Inside The Barclays S&P VEQTOR ETN (VQT) - Top Yielding ETFs
16 Enero 2012 - 3:17AM
Zacks
Although economic data seems to be improving as of late, the
market is still having trouble breaking to the upside thanks to
continued European worries. Threats of a default in some of the
smaller PIIGS nations, as well as rising borrowing costs in many
core members of the common currency bloc, are casting a shadow over
what have been surprisingly good payroll reports and relatively
solid manufacturing data releases over the past few weeks.
Thanks to this uncertainty over the European situation,
volatility could spike in the coming weeks especially if more
nations in the region have trouble servicing, or finding buyers
for, their debt. However, if the region remains stable, the slowly
rising strength in the American economy could help push stocks
higher in spite of these concerns. As a result, it may be ideal for
some prudent investors to stay on their toes and keep a close eye
on their positions in this uncertain time. For those unable to do
this, a closer look at an ETN from Barclays could offer quality
exposure that can dynamically allocate between three separate asset
classes; equities, implied volatility, and cash, which may be an
ideal choice in this shaky environment (read Top Three Precious
Metal Mining ETFs).
The fund, the Barclays ETN+ S&P VEQTOR ETN (VQT), looks to
track the S&P 500 Dynamic VEQTOR Total Return Index which seeks
to dynamically allocate among the three asset classes outlined
above. Basically, the goal is to keep exposure in equities when
volatility is low, push into VIX-related investments when
volatility is high, and then completely move into cash when neither
side of this trade is working. While it should be noted that the
fund is kind of expensive at 0.95% a year, the ETN structure allows
for sharp shifts in allocations among the components without
incurring transaction fees, suggesting that total costs could be
less with this approach as opposed to investors doing it on their
own. Furthermore, the fund also uses a rule-based methodology which
looks to take the guesswork out of the various allocations that are
involved (read ETFs vs. ETNs: What’s The Difference?).
VEQTOR ETN Methodology
In order to determine the weightings between the three
components, the ETN undergoes a multi-step process. First, realized
volatility is classified into one of five bands; less than 10%,
10%-20%, 20%-35%, 35%-45%, and greater than 45% in order to
ascertain the current fear level in the market. Then, both the five
day and 20 day moving averages of the VIX index are observed in
order to establish a trend line for implied volatility. If, for ten
consecutive business days, the five day average is less than the 20
day average, it is considered a downward trend while if the five
day average exceeds the 20 day it is considered to be in an uptrend
(implied volatility isn’t considered to be in a trend if it doesn’t
fall into either of the categories listed above). Based on these
metrics, the components are divided up as follows (courtesy of a
PDF on the website of Barclays Capital):
Lastly, if the five day performance falls below 2.0% the index
will shift entirely into cash in order to protect against truly
shaky market environments in which neither volatility nor stocks
seem like a good option (see BDCL: Yield King Of Leveraged
ETNs).
Performance
The real question is obviously if this strategy can pay off and
more importantly, if it is worth the outsized expense ratio over an
ETF that just tracks the S&P 500. After all, the fund does
intend to be allocated towards the S&P 500 for a large part of
the time suggesting that during these periods, the expense on the
VQT is more than 10 times that of broad market tracking ETFs such
as SPY or IVV. Luckily for this ETN, the fund has broadly
outperformed SPY over the last twelve month period. However,
it should be noted that VQT has underperformed SPY by a wide margin
over the past three months and that the vast majority of the
outperformance for VQT came in early August of 2011. In this time
period, roughly from July 20th to August
22nd, VQT gained close to 8.7% while SPY slumped by
nearly 15.1%, a huge difference in this tiny time-frame.
The above example of last summer shows that VQT certainly has
great potential to outperform, but only when markets are extremely
shaky and volatility is broadly rising. In these times, the shift
towards VIX-focused assets can greatly help this ETN to outgain its
less-dynamic rivals and this outperformance makes the fund a star
performer for long periods afterwards. However, when markets are
flat or rising, or when we remain in periods of low volatility,
VQT, thanks to its high expense ratio and small allocations to VIX
instruments no matter what, simply cannot compete with broad based
products that are ultra cheap (see Ten Best New ETFs Of 2011).
So the real dilemma for investors has to be what their
perceptions of volatility are in the near term. For those that
expect low levels of volatility, this is probably not a good fund
to be in as it seems very likely to underperform. Yet, for those
looking for another event like we saw in the fall of 2008 or the
late summer of 2011, VQT looks to be a quality product that could
provide a solid hedge that can help to offset any broad market
losses if fear returns to the marketplace.
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