|



From the Founder
Anti-Money Laundering
Forex Information
Excellence Award
Tips for healthy trading
FAQs (email)
Articles
Series Three Info
CTA and CPO info
NFA style Field Audits
IB & Branch setup
Consulting
Career Placement
Privacy Policy

Award page
Items you need to improve and protect your FCM or IB...
1.
Very important and useful forms and letters for
different applications for the FCM and the Introducing Broker. Visit our
"forms" page.
|
Ishares and ETFs: Pushing the DJIA Toward the Cliff
by
Steve Selengut
How many of you remember the immortal words of P. T. Barnum? Of Yogi
Berra? On Wall Street, the incubation period for new product scams
may be measured in years instead of minutes, but the end result is
always a lopsided, greed-driven, gold rush toward financial
disaster. The dot.com melt down spawned the index mutual funds, and
their dismal failure gave life to "enhanced" index funds, a wide
variety of speculative hedge funds, and finally, a rapidly growing
number of Index ETFs. Deja Vu all over again, with the popular
ishare variety of ETF leading the lemmings to the cliffs. How far
will we allow Wall Street to move us away from the basic building
blocks of investing? Whatever happened to stocks and bonds? The
Investment Gods are not happy.
A market or sector index is a statistical measuring device that
tracks the movement of price changes in a portfolio of securities
that are selected to represent a portion of the overall market.
Index ETF creators: a) select a sampling of the market that they
expect to be representative of the whole, b) purchase the
securities, and then c) issue the ishares, SPDRS, CUBEs, etc. that
you can trade on the normal exchanges just like ordinary stocks.
Unlike ordinary index funds, ETF shares are not handled directly by
the fund, and as a result, they can move either up or down from the
value of the securities in the fund, which, in turn, may or may not
mirror the movements of the index they were selected to track.
Confused? There's more. these things are designed for manipulation!
Unlike managed Closed-End Funds (CEFs), ETF shares can be created or
redeemed by market specialists, and Institutional Investors can
redeem 50,000 share lots (in kind) if there is a gap between the
net-asset-value and the market price of the fund. These activities
create demand in order to minimize the gap between the fund
net-asset-value and the fund price. Clearly, these arbitrage
activities provide profit-making opportunities to the fund sponsors
that are not available to the shareholders. Perhaps that is why the
fund expenses are so low. and why there are now hundreds of the
things to choose from. It is also why a famous 30 stock Market
Average has gone up at three times the speed of all the other
indicators!
Two other ishare/ETF idiosyncrasies need to be appreciated: a)
performance return statistics for index funds typically do not
include fund expenses. it should be fairly obvious that an index
fund will always under-perform its market, and b) some index funds,
ishares in particular, publish P/E numbers that only include the
profitable companies in the portfolio. How do you feel about that?
So, in addition to the normal risks associated with investing in
general, we add: speculating in narrowly focused sectors, guessing
on the prospects of unproven small cap companies, experimenting with
securities in single countries, rolling the dice on commodities, and
hoping for the eventual success of new technologies. We then call
this hodge-podge of speculations a diversified, passively managed,
inexpensive approach to 21st Century Asset Management! How this
differs from the roots of the dot.com mess is a mystery to me. Once
upon a time, there were high yield junk bond funds that the
financial community insisted were appropriate investments because of
their excellent diversification. Does diversified junk become
un-junk? Isn't "Passive Management" as much of an oxymoron as
"Variable Annuity"? Whatever happened to the KISS Principle?
But let's not dwell upon the three or more levels of speculation
that are the very foundation of all index funds. Let's move on to
the two basic ideas that led to the development of plain vanilla
Mutual Funds in the first place: diversification and professional
management. Mutual Funds were a monumental breakthrough that changed
the Investment World. Hands on investing (without the self-centered
assistance of the banks and insurance companies) became possible for
absolutely everyone. Self directed retirement programs and cheap to
administer employee benefit programs became doable. The investment
markets, once the domain of an elite group of wealthy entrepreneurs,
became the savings accounts of choice for the employed masses. But
only because the Funds were relatively safe with their guarantees of
diversification and professional management! ETFs are just not the
answer to the problems we've experienced lately with traditional
Mutual Funds. (Those problems are a function of Fund Manager
Compensation, conflicts of interest within Fund Sponsor
Organizations, the delivery and pricing system for the funds, and
believe it or don't, the self directed retirement programs
themselves.)
Here's a thumbnail sketch of how well the major Passively Managed
Indices have done since the turn of the century: For those six
years, the DJIA growth rate averaged Zero % per year, the S & P 500
averaged Minus 2% per year, and the NASDAQ Composite averaged Minus
8% per year! How many positive sectors, technologies, commodities,
or capitalization categories could there have been? Go ahead, add in
1999 just to make yourself feel better and you'll come up with +2%
per year for the DJIA, Zero % annually for the S & P, and a stellar
-1.5% per year for the NASDAQ. Now subtract the fees. hmmmm. Again,
how would those ishares have fared? Hey, when you buy cheap and
easy, it's usually worth it. Now if you want performance, I suggest
you try management. Any management is better than no management, so
long as you are receptive to the strategies or disciplines employed
by the manager. If you can't understand or accept the strategy,
don't hire the manager. During the past six years, there have been
more advancing issues than declining ones on the NYSE, more stocks
achieving new highs than new lows. Why did you lose money?
Sure, you might find some smiles in an ishare or two, particularly
if you have the courage to take your profits, and there may be times
when it makes good business sense to use these products as a hedge
against a specific risk. But please, stop kidding yourself every
time Wall Street comes up with a new short cut to investment
success. Don't underestimate the value of experienced management,
even if you have to pay a little extra for it. Actually, there is no
reason why you (and I mean every one of you) can't learn either to
run your own investment portfolio, or to instruct someone how you
want it done. Every guess, every estimate, every hedge, and every
shortcut increases risk, because none of the crystal balls used by
those creative product hucksters works very well over the long haul.
Products and gimmicks are never the answer. ETFs, a combination of
the two, don't even address the question properly. AND their rising
popularity has raised the risk level throughout the Stock Market.
How's that, you ask? The demand for DJIA stocks included in ETFs is
raising their prices to levels that have nothing to do with company
Fundamentals.
What's in your portfolio?
NOTICE: Investment Reference does not recommend
or endorse any products, brokerage firms, CTAs, CPOs or representatives. All
material contained in any article is only the opinion of the person authoring the
article. Investment reference will publish any article submitted as a way of
offering a public forum and a means of exchanges of views and ideas. Investment
Reference also reserves the right to make the final decision on what to publish, and will
not publish anything that it considers offensive, slanderous, or fraudulent.
Investment Reference cannot and will not be held responsible for any information or
content in any articles except those which it authors itself.
Get in touch with us by
email.
THERE IS RISK OF LOSS IN TRADING
FUTURES... LOTS OF IT!!
Email us with questions or comments about
this website.
Copyright 1995 /2008 Investment Reference
Last modified:
April 05, 2008
|