Sections
Citi Report: ETFs Fall 9.3% In September
October 10, 2008 6:54 am
|
Page 1 of 2
Amid the dire markets conditions in September, the average exchange-traded fund was down 9.3% for the month, according to the latest monthly ETF research report from CitiGroup Global Markets. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 8.91% for the month, by comparison, the review found. The No. 1 top-performing ETF in September was, no surprise, a ProShares inverse ETF, the UltraShort Basic Materials (AMEX: SMN). It was up 51.99% for the month. Citi also noted in the monthly report a new, but not unexpected, trend in ETF issuance: For September, new launches lurched to a halt. In fact, there were net liquidations in the ETF industry. The total number of ETF closings in 2008—the first year since 2006 in which an ETF was liquidated—now stands at more than 40 (see story here). Among the major broad-based equity ETFs, performance was down 10.35% in September. Even the best-performing equity ETF, the WisdomTree Total Earnings Fund (AMEX: EXT), was down 2.59%.
Source: Bloomberg and Citi Investment Research
The SPA MarketGrader 40 ETF (AMEX: SFV) was the biggest dog among broad-based ETFs, down 18.76%. SPA had three of the five worst-performing broad-based ETFs for the month:
Source: Bloomberg and Citi Investment Research
Among international ETFs, the average portfolio was down 13.74% for September, and down 29.63% for the year-to-date period. The best and worst performers among international ETFs were both sector-specific. The best among international ETFs was SPDR S&P International Health Care Sector ETF (AMEX: IRY), down 4.59%:
Source: Bloomberg and Citi Investment Research
The worst-performing international ETF was targeted to the Real Estate sector, but country funds also took some major hits in September:
Source: Bloomberg and Citi Investment Research
In terms of specific market cap asset classes, micro-cap ETFs were the top-performing segment:
Source: Bloomberg and Citi Investment Research
WisdomTree again led the way among market-cap ETFs. Its SmallCap Dividend Fund (NYSEArca: DES) was the only fund in the space to generate a positive return, up 1.32% for the month. In terms of style, value ETFs outperformed growth ETFs for the third consecutive month, the Citi research showed:
Source: Bloomberg and Citi Investment Research |
Short-Seller’s Guide To GLD
Gold, despite its recent rebound, has gotten clobbered over the past three months.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.
|
|
|
|
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.
See All
Previous Page


