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Signal Update
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Current
Signal Performance as of
Signal
Type |
Trade
Date |
Index |
Return
since issued |
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Nasdaq 100 |
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Russell 2000 |
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S&P 500 |
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Market Update |
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Stocks remained
essentially flat the first two days of the week. After moving
higher Wednesday morning, they then reversed course as interest
rates worries resurfaced, sending the yield on the 10-year note
to 5.15%. Financial stocks were further hit by lingering concerns
over the subprime mortgage market. The major indexes succombed
to the negative mood and finished lower on the day. The markets
were able to bounce back Thursday, helped by a report from the
Philadelphia Federal Reserve showing that manufacturing in the
region reached a 2-year high. A rally in technology stocks provided
added fuel, as several upgrades in the semiconductor sector
propelled the influential SOX index
to a new 13-month high. Stocks were unable to hold onto their
gains, as they fell again Friday. Higher oil prices combined
with ongoing nervousness about interest rates and hedge-fund
trouble related to subprime mortgages to send the market lower.
Please note that Friday's volume was artificially high: it picked
up significantly going into the close and in after hours as
fund managers adjusted their portfolios to account for the annual
Russell 2000 index rebalancing. Trading volume during the regular
session was actually tracking lower than the day before.
The Nasdaq 100, Russell 2000 and S&P 500 respectively lost 1.05%,
1.58% and 1.98% on the week. All 3 indexes remain above both
their 50-day exponential moving average (EMA) and 200-day EMA.
For its part, our World Index Ranking portfolio
outperformed the US averages as it posted a 0.03%
gain this week. The portfolio consists of the 5 top-ranked world
indexes as of May 25, which marked the beginning of the current
4-week holding period. The World Index Ranking
portfolio is being rebalanced today, as the current 4-week holding
period is now over.
Our current Buy
signal remains in effect.

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Trend Timing School |
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ETFs
top 500 billion in assets
Yes, by our count, the total value of assets held in U.S. ETFs
has topped half a trillion dollars, or is not very far from
it! The ETF juggernaut is marching on and the explosion in total
assets is the best testimony to rapid adoption by individual
investors and investment advisors alike. Since the launch of
the first Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) in 1993 - the SPDR S&P
500 ETF (SPY) which also is the largest at some $61B - there
has been a growing swell of products and variety. In fact, the
flow has been accelerating, with more new funds introduced during
the last six months (nearly 170, over 30% of all funds) than
in their first 10 years of existence. Index ETFs, to distinguish
them from their distant cousins the closed-end funds, now number
well over 500 with more coming every week. It has only been
a few months since we did an ETF review, but there has been
so much activity that a refresher is in order.
To illustrate our point, just last week, PowerShares the company
built around the now famous PowerShares QQQ fund (QQQQ), the Nasdaq-100
index fund, launched a series of new ETF products (see complete
Press Release here):
- PIO
- PowerShares Global Water Portfolio
- PBD
- PowerShares Global Clean Energy Portfolio
- PFA
- PowerShares Dynamic Developed International Opportunities
Portfolio
- PUA
- PowerShares Dynamic Asia Pacific Portfolio
- PEH
- PowerShares Dynamic Europe Portfolio
At first
glance the announcement simply adds to the rising tide of
new ETFs. A closer examination reveals the trend for ever
expanding ETF types and categories, and for higher degrees
of specialization. ETF companies like PowerShares now pride
themselves, and attempt to differentiate themselves, with
the sheer number (now at 91) and variety of fund choices they
offer.
ETFs were initially created as proxies for broad stock market
indexes, like the S&P 500, but have become increasingly specialized
and indexes are being invented on the fly to define and sanction
ever shrinking niches. To understand the shifting ETF landscape
it is imperative we first review the various ETF types and
categories:
ETF categories (the dimensions of specialization)
Asset
Class |
Style |
Market
Capitalization |
Geography |
Industry
Sector |
Equity |
Growth |
Large |
Country |
Aerospace
& Defense |
Long |
Value |
Mid |
U.S. |
Biotech |
Short |
Dividend |
Small |
Australia |
Communications |
Leveraged |
|
Micro |
Austria |
Consumer
goods discretionary |
Fixed
Icome |
|
|
Belgium |
Consumer
goods staples |
U.S./Foreign |
|
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Brazil |
Energy |
Government/Corporate |
|
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Canada |
Financial |
Various
maturities |
|
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China |
Gold
miners |
Commodities |
|
|
France |
Healthcare |
Diversified |
|
|
Germany |
Industrial |
Gold |
|
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Hong
Kong |
Internet |
Silver |
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Italy |
Materials |
Currencies |
|
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Japan |
Natural
Resources |
Japanese
Yen |
|
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Malaysia |
Networking |
Euro |
|
|
Mexico |
Oil
Services |
Swedish
Krona |
|
|
Netherlands |
Pharmaceuticals |
British
Pound Sterling |
|
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Singapore |
Real
Estate Builders |
Australian
Dollar |
|
|
South
Africa |
Retail |
Swiss
Franc |
|
|
South
Korea |
Semiconductor |
Canadian
Dollar |
|
|
Spain |
Software |
Mexican
Peso |
|
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Sweden |
Technology |
U.S.
Dollar bull/bear |
|
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Switzerland |
Transportation |
Real
Estate |
|
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Taiwan |
Utilities |
REITS |
|
|
United
Kingdom |
|
| |
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Region |
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| |
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Emerging
Markets |
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| |
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Europe |
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| |
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Latin
America |
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| |
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Pacific |
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Pacific
ex-Japan |
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The
first grouping is by Asset Class. Most investors equate ETFs
with stock market indexes but it turns out that many do not
invest in equities at all. You can buy debt securities with
bond funds, commodities, currencies and even real estate.
Want to bet against the U.S. dollar? Simply buy the PowerShares
DB U.S. Dollar Index Bearish (UDN
)! All of these asset classes are very interesting but fundamentally
unrelated to our Trend Timing which concerns itself exclusively
with broad stock market trends. Just within the equity category
we have plenty of choices, now including the short and leveraged
options pioneered by ProShares (See "What
are ProShares ETFs?" and "What
is an UltraShort ETF").
While we are on the subject, the ProFunds Group announced
earlier this month that their ProShares families of ETFs passed
the $6 billion in assets mark less than a year after its launch.
With now over 50 ProShares ETFs, they also claim to be the
fastest growing family based on asset percentage growth. Although
that growth is impressive, the size is dwarfed by the big
fish in the rapidly expanding ETF pond. According to a recent
Bloomberg
article "Barclays Global is the world's largest ETF manager,
with assets increasing an average 86 percent annually in the
past six years to $363 billion." This represents a 70%+ market
share which might not yet qualify as monopolistic domination,
but when the next few firms are added to the mix, we dangerously
approach oligopoly status for the industry, which usually
spells trouble for the consumer down the road. But we digress,
back to ETF categories.
Style, in stock investing, has to do with the growth or value
orientation of companies. More recently, a new style variation
was added focusing on so-called "high-yield" stocks which
pay high dividends. Market Capitalization helps group companies
by their size, and they are called variously: Large-cap, Mid-cap,
Small-cap or Micro-cap.
In the "old days", when there were only a few funds like SPY
and QQQQ tracking U.S. market indexes, very few people realized
they were investing in single country funds. With the explosion
of ETF varieties the geographic focus is fertile ground. By
definition, geographic funds are diversified from the stand
point that they do not focus on a style, company size or industry
sector, but they are geographically non-diversified. While
most country funds tend to be well correlated, history has
shown that there are large variations in relative strength.
Thanks to the World Index Ranking we can
now follow the broad market trend AND target the strongest
markets.
The last major ETF grouping, which is also exhibiting the
most new fund introductions, is by industry sector, with ever
increasing granularity. The table only lists the main categories
but more are added all the time, including new sub-categories
as well as intersections of sub-categories. We count nearly
80 distinct types. Maybe, when we start developing allergies
and rashes from all this ETF proliferation, will it finally
be a good time to invest in the HealthShares Dermatology &
Wound Care ETF (HRW)! 
Alas for the fund industry, boosting the number and variety
of product is an expansion strategy with rapidly diminishing
returns. We do not believe that the explosion in the number
and type of ETFs can continue. New potential funds face mounting
difficulties in finding the required initial funding. Why
would anyone want to fund the 21st bond ETF?
The main point for us Trend Timers to remember is that we
need to stay focused on broad market ETFs. And keep dreaming
about ways to exploit the specialized ETFs which are poorly
correlated with the broad stock market we track.

|
FAQ of the Week |
 |
Question:
Do the TimingCube and TradeGuru services overlap?
No, the TimingCube
and TradeGuru
services are completely separate and use radically different
models and strategies. TimingCube
implements a purely technical trend following model to invest
in broad U.S. and World market indexes through their ETFs. TradeGuru
on the other hand performs top down selection of U.S. traded
companies based on valuation and leadership fundamentals such
as earnings growth. See the point by point comparison below.
Comparison of TimingCube
and TradeGuru
services
| |
TimingCube |
TradeGuru |
Style
|
Index
investing |
Stock
picking |
Strategy |
Trend
following |
Special
stock opportunities |
Investment
selection |
Purely
technical |
Purely
fundamental |
Market
side |
Long/Short |
Long
only |
Investment
vehicles |
Market
indexes via
ETFs, mutual funds, options |
Individual
stocks, options |
Geography |
U.S./World |
U.S. |
Trading
frequency |
3-5x
per year |
12x
per year |
The two services are in fact complementary and we always recommend
diversification of strategy over putting all your eggs in one
basket. And in case imaginative subscribers get tempted to outsmart
themselves by applying the TimingCube
long/short signals to the TradeGuru
stock selections, we should stress that mixing them is not recommended
(because it does not work). Note that there are only 8 days
left (through June 30) on TradeGuru's
Special Invitation to TimingCube
subscribers. Make sure to try our risk-free offer and get
a 20% discount off
the regular yearly subscription, or $399.95. Go to http://www.tradeguru.com/special-tc/
for details and to sign up with the discount.
Warm
wishes and until next week.
The TimingCube
Staff
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