oil prices had jumped higher and that the ISM Manufacturing Index rose to 49.5% for February; while still in contraction territory, that beat consensus estimates. The NASDAQ Composite witnessed its largest one-day gain since August 2015 as utilities and Treasuries took a breather. Another strong gain in oil prices on Wednesday pushed stocks into the black once again. Investors met the “Goldilocks” news from the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book with a sigh of relief; it hinted that the central bank might be slow to raise interest rates this year, while showing the economy is still growing. This rally pushed the ten-year Treasury yield to its strongest closing high since February 5. Despite the risk-on attitude by many investors this past week, risk aversion remained the mantra of fund investors. For the week fund investors were net purchasers of fund assets (including those of conventional funds and exchange-traded funds [ETFs]), injecting a net $6.4 billion for the fund-flows week ended March 2. The increase in recent market volatility pushed investors toward safe-haven plays and fixed income securities, padding the coffers of money market funds (+$5.7 billion net), taxable bond funds (+$2.9 billion net), and municipal bond funds (+$0.2 billion net), while being net redeemers of equity funds (-$2.4 billion). For the first week in five equity ETFs witnessed net inflows; however, this past week they took in just $450 million. As a result of rises in oil prices and good economic news during the week, authorized participants (APs) were net purchasers of domestic equity ETFs (+$1.5 billion), injecting money into the group for the first week in three. Despite a slight improvement in the global markets, APs-for the fifth consecutive week-were net redeemers of nondomestic equity ETFs (-$1.0 billion). Perhaps as a result of persistent risk aversion, accompanied by the rally in technology firms, APs bid up some unlikely names, with the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: GLD ) (+$1.1 billion), the PowerShares QQQ Trust ETF (NASDAQ: QQQ ) (+$0.6 billion), and the iShares U.S. Real Estate ETF (NYSEARCA: IYR ) (+$0.3 billion) attracting the largest amounts of net new money of all individual equity ETFs. At the other end of the spectrum, the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) (-$1.2 billion) experienced the largest net redemptions, while the iShares MSCI Japan ETF (NYSEARCA: EWJ ) (-$362 million) suffered the second largest redemptions for the week. For the third week in four conventional fund (ex-ETF) investors were net redeemers of equity funds, redeeming $2.8 billion from the group. Domestic equity funds, handing back $2.9 billion, witnessed their fourth consecutive week of net outflows, while posting a weekly gain of 3.32%. Meanwhile, their nondomestic equity fund counterparts, posting a 3.69% return for the week, witnessed net inflows (although just +$87 million) for the fifth consecutive week. On the domestic side investors lightened up on large-cap funds and equity income funds, redeeming a net $1.6 billion and $1.0 billion, respectively. On the nondomestic side international equity funds witnessed $362 million of net inflows, while global equity funds handed back some $274 million net. For the third week in four taxable bond funds (ex-ETFs) witnessed net inflows, taking in a little under $2.0 billion. High-yield funds witnessed the largest net inflows, taking in $2.6 billion (for their second consecutive week of net inflows), while government-mortgage funds witnessed the second largest net inflows (+$0.4 billion). Corporate investment-grade debt funds witnessed the largest net redemptions from the group, handing back $754 million for the week. For the twenty-second week in a row municipal bond funds (ex-ETFs) witnessed net inflows, taking in $125 million this past week.