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Showing posts with label ETN'S. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ETN'S. Show all posts

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Fidelity Increases Commission-Free ETFs to 31

Consumers everywhere agree – price wars are the best wars on the planet.  The ETF trading commission price war makes ETF investors happy and their wallets a little thicker.  Fidelity today (2/16/11) announced the addition of five more iShares ETFs to its $0 commission lineup.  This brings the total quantity of commission-free ETFs for Fidelity’s online customers to 31, consisting of Fidelity’s own Nasdaq Composite Tracking Stock (ONEQ) and 30 iShares products.

The complete list of iShares with free online trading at Fidelity now includes these ETFs:
  • iShares iBoxx Yield Corporate Bond (HYG)
  • iShares Dow Jones Select Dividend (DVY)
  • iShares Dow Jones EPAC Select Dividend (IDV)
  • iShares Dow Jones Real Estate (IYR)
  • iShares MSCI ACWI ex US (ACWX)
Sixteen months ago, the first salvo in this war was yet to be fired.  Today four major players have a lot at stake.  The history is brief but eventful:

Schwab Creates Watershed Event with Commission-Free ETFs on 11/3/09 by launching its first ETFs and introducing commission-free trading.  Schwab has since extended its lineup several times.

Fidelity responded three months later on 2/2/10 by teaming up with iShares to offer 26 Commission-Free ETFs at Fidelity while lowering commissions on other ETFs.  Fidelity expanded its menu today.

Vanguard Entered the ETF Free Trading War three months later (5/4/10) by making its own line of ETFs available to Vanguard Brokerage customers without commissions.  Vanguard continues to aggressively launch new ETFs with no commissions for its brokerage customers.

The Launch of Ameritrade’s ETF Supermarket on 10/8/10 was the most sweeping to date, including eight different sponsors and 101 ETFs and ETNs.

Disclosure I am Long HYG shares. 

MLP ETFs: A Fixed-Income Alternative

Are you looking for a stable and relatively high yield fixed-income asset? Then you may want to take a gander at master limited partnerships (MLPs) exchange traded funds (ETFs), which have only recently come to market.

If you’re unfamiliar with this sector, here’s the short of it: MLPs are a great way to play the energy industry with the added benefit of regular dividend payouts and investment appreciation.
Wells Fargo Senior Energy MLP Analyst Michael Blum believes that MLPs still have plenty of potential, with strong business fundamentals, distribution growth and attractive yields, writes Brian Sylvestor for Investor Ideas.

Those are the basics. Now here’s what you really need to know about this sector that’s more than likely new to you:
  • There are different kinds of MLPs. Exploration and production (E&P) MLPs plays produce oil and natural while gather and processing (G&P) MLPs deal in extracted natural gas liquids (NGLs). G&P MLPs benefit from rising oil prices and low natural gas prices.
  • Around 80% of distributions received from MLPs will be tax deferred until the asset is sold. MLPs are also equities, which means there is an upside in the price. Additionally, MLP distributions may change. Blum forecasts a 5% medium distribution growth for the MLP sector over the next couple of years.
  • MLPs are slightly sensitive to interest rate changes – a spike in interest rates will cause MLPs to underperform, so watch for any hints of Federal Reserve action on that front. MLPs are also correlated to commodity prices, with a higher correlation toward rising crude oil – certainly an advantageous situation these days.
  • Short-term bursts won’t affect MLPs too much because they operate based on volume of oil or natural gas shipped, which provide investors with predictable and stable cash flows, reports Jim Fink for Investing Daily.
  • MLPs pay taxes at the partner, or unitholder, level and most of their income flow to their partners in the business, says Christine Benz for Morningstar. By gaining this tax status, MLPs must provide 90% of their income from “qualified sources,” or producing, processing, and transporting energy.
  • Since MLP payouts aren’t dividends, investors report income on a K-1 form, as you would with futures-based ETFs.
Now, let’s get into a few of the ETFs and exchange traded notes (ETNs):
  • Alerian MLP ETF  (NYSEArca: AMLP): AMLP launched last September, and it’s the first MLP ETF. Until this fund came along, MLP access could only be had in ETNs. It delivers a nice yield (currently close to 6%), though its performance has been flat since launch. This fund is diversified across three primary MLPs: petroleum transportation, natural gas pipelines and gathering and processing.
  • Credit Suisse Cushing 30 MLP Index (NYSEArca: MLPN): MLPN owns 30 companies involved in the energy infrastructure market. Each holding in the fund starts off with a 3.33% weighting after rebalancing quarterly, making it a more equally-weighted fund instead of the more common route of cap-weighting.
  • UBS E-TRACS Alerian Natural Gas MLP ETN (NYSEArca: MLPG): MLPG also appeared on the market in March 2010. It has a current yield of 6.23%. Its top 10 components range between 9.7% of the total portfolio (in the case of Enterprise Products Partners) down to 4.4% (in the case of MarkWest Energy Partners).
  • JPMorgan Alerian MLP Index ETN (NYSEArca: AMJ): AMJ has a current yield of 5.04%. It’s a tad more concentrated than other MLP funds, however; the top two constituents account for more than 25% of the fund. If concentration is a concern for you, then you might be better off with an equally-weighted fund, or one that simply has its holdings spread out a little more.
Disclosure I am Long AMJ shares. 

Are ETNs Finally Coming Of Age?

The success of a number of exchange-traded notes this year, including two that canvass the market of VIX volatility futures and others offering investors exposure to master limited partnerships, is raising the question of whether ETNs are about to truly take off and become part of every investor’s portfolio.

ETNs, unlike ETFs, offer investors direct exposure to an underlying index, minus expenses. They don’t own underlying baskets of securities like ETFs do, which not only eliminates tracking error but also gives ETNs access to parts of the investment universe that are hard to cover.

The catch -- and it’s been a big one since the market crash of 2008, 2009 -- is that ETNs are unsecured credit obligations backed only by the faith and good credit of their issuers. If an issuer goes under, investors essentially forfeit their entire investment. That chance seemed very remote when ETNs first launched in 2006, and perhaps it’s fading today. Some issuers say investors are getting over fears and are now curious about ETN attributes, including tax advantages.

“I am very confident that we’re going through what I’m calling ‘The Big Thaw’ when it comes to exchange-traded notes, and I think it started with the VIX products that iPath brought,” Bryon Lake, senior product strategy manager at Wheaton, Ill.-based Invesco PowerShares, said in a telephone interview. “We’re getting more questions and more feedback from investors that are looking for and comfortable with the exchange-traded note.”

ETNs represent about $14.5 billion out of the $1 trillion invested in exchange-traded vehicles, according to data compiled by IndexUniverse.com. And, inflows are building momentum:$1.21 billion in 2008; $4.18 billion in 2009 and almost $6 billion in 2010. Moreover, while ETN assets are less than 1.5 percent of total assets in exchange-traded products, the number of ETNs on the market is 131, or almost 12 percent of the 1,101 ETPs now listed in the U.S.

"It's clear that 2010 was the year of the ETN," said Keith Styrcula, chairman and founder of the Structured Products Association, a New York-based trade group with its finger on the pulse of developments in the world of ETNs. "With the proliferation of new issues and new issuers, the ETN came into its own as a liquid, tax-efficient investment vehicle," Styrcula added.

Top Gainers ($, Millions) 2010's Most Popular ETNs as of Dec. 29



Ticker Name Issuer Flows AUM ($, M) Turnover
VXX iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN Barclays Capital 2,591.07 1,692.04 119,135.19
AMJ JPMorgan Alerian MLP ETN JPMorgan Chase 1,229.85 2,255.00 6,148.97
VXZ iPath S&P 500 VIX Mid-Term Futures ETN Barclays Capital 700.23 695.89 7,977.51
DJP iPath Dow Jones-UBS Commodity Total Return ETN Barclays Capital 322.65 2,822.92 3,995.61
MLPI UBS E-TRACS Alerian MLP Infrastructure ETN UBS 180.51 194.27 243.62
RJI ELEMENTS Rogers International Commodity - Total Return ETN ELEMENTS 141.84 662.92 872.68
MLPN Credit Suisse Cushing 30 MLP Credit Suisse 94.13 121.30 377.98
RJA ELEMENTS Rogers International Commodity - Agriculture Total Return ETN ELEMENTS 90.57 517.06 890.05
UCI UBS E-TRACS CMCI Total Return ETN UBS 81.81 129.99 54.94
JJG iPath Dow Jones UBS Grains Sub Total Return ETN Barclays Capital 80.59 188.89 973.92

VIX, MLPs, Commodities and Beyond

Much of the recent growth in ETN assets has centered on a few products, notably the iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN (NYSEArca:VXX - News) and the iPath S&P 500 VIX Mid-Term Futures ETN (NYSEArca:VXZ - News). The two products now have $1.69 billion and $696 million in assets, respectively. The notes are designed to provide proxy exposure to the CBOE Volatility Index, or VIX, by reflecting the returns of short- and intermediate-term futures on the VIX index. Investors have been attracted to them as a potential hedge against unexpected market turbulence.
“ETNs allow you to track the more esoteric asset classes that would be tougher to do with an ETF, like the VIX, said Rick Romey, president of of ETF Portfolio Solutions, a Kansas-based Registered Investment Advisor. Romey added that his firm has not yet embraced ETNs, in part because of credit-related concerns.

The other big relative newcomer is the JPMorgan Alerian MLP Index ETN (NYSEArca:AMJ - News), a first-to-market exchange-traded note launched originally by Bear Stearns. After treading water for a few years, AMJ has caught on, pulling in more than $1 billion in new cash flow in the past year. It now has $2.26 billion in assets. Investors are attracted to AMJ for its yield, currently around 5 percent. ETNs are a slick vehicle for providing exposure to MLPs, which are nearly impossible to package into a tax-efficient mutual fund or ETF structure.

The third leg of ETN assets is in commodities, an area that includes the oldest and biggest ETN of all, the $2.82 billion iPath Dow Jones-UBS Commodity Total Return ETN (NYSEArca:DJP - News). DJP launched in 2006.

iPath has a broad family of futures-based commodity-related ETNs, which the company says gives investors the ability to play the emerging markets-related commodities boom of the past 10 years in a variety of ways.

“At different times, different commodities become interesting to people,” Tim Edwards, a New York-based iPath product development vice president, told IndexUniverse.com. “Right now, copper is one of them.”

The iPath Dow Jones-UBS Copper Sub Total Return ETN (NYSEArca:JJC - News) has returned about 25 percent this year and 43 percent in the past six months; it is currently the only ETP providing exposure specifically to copper. Two ETFs, the First Trust ISE Global Copper Index Fund (NYSEArca: CU) and the Global X Copper Miners ETF (NYSEArca:COPX - News) own companies that mine copper, though the companies held by the ETFs aren't necessarily exclusively focused on the mining of copper.

The iPath family of ETN also includes securities that allow investors to get exposure to currencies and to position their portfolios for changing interest rates.

Different Tax Treatment

Invesco PowerShares has built on the success of its commodities ETF franchise (including the $5 billion PowerShares DB Commodity Tracking ETF (NYSEArca:DBC - News)) and now offers investors the option of gaining similar exposure in an ETN wrapper. DBC’s ETN counterpart, the PowerShares DB Commodity Long ETN (NYSEArca:DPU - News), had gathered $6.7 million as of Dec. 29.

Apart from the broad-based DPU, the company has replicated ETF strategies using ETNs in four other commodity markets:oil, base metals, agriculture and gold. PowerShares has extended the market on the ETN side with short ETNs and ETNs offering double-exposure long and short.

“The ETN structure provides us some flexibility in order to access markets that may be more difficult to access through the ETF vehicle,” Bryon Lake, the PowerShares executive said. “For example, our double-long and double-short gold ETNs -- (NYSEArca:DGP - News) and (NYSEArca:DZZ - News) -- have seen significant uptick in activity and assets due to all the attention gold has been getting for the last year or so,” Lake said.

There are also potential tax advantages to owning ETNs, which, for commodity ETNs under prevailing IRS interpretations, are taxed like zero-coupon bonds. That means investors don’t owe tax on the note until they sell, the note gets called (if it’s callable), or the note matures. Commodity ETF investors have their positions marked-to-market each year, creating an annual tax bill. ETN investors also have to fill out 1099 tax forms, as opposed to the K1 forms reserved for investors in futures. That’s true even for ETN investors with futures-based holdings.

“We hear from some investors that they would prefer to not get K1s,” said Lake. “And they can generally get the same exposure through ETN vehicles that may offer them a different tax treatment.”

Lingering Doubts

Currently, the biggest issuers of ETNs are firms that thrived during the near-collapse of the financial system in September 2008. Indeed, companies such as iPath ETN issuer Barclays; J.P. Morgan, the company behind the MLP exchange-traded note “AMJ;” and Deutsche Bank, the sponsor of the ETNs marketed by PowerShares, all took advantage of the turmoil their rivals barely survived.
“The market crash got rid of a lot of players in the marketplace. So those who were left standing like Barclays who had the creditworthiness, could then grab a bigger market share,” said Richard Keary, president of Global ETF Advisors LLC, a New York-based firm that helps companies bring exchange-traded products to market.

Recently, however, that has changed. Citigroup recently launched the volatility-related C-Tracks Exchange-Traded Notes Based on the Performance of the Citi Volatility Index (NYSEArca:CVOL - News). The note has attracted $13.8 million in assets since its rollout in mid-November. A slew of other firms are also jumping into the ETN arena, among them Credit Suisse, UBS, the Royal Bank of Scotland as well as a firm called VelocityShares that was formed in part by an executive who helped launch iPath's ETNs
What could that mean? Are investors so complacent that firms, such as CitiGroup or RBS, formerly on life-support can now issue debt products and attract attention? Or have Citi and RBS turned the corner and now is seen as trustworthy? Or, mostly likely, do investors see these as trading products designed for one- or two-day moves, and not as long-haul investments where the credit risk most matters.

Maybe that’s the secret of the ETN rebirth:the notes have focused on providing trading tools rather than long-term investments, reducing the likelihood that investors will be caught in a failed situation.
The uncertainty brings the discussion full circle back to the credit risk implicit in any ETN. After all, three ETN backed by Lehman Brothers closed in September 2008 after the firm declared bankruptcy, and any investor who held to the bitter end lost out.

“I know it’s a long shot,” said Rick Romey, the Kansas-based financial advisor. “The odds of a company going out of business and the ETN holders being left holding the bag is very small probability. But in the last couple of years, we’ve seen a lot of long shots come to fruition and hurt a lot of people.”

Time will tell.

 Disclosure I am long AMJ approx 2 weeks ago.