Best & Worst ETFs

Best Performing ETFs for Friday December 14, 2007

Energy, specifically clean energy and Commodities (Gold) were the only two sector ETFs I track that were positive on the day.

PBW PwrShr WilderHill Clean Energy 1.55%
GLD StreetTRACKS Gold Trust 0.15%

Worst Performing ETFs for Friday December 14, 2007

It seems the heavy selling was in the Real estate and Banking ETFs.

KBE SPDR Series KBW Bank -4.45%
ICF iShares Cohen & Steers Rlty Ma -3.62%
RWX SPDR DJ Wilshire Intl Real Est -3.43%
RWR SPDR DJ Wilshire REIT -2.93%
VNQ Vanguard REIT ETF -2.89%

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com

Traders’ Market Update

The BIG story of the week was the FOMC meeting on Tuesday…and the market’s disappointment in ‘only’ 25 bps cuts on the Fed and discount rates. The Fed then surprised investors the next morning, in a coordinated plan with other global central banks, by injecting up to $40 billion in reserves into the financial markets in order to improve liquidity.

November PPI came in higher at 3.2% versus 1.5% (core at 0.4% versus 0.2%) on Thursday, and November CPI at 0.8% versus 0.6% (core at 0.3% versus 0.2%) on Friday. A better than expected Advanced Retail Sales (1.2% versus 0.6% expected in November) failed to impress investors, especially as reports that online sales for November and December are running below the 26% pace of a year earlier.

The major indices finished the week lower:
Dow Jones -2.10%
S&P500 -2.44%
Nasdaq -2.60%
Russell 2000 -4.02%

The US Dollar rallied 1.5% as investors pared down expectations for further rate cuts on the back of the biggest increase in consumer expectations in two years. Gold finished the week at $798, down $2.20.

Check out next week’s calendar at:
http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/ecalendar/index.html

Amaury
Contributing Author, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com/

ETF Swing Trading – Good or Bad? Depends Which Side of the Market You’re On!

The ETF Sector Rotation Strategy (our strategy for longer term investors) lost ground today, but the positions are still in positive territory.

The Swing Trading Playbook has been hitting it out of the park all week. We had very few trading signals since the positions entered earlier in the week are working great. The Playbook is up about 4.5% for the week and holding a few unrealized gains over the weekend and into next week.

It looks like Monday may be the time to hedge the portfolio or start ringing the register on few positions.

Here is a screen shot of the open positions for the Swing Trade Playbook. As you can see, huge positions are not necessary to make money swing trading. The key this week was keeping the losses small and letting the winners run.

To learn more about how you can benefit from us visit http://etfupdater.com/.

Have a good weekend!

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com/

ETF – Professional Technical Analysis and Money Management Organizations

I believe, to stay on top of their game, money managers must constantly evaluate new market concepts, revisit old trading journals and network with their peers.

To accomplish this task, I belong to a few professional organizations. One of which is the Market Technicians Association (http://mta.org/) and I joined for a few reasons:

1. To learn more about technical analysis to improve my personal trading
2. To meet other professional Market Technicians
3. To help promote the use of Technical Analysis

To Learn more about the MTA click here and to learn more about what a market technician does click here.

Another organization I belong to is the National Association of Active Investment Managers (NAAIM) to visit the organizations website click here.

Each organization has a different focus, but together, they combine the knowledge, insight and camaraderie I feel a money manager needs to succeed.

If you have any questions or would like my opinion about how you can benefit, feel free to contact me. For our contact information click here.

Michael Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com/

Today’s ETF Action Action and Yesterday’s Playbook

Here is an excerpt from my swing trade playbook I sent out today. If you are interested in learning gaining access visit http://etfupdater.com/ :

This was a great day for subscribers that get a glimpse of my trading plan!

As you probably already learned the fed cut rates by .25 basis points. In my opinion, I thought they should have cut by .50 basis points and from the market’s response, I think the majority of market participants felt the same way.

As many of you know, for the past few days I’ve been posting how the market has been rising on low volume (remember low volume moves to the upside are suspect), that I’m keeping the portfolio light and how there was more risk to the downside than the upside.

As I filter through the ETFs, there are no setups for tomorrow’s playbook because of today big move, so I thought I would send a sample yesterdays playbook and how much each trade is in the money.

Tomorrow will be a day to sit on my hands, let the positions work and mitigate any risk.


The image to the right is what I sent to subscribers last night. It shows the direction I attempt to play, the entry price that the ETF has to trade at to trigger an entry signal, the average volatility of the ETF and how many shares I anticipate trading.

The image below shows the trades that were triggered and how many points they are “in the money” (maximum for the day). Basically, you can multiply the “In Money” column by how many shares you would have purchased. Click on the image to enlarge it.

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com/

Leveraged ETFs – The Leverage Mix-UP

I’ve come across many market participants believing if they purchase a leveraged ETF and held it for an extended period of time, the ETF’s performance should double the index or sector it’s benchmarked against.

Please understand this is not the case. The majority seek to provide a 200% DAILY return on the underlying index they track.

Notice I typed “DAILY”!

Noted in the ETF providers prospectus, which I’m sure we all read quite diligently. It is stated the leveraged ETF is designed to double the Daily return, not the total return for time periods greater that one day.

I noticed this while I was helping a hedge fund that trades ETFs quite heavily. The were using the leveraged ETFs to hedge the portfolio and noticed the hedge was not delta neutral. The hedge was actually appreciating more than what the underlying portfolio was depreciating.

So, why does this happen? Why doesn’t it track properly if market participants hold positions overnight? Compounding! Just as we all like compound interest you get the same effect here, except since the ETF can depreciate in price it can work adversely too.

Over time the effect of compounding and leverage can have a significant effect on the total return of the ETF.

Here is an example assuming a $10,000 investment.

Day 1:

The underlying index increases 1%
The leveraged ETF increases 2%

The first day = 200% return, just as we thought, and we outpaced the market, great!

Day 2:

The underlying index decreases 1%
The leveraged ETF decreases 2%

Underlying Index Value: $9,999 (An increase of $100 and then a decrease of $101 on day two)

Leveraged ETF Value: $9,996 (an increase of $200 and then a decrease of $204)

As you can see the index decreased in value $1 over two days and the leveraged ETF decreased $4 over the two days (this is four times the cumulative index loss as opposed to two times the loss).

Hopefully, I’ve explained this in detail enough for you to see how over a longer period of time the cumulative percentage change of the leveraged ETF has the ability to vary significantly from the underlying index.

Here are a few popular Leveraged ETFs:

QLD
DDM
SSO
MVV
SAA
UWM

If you would like to learn more about leveraged ETFs visit my home page http://etfupdater.com or http://proshares.com.

Mike Matousek, CMT
Portfolio Manager, ETF Updater
http://etfupdater.com