Etf Prime Logo

Welcome to the ETF Prime Podcast

One of the “most helpful plain-English resources for investors who want to demystify exchange-traded funds” – Bloomberg Businessweek

Latest Episode​

Managing Risk, Capturing Growth: ETF Strategies from WEBs and Alger

Ben Fulton, CEO of WEBs Investments, highlights the firm’s suite of Defined Volatility ETFs, which dynamically adjust equity market exposure based on real-time market volatility.  Arthur Nowak, Client Portfolio Manager at Alger, discusses the firm’s high-conviction approach to investing in innovation and growth – including the Alger AI Enablers & Adopters ETF (ALAI).

About the Podcast

ETF Prime is hosted by Nate Geraci. Learn how to make ETFs a part of your investment portfolio as Nate spotlights individual ETFs and interviews experts from across the country. ETF Prime is available on Apple Podcasts, Android, Spotify, and most other major podcasting platforms. Specific guest interviews can be accessed by visiting the ETF Expert Corner.

Nate Geraci Headshot

Recent Episodes

New Way To Play Gold

As gold prices continue to rise on a weak dollar and fears of inflation, ETF provider Market Vectors introduced a new way to play the commodity.

The new ETF, the Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (GDXJ), is constructed to track a basket of smaller gold mining companies.  The Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners Index, which GDXJ seeks to replicate, provides global exposure to small and mid-capitalization companies that generate at least 50% of their revenue from gold and silver mining.  A requirement for companies that are included in the index is that they must hold real property that has the potential to produce at least 50% of the company’s revenue from gold or silver mining when developed, or primarily invest in gold or silver. 

As of now, the top holdings in the fund include Coeur d’ Alene Mines (CDE), New Gold (NGD) and Silver Standard Resources (SSRI).  These are small mining firms, and some, like Silver Standard Resources, are still in the development stage which increases the risks involved with investing in GDXJ.  Additionally, lower trading volume and liquidity issues will likely add to the volatility of this new ETF. 

In and of itself, GDXJ was launched at a good time by an ETF provider that is no stranger to the market.  After all, the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX), which tracks much larger gold mining companies, has been a success and boasts nearly $5 billion in assets.

What To Look For In Emerging Market ETFs

As the ETF landscape continues to change and new product innovation remains robust, iShares is looking to further expand its offerings of emerging market ETFs.

The leading ETF provider is expected to introduce two new ETFs:  the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Financials Sector Index Fund and the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Materials Sector Index Fund.  One reason that iShares has decided to introduce these new ETFs is the appeal of emerging markets.  In October 2009, net inflows into the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index (EEM) and the Vanguard MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (VWO), the two most actively traded and largest emerging market ETFs, accounted for 45% of all net inflows into exchange traded funds.

There is no doubt that international ETFs are becoming more popular and can offer great diversification benefits to a portfolio, but before considering adding more than one, it is equally important to consider concentration and overlap.  

On one end of the spectrum are the broad-based ETFs, like EEM, which diversify assets over a vast array of emerging market equities.  EEM’s top three country holdings are Brazil, China and Taiwan, with 16.2%, 15.7% and 10.6% allocations respectively.  On the other end of the spectrum are the concentrated funds which give exposure purely to one country, like the iShares MSCI Turkey ETF (TUR).  These two ETFs enable one to gain exposure to emerging markets, but in completely different ways and with completely different risk profiles.

A second factor to consider is the holdings of the ETF.  In many emerging market ETFs, single companies can dominate performance because of their relative size and the fact that the ETF uses market capitalization or modified market capitalization to allocate assets.  An example of this can be seen through the iPath MSCI India Index ETN (INP), which has 59 holdings and allocates nearly 23.5% to two companies.  A well-diversified ETF will allocate no more than 10% of its assets to its top holding. 

Thirdly, it is equally important to be mindful of the underlying sector allocation of an emerging market ETF.   Take TUR, for example – the ETF holds 80 different stocks, however it allocates more than half of its asset base to the financial sector.  Another example is the Market Vectors Russia (RSX) which holds 36 different stocks but allocates more than 50% of its assets to the oil, gas and energy sector.

It is important to know what an ETF holds and tracks before utilizing it to build a well-balanced portfolio.  You don’t always get what you think you are getting.

Most Popular ETFs in October

In the month of October, it appears that investors became more bearish on U.S. equities and turned to other investments like international markets, fixed income and commodities for their portfolios.

All together, net inflows for international equity long ETFs was $7.47 Billion for the month which accounted for more than half of the gross inflows for the entire ETF industry.  To take it a step further, of international ETFs, the Vanguard MSCI Emerging Markets (VWO) witnessed net inflows of $2.2 Billion and the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets (EEM) witnessed net inflows of $1.76 Billion.  Together, these two ETFs comprised nearly 45% of the net inflows across all exchange traded products.

U.S. bond funds followed the international markets and were led by inflation protected securities like the iShares Barclays TIPS (TIP), an ETF that is constructed to enable investors to gain protection against inflation, which saw net inflows of $589 million.  Another popular fixed income ETF was the iShares Barclays 1-3 Year Credit (CSJ), which indicated that an appetite for the short-end of the yield curve is emerging.  In aggregate, bond ETFs saw inflows of nearly $3.1 Billion indicating that inflation is a concern amongst Wall Street.

The third asset class that investors fled to was commodities.  In general, as investors become fearful of inflation and the U.S. dollar continues to weaken, commodities become more attractive.  The United States Natural Gas (UNG) and the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) led the commodities markets in net inflows, with $308 million and $272 million, respectively. 

As for outflows, broad based U.S. equities were the culprits in the month of October with the SPDRs (SPY) leading the way logging net outflows of $2.3 billion, while the iShares Russell 2000 (IWM) lost nearly 8.5% of its September 30 AUM by witnessing a net outflow of $1.1 billion.

ETFs Continue to Innovate

The month of October was a busy month for ETFs as numerous providers launched new ETFs or filed registration paperwork with the Securities and Exchange Commission to launch new ETFs.

iShares filed a registration form to launch the first line of ETFs that hold municipal bonds which have maturities that fall within a specified date range.  The funds are designed to work like traditional municipal bonds in that they return tax-exempt distributions and an investor’s principal investment.  The new fixed income funds will be designed to track indexes in the S&P AMT-Free Municipal Bond Index Series and will distribute its assets to shareholders after the last holding of the fund hits maturity, which is expected to be around August 31 of the year in the fund’s name.

To further extend out the line of fixed income ETFs on the market, bond giant, PIMCO, is expected to launch two new ETFs that track the Treasuries market.  The first is the PIMCO 3-7 Year U.S. Treasury Index Fund (FIVZ) which will carry an expense ratio of 0.15%.  The second is the PIMCO 20+ Year Zero Coupon U.S. Treasury Index (ZROZ), which will carry an expense ratio of 0.15% and track the Treasury STRIPS 20-25 Year Equal Par Bond Index which sells Treasuries and securities at a discount and doesn’t offer interest payments because the bonds mature at par.

In the commodities arena, ETF provider Jefferies has launched two ETFs based on agriculture and industrial metals indexes.  The first is the Jeffries/TR/J CRB Global Agriculture Index Fund (CRBA) and the second is the Jeffries/TR/J CRB Industrial Metals Equity Index Fund (CRBI).  Both ETFs are based upon the Thompson Reuters/Jeffries CRB-EQ series of indexes, carry an expense ratio of 0.65% and hold equity securities. 

CRBA holds international companies that are focused on the production and distribution of agricultural products and equipment, whereas CRBI offers investors exposure to companies that engage and specialize in the production and distribution of base and industrial metals and products around the globe.

Additionally, ETF Securities recently announced that it plans to launch the ETFS Palladium Trust (PALL), which will be the first U.S. listed ETF that holds physical palladium. 

To offer further diversity, the ETF landscape broadened with the launch of the first state-focused ETF, the Spade Oklahoma Index (OOK).  OOK focuses on companies that are domiciled in Oklahoma, carries an expense ratio of 0.85% and donates at least 10% of revenue generated from fees to an Oklahoma charity.  The fund tracks an index of 29 companies, each with a market cap of at least $100 million and is heavily concentrated in the energy sector – more specifically, drilling and exploration, pipeline and oil and gas.

Forget Stocks?

The front page headline on CNBC.com today reads “Forget Stocks: Investors Pile Into Exchange-Traded Funds”.  More and more investors are beginning to realize what we at The ETF Store have known for a long time:  ETFs can provide a more convenient, transparent, cost effective, and tax efficient way to invest across a wide range of asset classes.  With ETFs, you can precisely tailor your portfolio with exposure to equities, bonds, commodities, REITs, currencies and even inverse and leveraged vehicles.  As has been well documented in many of our previous blogs, with ETFs, you can choose between specific market segments, sectors and industries such as energy, commodities, basic materials and industrial metals.  You can even invest in agriculture and precious metals such as gold and silver.

ETFs combine the benefits of stocks and mutual funds into one investment.  Because ETFs trade throughout the day, investors can utilize stop loss/limit orders and options – flexibility that mutual funds can’t provide.  And because ETFs are baskets of securities, investors can minimize company specific risk – flexibility that individual stocks and bonds can’t provide.  With this kind of flexibility, investors are realizing that ETFs can be a much better way to deal with the current turbulent market – they need the ability to stay nimble in this highly complex and risky environment.

ETF assets exceeded $700 billing in September on what continues to be a steep upward trajectory for the ETF industry that many expect to exceed $1 trillion in assets by 2011.  As Sean Crawford, a portfolio manager at Barclays, pointed out in the article, “There are a lot more ETFs in different asset classes than (there) had been in the past, and they’re becoming more nuanced.  It’s become a pretty compelling investment idea.”

Skip to content