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Inside Commodities: China And The Dollar
December 12, 2011
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Between China’s growing appetite for everything from oil to copper to corn, and with developed countries embracing easy-money policies that are weakening their currencies, investing in commodities looms largely as an inflation hedge in the uneven recovery since the market crash of 2008. That was the takeaway from IndexUniverse’s 4th Annual “Inside Commodities” conference, held on Dec. 8 at the New York Stock Exchange. To be sure, there were some in attendance who didn’t think commodities should be considered an asset class, but they were clearly in the minority. After all, the decade-long boom in commodities that has fueled a 600 percent rise in gold and a more than sixfold increase in crude oil has also given rise to dozens of commodity ETFs. Growing numbers of investors are embracing these ETFs as inflation hedges and as a way to diversify investment portfolios with assets not correlated with bread-and-butter investments such as equities. Among the more popular ETFs are the $5.5 billion futures-based PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund (NYSEArca: DBC) and the $71 billion physical gold fund, SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEArca: GLD). In all, more than $115 billion is now invested in ETFs, or 10.7 percent of all U.S. ETF assets, according to data compiled by IndexUniverse. Of course, given all the uncertainty in the global economy these days, it’s hardly assured that the rally will continue, particular for certain agricultural economies such as corn. But even if the world heads back into recession, few attending the conference were prepared to say that the rise of China and emerging markets will somehow stop and reverse. Tread, but tread lightly, panelists seemed to be arguing. “We cannot be too dogmatic,” Marc Faber, editor and publisher of The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report” said in a keynote address at the conference. “I am also interested in commodities in the long run, but there will be times when equities are better than commodities and there will be times when you have to move back into commodities.” Faber also moderated a panel on inflation. Complicating matters is the fact that commodities don’t march in tandem. Faber rattled off year-to-date statistics that show how difficult it is to generalize about commodities. He noted although the U.S. stock market, through all its volatility in the past year, has basically been flat, commodities have been a mixed bag. Examples he laid out included:
The Case For Commodities ETFs The good news for investors in commodities is that whether it’s over the past 10 years or the past 45 years, commodities have returns equivalent to equities. Also, their volatility is consistent with equities, according to Jeff Gaspar, a commodities and fixed-income portfolio strategist at Commonfund Asset Management. Moreover, over most periods, commodities have low correlations with both equities and fixed income, partly because their prices are driven either by supply shocks or demand shocks, Gaspar said. Broadly, it all adds up to commodities being a great inflation hedge, and ETFs have emerged in the past decade as tools that give investors a liquid investment vehicle in a pocket of the investment universe that has historically lacked liquidity. “Gold is the prettiest of the ugly dogs in a crisis,” Gaspar said during the inflation panel. “You are basically talking about preservation of wealth, the storage of value." He added that energy is also a good inflation hedge and that industrial metals, which have benefited from Chinese demand, also do well in a rising economy.
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Looking Beyond VWO And EEM
Broad-based, cap-weighted ETFs were the way to play emerging markets over the past decade. But it’s time for investors to become more strategic and look beyond VWO and EEM.Why Class Matters More Than Ever
Equity indices are based on common shares. But there's little equitable about the way an increasing number of companies treat shareholders.-
May 22, 2012
Best/Worst Daily ETF Returns: Energy Shines CRUD was the best-performing ETF on Monday, May 21, boosted by policymakers’ search for ways to support the global economy. -
May 21, 2012
Best/Worst Daily ETF Returns: GAZ Falls 10% iPath's GAZ dropped 10 percent on Friday, May 18, on the same day Barclays issued a warning on the unusually high premium on the ETN. -
May 16, 2012
Best/Worst Daily ETF Returns: GLDX Falls 8.27% GLDX and other precious metals ETFs were among the worst-performing ETFs on Tuesday, May 15, as anxiety mounted over Greece's future in the eurozone. -
May 15, 2012
Ric Edelman: Mutual Fund Era End In Sight The popularity of ETFs will soon go parabolic, and that will spell the end of the mutual fund industry as we know it, the top-rated advisor says. -
May 15, 2012
Best/Worst Daily ETF Returns: SLVP Falls 7.72% SLPV and GREK were the worst-performing ETFs on Monday, May 14, as investor nervousness about the eurozone grows.
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ETF Fund Flows: GLD Drops $891 Million
May 23, 2012 4:00 am -
iShares Plans LatAm Bond ETF
May 21, 2012 10:17 am -
First Trust Plans Broad Futures ETF
May 21, 2012 8:54 am -
Barclays To Sell Stake in BlackRock
May 21, 2012 5:15 am -
Direxion Changes Strategy On 5 ETFs
May 17, 2012 2:01 pm
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JP Morgan & ETN Credit Risk
Paul & Ugo discuss the implications of J.P. Morgan's $2 billion loss, the European debt crisis and what it means for ETN investors.
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