Tag Archives: unemployment
Time For These Top-Rated Cyclical ETFs?
The markets have been lukewarm lately as participants are holding their breath to study every bit of the Fed-related news. No doubt, signs of a snap-back are pretty much there in the U.S. economy, but the recoil is not flawless and the global market volatility ticked up to a delirious level, thanks mainly to the China issues. Also, previous remarks by the Fed have only added to the uncertainty as the central bank sought more improvement in the labor market and inflation backdrop. The U.S. economy underwent an upward GDP revision for the second quarter of 2015, from 2.3% reported earlier to 3.7% upgraded later on strong domestic demand. If this was not enough, the unemployment rate dropped to 5.1% in August, the lowest since April 2008. While this more-than-seven-year low unemployment rate should bolster the case for an imminent policy tightening, a still-muted inflation backdrop backed by an oil price slump, lackluster wage gains, a missed job expectation in August and a feeble overseas market are blurring the optimism. All these have put this week’s Fed meeting in the high-alert zone. Cyclicality of Sectors Whatever the case, no one can deny the growth in the American economy given the solid housing data, improved confidence among citizens and decent recovery (if not brisk) in several cyclical sectors like retail. Added to this, historically cyclical sectors outperform the defensive ones when the rates normalize. These areas often slump when the economy is tumbling, but are among the biggest winners when the economic environment turns favorable. Among the cyclical ones, as per Fidelity, sectors like consumer discretionary and financials and economically sensitive sectors like industrials and information technology tend to do better in the early cycle of the an economic recovery. Fidelity defines an early cycle phase when economic activity revives, credit starts to grow, policy is still accommodative and sales and profits improve. With many of these conditions present in the U.S. economy, we can conclusively say that the coming months will be fairly dominated by the cyclical sectors. If the Fed at all hikes rates this month, it should not be more than just 25 bps; otherwise, investors might see the timeline shifting to the end of the year. In either of the case, a few cyclical sectors and the related ETFs are expected to perform impressively especially given the expected earnings growth trend. For these investors, we highlight three ETF picks below that have heavy exposure to the cyclical industries: Market Vectors Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: RTH ) The retail sector can best reflect the lift in an economy as it revolves around discretionary purchases. Though the August Retail Sales report was mixed, with the ‘headline’ growth rate falling short of estimates, its internals exhibited improved momentum and the prior-month’s numbers were revised higher. The sector is expected to post earnings growth of 0.4% and 6.4% in Q3 and Q4 of this year, respectively, both better than consumer discretionary sectors. Its sales expectation is also steady at 3.5% for Q3 and 7.1% for Q4, again better than consumer discretionary. More jobs and cheaper fuel should help the sector to grow. This retail fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #1 (Strong Buy) with a Medium risk outlook. The fund has added over 5.7% so far this year. PowerShares DWA Technology Momentum ETF (NYSEARCA: PTF ) The technology sector saw certain setbacks this year as the stocks were crushed during the market correction in August. The sector went into a tailspin on acute sell-offs in tech biggies like Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ), Goggle (NASDAQ: GOOG ) (NASDAQ: GOOGL ), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT ) and IBM (NYSE: IBM ). However, the nightmare should soon be over, as the sector is expected to register a 2.8% earnings growth in Q3 and an 8.8% jump in revenues. This technology ETF currently has a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) and has advanced 5.1% in the year-to-date frame (as of September 15, 2015). PowerShares KBW Regional Banking Portfolio (NYSEARCA: KBWR ) This regional banking sector has benefited greatly from approaching Fed policy normalization. The space boasts solid Zacks Ranks. In any case, U.S. banks reported solid earnings this season with 11.6% growth in earnings on 0.6% decline in revenues. Banks recorded 66.7% beat on earnings on 60% top-line beat. Overall the financial sector is expected to deliver stellar earnings growth of 8.6% and 15.1% in Q3 and Q4, respectively. Very few sectors are able to attain this envious growth rate, especially given the even-increasing global growth. However, there will be no expansion in revenues. Regional banking ETF ( KBWR ) is up 3.8% so far this year and has a Zacks ETF Rank #2 with a High risk outlook. Original post .
What Lies Ahead For Dollar ETFs?
Although the Fed rate hike hearsay continues to dominate the headlines, investors haven’t really seen this speculation shift to huge gains for the U.S. dollar, at least not in the recent time frame. In fact, the greenback – as represented by the U.S. dollar Index – has lost its value in the last one month and five-day period (as of September 15, 2015). One of the reasons for this unexpected move was an extremely dour trading scene throughout August and the start of September. Maddening economic issues in China – a currency devaluation and a six-and-half-year low manufacturing data for August – took the global market in its grip, and crushed the global equities in the last one month. Yet the U.S. dollar has held firm in 2015 (so far), as many investors remain long-term bulls on the world’s reserve currency due to a recovering American economy. This was truer as the most developed and emerging nations are dragging their feet currently, leaving the U.S. as the lone star. The U.S. economy underwent an upward GDP revision for the second quarter of 2015, from 2.3% reported earlier to 3.7% upgraded later on strong domestic demand. If this was not enough, the unemployment rate dropped to 5.1% in August, the lowest since April 2008. This more-than-seven-year low unemployment rate should bolster the case for an imminent policy tightening. Additionally, average hourly wages rose 0.3% sequentially and 2.2% year over year. The average work week also nudged up to 34.6 from 34.5 in the prior and the year-earlier months. All these made September lift-off a heightened possibility that should have bolstered the greenback, but kept it range-bound due to global market rout. Can Greenback Gain Post Fed? Things are at a critical juncture at this moment. Two ETFs offering exposure to U.S. dollar (USD) against a basket of world currencies – PowerShares DB US Dollar Bullish Fund (NYSEARCA: UUP ) and WisdomTree Bloomberg U.S. Dollar Bullish Fund (NYSEARCA: USDU ) – are up 4.1% and 5.8% so far this year (as of September 15, 2015) but retreated about 1.3% and 0.2% in the last one month, respectively. While many may view the recent dip in the greenback as a setback, we believe that this fall led the U.S. dollar and the related ETFs toward the fair valuation. These dollar-related products surged from the latter part of last year due to the diverging monetary policies between the U.S. and other developed and some emerging markets. The U.S. wrapped up its QE measure late last year while Japan boosted its gigantic asset-buying program and the Euro zone initiated a QE launch in early 2015. This policy differential made the U.S. dollar a king among its peer currencies while other developed currencies started to lose out on economic stimuli. As a result, the U.S. dollar index surged over 13% in the last one year (as of September 14, 2015). Thus, a certain pull-back will now help the U.S. dollar to better prepare for a rally if the Fed hikes rates this week). And even if the Fed opts for a December lift-off or sometime in early 2016, the U.S. dollar should prevail in the coming days as inflows of ultra-cheap money in Europe, Japan and some emerging economies will continue to weaken their respective currencies against the greenback, which is still stronger. Which ETF is a Better Bet? Given this, investors could definitely play the U.S. dollar by considering either UUP or USDU. UUP looks to track the U.S. dollar against a basket of six world currencies – the euro (57.6%), Japanese yen (13.6%), British pound (11.9%), Canadian dollar (9.10%), Swedish krona (4.20%) and Swiss franc (3.60%). USDU tracks the U.S. dollar against a basket of 10 developed and emerging market currencies. It allocates higher to the Euro zone currency at 32.5%, closely followed by Japanese yen (19.25%) and Canadian dollar (11.21%). Other currencies like Mexican peso, British pound, Australian dollar, Swiss franc, South Korean won, Chinese yuan and Brazilian real receive single-digit allocation each in the fund’s basket. Since, UUP is mostly exposed to the developed economies’ currencies; things are less likely to improve post Fed tightening. On the other hand, USDU gives exposure to a broader basket consisting developed and emerging currencies. Notably, most of the emerging market currencies are tumbling presently and are expected to fall out of favor post-Fed tightening. This should give USDU a scope for outperformance over UUP. Bottom Line Having said this, we would like to note that any resumption in the greenback rally should not be as great as it was late last year. This is because the market has mostly priced in the favorable outcome of the impending Fed lift-off and protracted easing in other developed nations like the Euro zone and Japan and their effects on the exchange rate. Original Post