VelocityShares Launches Equal Risk Weighted ETF - ETF News And Commentary
August 01 2013 - 10:15AM
Zacks
VelocityShares is best known for its lineup of inverse and
leveraged products which give investors concentrated exposure to a
number of volatile commodities like natural gas, platinum, and
crude oil. The company has started to expand out to ‘regular’
products too though, focusing on hedging and emerging markets for
this new part of its ETF lineup.
The latest addition to this trend looks to focus on the U.S.
market instead, holding large and mid cap stocks, pretty similar to
the S&P 500. However, this new ETF looks to hold stocks in very
different proportions than the popular benchmark, utilizing risk as
the main weighting component instead of market capitalization (also
see Overweight These Equal Weight ETFs in Your Portfolio).
Below, we highlight some of the key details regarding this
product for those who are looking for a different—and potentially
superior—way to target the U.S. market in ETF form:
New VelocityShares ETF in Focus
The new product will trade under the name of the Equal
Risk Weighted Large Cap ETF (ERW), holding about 500
stocks in its basket. The product will charge investors 65 basis
points a year in fees and will look to follow the VelocityShares
Equal Risk Weighted Large Cap Index.
This benchmark seeks to measure a stock’s risk and then weight
the exposure to each stock in the index so that each company
contributes the same level of risk. In this way, lower expected
risk stocks will take up a bigger portion of the VelocityShares
benchmark, at least when compared to the S&P 500 (see 3 ETFs
with Incredible Diversification).
Top components of the index include CME Group, Monster Beverage,
and Spectra Energy, and the three combine to hold roughly 11% of
the assets in the benchmark. This contrasts immensely with the
S&P 500, as that benchmark has Apple, Exxon, and Johnson &
Johnson as its top three, with the trio combining to take up less
than 7.4% of the total.
In terms of sectors, ERW looks to be overweight—compared to
products like SPY—in health care, utilities and consumer sectors.
Meanwhile, the fund will be underweight in segments such as energy,
technology, and financials. Overall the top segment looks to be
health care, with telecom and materials lagging for
allocations.
How does this fit in a portfolio?
This product appears to be an appropriate full market
substitution for investors seeking broad exposure across a number
of sectors. It also looks to be a solid choice for investors who
are tired of cap weighted products, but do not believe in the
merits of other alternative strategies like equal weight or low
volatility (see Time to Invest in Low Volatility ETFs?).
Plus, equal risk weighting, according to Velocity Indices
research, is the only one of the group that takes in to account
correlation in order to determine market weight. This technique
looks to help keep portfolio volatility low while ensuring that no
single security will blow up the portfolio.
On the other hand, the product may not be appropriate for low
cost-focused investors as it is far more expensive than both market
cap weighted funds, and many of the most popular equal-weight ETFs
on the market. Additionally, the low assets and lack of volume may
produce wide bid ask spreads for the product, at least
initially.
ETF Competition
Arguably the biggest competitors to this ETF look to come to us
in the equal weight and low volatility market. The most popular
ETFs in these segments include the Guggenheim S&P Equal
Weight ETF (RSP) and the PowerShares S&P 500
Low Volatility Portfolio (SPLV).
These two both have more than $4 billion in assets under
management and generally do more than one million shares of volume
a day. Plus, they both have at least a few years worth of a head
start in accumulating assets so it may be difficult for a newcomer
to find a niche (read Alternative ETF Weighting Methodologies
101).
However, if you believe the research on the equal risk weighted
technique and its promise to be a superior weighting methodology,
this new product could be the fund for you. It looks to have a more
spread out risk profile, so investors who are worried about a few
securities destroying their return may want to consider this ETF
over some of its more entrenched peers for broad market exposure at
this time.
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Author is long RSP
GUGG-SP5 EQ ETF (RSP): ETF Research Reports
POWERSH-SP5 LVP (SPLV): ETF Research Reports
SPDR-SP 500 TR (SPY): ETF Research Reports
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