The market path for stocks in the near term is by no means
certain. The policy course after the election is still a coin flip
while issues over the ‘Fiscal Cliff’ could send equities in any
number of directions.
Given this reality, many are uncertain as to how to position
their portfolios in the short-term. Perhaps, market neutral
approach could be the way to play this situation, at least during
the shaky market climate (read Three Defensive ETFs for a Bear
Market).
After all, this approach could take advantage of the range-bound
market, putting cash to work in the top segments while going short
in others. Meanwhile, since it is market neutral, the exposure is
both 100% long and 100% short, suggesting that overall stock trends
won’t be much of an issue, at least as they hit the broad equity
markets.
Luckily for investors, there is a group of funds that can offer
a relatively uncorrelated level of exposure while still targeting
U.S. equity markets. This group comes from upstart ETF issuer
QuantShares, a small firm that has a lineup of market neutral ETFs
(read Looking for Safety? Try These Money Market ETFs).
While most of the funds haven’t seen a great deal of inflows in
their roughly one year on the market, many could be great picks for
investors seeking a new way to target equities in a long/short
combination.
However, we should note that the products all have expense
ratios that are far higher than the ETF average, coming in at 99
basis points a year, while bid ask spreads could be high thanks to
low trading volumes.
Still, these products are among the most unique funds on the
market today and can provide investors with unparalleled neutral
market exposure, which could be very important for those who are
seeking a new way to tackle the market in this cloud of
uncertainty.
For these investors, we have highlighted three of our favorites
from their seven fund lineup which could make for interesting picks
during this uncertain market environment:
QuantShares U.S. Market Neutral Value Fund
(CHEP)
CEHP could be an interesting choice in today’s muddle through
environment because we believe high flying growth stocks with high
PEs may have trouble during a low growth economy. This trend could
especially be true for companies that are having trouble meeting
earnings estimates as these firms have been harshly punished in
this environment which is devoid of other market moving events (see
Two ETFs for the Muddle Through Economy).
A market neutral approach that cycles away from these high
flyers and towards more stable stocks can easily be found in ETF
form with CHEP, and could be an interesting pick for many investors
in this climate. The ETF tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Thematic Market
Neutral Value Index which looks to take long positions in the most
undervalued, and go short in the most overvalued stocks.
The process is done by investing in securities that have
below-average valuation ratios such as earnings to price, book to
price, and cash flow from operation to price ratios. Then, the firm
shorts securities that have the highest weightings, making sure to
be equal weighted, dollar neutral and sector neutral at the same
time as well.
Unfortunately, the intense methodology does result in some added
costs as the product charges a net expense ratio of 99 basis points
a year. Meanwhile, the strategy hasn’t caught on yet as just under
$10 million is in the product, suggesting bid ask spreads may be
rather wide for this fund.
However, these downsides shouldn’t discourage many investors, as
the product shines in terms of its low standard deviation over the
past six months which has come in below 12%.
QuantShares US Market Neutral Anti-Beta Fund
(BTAL)
Another way to play this uncertain market with a different type
of market neutral approach is with QuantShares’ BTAL. This fund
takes the neutral strategy but applies it to the idea of beta
instead, looking for stocks that move less than the overall
market.
In this technique, the fund will use an equal weighted, dollar
neutral and sector neutral approach to go long in low beta stocks.
Meanwhile, the fund will also short high beta stocks, hoping to
capture the spread return from these two segments (also see Three
Low Beta ETFs for the Uncertain Market).
Unsurprisingly, this strategy tends to outperform when markets
are slumping, or when staple-type stocks are outperforming their
more discretionary peers. However, the opposite is also true;
when markets are flying high BTAL can be a chronic
underperformer.
Much like its counterparts, the strategy hasn’t really caught on
with investors as the fund has just $26 million in AUM. However,
the standard deviation is quite low at 16.5% suggesting it could be
a relatively low volatility way to play the markets.
QuantShares US Market Neutral Momentum Fund
(MOM)
One of the top performers in the market neutral segment, that
many investors have overlooked, is undoubtedly MOM. The fund has
been an all-star this year, adding about 13.6% in the year-to-date
period, although investors should note it has been a bit more
volatile as of late (read Four Easy Ways to Play Beta and
Volatility with ETFs).
This fund’s focus is on momentum, seeking to deliver the spread
return between going long in securities that have had above-average
returns and shorting those that have fallen by the wayside and have
produced below-average returns.
MOM looks at returns over the first twelve of the last thirteen
months, taking into account total returns (price performance and
dividend returns) and selects 200 stocks on both the long and short
side of the equation.
This strategy looks to hold up rather nicely when stocks
continue to move in their defined trends. Luckily for investors,
this has definitely been the case as of late, as we have seen the
same sectors leading and the same ones lagging for much of the
year.
Surprisingly given the solid performance and the intriguing
strategy, many investors have shied away from MOM. The fund has
just $5 million in AUM and does volume below 4,000 shares a day,
suggesting wide bid ask spreads.
While this will probably add to the total trading costs, the
fund remains an excellent choice for those looking to tap into a
market neutral strategy that focuses in on the recent winners.
This momentum focus, while potentially more volatile when
markets swing, could be an outperforming one, making MOM a decent
choice for investors who are looking to move beyond the potentially
low volatility natures of BTAL and CHEP during this uncertain
market environment.
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QS-US MN AN-BET (BTAL): ETF Research Reports
QS-US MN VALUE (CHEP): ETF Research Reports
QS-US MN MOMNTM (MOM): ETF Research Reports
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