Fundamentals

March 24, 2008

A Weak Dollar Is Bad for America and ETFs

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By Carl Delfeld of Chartwell ETF and Chartwell Partners Asset Management

Martin Feldstein, the Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors under President Reagan, wrote an article for the Financial Times recently which outlines why he believes that a more “competitive” or weaker US dollar is good for America.

I cannot overstate how strongly I believe that this opinion is incorrect. “Strong Dollar, Strong Currency” is more than a mantra for me since economic history indicates that no country has ever achieved greatness nor maintained it by debasing its currency.

Have you ever heard of a country in deep economic trouble because of a strong currency?

Mr. Feldstein rolls out a litany of reasons why he believes America benefits from a weaker dollar. In short, increasing exports as well as maintaining growth and employment.

Here is my case why a weaker dollar hurts America.

First, a weaker dollar translates into a cut in the real spending power of American consumers - in effect - a reduction in real income. In Europe, the number of millionaire households grew by 26.4% in 2007, the highest of any region in the study, helped by its strong currency against the weakening U.S. dollar. Switzerland has the ranking for highest density of millionaire households, with millionaire households accounting for 6.1% of all households.

Second, a weaker dollar weakens the role of the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency. Why should investors and central banks around the world invest in US assets when their value is steadily declining?

Third, the chances of a weaker dollar leading to a sharp reduction in America’s trade deficit is highly unlikely since 40% of the current deficit is due to oil imports that are denominated in US dollars. An additional 20% is due to trade with China which is of course controlling the value of its currency. A weaker dollar is also hampering marketing efforts in strong currency countries. One example is $600 three star hotel rooms in London. A weaker dollar may give a bump to exports short term but then like a drug it wears off and starting all over again from an even weaker position.

Fourth, a weaker dollar is inflationary since it increases the cost of imports. Just look back to the US economy during the 1970s – ugly stagflation and markets going sideways year after year. I might also add that plenty of countries under IMF tutelage devalued their currencies with the hope of exporting their way out of financial trouble – name one such program that worked.

Fifth, business leaders know that discounting prices may bump near term revenue and profits but at a real cost to long term profitability not to mention inflicting damage to the brand name. This is what we are doing to the brand of America by trying to increase exports by lowering their price in the global marketplace. Better to stand firm on price and sell into global markets on the basis of what is great about American products – superior quality, innovation and service.

Sixth, investors seem to like a weaker dollar since the profits of American multinationals get a boost from foreign earnings being translated into U.S. dollars. Again, this is short-term thinking and vastly overstated since most multinationals have sophisticated treasury departments that hedge currency exposures.

What a weaker dollar really does is to encourage American and international investors to invest in non-American markets. The more the dollar drops, the more global equities rise. A weak dollar encourages capital outflows as investors chase the momentum of higher yields and currency appreciation. Many Asian currencies are hitting record highs against the U.S. dollar. The Australian dollar has climbed to a 25 -year highs, while the Singapore dollar has touched 10-year highs. The Brazilian real, which has jumped 18% in value against the U.S. dollar in 2008, and the Indian rupee's sharp appreciation against the U.S. dollar during the past year, have supercharged U.S. dollar investors' returns in those markets.

According to EPFR Global, investors are pouring money into global funds - net inflows of $96.94 billion into world equity funds in 2007 has accelerated in 2008 and investors are also taking out tens of billions out of U.S. equity funds. Foreign investors slashed their holdings of U.S. securities by a record amount as the credit squeeze has intensified, according to the latest Treasury figures. The Treasury said net sales of US market assets – including bonds, notes and equities.

Last and perhaps most importantly, I view a policy of weakening the U.S. dollar to improve America’s competitive position as the path of least resistance. Let’s not roll up our sleeves and cut federal spending, greatly simplify our tax code to encourage productivity and achievement or reduce corporate tax rates and excessive regulation. Let’s just wink and weaken and let our nation’s currency drift lower on automatic pilot.

My view is that the value of a nation’s currency reflects the perceived value of country in the global marketplace. The Feds policy of just reducing the discount rate to stimulate the economy is a foolsih policy. Look at Japan which tried the same driving its interest rate to zero. Now it still has low growth and can't manage the will to raise its benchmark rate above 0.5%!

Maintaining and strengthening the value of our nation’s currency is in the best interest of American consumers, businesses and investors.

February 20, 2008

ETFs vs. Closed-Ended Funds: New Ireland Fund Frustration

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By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor and ETFfolio.com

I think of exchange-traded funds and closed-ended funds as cousins. Sometimes I will prefer the closed-ended option because of the weighting of companies since some ETFs can be a bit too top heavy for my taste.

But the key drawback closed-ended funds aside from higher costs and the premium/discount issue is transparency.

The New Ireland Fund (IRL) is a glaring example. I am very keen on Ireland and without an Ireland ETF on the market have little other option but to go with IRL. You may have noticed that IRL has been absolutely hammered in the last few months due to banking issues and the meltdown in its real estate and construction sector. Its two largest holdings (I think) are construction giant CRH PLC and Allied Irish Bank and any smart investor should do some due diligence on these as well as perhaps a few other top holdings.

Here is the problem. Yesterday, I received its report by mail but the holding list was presented as of October 31, 2007!

Even if you go to ETFconnect.com to bring up its holdings you will find data as of 4/30/07! Compare this to the ease of bringing up all the holdings of any ETF any time. Could someone please introduce an Ireland ETF. And please hurry, on a valuation basis, it is the least expensive market in the world.

IRL is a holding in the Country ETF Rotation and the World Economic Freedom ETFfolios.

January 23, 2008

Will a Recession be Bad for ETFs?

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By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor and Chartwell Partners Wealth Management

It seems pretty clear that speculating about a U.S. recession is pretty painful for exchange-traded investors but what about when we get there?

Stock markets, as we learned back in Economics 101, are forward - looking mechanisms and seem to always be one step ahead of our emotions. This is what makes investing so difficult.

Because of various failures and missteps by regulators and central banks, global stock markets are currently serving a clearing mechanisms with painful consequences. But a point will be reached when fresh money, from the $3.3 trillion sitting on the sidelines in money market funds, will move into the market. The problem is that it may take a while and ETF prices may have to drop sharply.

But the record of stockmarkets during a recession is quite mixed and sometime counterintuitively quite good. In the nine U.S recessions (zero to negative growth) since World War II, in four of those recessions the stock market actually soared: 40% in 1954, 22% in 1961, 30% in 1980, and 30% in 1991.

Put in place a core & explore ETF portfolio to weather the storm and prepare for better weather at Chartwell ETF.

November 29, 2007

Steps to Building an ETF Portfolio

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By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor

Here are some simple steps to building a global portfolio using exchange-traded funds. Be sure to tailor them to your own personal situation. If you work with a financial advisor, take them along to your next portfolio review.

Separate portfolios - not as US and international but rather as core and growth

Risk Management - trailing stop loss, max weighting

Achieve real diversification - currencies, precious metals, regions, sectors, inverse, regions, countries

Look “under the hood” of ETFs - understand the implications of market cap weighting

Pick the right countries - Heckman study of international mutual funds from 2001-2005 showed 88% of performance variation due to geographic asset allocation

Have a clear investment process such as a "core & explore" strategy and then stick with it through thick and thin.

Find out much more by joining the Chartwell ETF Advisor

November 23, 2007

Mid-Cap ETFs Hit Home

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By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor

Mid-cap stocks and exchange-traded funds seem to get lost between the large caps and small caps. This is a big mistake since midcap ETFs contain companies which have market caps ranging from $2 billion to as much as $10 billion, are typically faster-growing than the market's giants but less volatile than small caps. There bigger size also provides more stable and predictable earnings visibility than small caps which tend to more volatile and unpredictable with plenty of earnings surprises both up and down.

Nathan Slaughter writing in Seeking Alpha points out that mid-caps can offer greater upside potential than large-caps and less volatility than small-caps. According to Morningstar, mid-cap growth companuies and ETFs have been the single best performing corner of the domestic market over the past five years with average annual returns in excess of +19%.

Investors looking to add this asset class to their portfolio may wish to try to pick some stocks but a wiser choice may be to go with an ETF such as the Vanguard Mid-Cap ETF (AMEX: VO).

Tracking the MSCI U.S. Mid-Cap 450 Index, this ETF contains both growth and value with a basket of 400 or so stocks and also avoids the overconcentration of its top names with its top ten holdings only represent a miniscule 5.8% of assets.

In terms of sectors, the ETF is heavily weighted towards the financial, consumer discretionary, and information technology sectors but has a bit less than the S&P 500's 20% allocation to the finance sector. It also sports a low expense ratio of 0.13% of assets.

September 27, 2007

Are ETFs Safe or Insured?

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By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor

A natural concern of and common question by investors about exchange-traded funds is are they safe, guaranteed or insured? In other words, are they structurally sound?

ETFZone has a good Q&A piece that addresses this issue as well as some other common ETF related questions.

Here it is with some editing and additions. There appears to be little risk of abuse of the ETF structure as an investment vehicle. In the U.S. the Securities Exchange Commission thoroughly examines any application to create an ETF, and only large and closely watched firms are allowed in on the creation and redemption process of an ETF certificate. Finally, the same government agency (the Depository Trust Clearing Corporation) that ensures that individual stock certificates end up in the right investor's hands after a trade also ensures the ETF certificates are assigned correctly in a trade. In a decade of trading billions of dollars worth of ETFs, to our knowledge, no US investor has ever lost money from fraudulent ETFs.

The risk of the underlying asset is quite another matter. There is no guarantee that the underlying assets in an ETF will perform as the investor expects. An ETF is merely a basket of securities and each security will fluctuate with the market. Each asset class must be examined separately, and risk profiles of assets may change over time. Stocks are clearly risky, and ones in technology or emerging markets particularly so. Long-term bonds will flucuate with interest rates and asset classes like real estate, precious metals, and are also risky in their own way. Short-term investment grade bonds, however, have generally proven quite safe.

A good rule of thumb for ETF investors is never to invest in an ETF unless you look to see what securities are in the ETF basket.

Learn more about ETF basics and how to build an ETF portfolio at Chartwell ETF

May 30, 2007

ABCs of ETF Options

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Investors may not know that many exchange-traded funds have options that can help them manage risk. Options can be used conservatively especially if you own the underlying ETF.

For example, you may wish to lock in profits from a recent run-up in an ETF without selling the position and triggering taxes. Or you may want to buy insurance against a drop in a shaky market? The China ETF (FXI) is one market which seems a bit toppy and investors can buy an option to sell this ETF as far out as January 2009.

These and other defensive strategies can be obtained with the nearly 70 ETF options currently available. Although many large stocks offer options, trying to engage in many at once becomes a nightmare of expense, tracking and paperwork. ETFs make defensive options easy.

ETFzone has a good primer on options which you may find helpful. Once you learn the basics, you will feel much more comfortable using them to manage the risk in your global ETF portfolio.

By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor


May 22, 2007

Best Performing Market Cap ETFs YTD

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YTD Mid Cap Growth ETFs are up an average of 11.74%. The mid caps are the only market caps up double digits so far this year. Small cap growth is fourth best with 8.49% followed by large cap value with 7.82%.

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By DE Smith of MyPortfolioView
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May 01, 2007

Does a Weak Dollar Help US ETFs?

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How do changes in the value affect US companies and US exchange-traded funds? It is not as straight forward as it looks. First, a falling dollar raises the dollar value of foreign sales. Big US multinationals receive roughly half of their total sales from overseas. For S&P 500 companies it is about 30 per cent of their sales overseas compared with 15 per cent for smaller companies in the Russell 2000) When the dollar weakens, the value of those sales grows. Hence international “mega-cap” companies, laggards for years, have recently outperformed. A weak dollar im­proves the case for big US stocks.

But as John Authers points out, globalization also affects costs and the proportion of cots a company decuts from revenue to determine profitability. Plus, look at Europe, the stronger euro has not hurt their share prices even though they are even more international in terms of sales than most American firms.

One of the reasons European ETFs are doing so well this year is the stronger Euro. Remember, international ETFs are not hedged against the US dollar so a weaker dollar will help their returns.

By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor

April 22, 2007

ETF Discounts and Premiums

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A common question I get at conferences is whether exchange-traded funds trade at their net asset values (NAV) like open-ended mutual funds.

Exchange-traded funds are not always bought and sold at prices equal to the net asset value (NAV) of their portfolios. Rather, just as stocks, ETFs trade at prices set by the market. The differences between ETFs' market prices and NAV have historically been small, but some ETFs may by their structure trade at larger discounts or premiums. Typically they are less than 1% and usually much smaller.

With ETF cousins, closed-ended funds, however the discount or premium can be huge rising to 50%. We watch these very carefully when we use closed-ended funds for markets where their is not yet an ETF or if we think a country ETF has too much of their basket in just a few stocks. The key is to compare the discount or premium compared to historical averages. Some ETFs are always at a discount and vice versa.

By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor

April 21, 2007

Diamond, Cube, Spider and Viper ETFs

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What are the most popular exchange-traded funds in terms of volume? ETF Zone has a nice one pager with a snaphot of the following ETFs. Keep it as a ready reference guide when you get a bit confused between a diamond, cube, spider and viper.

Standard & Poor's 500 Index Depository Receipts (SPY:AMEX)

Nasdaq-100 Index Tracking Stock (QQQQ:AMEX)

DIAMONDS Trust (DIA:AMEX)

iShares S & P 500 (IVV:AMEX)

Standard & Poor's MidCap 400 SPDRs (MDY:AMEX)

iShares Russell 2000 (IWM:AMEX)

iShares MSCI EAFE (EFA:AMEX)

Total Stock Market VIPERs (VTI:AMEX)

iShares SmallCap 600 (IJR:AMEX)

By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor

April 09, 2007

ETF Basics

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It is helpful from time to time to go back to the basics of exchange-traded funds or ETFs, especially in light of the complexity of new ETFs. I wanted to share this great overview provided by iShares, the largest family of ETFs sponsored by Barclays.

The presentation covers industry trends and the growth of ETFs, how ETFs work relative to mutual funds, the advantages of ETFs and how to start putting together a portfolio of ETFs.

I hope you find this presentation useful. If you have any further questions or need more information on ETFs, I encourage you to look at our website and to access our free ETF books.

By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor

March 08, 2007

ETF Options as Risk Management

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Many exchange-traded fund (ETF) investors don't realize that many ETFs have options that can be used as an excellent risk management tool. Options are the right to buy (called a call) or to sell (called a put) a stock at a certain price before a certain date. These rights have value and are themselves bought and sold on stock exchanges at evolving prices that reflect the fortunes of the underlying stock or ETF and the time left in the contract.

ETFzone describes some of the ways these options can be used. Want to lock in profits from a recent run-up in an ETF without selling the position and triggering taxes? Want to buy insurance against a drop in an emerging market like China? These and other defensive strategies can be obtained with the nearly 70 ETF options currently available. Although many large stocks offer options, trying to engage in many at once becomes a nightmare of expense, tracking and paperwork. ETFs make defensive options easy.

Here is just one example of how we have used options. In the beginning of 2006, we bought a put option on the China ETF (FXI) giving us the right to sell it at a price close to its then current price for out to 18 months. This gave us the security to then buy FXI which was up 84% during the rest of the year. If a market is all beaten up but you don't know if the worst is over - you could buy a call option and see what happens.

By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor

March 07, 2007

ETF Liquidity Unplugged

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There is a lot of confusion out there about the liquidity of exchange-traded-funds (ETFs). Many ETF investors look at the daily or average trading numbers to assess the liquidity of a particular ETF. What they should look at is the stocks that are inside the ETF basket. Look under the hood of the ETF and you will see that what matters is the liquidity of the underlying stocks in the index.

A good article by ETFZone describes why this is the case and explains the process of creating and redeeming ETFs. A good measure of ETF liquidity is to look at bid-ask spreads for ETFs. Salomon Smith Barney did a study on this issue and found that the premiums and discounts for the domestic and international ETFs were very small.

Financial advisors can also access at iShares.com a good piece on this issue entitled "The Hidden Liquidity of iShares".

By Carl Delfeld of the Chartwell ETF Advisor

March 06, 2007

Sage Advice From Ben Stein

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The market rebound today underlines some smart investing advice from Ben Stein. Here is the broad outline: Have plenty of cash.
Be patient. Never panic. Buy when others are selling. Diversify.

And, one last time, be patient. Do you think Warren Buffett was selling last week?

Click here to read more.