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Bond ETFs To Play If Fed Hikes In June

With the U.S. economy on the mend after a lukewarm Q1, a Fed rate hike possibility in June is back on the table. At least, the latest Fed minutes suggest that. A spate of stronger U.S. economic data in the field of retail, consumer sentiment, inflation and housing must have boosted the Fed’s confidence. The labor market and the manufacturing sector also seem sound. However, the June hike possibilities came as a shock to investors as they grossly shifted back the timeline of a hike in the wake of moderation in U.S. growth. Whatever the case, further Fed rate hikes are likely to bring in changes in investing sentiments. Against this backdrop, those who have started speculating a sooner-than-expected hike in the Fed interest rates must be worrying about the stability of their fixed income holding. Investors should note that yields on short-term bonds started to move higher since the release of the minutes. The yield on three-month bonds was 0.31% on May 19, 2016, up 3 bps from the yield recorded on May 17, 2016. Fixed-income investing has enjoyed a great show so far in 2016, especially in the longer part of the yield curve. However, the prospect of rising rates and risks to capital gains of bond holdings have left investors jittery about the safety of their portfolio. Given the situation, many investors are definitely pulling their money out of the bond market. At a time like this when investors are extremely cautious about rising rate risks and stock market volatility, investments in the below-mentioned bond ETFs can be intriguing bets. WisdomTree BofA Merrill Lynch High Yield Bond Negative Duration ETF (NASDAQ: HYND ) If investors are worrying about interest rate risks, negative duration bonds may come to rescue. Plus, this fund offers substantial yields which can easily beat out the benchmark yield. In addition, risks over junk bond investing are easing now with the ongoing energy sector recovery. This fund tracks the BofA Merrill Lynch 0-5 Year U.S. High Yield Constrained, Negative Seven Duration Index. The benchmark is a combination of the long and short portfolio. The long portfolio mirrors the BofA Merrill Lynch 0-5 Year U.S. High Yield Constrained Index, targeting non-investment grade corporate debt securities issued in the U.S. and maturing in five years. The short portfolio holds the short positions in U.S. Treasuries that surpasses the duration of the long portfolio, resulting in a targeted total duration of about negative 7 years. The fund puts heavy focus on junk bonds. It has a fee of 48 bps. The fund yields 4.55% annually (as of May 19, 2016). Sit Rising Rate ETF (NYSEARCA: RISE ) The ETF looks to track the performance of a portfolio comprising exchange-traded futures contracts and options on futures on two-, five- and 10-year U.S. Treasury securities weighted to attain the targeted negative 10-year average effective portfolio duration. Through this method, the ETF would see a 10% price appreciation with a 1% rise in U.S. Treasury yields. SPDR DoubleLine Total Return Tactical ETF (NYSEARCA: TOTL ) TOTL, an actively managed fund, has its foundation based on the principles of the DoubleLine’s sought-after investment research. The product seeks total return, while emphasizing income by investing in a global portfolio of fixed income securities of various maturities and ratings, though more-or-less 10% of the portfolio goes to the international arena. The fund looks to utilize various investment strategies in a broad array of fixed income sectors. It puts about 55% of assets in mortgage-backed securities. The fund charges 55 bps in fees. The fund has a modified adjusted duration of 3.90 years while its current yield stands at 2.58% (as of May 19, 2016). VanEck Vectors Investment Grade Floating Rate ETF (NYSEARCA: FLTR ) Floating rate notes are investment grade bonds that do not pay a fixed rate to investors but have variable coupon rates that are often tied to an underlying index (such as LIBOR) plus a variable spread depending on the credit risk of issuers. Since the coupons of these bonds are adjusted periodically, these are less sensitive to an increase in rates compared to traditional bonds. Investors can thus play the theme with FLTR. Effective duration of the fund is as low as 0.13 years. SPDR Barclays 1-10 Year TIPS ETF (NYSEARCA: TIPX ) The fund looks to track the Barclays 1-10 Year Government Inflation-linked Bond index. Since the inflation picture is improving in the U.S. and a solid inflationary outlook is a prerequisite of the Fed tightening policy, this TIPS ETF can be considered a good bet. The fund has moderate interest rate risk as noted by modified adjusted duration of 4.71 years. SPDR Nuveen Barclays Capital Build America Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: BABS ) Investors should note that the short-term bond ETFs would be under greater pressure if the Fed acts in June. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note actually fell 2 bps to 1.85% on May 19, 2016 from the earlier day while the yield on three-month treasury notes increased by one basis point. This pattern should help long-term bond investing. For this reason, we chose this muni bond ETF which yields about 3.15% annually (as of May 19, 2016). These bonds are safer than high-yield corporate bonds. Original Post

ETF Deathwatch For May 2016: List Jumps To 450

The quantity of exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”) and exchange-traded noted (“ETNs”) continues to zoom higher. There are now 450 products on the list, and the growth trajectory is on a path to surpass 500 by the end of the year. For May, there are 26 new names joining the list and 11 coming off. Only seven of the removals were the result of improved health – the other four died and lost their listings. The current membership consists of 342 ETFs and 108 ETNs. Further segmentation of the ETF population reveals that 41 are actively managed funds, 151 have smart-beta labels, and the remaining 150 are traditional capitalization-weighted ETFs. The surge of currency-hedged ETF introductions of the past two years continues to be problematic for the industry. The brief nine-month surge of the U.S. dollar in late 2014 and early 2015 generated a slew of currency-hedged ETF launches that continues to this day. However, with the dollar’s decline over the past 14 months, these funds have been at a performance disadvantage. As a result, they are failing to attract new assets, losing some of the assets they had, and ending up here on ETF Deathwatch. This month, six of the additions are currency-hedged ETFs. Twenty-six funds went the entire month of April without a trade, and 269 did not trade on the last day of the month. Additionally, six products have yet to record their first trade of 2016. It remains a mystery why some of these products exist and why the exchanges allow them to have a listing. The NYSE did take action against one ETN issued by Deutsche Bank (NYSE: DB ) in April. As outlined in ETF Stats for April , the NYSE suspended trading and delisted DB Commodity Long ETN (former ticker DPU) because its assets fell below $400,000. However, DB left shareholders holding the bag because it has no intention of automatically liquidating the ETNs and returning money to shareholders. Adding insult to injury, the notes do not mature for another 22 years. If owners are not willing to wait that long, then they will have to pursue the monthly round-lot redemption process or a sale in the over-the-counter markets. Keep this in mind before buying one of the 39 other DB-sponsored products that are currently on Deathwatch. The average asset level of products on ETF Deathwatch increased from $6.6 million to $6.8 million, and the quantity of products with less than $2 million fell from 98 to 96. The average age increased from 46.4 to 46.8 months, and the number of products more than five years of age surged from 148 to 177. The driving force behind the huge jump in five-year-old products on the list is that unloved family of iPath “Pure Beta” ETFs have now been on the market that long. Despite the lack of investor interest in these ETNs, Barclays continues to sponsor them, and the NYSE continues to collect a listing fee. Here is the Complete List of 450 ETFs and ETNs on ETF Deathwatch for May 2016 compiled using the objective ETF Deathwatch Criteria . The 26 ETFs and ETNs added to ETF Deathwatch for May: AlphaMark Actively Managed Small Cap (NASDAQ: SMCP ) CSOP China CSI 300 A-H Dynamic (NYSEARCA: HAHA ) CSOP MSCI China A International Hedged (NYSEARCA: CNHX ) Deutsche X-trackers CSI 300 China A-Shares Hedged Equity (NYSEARCA: ASHX ) ELEMENTS Rogers ICI Energy ETN (NYSEARCA: RJN ) ETRACS 2x Leveraged Long Wells Fargo BDC Series B ETN (NYSEMKT: LBDC ) ETRACS Monthly Pay 2x Leveraged Mortgage REIT ETN Series B (NYSEARCA: MRRL ) ETRACS UBS Bloomberg CMCI Series B ETN (NYSEARCA: UCIB ) Guggenheim MSCI Emerging Market Equal Country Wtd (NYSEARCA: EWEM ) iShares Currency Hedged MSCI South Korea (NYSEARCA: HEWY ) John Hancock Multifactor Healthcare (NYSEARCA: JHMH ) Morgan Stanley Cushing MLP High Income ETN (NYSEARCA: MLPY ) PowerShares Developed EuroPacific Hedged Low Volatility (NYSEARCA: FXEP ) PowerShares Dynamic Networking (NYSEARCA: PXQ ) PowerShares Japan Currency Hedged Low Volatility (NYSEARCA: FXJP ) PowerShares S&P 500 Momentum (NYSEARCA: SPMO ) PowerShares S&P 500 Value (NYSEARCA: SPVU ) PowerShares Zacks Micro Cap (NYSEARCA: PZI ) RBC Yorkville MLP Distribution Growth Leaders Liquid PR ETN (NYSEARCA: YGRO ) Reaves Utilities (NASDAQ: UTES ) SPDR MSCI China A Shares IMI (NYSEARCA: XINA ) The Restaurant ETF (NASDAQ: BITE ) VanEck Vectors Solar Energy (NYSEARCA: KWT ) WisdomTree BofA ML HY Bond Zero Duration (NASDAQ: HYZD ) WisdomTree Europe Local Recovery (BATS: EZR ) WisdomTree Global ex-U.S. Hedged Real Estate (BATS: HDRW ) The 7 ETPs removed from ETF Deathwatch due to improved health: Barclays Return on Disability ETN (NYSEARCA: RODI ) Global X Permanent (NYSEARCA: PERM ) Global X Scientific Beta US (NYSEARCA: SCIU ) IQ 50 Percent Hedged FTSE Japan (NYSEARCA: HFXJ ) iShares Global Inflation-Linked Bond (NYSEARCA: GTIP ) O’Shares FTSE Europe Quality Dividend (NYSEARCA: OEUR ) PureFunds ISE Junior Silver (NYSEARCA: SILJ ) The 4 ETFs removed from ETF Deathwatch due to delisting: Highland HFR Equity Hedge (NYSEARCA: HHDG ) Highland HFR Event-Driven (NYSEARCA: DRVN ) Highland HFR Global (NYSEARCA: HHFR ) DB Commodity Long ETN (NYSEARCA: DPU ) 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.

Junk Bond ETF ANGL Soaring: Will Its Flight Last?

Heightened volatility is driving investors to safe havens, making 2016 the year of the bond market. While long-term bonds are the undisputed winners, the high yield corner has drawn attention over the past three-months on investors’ drive for higher yields and a rebound in oil price. In addition, high-yield spreads have tightened significantly from 8.64 on February 12 to 6.36 currently, as per the BofA Merrill Lynch US High Yield Option-Adjusted Spread , making junk bonds attractive. This suggests that investors are now demanding lower premium than comparable Treasury bonds to compensate for the risk. However, the risk of default is on the rise, dampening the appeal for junk bonds. This is because the resumption of the slide in commodity prices and renewed global growth concerns are weighing on companies’ profits and balance sheets yet again. As per Moody’s Investors Service, global junk bond defaults will accelerate to 5% by the end of November, up from the previous forecast of 4.6% one month ago, and 3.8% in March. Fitch Ratings expects high yield bond defaults to climb to 6% this year from 4.5% last year and touch the highest level since 2000 (read: Junk versus Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETFs ). Given the heightened credit risk and low rate environment, investors thronged the high yield quality fund – VanEck Vectors Fallen Angel High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: ANGL ) . The fund gained 12.3% in the year-to-date time frame, outperforming the broad bond fund (NYSEARCA: BND ) and junk bond fund (NYSEARCA: JNK ) by wide margins. ANGL in Focus This ETF seeks to track the performance of the BofA Merrill Lynch US Fallen Angel High Yield Index, which focuses on the ‘fallen angel’ bonds. Fallen angel bonds are high yield securities that were once investment grade but have fallen from grace and are now trading as junk bonds. This unique approach gives the portfolio 248 securities that are widely spread across them, with none holding more than 1.65% of assets. The fund has an effective duration of 5.67 years and year to maturity of 9.33. Additionally, the product mainly comprises BB and B rated corporates, which together make up for 85.3% of the asset base. Bonds from energy and material sectors occupy the top two positions with 25.2% and 22.1%, respectively, while financial and communications round off the top four with double-digit allocation (read: all the High Yield Bond ETFs here ). ANGL has amassed $158.7 million in its asset base while trades in moderate volume of 82,000 shares a day on average. It charges a relatively low fee of 40 bps per year from investors and yields 5.20% per annum. Behind The Success of ANGL The fallen angels strategy is immensely successful this year as the number of fallen angels has increased substantially on a series of debt downgrades among energy and material firms – the top two sectors of the ETF. In this regard, Moody’s snatched investment grade ratings from 51 companies and gave them the junk status at the end of the first quarter, up from eight in the fourth quarter and 45 for the whole of 2015. These downgrades have boosted the performance of the ETF as bond price generally rebounds after losing an investment grade rating. Additionally, the rebound in oil prices from the 12-year low reached in mid-February injects further strength into these bonds and the ETF. As a result, fallen angels bonds tend to have lower default rates than their more traditional junk bond counterparts, thus offering better risk-reward profiles. These have a history of outperformance in nine out of the last 12 calendar years, according to Market Vectors. Moreover, the outperformance of ANGL was spurred by its higher average credit quality as about three-fourths of the portfolio carry the upper end rating (BB) of the junk category, leaving just less than 4% to the risky CCC-rated and lower. Link to the original post on Zacks.com