Tag Archives: taiwan

How To Fly In Turbulent Emerging Markets

By Sammy Suzuki Emerging markets may be stormier these days, but they’re still brimming with opportunities. You just need to know how to find them. That’s going to take some skillful piloting – and highly sensitive downside-risk radar. The developing world’s economic growth engine is losing steam. Commodity prices have collapsed, and some of the largest nations are facing structural and political struggles. Demand in the developed world has been persistently weak, and the prospect of rising US interest rates is adding uncertainty to the outlook. In this environment, simply buying an index isn’t likely to generate the easy outsized returns it had for most of the past decade. Investors may be tempted to bail. But writing off the developing world altogether means missing out on many of the world’s most dynamic, fast-growing economies and companies. The secret to success, then, is being able to identify pockets of strength – even in weak economies – and to catch nascent trends before they become obvious to others. In our view, that means investing actively, taking the long view and adopting preemptive tactics for riding out stormy times. It Pays to Deviate Generally speaking, we are indifferent to the benchmark. The reasons for this are clear: it pays to deviate liberally from the crowd. Emerging equity markets are less transparent than developed ones, and news tends to travel more slowly than it does in the developed world. As a result, developing-market stocks are more prone to overreactions and mispricings – but also far richer in opportunities for attentive stock pickers to exploit. That’s the beauty of emerging-market investing. Being active means leaning into reliable, long-term sources of equity outperformance. In other words, simply follow the basic tenets of good stock-picking: Buy stocks when they are cheap, when they are delivering stronger-than-average and/or more consistent profitability, or are more likely to score positive earnings surprises. Because emerging-market indices are so inefficient, the payback potential from such a back-to-basics strategy is high. Buffett’s Rule #1: Don’t Lose Money In storm-prone emerging markets, defense counts more than offense. So we’re especially vigilant about avoiding excess volatility. For years, the conventional thinking was that volatility was part and parcel of being an emerging-market investor. Since those risks were fully understood and accepted, active emerging-market managers didn’t have to control for it. Many professional investors merely track the ups and downs of a benchmark and call that risk control. We see things differently. In our view, the key to success in emerging stocks is to hold onto as much of your gains as possible over a full market cycle. That means being proactive and thoughtful about absolute – not relative – risk. One way to do that is by maintaining a consistent tilt toward companies with stable cash flows, good capital stewardship and/or lower sensitivity to the business cycle. Another way is to be ever watchful for looming macro risks. We rely more heavily on our country-specific economic insights for avoiding risk than for selecting stocks or return potential. This risk-aware approach is akin to constantly buying downside protection, in our view. Hunt for Durable Trends In times of increased economic turbulence, earnings quality and consistency become paramount. Some examples of companies with these attributes include South Korean biopharmaceutical company Medytox, which is getting a lift from the surging demand for an improved, next-generation botulinum toxin (commonly known as botox), an affordable form of eternal youth. When they travel abroad, Chinese vacation-goers are snapping up expensive skincare products from South Korean luxury cosmetics company Amorepacific. And emerging-Asian yarn spinners, fabric mills and sneaker makers are riding the phenomenal growth of “athleisure” sportswear. All of these companies are beneficiaries of enduring lifestyle trends. While generally shunning commodity-centric countries, we see further growth potential for many of the low-cost manufacturing centers. For example, Mexico, Vietnam, Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic should all continue to gain from China’s waning status as a source for low-cost labor. Winning investments can be found even in sectors with uncertain or dismal outlooks. For example, global demand for electronic devices appears to have reached saturation, from personal computers to laptops to tablets and smartphones. Yet certain niche players in the sector, such as camera lens makers and flexible printed circuit-board makers in South Korea and Taiwan, look headed for strong revenue growth as smartphone makers rush to add desirable features and slimmer designs. In the face of the likely economic squalls ahead, we believe that combining active, high-conviction investing with a greater sensitivity to risk is the best strategy. To get the most out of emerging-market equities, there’s no contradiction between finding returns and reducing risk. The views expressed herein do not constitute research, investment advice or trade recommendations and do not necessarily represent the views of all AB portfolio-management teams. Sammy Suzuki – Portfolio Manager – Strategic Core Equities

Semiconductor ETFs Surge On Impressive Q3 Earnings

Semiconductors have dragged down the broader technology sector for the most part of this year. But the recent wave of acquisition talks and a spate of strong earnings reports from some industry players have reversed this trend, pushing the chip stocks higher in recent weeks. In particular, most of the well-known industry players like Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU ), Texas Instruments (NASDAQ: TXN ), Intel (NASDAQ: INTC ) and Broadcom (NASDAQ: BRCM ) have managed to either beat or meet their Zacks Consensus Estimate on earnings, spreading an air of optimism into his corner of the technology sector. Revenues are also encouraging with all but Micron Technology beating the estimates (read: Time for Semiconductor ETFs? ). Let’s dig into the individual performances: Semiconductor Earnings in Focus Though the earnings results was not encouraging, Micron Technology was the major gainer in the industry as the stock has climbed over 12% to date post earnings announcement on October 1, after the close of the market. The memory chipmaker reported adjusted earnings of 37 cents per share, in line with the Zacks Consensus Estimate while revenues of $3.60 billion were slightly below our estimate of $3.67 billion. The company guided revenues in the range of $3.35-$3.60 billion and earnings per share of 20-26 cents for the ongoing first quarter of fiscal 2016. The Zacks Consensus Estimate at the time of earnings release was pegged at $3.75 billion for revenues and 48 cents for earnings per share. Texas Instruments climbed nearly 9.3% since the earnings announcement on October 21, after the closing bell. The company topped our earnings estimate by nine cents and revenues by $140 million. For the ongoing fiscal fourth quarter, it expects revenues in the range of $3.07-$3.33 billion and earnings per share of 64-74 cents. The midpoint of both is better than the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $3.12 billion and 62 cents, respectively, at the time of issuing the guidance. Shares of Intel , the world’s largest chipmaker, have moved up nearly 5.7% to date post earnings announcement on October 13, after the closing bell. The company continued its winning streak of beating earnings for the seventh consecutive quarter and topped our revenue estimate as well. It posted earnings per share of 64 cents on revenues of $14.47 billion that easily surpassed the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 59 cents and $14.23 billion, respectively. The company expects revenues in the range of $14.3-$15.3 billion for the ongoing fourth quarter, the mid-point of which is approximately in line with our current estimate. The wireless chipmaker BRCM also topped our estimates on both the top and the bottom lines. Earnings per share came in at 77 cents on revenues of $2.19 billion, trumping the Zacks Consensus Estimate by 4 cents and $45 million, respectively. The company didn’t issue any guidance as it is in the process of being acquired by Avago Technologies (NASDAQ: AVGO ) for $37 billion, which is expected to close in the first quarter of calendar 2016. Shares of BRCM are relatively flat since the earnings announcement on October 26, after the market closed (read: Semiconductor ETFs Surge on Avago – Broadcom Deal ). ETFs in Focus Impressive performances of these chipmakers have pushed the semiconductor ETFs higher over the past one month. Investors seeking to ride out the surging space in a diversified way could consider the following ETFs. All these funds have a Zacks ETF Rank of 3 or ‘Hold’ rating. iShares PHLX SOX Semiconductor Sector Index ETF (NASDAQ: SOXX ) This ETF follows the PHLX Semiconductor Sector Index and offers exposure to 30 domestic firms. It is highly concentrated on the top 10 firms with 59.2% share, and INTC and TXN occupy the top two positions. Two-thirds of the portfolio is dominated by large cap stocks while mid caps take the remainder, with just 9% going to small caps. The fund has amassed $425.6 million in its asset base and trades in solid average volume of roughly 590,000 shares a day. The product charges 47 bps in fees a year from investors and has gained nearly 11.2% over the past month. Market Vectors Semiconductor ETF (NYSEARCA: SMH ) This fund provides exposure to 26 securities by tracking the Market Vectors US Listed Semiconductor 25 Index. Of these, three firms – Intel, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM ) and Qualcomm Inc. (NASDAQ: QCOM ) – dominate the fund’s return with a combined 41% of total assets while other firms hold no more than 5.21% share. From a market cap look, the product focuses on large cap stocks, as these account for about 83% of the portfolio. The product has managed assets worth $345.8 million and charges 35 bps in annual fees and expenses. It is heavily traded with volume of around 4 million shares per day and is up 9.4% in the trailing one-month period. SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (NYSEARCA: XSD ) This fund tracks the S&P Semiconductor Select Industry Index, holding 48 stocks in its portfolio. It is widely spread across a number of securities as none of these allocates more than 3.92% of the assets. The product has a definite tilt toward small cap stocks at 65% while the rest is evenly split between the other two market cap levels. The fund is less popular with AUM of $144.6 million and average daily volume of more than 156,000 shares. It charges 35 bps in fees per year and surged 14% in the same period. PowerShares Dynamic Semiconductors Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PSI ) This fund tracks the Dynamic Semiconductor Intellidex Index, holding 30 securities in the basket with none holding more than 5.68% of assets. Here again, the ETF is skewed toward small caps at 49% while large caps and mid caps account for 39% and 13%, respectively. The product, with AUM of $61.1 million is often overlooked by investors and hence sees a lower average daily volume of 31,000 shares. Expense ratio came in at 0.63%. PSI added 8.7% in the same time period. Link to the original post on Zacks.com

Emerging Market Asset Flow Rebounds: ETFs In Focus

Emerging market equities seem to have gained some traction. The latest data from Bloomberg showed that emerging market ETFs experienced near $1 billion in net asset inflow last week ended October 9, driven mainly by movements in India, Mexico and Russia. This was a sharp rebound from the prior week ended October 2, when outflows from these funds more than doubled from the week-ago level. Inflows into emerging-market ETFs totaled $936 million last week, more than offsetting the $828 million in outflows over the previous two weeks. Stock funds gathered $982.4 million in assets but bond funds exhaled $46.4 million. Notably, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 6.9% last week, the fastest pace since the week ended December 2, 2011. Per Bloomberg, India witnessed the biggest inflow with collections of $150.9 million, compared with an outflow of $25.4 million in the prior week. Stock funds accumulated $151.7 million while bond funds moved out $0.8 million. The huge inflow in Indian ETFs can be attributed to the Reserve Bank of India’s move to cut its key interest rate by 50 basis points (bps) to 6.75% in a bid to boost economic activity as well as the IMF forecast of India retaining the world’s fastest growing economy status. According to IMF, the Indian economy is expected to grow 7.3% in 2015, compared with 6.8% growth in China and 2.6% in the U.S. Mexico experienced the second biggest inflow. Investors added $135.9 million to this country’s ETFs last week, as compared to $35.3 million of redemptions in the previous week. Stock funds gained $141.4 million, while bond funds fell $5.5 million in the week. Latin America’s second biggest economy has been recovering from the oil price crash. Domestic strength, improving U.S. economy, decreasing unemployment rate and subdued inflation bode well for the Mexican economy. Russia recorded the third biggest movement with $133.9 million in inflows. Stock funds added $135.7 million while bond funds saw an outflow of $1.7 million last week. The surge in Russian ETFs can be attributed to the rebound in oil price and stabilization of the ruble, raising hopes that the nation’s economic situation may not deteriorate to the level apprehended. Below we highlight four emerging market ETFs that have experienced significant net asset inflow in the week ended October 9. Goldman Sachs ActiveBeta Emerging Markets ETF (NYSEARCA: GEM ) – $157.26 Million This recently launched smart beta ETF tracks the Goldman Sachs ActiveBeta Emerging Markets Equity Index, designed to generate returns by selecting equities based on four well-established attributes of performance – good value, strong momentum, high quality and low volatility. The fund has the highest exposure to Asia, ex-Japan (68%), followed by Europe, Middle East and Africa (18.3%) and Latin America (13.6%). About a quarter of the assets in its portfolio are tied to financial firms. The ETF has amassed roughly $184 million in its asset base while it trades in a volume of roughly 74,000 shares a day. It charges 45 bps in fees from investors per year. Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF (NYSEARCA: VWO ) – $139.29 Million This is the top asset grossing emerging market ETF, which follows the market-cap weighted FTSE Emerging Index that measures the performance of roughly 850 large and mid-cap companies in 22 emerging markets. This fund is highly focused on China (26.6%), followed by Taiwan (14.1%) and India (12.7%). Sector-wise, about a quarter of its total assets are related to financial services firms. VWO has garnered nearly $38 billion in assets and trades in a heavy volume of roughly 16 million shares per day. It charges 15 bps in annual fees and carries a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold) with a Medium risk outlook. Market Vectors Russia ETF (NYSEARCA: RSX ) – $129.56 Million This ETF tracks the Market Vectors Russia Index, providing exposure to publicly-traded companies that are domiciled in Russia. The fund is heavily biased toward energy, followed by materials and financials. It has gathered around $2 billion in assets and trades in a hefty volume of nearly 12 million shares a day. It charges 63 bps in fees per year and carries a Zacks ETF Rank #4 (Sell) with a High risk outlook. iShares MSCI India (BATS: INDA ) – $119.14 Million INDA follows the MSCI India Index, which measures the performance of equity securities of the top 85% of companies in the Indian securities market. The fund gives the highest weight to the information technology sector, followed by financials and healthcare. It has garnered $3.8 billion in assets and trades in a solid volume of 2 million shares per day. It charges 68 bps in investor fees and carries a Zacks ETF Rank #2 (Buy) with a High risk outlook. Original Post