Dividend ETFs have been one of the hot spots in the ETF world,
as yield-starved investors continue to favor ETFs that provide not
only steady source of income but also potential for capital
appreciation.
As of now, there are more than 50 dividend ETFs available to
investors. These ETFs vary in focus and investors can choose the
funds that suit their risk-return preferences. (Read: 4 Excellent
Dividend ETFs for Income and Stability)
However, investors have largely overlooked that companies also
return cash to investors by way of share buybacks. Investors should
look past dividends to benefit from this trend that seems to be
gaining steam of late.
US companies are buying back their shares at a record pace this
year. February was a record month for share buyback
authorizations--$117.8 billion, up from $68 billion a year ago and
the highest since 1985.
Many US companies currently have record high cash balances and
record low debt. And, there is a shortage of attractive targets for
acquisition. As such the buyback surge may continue this year.
According to Moody’s, US non-financial companies held $1.45
trillion in cash as of year-end 2012, up 10% from $1.32 trillion as
of the end of 2011.
And, according to WSJ analysis, US banks could return more than
$30 billion to their shareholders over the next 12 months—most of
which will be in the form of buy backs amounting to approximately
$26.4 billion, based on announcements by 14 banks.
Some companies are using ultra-low interest rates to issue cheap
debt and use the money to buy back shares and save on dividend
costs. Among the companies that have issued debt in recent past and
used/plans to use the proceeds to buy back shares are AT&T,
Intel and Home Depot.
Repurchase of shares is generally a positive signal about the
health of company and its confidence in the value of its shares.
However, at times it could also mean that the company lacks other
productive avenues to deploy its cash.
Also, at times the repurchases are accompanies by issuance of
new shares to their top executives. (Read: Boost Income and Growth
with MLP ETFs)
Many investors prefer dividends to buybacks as they are simpler
to understand and put money in the pocket. However, buybacks have
their own advantages—they reduce the outstanding share count and
thus increase earnings per share. Further, they are more tax
efficient.
Research by Ford Equity Research, (creator of NASDAQ buyback
index methodology), shows that companies that reduced their shares
by at least 5% between 1975 and 2003, outperformed S&P 500
index in 24 out of 28 years.
The research further shows that between 2006 and 2011, companies
buying back shares produced excess returns with lower volatility.
(Read: Buy these ETFs for higher returns and lower risk)
Investors have a choice of a couple ETFs that focus on this
niche strategy.
PowerShares Buyback Achievers Portfolio
(PKW)
PKW tracks the NASDAQ US Buyback Achievers Index, which is
comprised of companies that have repurchased 5% or more of their
common stock in the trailing 12 months. The index is modified
market capitalization weighted and is rebalanced each quarter such
that the maximum weight of any index security does not exceed
5%.
The ETF has been outperforming the broader markets over the last
five years—it has returned 60.26% versus 26.54% for the S&P 500
ETF (SPY). The product continues to shine this year too, with
14.43% return compared with 9.69% for SPY.
Top five holdings are Amgen (5.7%), News Corp (4.8%), and
ConocoPhillips (4.5%). In terms of sector exposure, Consumer
Discretionary sector (36%) accounts for a major part of the
holdings, with Financials (19%) and IT (15%) rounding out the top
three
The fund charges an expense ratio of 71 basis points
currently.
TrimTabs Float Shrink ETF (TTFS)
TTFS is the actively managed product within the space. It is
based on Trim Tabs research on stock prices being a function of
supply and demand rather than value.
According to ETF’s fact sheet, the portfolio manager screens
approximately 3,000 stocks on a daily basis and invests equally in
100 highest ranked stocks that have, in addition to shrinking their
float, increased their free cash flow and not increased their
leverage ratio.
From a sector perspective, IT takes the top spot at 28%,
followed by Consumer Discretionary (19%) and Healthcare (16%).
The fund has returned 13.48% year-to-date. However, the
cost of the fund is somewhat high at 0.99% a year while volume is
also quite low, meaning that investors are likely to see a wide bid
ask spread.
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PWRSH-BYBK ACHV (PKW): ETF Research Reports
SPDR-SP 500 TR (SPY): ETF Research Reports
TRIMTB-FLT SHRK (TTFS): ETF Research Reports
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