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Relief For Leveraged Oil ETFs

What a great contrast. While the otherwise surging U.S. markets ended August on a three-year low note (as a basis of monthly performance) and U.S. index futures are on a retreat, oil – the prolonged pain for investors – staged a rally. Oil has been trapped in a downward spiral since mid-2014. For over one year, there was hardly any relief for oil prices. Supply glut, be in the U.S. or in the other oil-rich nations, and global growth worries that resulted in demand concerns were responsible for the collapse in the oil prices. However, oil signaled a turnaround last Thursday, jumping over 10% and representing the biggest one-day rally in over six years. Gains kept rolling even on Friday and Monday, marking the largest three-day oil price gain in 25 years . This matters a lot for a commodity like oil, the price of which declined over 60% in the last one year (read: Oil Tumbles to Six-Year Low: ETF Tale of Two Sides ). In particular, the U.S. economy grew 3.7% in Q2, which beat the initial reading of 2.3% growth and 0.6% expansion recorded in the seasonally weak Q1. While this ruled out some demand-driven worries, the calm in the stock market turbulence in the latter part of last week and lower inventory crude stockpiles in the U.S. initiated this bright spell (read: Positive News Flow Sparks Off Rally in Oil ETFs ). On August 31, oil futures added over 8%. The optimism originated from the indication that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) may cut back on production. Moreover, the U.S. government also reduced its estimate of domestic oil output. Domestic production in June was 9.3 million barrels a day, about 100,000 barrels short of the earlier prediction. Plus, the biggest synthetic crude oil manufacturer in Canada stopped production following a fire, which in turn boosted Canadian oil prices, per Reuters . A few analysts believe that these extraordinary gains in oil prices actually overprized the recent positive news. Compelling valuation is yet another reason for the bounce. So while positive news drove up all oil ETFs, fat gains were tied to the leveraged oil plays. Post oil price recovery, leveraged oil ETFs VelocityShares 3x Long Crude Oil ETN (NYSEARCA: UWTI ) with triple leverage and ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Crude Oil ETF (NYSEARCA: UCO ) with double exposure to the index added over 72% and 45%, respectively, in the last five trading sessions (as of August 31, 2015). Over the last three-day period (as of August 31, 2015), the funds were up 81% and 50%, respectively (read: 10-Minute Guide to 10 Most Popular Leveraged ETFs ). However, investors should note that leveraged ETFs are apt for short-term trading due to their extremely volatile nature. This is even truer for oil as this investing zone can be touted as one of the most risky plays. Global recovery is yet to be full-fledged with several economies tottering. So, demand-driven concerns are well in place. Now, recovery depends on when production cut takes place, if at all it happens. So, investors need to be vigilant while investing in the leveraged oil ETFs. Original post

3 Buy-Ranked Small-Cap Blend Mutual Funds

Small-cap blend funds are a type of equity mutual fund which hold in their portfolio a mix of value and growth stocks, where the market capitalization of the stocks is generally lower than $2 billion. Blend funds are also known as “hybrid funds”. Blend funds aim for value appreciation by capital gains. They owe their origin to a graphical representation of a fund’s equity style box. In addition to diversification, blend funds are great picks for investors looking for a mix of growth and value investment. Meanwhile, small-cap funds are a good choice for investors seeking diversification across different sectors and companies. Investors with a high risk appetite should invest in these funds. Below we will share with you 3 buy-rated small-cap blend mutual funds. Each has earned either a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy) or a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #2 (Buy) , as we expect these mutual funds to outperform their peers in the future. To view the Zacks Rank and past performance of all small-cap blend mutual funds, investors can click here to see the complete list of funds. Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund No Load (MUTF: FSLCX ) seeks capital appreciation over the long run. FSLCX uses a “blend” strategy to invest in small-cap companies having market capitalizations within the range of the Russell 2000 Index or the S&P SmallCap 600 Index. Factors including financial strength and economic condition are considered before investing in securities of companies throughout the globe. The Fidelity Small Cap Stock Fund has returned 6.5% over the past one year. Lionel T. Harris is the fund manager and has managed FSLCX since 2011. Lord Abbett Alpha Strategy Fund A (MUTF: ALFAX ) is a “fund of funds” that generally invests in mutual funds of Lord, Abbett & Co. LLC. ALFAX invests in value and growth stocks of companies located all over the world. The fund invests in companies having micro-, small- and mid-cap market capitalizations. The Lord Abbett Alpha Strategy A fund has returned 2.6% over the past one year. As of June 2015, ALFAX held 7 issues, with 20.18% of its total assets invested in the Lord Abbett Developing Growth I fund. TIAA-CREF Small-Cap Equity Retail Fund Adv (MUTF: TCSEX ) seeks favorable returns over the long term. TCSEX invests heavily in domestic small-cap companies having market capitalizations identical to those included in the Russell 2000 Index. The fund primarily invests in small-sized companies across different sectors. The TIAA-CREF Small-Cap Equity Retail fund has returned 4.9% over the past one year. TCSEX has an expense ratio of 0.78%, compared to a category average of 1.24%. Original Post Share this article with a colleague

The Importance Of Your Time Horizon

I ran across two interesting articles today: Both articles are exercises in understanding the time horizon over which you invest. If you are older, you may not have the time to recover from market shortfalls, so advice to buy dips may sound hollow when you are nearer to drawing on your assets. Thus the idea that volatility, presumably negative, doesn’t hurt unless you sell. Some people don’t have much choice in the matter. They have retired, and they have a lump sum of money that they are managing for long-term income. No more money is going in, money is only going out. What can you do? You have to plan before volatility strikes. My equity only clients had 14% cash before the recent volatility hit. Over the past week I opportunistically brought that down to 10% in names that I would like to own even if the “crisis” deepened. That flexibility was built into my management. (If the market recovers enough, I will rebuild the buffer. Around 1300 on the S&P, I would put all cash to work, and move to the alternative portfolio management strategy where I sell the most marginal ideas one at a time to raise cash and reinvest into the best ideas.) If an older investor would be hurt by a drawdown in the stock market, he needs to invest less in stocks now, even if that means having a lower income on average over the longer-term. With a higher level of bonds in the portfolio, he could more than proportionately draw down on bonds during a crisis, which would rebalance his portfolio. If and when the stock market recovered, for a time, he could draw on has stock positions more than proportionately then. That also would rebalance the portfolio. Again, plans like that need to be made in advance. If you have no plans for defense, you will lose most wars. One more note: often when we talk about time horizon, it sounds like we are talking about a single future point in time. When the time for converting assets to cash is far distant, using a single point may be a decent approximation. When the time for converting assets to cash is near, it must be viewed as a stream of payments, and whatever scenario testing, (quasi) Monte Carlo simulations, and sensitivity analyses are done must reflect that. Many different scenarios may have the same average rate of return, but the ones with early losses and late gains are pure poison to the person trying to manage a lump sum in retirement. The same would apply to an early spike in inflation rates followed by deflation. The time to plan is now for all contingencies, and please realize that this is an art and not a science, so if someone comes to you with glitzy simulation analyses, ask them to run the following scenarios: run every 30-year period back as far as the data goes. If it doesn’t include the Great Depression, it is not realistic enough. Run them forwards, backwards, upside-down forwards, and upside-down backwards. (For the upside-down scenarios normalize the return levels to the right side up levels.) The idea here is to use real volatility levels in the analyses, because reality is almost always more volatile than models using normal distributions. History is meaner, much meaner than models, and will likely be meaner in the future… we just don’t know how it will be meaner. You will then be surprised at how much caution the models will indicate, and hopefully those who can will save more, run safer asset allocations, and plan to withdraw less over time. Reality is a lot more stingy than the models of most financial Dr. Feelgoods out there. One more note: and I know how to model this, but most won’t – in the Great Depression, the returns after 1931 weren’t bad. Trouble is, few were able to take advantage of them because they had already drawn down on their investments. The many bankruptcies meant there was a smaller market available to invest in, so the dollar-weighted returns in the Great Depression were lower than the buy-and-hold returns. They had to be lower, because many people could not hold their investments for the eventual recovery. Part of that was margin loans, part of it was liquidating assets to help tide over unemployment. It would be wonky, but simulation models would have to have an uptick in need for withdrawals at the very time that markets are low. That’s not all that much different than some had to do in the recent financial crisis. Now, who is willing to throw *that* into financial planning models? The simple answer is to be more conservative. Expect less from your investments, and maybe you will get positive surprises. Better that than being negatively surprised when older, when flexibility is limited. Disclosure: None