Tag Archives: zacks funds

High Dividend Sector ETFs Hitting All-Time Highs

A few days back, the market was abuzz with faster-than-expected rate hike bets in the U.S. on hawkish tip-offs from some Fed officials after a dovish meeting in mid March. However, recently Fed chair Yellen put all hearsay to rest by emphasizing global growth issues. Also, the Fed chair indicated a ‘cautious’ stance that may be adopted by the U.S. central bank on the policy tightening issue going forward. Following the dovish statements, stocks and bonds soared. Investors should also note that yields on U.S. treasuries dropped following Yellen’s remarks. Below we discuss a few ETFs that popped after Yellen’s speech and could remain in focus ahead. In a falling yield environment, investors rushed to tap every possible option that can cater to their income need. Along with broader dividend funds, high yielding sector ETFs have also been witnessing strong pricing performance lately. Below we highlight a few winning sectors and their ETFs that hit all-time highs reflecting Yellen’s comments. Utilities Utilities usually have strong yields and are embraced by investors when Treasury bond yields fall. Also, the utility sector is considered a safer option when volatility levels spike. This sector is less volatile in nature and relatively immune to the market peaks and troughs. Moreover, the space is less exposed to currency translation due to lack of foreign coverage (read: Protect Your Portfolio with These Utility ETFs ). By virtue of their stronger yields and defensive nature, the following utilities ETFs touched all-time highs lately. The Utilities Alphadex First Trust (NYSEARCA: FXU ) hit an all-time high on March 31 2016. The fund added over 2.7% in the last five trading days (as of March 31, 2016) and yields about 2.85% annually and FXU has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold) with a Medium risk outlook (read: Smart Beta ETFs That Stood Out Amid Market Volatility ). The Guggenheim S&P Equal Weight Utilities ETF (NYSEARCA: RYU ) hit an all-time high on March 31, 2016. The fund returned 2.6% in the last five trading days (as of March 31, 2016) and yields 3.20% annually and follows an index which is the equal weighted version of the S&P 500 Utilities Index. Real Estate Real Estate is also a highly interest rate sensitive sector. These firms are usually highly leveraged and face maximum interest rate risk in the REIT world. Now, REITs are required to distribute 90% of their annual taxable income through dividends which make them high dividend yield vehicles. With interest rates expected to remain subdued for longer and bond yields trending down, the Real Estate Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLRE ) hit an all-time high, adding about 2.2%, on March 29, 2016. The fund yields 2.06% annually (as of the same date). The fund was up over 3.7% in the last five trading days (as of March 31, 2016). Telecom Telecom, another defensive sector by nature, also offers investors solid dividend yields. The Fidelity MSCI Telecommunications Services Index ETF (NYSEARCA: FCOM ) hit an all-time high on March 31, 2016. The product advanced about 4.4% in the last five trading days (as of March 31, 2016). Consumer Staples Consumer staple stocks have been performing better in recent months as investors are slowly moving toward defensive sectors. Also, consumer staples stocks and ETFs are high yield in nature which put this sector in focus following Yellen’s speech. Also, many consumer staples stocks are rich in global presence and are likely to outperform amid falling dollar. The Fidelity MSCI Consumer Staples Index ETF (FTSA) touched an all-time high on March 31, 2016. The fund added about 1.5% in the last five trading days (as of March 31, 2016). The fund yields about 2.52% annually (as of March 31, 2016). Link to the original post on Zacks.com

First Trust Plans For A Mortgage REIT ETF

The year has been marked with ups and downs for mortgage REITs that provide real estate financing through the purchase of mortgages and mortgage-backed securities (MBS). Volatile markets triggered by global growth worries and a stronger dollar weighed on these REITs. However, dovish comments by Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen while addressing the Economic Club of New York earlier this week along with the Fed’s March meeting, where the federal funds rate was dialed back to 0.875% by the end of the year from the previously expected 1.375%, provided a boost to rate sensitive sectors like the REITs (read: ETF Winners & Losers Following Yellen Comments ). A low interest rate environment is expected to benefit the performance of mortgage REITs. These REITs finance their investments with equity and debt capital and generate profits through the spread between interest income on mortgage assets and funding costs. Lower interest rates would certainly aid their borrowing cost, pushing earnings and dividends higher. Encouraged by this, First Trust has recently filed for an actively managed ETF, The First Trust Strategic Mortgage REIT ETF, targeting this market. While a great deal of the key information, such as expense ratio and ticker, was not available in the initial release, other important points were released in the filing. We have highlighted those below for investors who may be looking for a fresh out-of-oven play targeting the mortgage REIT segment from First Trust should it pass regulatory hurdles (see all Real Estate ETFs here ). Proposed Fund in Focus As the name suggests, the fund will primarily invest in individual mortgage REITs, which rely on the spread between short-term borrowing costs and the investment yield earned on longer-termed investments. This is in stark contrast to equity REITs, which earn generally from rent revenues coming from owned real estate properties. Apart from mortgage REITs, the fund may also invest in mortgage-backed securities and exchange-traded and over-the-counter (OTC) options on mortgage REITs and real estate companies, OTC options on mortgage TBA transactions, exchange-traded U.S. Treasury and Eurodollar futures, exchange-traded and OTC interest rate swap agreements and exchange-traded and OTC options on interest rate swap agreements among others. The fund may even engage in short sales as part of its overall portfolio management strategies. As per the SEC filing , the fund’s objective is to generate high current income. It will select its investments based on a top-down approach involving macroeconomic views on the sector with a bottom-up approach involving quantitative and qualitative analysis of individual securities. The fund also has an eye for limiting volatility and mitigating mortgage REIT valuation pressures using interest rate and spread based hedges. How does it fit in a portfolio? This fund can be a good choice for investor having faith in Yellen’s dovish comments that only gradual increases in the federal funds rate are likely in the coming years given the uncertain economic environment, employment scenario and inflation goals. Apart from that, the fund is also recommended for investors looking to diversify their portfolio to include the mortgage REIT segment. However, the fund on its own does not provide diversification benefit as it focuses on a single industry or sector and would be associated with higher concentration risk as compared to a fund that is broadly diversified over several industries or sectors. ETF Competition The First Trust Strategic Mortgage REIT ETF definitely holds promise. Still, there are a number of U.S.-based ETFs that are worth mentioning. A couple of the top U.S. mortgage REIT funds include the iShares Mortgage Real Estate Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: REM ) and the Market Vector Mortgage REIT Income ETF (NYSEARCA: MORT ). REM tracks the FTSE NAREIT All Mortgage Capped Index. The fund consists of 38 securities in its basket while it charges investors 48 bps a year. The product has amassed around $765.7 million in its asset base and trades in an average volume of 1.1 million shares per day. It has a solid yield of 11.9%. On the other hand, MORT tracks the Market Vectors Global Mortgage REITs Index. The fund consists of 26 stocks and charges 41 bps in investor fees per year. The fund is relatively less popular with an asset base of $95.3 million and an average volume of roughly 36,000 shares per day. It has a dividend yield of 9.89%. Being an actively managed ETF, The First Trust Strategic Mortgage REIT ETF could command a higher expense ratio than REM and MORT. Thus, the proposed ETF, if launched, has a good chance of making a name for itself only if it manages to generate returns net of fees greater than the passively managed products in the mortgage REIT ETF space. Apart from these, The First Trust Strategic Mortgage REIT ETF could also face competition from the global mortgage REIT fund – the iShares Global REIT ETF (NYSEARCA: REET ) . Link to the original post on Zacks.com

Short Gold With These ETFs

The rally in gold ETFs that was spurred by the safe haven demand in the wake of the Chinese market rout, overall global growth worries and nagging oil price declines at the start of 2016, has started to lose steam. Possibilities of another Fed rate hike as early as in April, given stronger U.S. economic numbers and an upward shift in Q4 GDP data have added strength in the greenback lately. Notably, PowerShares DB US Dollar Bullish ETF (NYSEARCA: UUP ) added over 1.3% in the last five trading sessions (as of March 24, 2016). As a result, a surging greenback weighed on the yellow metal as these are mostly priced in the U.S. dollar. Also, rate hike talks pushed up the U.S. Treasury bond yields in recent times, which in turn wrecked havoc on non-interest bearing assets like gold. In any case, the outlook for gold investing was appalling (read: Pain or Gain Ahead for Gold ETFs in 2016? ). The metal saw its third consecutive annual decline in 2015, being crushed heavily by the strength of the greenback in the wake of the Fed policy tightening, demand-supply imbalances and tepid global inflation (especially in the developed markets). As a result, the largest gold bullion ETF SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEARCA: GLD ) lost over 11% in 2015, followed by a 3.8% decline in 2014 and 28.8% in 2013 (see all precious metal ETFs here ). Now the renewed talks of Fed tightening have cast a shadow over this space. The price of gold fell to the lowest level in more than a month of late. Following the Fed meeting in mid-March, which indicated two more hikes this year, the largest gold bullion ETF SPDR Gold Shares saw asset outflow of $844.9 million from March 20 to March 27, 2016. As a result, investors who are bearish on gold right now may want to consider a near-term short on the precious metal. Below, we highlight a few such options (read: Believe in Goldman? Short Gold with These ETFs ). DB Gold Short ETN (NYSEARCA: DGZ ) This ETN has an inverse (opposite) relation to the movement of gold prices and thus creates a short position in the underlying index. It has managed assets of $23.9 million so far in the year and trades in average daily volume of more than 200,000 shares. This suggest a relatively wide bid/ask spread increasing the total cost for the product beyond the annual fees of 75 bps. DGZ added about 2.7% in the last five trading sessions (as of March 24, 2016). DB Gold Double Short ETN (NYSEARCA: DZZ ) This ETN seeks to deliver twice (2X or 200%) the inverse return of the daily performance of the Deutsche Bank Liquid Commodity Index-Optimum Yield Gold, as per etfdb. The note charges 75 bps in fees per year from investors. The product has amassed about $52.8 million in AUM. The ETN generated impressive returns of about 4.4% in the last five trading sessions (as of March 24, 2016). ProShares Ultra Short Gold ETF (NYSEARCA: GLL ) This fund seeks to deliver twice the inverse return of the daily performance of gold bullion in U.S. dollars; the gold price is fixed for delivery in London. The product is expensive when compared to the other geared options in the space, charging 95 bps in fees a year. The $60-million fund trades in average daily volumes roughly 30,000 shares. The ETF gained 5.6% in the last five trading days (as of March 24, 2016). VelocityShares 3x Inverse Gold ETN (NASDAQ: DGLD ) This product provides three times (300%) short exposure to the daily performance of the S&P GSCI Gold Index Excess Return plus a daily accrual equal to the return that could be earned on a notional capital reinvestment at the 3-month US Treasury rate less the daily investor fee. The ETN has been able to amass an asset base of $18 million. The product is a high cost choice in the gold bullion space, charging 135 bps in fees per year from investors. Additionally, it has a wide bid/ask spread given its small average daily volume of 60,000 shares that increases the total cost of the product. Not surprisingly, the note returned an excellent 8.8% in the last five days (as of March 24, 2016) buoyed by negative sentiments for gold across the globe. Original Post