Tag Archives: zacks funds

U.S. Manufacturing Shows Signs Of Healing: 3 Mutual Fund Picks

By the end of last year, U.S. manufacturing was tottering on the verge of a recession, after the collapse in commodity prices and a stronger dollar took a toll on American factories. However, based on encouraging readings on factory activity in March, it seems that manufacturing is on a resurgence. Philadelphia, New York and Richmond Fed manufacturing reports were impressive for this month. Markit’s flash manufacturing PMI also ticked up in March, while the ISM manufacturing index had already shown signs of a turnaround last month. A rise in new orders for U.S. factory goods in January points toward an easing in manufacturing slump. For now, even though there is volatility in the oil price movement, it has recovered considerably from its mid-February record low. Moreover, the Fed’s dovish stance in its two-day policy meeting last week has weakened the dollar considerably. In this scenario, it will be prudent to invest in mutual funds that focus on the industrial sector. The Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLI ) had gained 4.3% on a year-to-date basis, the second-highest among all the S&P 500 sectors. Factory Activity Positive in March Manufacturing activity in the Philadelphia area turned positive in March for the first time in seven months. The Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index advanced to 12.4 in March from a negative 2.8 in February. Any reading above zero shows that industrial activity is improving. Separately, new orders and shipments rose significantly. Factory activity in the New York region also expanded this month for the first time since last July. The Empire State manufacturing index rose to 0.6 in March from minus 16.6 in February. While new orders and shipments increased, more manufacturers expect business conditions in the region to improve further in the next six months. A measure of manufacturing activity in the lower U.S. Atlantic region too rose in March. The Richmond Manufacturing Index jumped to 22 this month, its highest level in almost six years. The index had been at a negative 4 in February. The index covers manufacturing activity in the District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and most of West Virginia. Flash PMI Ticks Up, ISM Turns Around Markit’s flash manufacturing PMI came in at 51.4 in March. The PMI showed that manufacturing activity picked up this month from February’s 28-month low of 51. Output and new business volumes moved up at a slightly faster pace compared to February. This reading followed the Institute for Supply Management’s (ISM) reading on manufacturing activity in February. The ISM manufacturing index increased to 49.5, above January’s reading of 48.2. This indicated that fewer manufacturers had cut back on activities in February than in January. Any reading above 50 shows expansion. Add to this a robust surge in factory orders in January, and it becomes even clearer that the manufacturing sector is coming out of troubled waters. The Commerce Department had reported that new orders for U.S. factory orders rebounded 1.6% in January from a drop of 2.9% in December. New orders increased the most in seven months in January. Factory orders rose broadly in January, with orders for transportation equipment soaring 11.4%. Orders for on-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, which indicates business confidence and spending plans, gained 3.4%. Inventory levels, on the other hand, dropped for the seventh straight month, indicating factories were progressing steadily on reducing inventory glut. Buy The 3 Best-Performing Industrial Mutual Funds It looks like the worst of U.S. manufacturing is coming to an end as recent reports on manufacturing activity in core factory hubs such as Philadelphia, New York and Richmond turn out to be promising. An uptick in Markit’s flash manufacturing PMI in March makes us believe that factory activities in the U.S. will improve. In fact, when it comes to the ISM manufacturing index, RBC Capital Markets’ Chief U.S. economist, Tom Porcelli, expects the index to climb above the 50 mark in April. He believes the negative impact of low oil prices and strong dollar will fade. Moreover, record factory orders data in January also show a release from the slump. Banking on this optimism, investors may bet on three industrial mutual funds that not only boast strong fundamentals, but have also given solid returns over a long period of time. These funds possess a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy) or #2 (Buy), have positive year-to-date and 5-year annualized returns, minimum initial investments within $5000 and carry a low expense ratio. Fidelity Select Industrials Portfolio No Load (MUTF: FCYIX ) invests the majority of its assets in securities of companies primarily involved in the research, development, manufacture, distribution, supply or sale of industrial products, services or equipment. The fund’s year-to-date and 5-year annualized returns are 2.9% and 10.1%, respectively. It carries a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #2, and the annual expense ratio of 0.78% is lower than the category average of 1.33%. Fidelity Select Industrial Equipment Portfolio No Load (MUTF: FSCGX ) invests a major portion of its assets in securities of companies principally engaged in the manufacture, distribution or servicing of products and equipment for the industrial sector. The fund’s year-to-date and 5-year annualized returns are 2.9% and 8.3%, respectively. FSCGX carries a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1, and its annual expense ratio of 0.77% is lower than the category average of 1.33%. Putnam Global Industrial Fund A (MUTF: PGIAX ) invests a large portion of its assets in securities of companies in the industrial products, services or equipment industries. Even though it invests in large and mid-sized companies worldwide, around 80% of its investments are in the U.S. PGIAX’s year-to-date and 5-year annualized returns are 2.2% and 8.8%, respectively. The fund carries a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1, and its annual expense ratio of 1.27% is lower than the category average of 1.33%. Original Post

Hedged And Inverse Bond ETFs To The Rescue If Rates Rise

The behavior of the fixed income market is different this week from the last. This is because a few hawkish comments from some Fed officials completely ruled out the dovish mood felt last week after the Fed announced no rate hike in its latest meeting and cut the number of projected rate hikes for this year (read: Buy Ranked Dividend Growth ETFs in Focus after Fed Meeting ). In any case, the recent data points corroborated sturdy U.S. economic growth. Plus, comments from Atlanta Fed president Dennis Lockhart, San Francisco Fed president John Williams and Richmond Fed president Jeffrey Lacker once again stirred up the rate hike talks, going by Reuters . As per these officials, the reduced rate hike projection mainly reflected the tantrums thrown by the global financial market, which are now showing signs of cooling off. The two important indicators to measure the timing of another rate hike – labor market and inflation – are both stabilizing. San Francisco Fed president even said that he would promote a hike as early as April. Against this backdrop, speculation of a sooner-than-expected hike in the Fed interest rates is rife again. As a result, U.S. treasury yields recorded the biggest single-day rise in over a week on March 21, 2016. On March 21, yields on 10-year Treasury notes jumped 4 bps to 1.92% while yields on two-year Treasury notes rose 3 bps to 0.87%. Investors should note that fixed-income investing has enjoyed a great show so far in 2016, especially in the longer part of the yield curve, as risk-off trade sentiments have brightened the appeal for safer assets. However, the prospect of rising rates and risks to capital gains of the bond holdings have left investors jittery about the safety of their portfolio. Given the situation, many investors may pull their money out of the bond market. At a time like this, investments in U.S. bonds with significant protection from potential rising rates can be good bets. Some opportunistic investors could capitalize on this backdrop in the form of inverse ETFs too. Market Vectors Treasury-Hedged High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: THHY ) The fund seeks to replicate the price and yield performance of the Market Vectors U.S. Treasury-Hedged High Yield Bond Index. THHY has a weighted average maturity of 9.83 years while its effective duration is at negative 0.50 years. The product is high yield in nature as evident from its 30-day SEC yield of 6.04% (as of March 21, 2016). THHY charges 0.50% of expense ratio. The fund added about 5.5% in the last one month (as of March 21, 2016) (see all the junk bond ETFs here ). ProShares High Yield Interest Rate Hedged ETF (BATS: HYHG ) HYHG is another ETF which has an interest rate hedge built into its strategy as it takes a duration-matched short position in U.S. Treasury futures. Like HYGH, it also has a pretty high yield (and a modest expense ratio of just 50 basis points) of 8.77% in 30 Day SEC terms (as of February 29, 2016), indicating that this could be a safer bond and yield play for investors anxious about rising rates. This $85.1 million ETF was up 8.1% in the last one-month frame (as of March 21, 2016). ProShares Investment Grade-Interest Rate Hedged ETF (BATS: IGHG ) This investment grade fund too offers interest-hedge benefit to investors. The fund looks to track the Citi Corporate Investment Grade (Treasury Rate-Hedged) Index which comprises long positions in USD-denominated investment grade corporate bonds issued by both U.S. & foreign domiciled companies while adopting short positions in US Treasury notes or bonds of approximate equivalent duration to the investment grade bonds. The index seeks to achieve an overall effective duration of zero. Its 30-Day SEC yield stands at 3.93% (as of February 29, 2016) while it charges 30 bps in annual fees. The $135.4-million fund was up 4.4% in the last one month (as of March 21, 2016). Barclays Inverse US Treasury Aggregate ETN (NASDAQ: TAPR ) The note provides investors a unique strategy to hedge against or benefit from the rising U.S. dollar interest rates by tracking the Barclays Inverse US Treasury Futures Aggregate Index. This benchmark employs a strategy, which follows the sum of the returns of the periodically rebalanced short positions in equal face values of each of the 2-year, 5-year, 10-year, long-bond and ultra-long U.S. Treasury futures contracts. If the price of each Treasury futures contract increases or decreases by 1% of its face value, the value of index would decrease or increase by 5% over the same period. The $15.5-million fund charges 43 bps in annual fees. It added about 4.4% in the last one month (as of March 21, 2016). Link to the original post on Zacks.com

Leveraged Oil And Gas ETNs Dominate Inflows In March

Oil has been making headlines over the past one and a half years owing to huge swings in its prices. Oil prices took a U turn after touching a 12-year low this February. This is especially true as oil broke its near-term trading range and regained momentum, indicating that the worst might be over for the commodity (read: Oil Hits 12-Year Low: Short Energy Stocks with ETFs ). Notably, WTI crude surged near the $39 per barrel mark earlier this month while Brent jumped to more than $41 per barrel. However, prices retreated a bit over the last couple of trading sessions. With this, both WTI and Brent are up more than 6% since the start of March. Meanwhile, after touching a 17-year low on March 3, natural gas prices have also rallied so far this month. This shift made investors put huge amounts of money in oil and gas ETFs/ETNs that are wonderfully undervalued at current levels. In fact, these ETFs have seen the biggest asset inflows so far this month with the two ultra-popular ETFs – the VelocityShares 3x Long Crude Oil ETN (NYSEARCA: UWTI ) and the VelocityShares 3x Long Natural Gas ETN (NYSEARCA: UGAZ ) – accumulating nearly $9.3 billion and $6.8 billion, respectively, as per ETF.com . Oil Rebound in the Cards? The latest boost in oil price came with improving demand/supply trends. Talks of production freeze from giant oil producers including Russia and Saudi Arabia had been among the rally’s biggest drivers. Meanwhile, disruptions in supply in Iraq and Nigeria have led to a tightening of supply, which albeit is short term (read: Oil ETFs in Focus on Oil Output Freeze Talks ). Signs of decreasing production can also be seen in the U.S. With oil drilling activity falling in the country, output is expected to continue to decline in the coming weeks. However, increasing production in Iran, a strong dollar and weak global economic growth could lead to further swings in oil prices. Given the uncertain backdrop for oil, investors are seeking to make quick profit from the current trend. UWTI with a leveraged factor of 3 times has been in demand this month. This popular leveraged fund targets the energy segment of the commodity market through WTI crude oil futures contracts. It seeks to deliver thrice the returns of the S&P GSCI Crude Oil Index Excess Return and has amassed $10.62 billion in its asset base. The fund charges a higher fee of 1.35% per year and trades in high volume of 7.5 billion shares. UWTI accumulated almost 88% of its AUM in March so far and is up about 16.2% over the same time frame. In the natural gas world, UGAZ with AUM of $7.08 billion tracks the performance of S&P GSCI Natural Gas Index ER with a leveraged factor of 3 times. The fund also charges a high fee of 1.65% per year and trades in volumes of 1.2 billion shares. UGAZ has accumulated almost 96% of its AUM in March and has gained 11.6%. Investors should be careful while investing in leveraged exchange-traded notes (ETN), as these use derivatives instruments to amplify the returns of the underlying index. While this strategy is highly effective in the short term, their long-term performance could vary significantly from the actual performance of the underlying index due to a compounding effect. Link to the original post on Zacks.com