According to the recent TIM (Trade Ideas Monitor) report, the TIM Sentiment Index (TSI) decreased 5.3% week-over-week from 54.03 to 51.19 (see previous post, youDevise website for additional information on the TIM report). For the five trading days ending July 16th, the number of new short ideas as a percentage of new ideas sent to investment managers increased to 38.63% from 25.90% one week earlier (see last week's post). To date, shorts represent 35.27% of ideas in July, and 41.14% of this year.
As for individual securities in the U.S. and North America, Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Kraft (KFT), and Intel (INTC) were the stocks most recommended as longs by institutional brokers, while DigitalGlobe (DGI), Fairchild Semiconductor (FCS), and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) were most recommended as shorts. The materials, industrials, and health care sectors had increased broker sentiment for the week, while consumer staples, utilities, and telecommunications had decreased sentiment.
TIM Report: Sentiment Becomes More Bearish, with DGI, FCS, and AMD as Recommended Shorts
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/17/2009 11:08:00 AM | AMD, DGI, FCS, INTC, JNJ, KFT, TIM Report, Trade Ideas Monitor, youDevise | 0 comments »New 130/30 ETF Being Offered by ProShares
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/15/2009 08:23:00 AM | 130/30 Fund, Credit Suisse 130/30 Large-Cap Index, ETF, Index Funds, Long-Short Strategies, ProShares | 0 comments »ProShares is launching the first 130/30 ETF strategy (see Pensions & Investments article, Nasdaq article). The 130/30 ETF (CSM) will track the Credit Suisse 130/30 Large-Cap index. The Credit Suisse 130/30 index was developed by Andrew Lo (CIO of AlphaSimplex Group) and Pankaj Patel (director of quantitative research at Credit Suisse). The ETF has an expense ratio of 95 bps, with a strategy that will offer "investors a transparent, low-cost means of achieving 130/30 beta and, potentially, alpha superior to what a comparable long-only large-cap strategy would deliver over the long run." A First Trust 130/30 Large Cap ETN (JFT) based on the 130/30 strategy was released just over a year ago (see previous post, MarketWatch article).
Not familiar with 130/30 strategies? Basically, the strategy uses leverage to short poor performing stocks and then uses the proceeds, along with initial capital, to purchase shares that are expected to do well. If is a form of the general 1X0/X0 long/short strategy, although the 130/30 ratio funds have seem to generate the most interest, producing a 130% long, 30% short strategy. Investors using the strategy will often mimic an index such as the S&P 500 when choosing stocks for the strategy. You can find additional descriptions of the 130/30 strategy here and here. Lo paper here.
Keep in mind that with such strategies the managers must pick stocks to go both long and short. Often there is feeling that you are market neutral, given that you have both long and short positions, but this is not the case. While traditional hedge fund might utilize a long/short strategy that makes them market neutral (beta close to zero), the 130/30 strategy is usually compared to a benchmark, such as the S&P 500, giving 100% exposure to the benchmark. As a result, the strategies are sometimes referred to as beta-one strategies. Furthermore, if the manager gets it wrong in either, or both directions, you may end up losing more than expected. As with most funds, good management is essential, regardless of the strategy.
Given the market beta exposure, these funds are useful if you have a positive market view and you believe that the fund manager can generate alpha from the short portion of the portfolio. If your view is neutral or negative, a hedge fund with an appropriate strategy might be better. If you have a positive market view but are not confident that your manager can generate alpha from short selling, then a long-only fund, or index fund, would be best. Keep in mind that such funds also trade more often, making them less tax efficient compared to traditional long-only index funds.
Note/Update: As a follow-up, I just ran across an excellent article at Greenfaucet that also provides details about the ProShares launch, and the success, or lack of success of the 130/30 funds. Check it out here.
Maybe We Should Use Sovereign CDS Spreads To Curb Spending
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/14/2009 10:50:00 AM | CDS, Sovereign CDS, Sovereign Debt | 1 comments »Trading in sovereign credit default swaps has risen fivefold since the demise of Lehman Brothers last fall (see previous post on tradable CDS indexes, and current Financial Times article). This increase in trading, and general levels of increased government debt, have caused CDS spreads to rise and somewhat fall back to earth over the last year (see figure below).
In the UK, the cost to protect sovereign debt soared to 164 basis points, compared to its pre-Lehman levels of 10bp last February (see Financial Times article). This means that at one point it costs $164,000 to insure $10m of UK debt, instead of the initial $10,000. Eventually, the cost fell back to 75bp as speculators began leaving the once volatile market. CDS spreads in Germany, the U.S., and Japan have seen similar rising and falling trends, although not as pronounced as the moves in the UK CDS market.
Even though the number of outstanding contracts are much less than many big companies, the moves are is still raising some concern, and highlight how investors now see "risk-free" government debt. And while it is also unlikely that sovereign CDS are being used for hedging in any direct, or large-scale way (after all, if there is a massive government default, good luck finding the counterparty), the markets do still provide information, even if the participants are not actually expecting large established governments to default.
So why waste a good financial product? Here is a suggestion (tongue in cheek - sort of). Given that governments around the globe are looking to rein in risk-taking by placing curbs on executive pay in companies that take on too much risk (see WSJ article), might it also be possible to do the same for governments that are spending too much and creating too much debt? In a rather ironic twist, maybe the sovereign CDS market could be used to place curbs on Congress? Now that is some market regulation that even Wall Street could get behind.
$1 Trillion Deficit: How Did We Get Here?
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/14/2009 09:24:00 AM | Budget Deficit, CBO, Congressional Budget Office, GDP, Government Debt, Keynesian Economics, Supply Side Economics, Tax Cuts | 2 comments »A recent AP article by Martin Crutsinger introduces and then answers the question "How did (the) $1 trillion deficit happen?" (see full AP article). Some highlights from the article include:
- The government's annual budget deficit has topped $1 trillion. With three months left in the budget year, it will get even worse. The administration is projecting that the deficit will hit $1.84 trillion for the current budget year. This is four times the size of last year's budget deficit.
- The deficit spending began with the 2001 recession, and got deeper with the 9-11 terrorist attacks as war spending started to ramp up.
- Until 2008 the deficit had been shrinking, hitting a five-year low of $161.5 billion in 2007, but was followed by the record deficit of $454.8 billion in 2008 as the current recession and financial crisis hit.
- The size of the deficit started to ramp up with the initial $700 billion TARP (about half spent in 2008, half in 2009), along with the recent $787 billion economic stimulus.
- In addition to stimulus spending,"automatic stabilizers," such as food stamps and unemployment compensation, are also increasing. Government outlays are up 20.5% through the first nine months of this budget year.
- All of this spending is occurring just as tax receipts are falling. Government revenues have fallen by 17.9% during the October-to-June period compared with one year ago.
- While large in dollars, current deficits are still not the largest in terms of GDP, but are the largest outside of WWII. Currently, the CBO is forecasting the budget deficit will equal 13% of GDP. As a comparison, the deficit was 6% of GDP in 1983 as we moved out of another recession and ramped up cold war spending, and 30.3% of GDP in 1943 during World War II.
- The CBO is projecting that the deficits will remain large for the foreseeable future, coming in at $1.43 trillion in 2010 and not falling below $633 billion over the next 10 years, ultimately adding $9.1 trillion to the national debt.
It's (Still) The Debt, Stupid
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/14/2009 08:17:00 AM | Black Swan Events, Debt, Equity, Fiscal Stimulus, Hyperinflation, Inflation, Mark Spitznagel, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Stimulus | 0 comments »As pointed out in a recent Financial Times opinion piece by Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Mark Spitznagel (see FT article, concepts also expressed in a recent CNBC interview), the core economic problem that we are facing "is that our economic system is laden with debt." In fact, as pointed out by the authors, the debt load is about triple the amount relative to the GDP levels of the 1980s. Given that Tabel and his colleague have been betting on debt-induced hyperflation becoming the next black swan event (see previous post), and making them even more coin in the process, it might be easy to dismiss this as someone simply talking their book - which is probably somewhat the case. Yet the levels of the deficit spending and debt are unprecedented, and scary. Of course, what is possibly even more shocking is how making these levels know and pointing out their consequences is still looked at as a revelation, or at least finally drawing serious concern. It is simply no longer enough to point out the irony of using debt to solve a problem caused by too much debt. That train has already left the station. The focus is finally shifting to those trying to slow down the train before we all get run over.
As pointed out in the FT article, Taleb and Spitznagel believe the only solution to the debt problem is to immediately convert debt to equity. After all, companies in bankruptcy do this all the time - then again, I am not sure what that says about a country and its credit rating [Note: As a follow-up, see the recent Felix Salmon Reuters blog post about the unsustainability of debt-to-equity conversion]. To bolster their case, the authors given three reasons for their concern and reasoning. First, debt and leverage cause the system to become fragile - i.e., there is less room for error. Second, globalization has caused the system to be more complex, which in turn has caused business parameters to be more volatile. Third, and somewhat novel in perspective, is that debt is "highly treacherous." Loans hide volatility since they do not really vary outside of default. Such risk is hidden even more in highly complex derivative products, such as swaps and CDOs.
So what additional steps can governments do to reverse the trends? Tabel and Spitznagel list two options: deflate debt or inflate assets (once again, the authors are betting on the later). What have governments done? Deficit-based stimulus spending. And they are considering more (see previous post). Besides adding more debt, stimulus spending is likely to over- or undershoot since it is difficult to get just right in size and timing. This of course leaves economies vulnerable to inflation, and in some cases creates hyperinflation. Therefore, unless the levels of consumer and government debt are dealt with, and we consider other approaches for dealing with current problems, we are likely to experience another black swan - even one that is large and can be seen flying right towards us.
Momentum Funds - New Small Cap, Large Cap, and International Funds Now Offered
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/13/2009 10:39:00 PM | AQR Capital Management, Growth Funds, Hedge Funds, Large Cap, Momentum Investing, Mutual Funds, Small Cap, Value Funds | 2 comments »Hedge fund firm AQR Capital Management has launched a set of indexes designed to capture the returns of stocks that have positive momentum (see WSJ article). In addition, the firm launched three no-load mutual funds that will track the new momentum indexes. The AQR Momentum Fund, AQR Small Cap Momentum Fund, and AQR International Momentum Fund will track the AQR Momentum, Small Cap Momentum, and International Momentum indexes, respectively.
The new AQR indexes are constructed using the top one-third of stocks that have outperformed other stocks in their grouping over the last 12 months, with the stock weightings based on market capitalization. The large-cap index examines the 1,000 largest U.S. market cap stocks, while the small-cap index will examine the next largest 2,000. The indexes are rebalanced quarterly. The designers of the funds hope that investors will use them to represent the growth portion of their portfolio since momentum-based portfolios tend to do well when value strategies are not in favor. Pure growth strategies also tend to under-perform momentum strategies over time according to a principal at AQR. Nonetheless, each momentum strategy needs to be somewhat specific, making it difficult to do a direct momentum for growth substitution, but could still prove useful for those looking for diversification with their momentum investing.
Meredith Whitney on the Financials
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/13/2009 12:22:00 PM | BAC, C, Carbon Credits, CNBC, Financials, GS, Meredith Whitney, Mortgage Modification, Mortgages, Risk Management, Tangible Book | 0 comments »Meredith Whitney was recently on CNBC (the video is provided below) discussing the banks and financials. Some observations from the interview include:
- This will be a tactical quarter for the banks.
- She has a bullish call on Goldman Sachs, but a bearish call on financial stocks in general.
- A huge refinance wave will create the "Mother-of-all" mortgage quarters, boosting earnings for the quarter for many banks, even though business in general is not getting better.
- Core earnings numbers may not be very good, but below the line numbers will be good due to all the mortgage activity. This will result in huge moves in tangible book value for the banks, even with unimpressive earnings numbers. These stocks trade on multiples of tangible book.
- A move from $18 billion in incentives to $75 billion in incentives to modify mortgages, with less modification liability, could cause some banks move 15% short-term.
- Mortgage modification numbers will increase logarithmically, causing past dues to become current, and allowing the banks to receive fees for the modifications.
- As a result of the fees and less litigation due to the current legislation, banks may even seek to modify mortgages which have not yet defaulted, or are not yet past due.
- Bank of America (BAC) is the cheapest of the banks, based on tangible book value (excluding Citi).
- Bank solvency has been off the table for a few quarters now, but main street has not been helped by the financial bailouts as much. A lot of refinancing is occurring, but not a lot of new lending. The new legislation and increased risk aversion is actually providing less access to credit.
- The next couple of years will be debt market-focused due to the tsunami of debt issuance needed to pay-off current spending.
- She also mentioned in the discussion (not included in the CNBC online video) that unemployment could reach toward 13%.
Source: CNBC Video
Stimulus Part 2: It Does Not Make Sense Given Past Reasoning, But That Never Stopped Us Before.
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/13/2009 08:41:00 AM | CBO, Congress, Congressional Budget Office, Fiscal Stimulus, Payroll Taxes, Taxes | 1 comments »The following graph from the Congressional Budget Office shows the projected output gap between actual and potential GDP with and without stimulus spending, i.e., the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (see full CBO presentation). The CBO presentation highlights the implementation lags of fiscal policy, and illustrates why a stimulus package that stretches over 2 or 3 years seemed justified given that the CBO expected the GDP output gap to persist for longer than one year. Projections have only 24% of the money being disbursed in fiscal year 2009, 74% disbursed by the end of FY 2010, and 91% disbursed by the end of FY 2011.

Given the back-loading of spending, and the realization that the recovery is not taking hold as quickly as most would want (except possibly by politicians up for re-election next year and looking for an election year boost), this is creating a problem now for both the administration and Congress. On the one hand, quicker, and more front-loaded stimulus seems warranted, yet data such as that provided by the CBO has been used to justify the huge delayed spending in coming years. Therefore, if the projections are correct, then patience is in order, but something tells me that is not going to fly as unemployment nears 10 percent.
So how do you speed things up? As outlined by the CBO, you could waive environmental reviews, award contracts without competitive bidding, or simply not dole out money by jurisdictions, but instead give money to those who can most efficiently spend it (shovel-ready project). The first one is a non-starter given the environmental shift of the current administration, the second is going to be difficult given the criticism that no-bid projects received in the last administration, and the last one is simply unacceptable to anyone in Congress - given their parochialism and the fact that it actually makes some sense (and of course, you need shovel-ready projects on a rather large scale - most are probably already funded).
So on the short-term, what needs to be done? The quickest way is through changes to taxes. This could come in rebates (which are relatively quick in non-tax months, but also somewhat ineffective when people are scared and the savings rate is increasing), or through lowering withholding (currently tried with the middle class, but not having the desired effect). This leaves suspending some income taxes for a period of time, or lowering income taxes on everyone, including the wealthy and corporations. Suspension is difficult to sell given the state, or perceived state, of social security and medicare needs, not to mention the growing deficit (even though lower rates can bring in higher receipts), while reducing taxes on corporations and the wealthy is anathema to most of those currently in power.
The limited real and political choices available has now caused the discussion to come full circle - backed to considering another stimulus. I forget - what was that definition about doing the same thing again and expecting different results? If President Obama is not able to convince the American public and Congress to be patient, we may find out the answer rather quickly.
Full-time Jobs At Part-time Hours Will Continue To Affect Consumer Confidence, Spending
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/11/2009 05:46:00 PM | Average Hourly Earnings, Average Workweek, Consumer Confidence, Consumer Discretionary | 0 comments »While the focus on the recent June jobs report was on the number of job losses and the unemployment rate, the average workweek and average weekly earnings data was also not very encouraging. The average workweek fell to 33 hours, down 0.1 hours, taking it to its lowest recorded level going back to 1964 (see Business Week article). While hourly earnings remained flat, the shorter workweek caused average weekly earnings to also fall from $613.34 in May to $611.49 in June. With employed full-time workers scheduled for what is looking more like part-time work, consumer spending and consumer confidence will most likely continue to suffer. This will no doubt put pressure on consumer discretionary stocks and make the prospects of a jobless recovery more likely. Given that companies tend to increase the workweeks of existing employees, and even offer overtime to such employees before taking on the expense of hiring and training new employees, it may take a long time before consumer spending once again reaches the levels required to bring the average workweek back to normal hours. As a result, it may be a while before the Friday noon traffic is caused by workers once again going out for a business lunch, and not simply going home early for the week.
TIM Report: Sentiment Becomes More Bullish, with WU and DRYS As Longs, X and MS As Shorts
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/10/2009 10:46:00 AM | TIM Report, Trade Ideas Monitor, youDevise | 0 comments »According to the recent TIM (Trade Ideas Monitor) report and the TIM Sentiment Index (TSI), institutional brokers increased 4.5% from 51.70 to 54.03 (see previous post or youDevise website for additional information on the TIM report). For the five trading days ending July 9th, the number of new long ideas as a percentage of new ideas sent to investment managers increased to 74.10% from 60.84% one week earlier (see last week's post). While the intra-week trend did fall, it later rebounded. To date, longs represent 58.64% of all ideas this year.
As for individual securities in the U.S. and North America, Western Union (WU) and DryShips (DRYS) were the stocks most recommended as longs by institutional brokers, while U.S. Steel (X) and Morgan Stanley (MS) were most recommended as shorts. The information technology, materials, and consumer discretionary sectors had increased broker sentiment for the week, while health care and energy had decreased sentiment.
Hedge Fund Assets Flow Into Long-Short Equity and Fixed Income Strategies in May
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/09/2009 06:28:00 PM | BarclayHedge, Barclays, Fund-of-Funds, Hedge Funds | 0 comments »Hedge funds posted their first inflows in nine months (see BarclayHedge article, free registration required). Based on a survey of over 1,200 hedge funds, it is estimated that the hedge fund industry gained $1.4 billion in May, or 0.1% of total assets. Nonetheless, funds-of-funds and CTAs are still experiencing outflows. Fund-of-funds, which did not do as good a job as expected picking hedge funds in order to justify their extra layer of fees, lost $5.2 billion, or 1.0% of assets in May. This makes their twelfth straight monthly outflow. Below is the hedge fund asset flow data by strategy for May 2009 (source: BarclayHedge, see article, free registration required). Next to fund-of-funds and managed futures, event driven strategies saw the biggest outflows. Equity long-short, fixed income, and multi-strategies saw the biggest inflows.
ALPS Offering An ETF Of The Nine Select Sector SPDR ETFs
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/09/2009 11:43:00 AM | ALPS, ALPS Equal Sector Weight ETF, EQL, ETF, Select Sector ETF | 0 comments »ALPS has launched a new Equal Sector Weight ETF of ETFs (EQL) that provides an equal weight position in each of the nine Select Sector SPDR ETFs (see IndexUniverse article). The fund rebalances the sector positions every quarter. The attraction of the fund, beyond not needing to invest in nine different ETFs in order to get sector diversification, is that it is designed to avoid over-investment in “bubble” sectors that may have run-up too far, too fast. When their strategy was back-tested over the last 10 years, the EQL strategy of reducing the spread in sector returns outperformed the S&P 500 by more than 3% per year. The EQL ETF charges 0.55% in annual expenses, which includes the assumed 0.21% in expenses for the underlying nine Select Sector ETFs. The EQL ETF sounds like an interesting and useful product, although it is not entirely clear how accurate one can measure when to reduce exposure to bubble sectors going forward.
American Express CEO Ken Chenault on CNBC
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/08/2009 06:57:00 PM | American Express, AXP, CNBC, Ken Chenault | 0 comments »There was an interesting interview on CNBC today with Ken Chenault, CEO of American Express. While Chenault spent half of the interview discussing the AXP brand and strategy, he also spent time discussing the economy in general, and credit card legislation specifically. Instead of simply pumping the economy and his company, Chenault was more sober and direct. In particular, during the first few minutes he mentioned that while recent government actions have produced stability and are giving signs that could potentially lead to "green shoots," it is too soon to call this a recovery. Around the 7:30 min mark he also comments on the proposed credit card reform. While he believes that some type of reform is necessary, he does not agree with some of the proposals regarding risk-based pricing, which could stifle growth and limit credit for those who may need it the most. As written, he is yet not convinced that the current proposed legislation will have a positive impact on the economy.
While Chenault has a dog in the fight, and company interest in the legislation, I believe he is right to expand the argument to the broader economy. While restricting the ability the price risk would reduce an extra source of revenue for the credit card companies, the impact on retail sales will also be negative, significant, and ultimately detrimental to growth (see previous post). Beyond the lost of revenue due to lower rates and fees, the inability to effectively manage risk can not be discounted, or its effect on helping to measure, control, and regulate systemic risk (see previous post).
CNBC Interview With Nassim Taleb
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/02/2009 06:31:00 PM | Debt, Forecasting, Leverage, Nassim Taleb, Stimulus | 0 comments »CNBC interview with Nassim Taleb from earlier today. Of interest are the following observations:
- Why trust the employment number forecasts being made? These forecasters did not forecast the downturn.
- When the unemployment number has essentially doubled in less than a year, why worry about one monthly number? Error must be considered.
- The current system is complex and fragile, and will eventually break and crash.
- Instead of deflating debt, governments are trying to stimulate and inflate assets.
- Monetary policy is out of control.
- We need to convert debt to equity.
Source: CNBC Video
TIM Report: Sentiment Becomes More Bearish, with CPC, BBBY, and FSLR As Recommended Shorts
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/02/2009 01:05:00 PM | 0 comments »According to the recent TIM (Trade Ideas Monitor) report and the TIM Sentiment Index (TSI), institutional brokers became more bearish over the last five trading days as the TSI decreased 5.0% from 57.32 to 54.46 (see previous post or youDevise website for additional information on the TIM report). For the five trading days ending July 1st, the number of new short ideas as a percentage of new ideas sent to investment managers increased to 30.98% from 22.07% one week earlier (see last week's post), but the intra-week short trend did fall off its high of 35.26%. To date, shorts represent 41.46% of all ideas this year.
As for individual securities in the U.S. and North America, Tyco Electronics (TEL), Intel (INTC), and Electronic Arts (ERTS) were the stocks most recommended as longs by institutional brokers, while Chemspec International (CPC), Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY), and First Solar (FSLR) were most recommended as shorts. The energy, information, and consumer discretionary sectors had increased broker sentiment for the week, while utilities and health care had decreased sentiment.
US Yield Curve Mambo
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/01/2009 05:03:00 PM | Swap Spread | 0 comments »Now for a little fun (?). Below is a video of the 3 month to 30 year U.S. Swap Spread data from Bloomberg, animated and set to music. Who said Swap Spreads were not fun? Well, maybe just about everyone. This may not change your mind, but let us give a hat tip to Nick Gogerty for putting it together anyway.
Program Trading and Market Manipulation
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 7/01/2009 11:35:00 AM | Joe Zaluzzi, Market Manipulation, Program Trading, Themis Trading | 0 comments »Comments on electronic program trading and market manipulation from Joe Zaluzzi of Themis Trading (HT to the Zero Hedge blog). Interesting stuff.
Source: YouTube
Tradable CDS Index On European Governments To Become Available
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 6/29/2009 10:17:00 PM | Credit Default Swaps, Debt, Markit iTraxx, Sovereign Debt | 0 comments »In what is turning out to be more than just a little bit of irony, sovereign credit default swaps may end up being more widely traded when a new basket of 15 countries is launched later this year through the Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index (see WSJ article). It is widely believe by many that the corporate CDS market was to blame in part for the recent financial crisis. To help clean up the mess and unfreeze the credit markets, many European and world governments have been borrowing massive amounts of money and injecting it into their economic systems in order to add liquidity. Unfortunately, the massive spending and borrowing are putting the credit quality of many these same countries into jeopardy, producing an unusual turn of events as CDS contracts are now being used to protect against default in those very countries which had too many companies with dangerous levels of CDS exposure. Now, not only can you trade CDS contracts to protect yourself against a country defaulting, but soon you will be able to trade a more diversified basket of sovereign CDS contracts. Profitable? Maybe. Of course if there is another massive default, I am not sure who will be left to bail out this market if spending continues at current levels. There is only so long you can solve a problem caused by too much debt by taking out additional debt. But, look on the bright side. At least now you can trade it. I guess financial innovation never sleeps.
Emerging/Global Market Funds In A Commodity Holding Pattern
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 6/29/2009 10:06:00 AM | Commodities, Crude Oil, Currencies, EEM, EFA, Emerging Markets, Housing, iShares, Natural Gas | 0 comments »Some investors in global and emerging market funds are starting to become nervous that such markets have risen too far, too fast (see Asian Investor article). After a nice run since early March, investors in emerging market funds that are tracked by EPFR Global have seen investors pulling a net $1.87 billion out of Asia ex-Japan, Latin America, Europe, Middle East, Africa, and diversified global emerging markets equity funds as of June 24th. High-yield bond and global equity funds also saw their string of consistent inflows stop, with the funds flowing into money market and U.S. bond funds. The reversal of flows has been driven in part by investor worries as to when foreign demand for manufactured goods and commodity exports will increase. Russia and Brazil equity funds, which are commodity dependent, are also posting new outflows.
As a few examples, the yearly charts for both EEM (iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index) and the EFA (iShares MSCI EAFE Index ETF) reflect some of this indecision in the second half of June, but the trends are not unlike what has been observed in the S&P 500 Index over the same period.
This slowdown in the bullish trend comes just as the International Energy Agency cut its expectations for medium-term global oil demand (see Financial Times article), with the recession diminishing the medium-term risk of a supply crunch as the spare capacity cushion remains healthy. Natural gas storage is also up (see EIA article) and above the 5-year historical range.
Yet, not everyone appear as cautious or nervous, with many analysts and traders still bullish (see SeekingAlpha articles here and here and here). In addition, as hedge funds are near completing one of their best starts of the year since 1999, many managers expected capital to continue to flow into their funds, especially those funds that are focused on emerging markets (see The Australian article). Given that many emerging market funds are commodity driven, then next few weeks/months should be telling as data on the summer driving season, housing, and currencies markets will help signal if the commodity correction has indeed arrived (see SeekingAlpha article), and whether or not emerging markets will continue their recent strength.
New Levered Long/Short ETFs Now Offered On European Indexes
Posted by Bull Bear Trader | 6/26/2009 11:54:00 AM | CAC 40, DAX, Derivatives, Dow Jones EURO STOXX, ETF Securities, FTSE 100, Hedging, Long, Short | 0 comments »ETF Securities is now providing levered 2X ETFs on four popular European indexes (see Financial Times article, Citywire article). The eight ETFs being offered include both long and short exposure on the FTSE 100, Dow Jones Euro STOXX, CAC 40, and DAX. The four 2X short ETFs will carry annual management charges (AMC) of 60 bps. The 2X leveraged long ETFs will carry charges between 40 and 50 bps. The company is offering the ETFs to allow fund managers the ability to hedge portfolios in place of borrowing stock or using derivatives.