Beat Hedge Funds with These ETFs - ETF News And Commentary
20 Settembre 2013 - 4:09PM
Zacks
The Federal Reserve has
decided to keep its $85 billion bond buying program in place and
the stock market which was in the consolidation mode for the last
few weeks, has resumed its upward march. With the punch bowl still
on the table, the stock market party may go on some time.
(Read: 3 ETF Winner from the No Taper Shocker)
As a result of stock market optimism, investors have continued to
pour a lot of money in US equity funds this year, but most of the
money has gone to top few ETFs. The largest ETF SPDR S&P 500
ETF (SPY) now has a whopping $148.2 billion in AUM. On the other
hand, many smaller ETFs, particularly the ones that focus on
certain ‘niche’ strategies continue to remain out of limelight.
Some of these ‘niche’ ETFs provide access to certain obscure
corners of the investment world that are otherwise not accessible
to ordinary investors. One such area is hedge fund investing.
The hedge fund industry with about $2.4 trillion in assets is
accessible only to very wealthy investors as these funds generally
require minimum investments of $250,000 and also have limits on
cash withdrawals. (Read: 3 Ultra-Cheap ETFs for Value
Investors)
Hedge fund managers use very different investment strategies but
they do not always hedge their exposures as the name would suggest.
In fact many of them have high leverage and invest in riskier
assets, though many may have many counterbalancing trades.
Further, hedge fund investing is expensive as they usually charge
an annual asset management fee of 2% and a performance fee of 20%
of fund’s profits (2 and 2 fees). Also, their performance may not
justify the steep fees that they charge.
Hedge Fund Research Inc.'s HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index,
which tracks the broad hedge-fund industry, gained 3.8% this year
through August (net of fees), while the S&P 500 index gained
16.2% with dividends.
How to invest like Hedge Funds
Most investors would like to invest like George Soros, Carl Ichan
and John Paulson and there are some ETFs that provide access to
investing secrets of these stalwarts, without charging the hefty
fees that their funds charge. (Read: 3 Unknown ETFs that continue
to crush SPY)
All hedge funds with more than $100 million in U.S. equity
investments are required to publish their holdings in a
publicly available document called the 13 F. Some ETFs look
for best investment ideas from these holdings and replicate them.
While not all of them of have been successful, we have highlighted
two ETFs that have handily beaten the broader hedge fund industry
as well as the stock market.
Global X Top Guru Holdings Index ETF (GURU)
GURU uses a proprietary methodology to compile the best ideas from
a select pool of hedge funds where the 13F information is most
valuable. They exclude hedge funds with high turnover.
The fund aims to generate alpha vs. benchmark equity indexes and
rebalances quarterly
The product launched in June 2012, has attracted $147.5 million in
assets so far. It charges 75 basis points in expenses per
year. Pandora, Cumulus Media and US Airways are the top holdings at
present.
Daily average trading volume is about 50,000 shares per day.
AlphaClone Alternative Alpha ETF (ALFA)
This ETF is based on the AlphaClone Hedge Fund Long/Short Index.
The index uses AlphaClone’s proprietary “Clone Score” methodology
to aggregate the hedge funds ideas on a quarterly basis. Clone
scores, which are calculated bi-annually, are based on hedge funds
managers’ performance. Index constituents are equally
weighted but can have overlap bias.
The index also has a hedge mechanism built in, which is triggered
on or off when the S&P
500 index crosses its 200 day moving average at any month end. If
the market goes down, the index goes from long-only to market
hedged (50% short exposure to S&P 500).
Launched in May last year, this product has been able to garner
only $17.5 million in assets so far. It has 78 holdings currently;
Twenty-First Century Fox, American International Group and Valeant
Pharmaceuticals being the top holdings.
ALFA is slightly more expensive than GURU, charging 95 basis points
in expenses. Further due to low trading volume of just about
5,000 shares, trading costs may be higher due to high bid-ask
spread.
The Bottom Line
As can be seen from the chart above, these two ETFs have been
outperforming the broader market over the past few months. Looking
at the one-year performance, GURU and ALFA have returned 37% and
23% respectively compared to about 20% return for SPY.
GURU has obviously has delivered a much better performance at a
lower cost. One possible advantage of investing in ALFA is its
hedging strategy. If the market suddenly turns bearish, ALFA may be
able to provide some protection to the portfolio.
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ALPHACLN-ALT AL (ALFA): ETF Research Reports
GLBL-X TOP GURU (GURU): ETF Research Reports
SPDR-SP 500 TR (SPY): ETF Research Reports
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