A Defensive Stand Against Volatility

A Defensive Stand Against Volatility RAAX VanEck ETFFor the first time since launch, the VanEck Vectors Real Asset Allocation ETF (RAAX) is allocated 100% to cash. Portfolio Manager David Schassler examines the indicators. Read the article A Defensive Stand Against Volatility.

The VanEck Vectors®Real Asset Allocation ETF (RAAX™) uses a data-driven, rules-based process that leverages over 50 indicators (technical, macroeconomic and fundamental, commodity price, and sentiment) to allocate across 12 individual real asset segments in five broad real asset sectors. These objective indicators identify the segments with positive expected returns. Then, using correlation and volatility, an optimization process determines the weight to these segments with the goal of creating a portfolio with maximum diversification while reducing risk.

Summary

The VanEck Real Asset Allocation ETF (RAAX) seeks shelter by allocating 100% to U.S. Treasury bills.

  • Volatility re-emerged in October as strong U.S. economic data stoked fears that the Fed would escalate monetary tightening. Existing turmoil related to China trade tensions, slowing growth in China, and Brexit compounded the situation. This triggered a sell-off in bond prices, which rolled over into equities and real assets.
  • Oil prices peaked in early October, at $76.41 per barrel, due to fears of supply shortages from U.S. sanctions on Iran. However, by month-end, the risk-off environment pushed prices down to $65.31, causing losses of 18% in oil service and unconventional oil and gas equities.
  • The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield abruptly increased from 3.06% to 3.24% which placed downward pressure on interest-sensitive real assets. REITs, global infrastructure, and MLPs were down -2.93%, -3.70%, and -12.05%, respectively.

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The table presents past performance which is no guarantee of future results and which may be lower or higher than current performance. Returns reflect temporary contractual fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements. Had the ETF incurred all expenses and fees, investment returns would have been reduced. Investment returns and ETF share values will fluctuate so that investors’ shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. ETF returns assume that distributions have been reinvested in the Fund at “Net Asset Value” (NAV). NAV is determined at the close of each business day, and represents the dollar value of one share of the fund; it is calculated by taking the total assets of the fund, subtracting total liabilities, and dividing by the total number of shares outstanding. The NAV is not necessarily the same as the ETF’s intraday trading value. VanEck Vectors ETF investors should not expect to buy or sell shares at NAV.

†Returns less than a year are not annualized.

Expenses: Gross 0.81%; Net 0.74%. Expenses are capped contractually at 0.55% through February 1, 2020. Expenses are based on estimated amounts for the current fiscal year. Cap exclude certain expenses, such as interest, acquired fund fees and expenses, and trading expenses.

Performance and Positioning

RAAX provided significant downside protection last month due to its 66% allocation to U.S. Treasury bills. While RAAX declined, it is important to look at the returns of the various real asset sectors for context. Most real asset classes were down significantly in October.

This is an environment of extreme risk in real assets. RAAX responded by increasing its allocation to Treasuries from 66% to 100% this month. This is the first time that the ETF has been this defensive. RAAX is measuring elevated risk across nearly all real asset sectors. The indicators that are flashing red include weak momentum and commodity prices, wide credit spreads, and in certain cases, declining fundamentals and extreme volatility.

Gold was the standout real asset in October. Gold did what it typically does in systemic risk-off events: it went up, this time by about 2%. However, RAAX remains bearish on gold due to weak technical readings and investor sentiment.

A Closer Look at the What, When, and How

RAAX offers a risk-managed approach to real asset investing. It seeks to address key volatility considerations in each step of its process by evaluating: first, what asset classes to invest in; second, when to get defensive by transitioning to cash; and lastly, how much to allocate among asset classes. Decisions are made on a monthly basis using our rules-based, quantitative allocation process with the responsiveness to quickly adapt to changing market conditions.

RAAX only invests in asset classes that the model is bullish on, and the weightings themselves are not an indication of conviction but are instead determined by RAAX’s optimization process that seeks to maximize diversification and minimize volatility.

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Source: VanEck. As of November 2018.

November Positioning

This month, RAAX increased its U.S. Treasury bill allocation from 66% to 100%.

Real Asset Sector and Asset Class Weights

Source: VanEck. As of November 2018.

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Source: VanEck. As of November 2018. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURE

Please note that the information herein represents the opinion of the author, but not necessarily those of VanEck, and these opinions may change at any time and from time to time. Non-VanEck proprietary information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed. Not intended to be a forecast of future events, a guarantee of future results or investment advice. Historical performance is not indicative of future results. Current data may differ from data quoted. Any graphs shown herein are for illustrative purposes only. No part of this material may be reproduced in any form, or referred to in any other publication, without express written permission of VanEck.

 

Real Assets Fueled by Energy

Real Assets Fueled by Energy

The VanEck Vectors Real Asset Allocation ETF (RAAX) uses a data-driven, rules-based process that leverages over 50 indicators (technical, macroeconomic and fundamental, commodity price, and sentiment) to allocate across 12 individual real asset segments in five broad real asset sectors. These objective indicators identify the segments with positive expected returns. Then, using correlation and volatility, an optimization process determines the weight to these segments with the goal of creating a portfolio with maximum diversification while reducing risk. The expanded PDF version of this commentary can be downloaded here.

April Performance Summary

The VanEck Vectors Real Asset Allocation ETF (RAAX) launched, on April 9, into a period of strong performance for real assets. RAAX performed well on both an absolute and relative basis. Through April, in the first 16 days of its life, RAAX returned +2.98% based on net asset value versus +2.41% for its benchmark, the Blended Real Asset Index, which is comprised of an equally weighted blend of the returns of Bloomberg Commodity Index, S&P Real Assets Equity Index, and VanEck Natural Resources Index*. Equal weightings are reset monthly.

Total Returns (%) as of April 30, 2018
1 Mo YTD 1 Year Life
(04/09/18)
RAAX (NAV) 2.98
RAAX (Share Price) 3.26
Blended Real Asset Index* 2.41
Total Returns (%) as of March 31, 2018
1 Mo YTD 1 Year Life
(04/09/18)
RAAX (NAV)
RAAX (Share Price)
Blended Real Asset Index*

The table presents past performance which is no guarantee of future results and which may be lower or higher than current performance. Returns reflect temporary contractual fee waivers and/or expense reimbursements. Had the ETF incurred all expenses and fees, investment returns would have been reduced. Investment returns and ETF share values will fluctuate so that investors’ shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than their original cost. ETF returns assume that distributions have been reinvested in the Fund at NAV.

Returns less than a year are not annualized.

Expenses: Gross 0.81%; Net 0.74%. Expenses are capped contractually at 0.55% through February 1, 2020. Expenses are based on estimated amounts for the current fiscal year. Cap exclude certain expenses, such as interest, acquired fund fees and expenses, and trading expenses.

RAAX’s positioning was moderately defensive in April, and it was fully invested across commodities, natural resource equities, and Master Limited Partnerships (”MLPs”). The largest real asset investments were in diversified commodities (30%), gold bullion (20%), and agribusiness equities (20%).

May Positioning: Fully Invested and Mostly Bullish

RAAX remains fully invested across commodities, natural resource equities, and MLPs. As they were at launch, the largest weightings remain in diversified commodities (30%), gold bullion (20%), and agribusiness equities (20%). However, its allocation to gold equities now stands at 10%, increasing overall gold exposure to 30%.

We are bullish on most real assets. Based on the model’s analysis, diversified commodities, gold, agribusiness equities, MLPs, steel equities, oil services equities, and unconventional oil and gas equities are all well positioned to perform. We are bearish on Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), infrastructure, base metal equities, and coal equities.

Asset Class Weights

Source: VanEck. Data as of May 2, 2018.

This month we increased our exposure to gold equities and removed our exposure to coal equities. Another notable point is that we are bearish on two interest rate sensitive sectors, REITs and infrastructure, as interest rates continue to rise.

Remember, RAAX only invests in asset classes that the model is bullish on, and the weightings themselves are not an indication of conviction but a byproduct of a quantitative process that seeks to maximize diversification and minimize volatility. Let’s take a look at some of the reasons why RAAX maintains a bullish or bearish position on certain asset classes.

Gold

The model remains bullish, and overall exposure increased based on the portfolio diversification benefits that gold provides. Gold prices have been flat this year, but the precious metal has provided stability during periods of broad market stress.

Cumulative Growth of $10,000 of Gold and S&P 500 Index in 2018

Source: FactSet; Bloomberg. Data as of May 2, 2018. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Investors cannot invest directly in an index.

Oil Services Equities

Research conducted here at VanEck has identified that oil price and the S&P 500 Index can be used to explain most of the performance of oil services stocks historically. Using these variables to generate an expected return for oil services stocks, we can look at the difference between this and the actual return of oil services stocks. Right now, based on these variables, oil services stocks are trading at a substantial discount, and the chart below shows that oil services stocks haven’t been this cheap since 2001.

Performance Variance of Oil Servicers and Key Independent Variables

Source: VanEck; FactSet; Bloomberg. Data as of April 2018. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Oil servicers measured by the MVIS U.S. Listed Oil Services 25 Index. Investors cannot invest directly in an index.

The model remains bullish on oil services stocks. Key bullish indicators include strong oil prices, reasonable volatility in oil services equities, and strong demand for natural gas. The chart below shows that oil prices are up 14.83% this year through April.

Cumulative Growth of $10,000 of Crude Oil in 2018

Source: FactSet. Data as of April 30, 2018. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Oil measured by West Texas Intermediary (WTI) oil price. Investors cannot invest directly in an index.

Coal Equities

At launch, RAAX had a small weighting to coal, but in May, this exposure was completely eliminated based on falling coal equity prices and weakening supply and demand data. Below is our economic composite for coal. It turned bearish at the end of April due to declining demand for coal in the U.S. and China, and declining production in the U.S.

Coal Economic Indicator Composite

Source: VanEck. Data as of April 30, 2018. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Coal equities measured by MVIS Global Coal Index. Investors cannot invest directly in an index.

A Closer Look at the What, When, and How

Step One: What to Own

The aphorism ”a rising tide lifts all boats” is appropriate here. April was a great month to invest in real assets. Each real asset in our investment universe and the approximated holding period return of the underlying index is listed below. The assets that we were bearish on are shaded.

Holding Period Return
April 10 – April 30, 2018

Gold Equities 1.42% Oil Services Equities 13.97%
Agribusiness Equities 1.22% Unconventional Oil & Gas Equities 12.36%
Coal Equities -1.78% Global Metals & Mining Equities 4.65%
Gold Bullion -1.56% Diversified Commodities 3.60%
MLPs 6.08% REITs 1.53%
Global Infrastructure 1.53% Steel Equities 7.42%

Source: Bloomberg; FactSet. Data as of April 30, 2018. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Investors cannot invest directly in an index.

Step Two: When to be Invested

We were fully invested in April. This was the right call as real asset investments rallied. RAAX begins to raise a cash position when five or more assets become bearish. This is typically indicative of a systemic market event. RAAX has not raised cash since it launched.

Step Three: How to Allocate

Capital is allocated amongst assets on which the model is bullish on using an optimization process designed to maximize our diversification and minimize our volatility. In April, this resulted in a 50% exposure to commodities, a 45% exposure to natural resource equities, and a 5% exposure to MLPs. RAAX’s allocation in May has not changed drastically.

Monthly Asset Class Changes

Asset Class May-18 Apr-18 Change
Gold Equities 10% 5% 5%
Diversified Commodities 30% 30% 0%
Agribusiness Equities 20% 20% 0%
Gold Bullion 20% 20% 0%
Limited Partnerships 5% 5% 0%
Service Equities 5% 5% 0%
Cash 0% 0% 0%
Unconventional Oil & Gas Equities 5% 5% 0%
Steel Equities 5% 5% 0%
Estate Investment 0% 0% 0%
Global Infrastructure 0% 0% 0%
Metals and Mining Equities 0% 0% 0%
Coal Equities 0% 5% -5%

Source: VanEck. Data as of May 2, 2018.

Additional Resources

VanEck lanserar ETF för realtillgångar

VanEck lanserar ETF för realtillgångar

Under tisdagen lanserade VanEck en ny börshandlad fond, denna gång är det en ETF för realtillgångar som såg dagens ljus. Den nya ETFen har som mål att ge andelsinnehavarna en exponering mot realtillgångar samtidigt som den försöker att minimera påverkan av kursfall.

VanEck Vectors® Real Asset Allocation ETF (NYSE Arca: RAAX) investerar i alla typer av realtillgångar inklusive råvaror och företag som är involverade i naturresurser, fastigheter och infrastruktur.

Realtillgångar kan potentiellt hjälpa investerare att bekämpa stigande inflation, öka diversifiering i deras portföljer och ge dem en möjlighet att delta i den globala tillväxten. Den nya fonden använder en reglerbaserad modell för att fördela kapitalet mellan cirka 12 börshandlade produkter (ETPer) och har möjlighet att allokera upp till 100 procent av sitt kapital till likvida medel vid marknadsstress.

Exponering mot agribusiness, kol, infrastruktur, fastigheter, stål, oljetjänster

Dessa ETPer ger innehavarna exponering mot agribusiness, kol, infrastruktur, fastigheter, stål, oljetjänster, okonventionella olje- och gas- och guldgruvbolag samt diversifierad exponering genom råvaruterminer och fysiskt guld.

Ed Lopez, chef för ETF-produkten hos VanEck, sade att RAAX är den typ av lösningsinriktade ETF som våra investerare förväntar sig av VanEck. ”Den innovativa fördelningen och riskhanteringsmetoden är en indikation på VanEcks åtagande att erbjuda framtida tänkbara investeringslösningar, säger Lopez.

David Schassler, Portföljförvaltare för RAAX, sade att VanEck länge har varit en långsiktigt förespråkare för fördelarna med reala tillgångsinvesteringar, både från ett prestations- och portföljdiversifieringsperspektiv.

Realtillgångar är en utmaning för många investerare

”Vi förstår också att volatiliteten av investeringar i realtillgångar är en utmaning för många investerare” sa Schassler. ”Dessa är främst cykliska sektorer som upplever täta perioder med hög volatilitet. RAAX är speciellt utformad för att ta itu med detta. Det är en riktig investeringslösning med inbyggd riskhantering. ”

VanEck noterar också att reala tillgångsinvesteringar inte är utan risker, vilket kan inbegripa mottaglighet för negativa ekonomiska händelser, naturkatastrofer, geopolitiska risker och störningar i utbud och efterfrågan. RAAX resultat beror på de underliggande fondernas resultat och är föremål för riskerna med de underliggande ETPernas investeringar.

VanEcksETF för realtillgångar är det senaste tillägget till VanEck Vectors-paketet tilldelningsfonder, som inkluderar VanEck Vectors® NDR CMG Long / Flat Allocation ETF (NYSE Arca: LFEQ).