In True Form September Begins Shaky

Ulli Market Commentary Contact

Tue pic

[Chart courtesy of MarketWatch.com]

1. Moving the Markets

Well, the trading month of August was a wild ride for us all. August 2015 chalked up to be the worst month for the Dow since May 2010 and the stock market’s first 10% correction in four years. Investors remained nervous over fears of a move by the Fed to raise rates and stocks followed a global market selloff sparked by a weak manufacturing report out of China that raised fresh fears of a worsening slowdown in the world’s second-biggest economy.

The first trading day in September did nothing to ease fears on Wall Street. The Dow plunged 470 points and all indexes closed down nearly 3%. Sparking the negative market sentiment today was a report released overnight which showed that manufacturing in August in China hit a three-year low, exacerbating worries about the health of the world’s second-biggest economy and sparking fresh fears of a global growth slowdown.

Perhaps some positive news for those investors in food chains is that America’s Mexican-on-the-go powerhouse Chipotle (CMG) is rolling out a delivery service to universities. Chipotle has partnered with Tapingo, a food-delivery app specifically for the college market, to deliver its burritos, bowls and other menu items to 40 college campuses, the fast-casual chain said today. It will expand to more than 100 campuses by spring. Guacamole anyone?

For the second day in a row, there were no winners among our 10 ETFs in the Spotlight as the bear remained clearly in charge. It turned out to be a good time to be on the sidelines with all sectors getting clobbered. Taking the biggest spanking was the Global 100 ETF (IOO) with -3.18%, while Consumer Staples (XLP) “only” lost -2.05%.

That’s no surprise to us, as our Trend Tracking Indexes (TTIs) continue to be stuck below their trend lines and therefore in bear market territory. Please see more details in section 3.

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Markets Smash Hopes About Stability

Ulli Market Commentary Contact

Mon pic

[Chart courtesy of MarketWatch.com]

1. Moving the Markets

Uncertainty about the timing of Federal Reserve rate hikes and persistent fears about a China slowdown continued to weigh on financial markets after last week’s wild ride. Investors thought stocks may have stabilized by the end of last week, however, indexes tumbled and oil prices surged Monday as Wall Street closed out a volatile August with hefty losses that gave the S&P 500 its worst monthly performance since May 2012.

The losses were broad-based with nine out of the ten S&P sectors falling. Energy stocks were the only gainers as oil prices surged for a third straight day after the OPEC indicated they are prepared to discuss production levels. As a side note, Crude has jumped 27% in three days.

As for real estate, the sudden collapse in the Shanghai Composite and the devaluation of the yuan in the past month have led some to worry that it could cause trouble for the U.S. real estate. The reality is that potential capital flows from the turmoil in China can find safety in U.S. properties and the data speaks to it. Over the last 12 months, nearly $5.1 billion of $21.1 billion in commercial real estate investments coming from China has been allocated to the U.S market.

There were no green numbers to be found in our 10 ETFs in the Spotlight with all of them heading south. Faring the best was the Mid-Cap Value ETF (IWS) with a loss of -0.44%, while Healthcare (XLV) gave back the most by surrendering -1.82%.

Our Trend Tracking Indexes (TTIs) remain in bear market territory.

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ETFs/Mutual Funds On The Cutline – Updated Through 08/28/2015

Ulli ETFs on the Cutline Contact

Below are the latest ETF Cutline reports, which show how far above or below their respective long-term trend lines (39 week SMA) my currently tracked ETFs/MFs are positioned.

The first report covers the ETF Master List from Thursday’s StatSheet and includes 410 ETFs, of which currently 41 (last week 36) are hovering in bullish territory.

The second report includes only High Volume ETFs. To clarify, High Volume (HV) ETFs are defined as those with an average daily volume of $10 million or higher.

These ETFs are generated from my selected list of some 97 that I use in my advisor practice. It cuts out the “noise,” which simply means it eliminates those ETFs that I would never buy because of their volume limitations. 7 ETFs (last week 7) have managed to remain in bullish territory after the recent market volatility.

The third report covers Mutual Funds on the Cutline. There are currently 63 (last week 48) above the line and 757 below it out of the 820 that I follow.

Take a look:

  1. ETF Master Cutline Report
  2. ETF High Volume Cutline Report
  3. MF Cutline Report

In case you are not familiar with some of the terminology used in the reports, please read the Glossary of Terms.

If you missed the original post about the Cutline approach, you can read it here.

One Man’s Opinion: Is The Time Ripe To Bottom-Fish Or Re-Enter The Equity Markets?

Ulli Market Review Contact

ManThe latest rebound in US equities is probably too early to do a victory lap though there’s no denying that valuations have improved pretty dramatically in the last couple of weeks, said David Lafferty, Chief Market Strategist at Natixis Global Asset Management.

With the S&P 500 trading at about 18 times forward earnings and the Dow at about 16.5/17 times, the market is surely not dirt cheap. But global quantitative easing over the last three to four years has made everything pretty expensive and this sell-off has helped a lot in getting investors back into the markets, he noted.

Asked where investors should seek value now if valuations are not “dirt-cheap”, David said this may not be the best time to bottom-fish since he’s a little longer on outlook. Natixis’ view across sectors hasn’t changed much and there are two sectors where there could be good value.

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New ETFs On The Block: WisdomTree International Hedged Equity ETF (HDWM)

Ulli International ETFs Contact

91551519The theme of hedging currency risk within the same wrapper of an international equity portfolio has gained popularity in the US, particularly after the greenback’s continued strength amid diverging monetary policies across the Atlantic.

WisdomTree, the fifth-largest US issuer of exchange traded funds, has been fairly successful in gauging investors’ preference as evidenced from their wildly successful WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund (DXJ) and WisdomTree Europe Hedged Equity Fund (HEDJ). Both the funds have managed to garner about $37 billion in total assets in the past 18 months amid the turmoil in Europe and Asia.

WisdomTree expanded their currency hedged wrapper recently with the launch of another product that has a diversified exposure to the world’s developed and developing countries ex-Canada and the US.

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ETF/No Load Fund Tracker Newsletter For August 28, 2015

Ulli ETF Tracker Contact

ETF/No Load Fund Tracker StatSheet

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THE LINK TO OUR CURRENT ETF/MUTUAL FUND STATSHEET IS:

https://theetfbully.com/2015/08/weekly-statsheet-for-the-etfno-load-fund-tracker-newsletter-updated-through-08272015/

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Market Commentary

CLOSING WITH A WHIMPER AFTER A TUMULTUOUS WEEK

Fri pic

[Chart courtesy of MarketWatch.com]

1. Moving the Markets

One look at the chart tells the entire story. It was a wild and tumultuous week that ended up on the plus side but could have just as easily gone the other way with the S&P 500 touching the 1,867 level. As posted, both of our main directional indicators, the Trend Tracking Indexes (TTIs), slipped below their long-term trend lines and remain in bearish territory despite the enormous 2-day rebound we saw on Wednesday and Thursday.

For the time being, this rebound has the look and feel of what we saw last October, when the markets capitulated for only 8 days, before the bulls gained the upper hand and upward momentum resumed. It’s too early to tell if we will get lucky again or if this time will be different. Our goal, when using the Trend Tracking approach, is to sidestep an oncoming bear market in order to avoid severe portfolio destruction.

At times, as we’ve seen in October 2014, it will turn out to be a false alarm, and we will need to re-establish our equity positions once the trend turns bullish again. Nobody knows for sure what’s next, but I think we will find out pretty soon if this week’s sudden rebound was a resumption of the previous trend or nothing but a giant head fake.

6 of our 10 ETFs in the Spotlight edged up slightly during this see-saw day. Leading the winners was the Select Dividend ETF (DVY) with +0.38%, while, on the losing side, Healthcare (XLV) took the dubious honors with a loss of -0.57%.

Our Trend Tracking Indexes (TTIs) remain in bear market territory as section 3 below shows.

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