Timber ETFs To Benefit From Housing Recovery - ETF News And Commentary
January 20 2012 - 1:54AM
Zacks
Recent housing data
suggests that 2012 may be the year of turnaround in the housing
markets. While a healthy recovery for the markets still seems
far away, the prices are now bottoming out. As a result of
improving sentiment, the home construction companies and the
homebuilder ETFs have been on the run in the past few weeks.
Another industry that looks very attractive right now is the timber
industry. Any pickup in the housing construction and
remodeling activities will result in increased demand for wood.
Further, most timber companies deferred their harvest when
the demand for wood was low while the assets (trees) continued to
grow and so when the housing market returns, the cash flows from
harvest operations will increase in a big way. (Also read Steel
ETFs Head-To-Head)
Another reason to
invest in timber is its low or negative correlation with
traditional asset classes. Including this asset class in your
portfolio provides excellent portfolio diversification resulting in
low volatility of portfolio returns. (Read Create a Diversified
Portfolio Using ETFs).
Timber investments also
serve as a partial hedge against inflation. While direct investment
in timberlands and private equity investment through TIMOs require
initial high initial investments; you can choose from the many
other investment vehicles which provide exposure to timber, such as
timber REITs and timber ETFs. We may however add that neither the
timber REITs nor the timber ETFs are similar to owning timberlands.
In addition to harvest operations, most timber REITs derive a
substantial portion of their earnings from manufacturing
operations. Similarly timber ETFs hold equities in firms
involved with managing timberlands, but they also have significant
exposure to other sectors like manufacturing and
financials.
The Guggenheim Timber
ETF (CUT)
CUT seeks investment
results that correspond to the performance (net of fees and
expenses), of the Beacon Global Timber Index, which tracks the
performance of common stocks of global timber companies. The ETF
invests in firms that own or lease forest lands and harvest the
timber for sale of wood-based products, including lumber, pulp,
paper and packaging.
ETF’s expense ratio
currently is 0.70% (with operating expenses capped at 0.65% through
12/31/2013). In terms of geographical weighting, US companies
constitute 39.61% of the ETF and on the second place is Japan with
18.16% weighting. Top sector is materials (75.93%), followed by
financials (19.28%). Started in November 2007, the fund currently
manages assets worth $110.93 million.
iShares S&P Global
Timber & Forestry Index Fund (WOOD)
WOOD tracks the
performance (before fees and expenses), of the S&P Global
Timber & Forestry Index which is comprised of approximately 25
of the largest publicly-traded companies engaged in the ownership,
management or upstream supply chain of forests and
timberlands.
With an expense ratio
of 0.48%, this ETF is cheaper than CUT. It is more exposed to
domestic companies, with 53.69% of the weighting assigned to US.
Launched in June 2008, the fund currently owns assets worth $149.85
million.
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