Good tidings come for the U.S. equity markets, with gains of 26.5%
for the S&P 500 and 22.2% for Dow Jones in the year-to-date
time frame. Unlike the lackluster rally in 2012, the bull trend
could definitely continue this December if the Santa Claus rally
proves to be real.
According to market belief, December has a proven track record of
being a top performing month for the S&P 500. The stocks tend
to move up in the anticipation of various factors such as general
holiday season cheer, tax-related affairs, and people investing
their Christmas bonus. This holiday bonanza is called a ‘Santa
Claus Rally’ (read: 3 ETFs For This Holiday Season).
Over 50 years, the S&P 500 has a track record of gaining 1.9%
on average in the month of December. In fact, according to the
Stock Trader’s Almanac, the biggest jump in stocks can be seen
through the final week of a calendar year (i.e. between Christmas
and New Year Day).
Here Comes a Santa Claus Rally
Given strong macro trends and increased investors’ appetite for
riskier assets (i.e. equities over bonds), it appears that 2013
would see the best Santa Claus rally in the past few years. This is
especially true given that equity ETFs/ETPs have pulled in a total
of $213.5 billion funds since the start of the year through
November end. This is higher than $124.4 billion seen in the
year-ago period.
Additionally, a slew of positive economic data on employment,
manufacturing, housing, consumer spending, and GDP growth supports
the Santa Claus rally. The economy created 203,000 jobs in
November, leading to a decline in the unemployment rate to 7% from
7.3%.
Further, the political gridlock between the White House and
Republican lawmakers seems to have eased with a tentative two-year
budget deal, which if approved would end the three years of impasse
and fiscal instability in Washington. This move is definitely a
positive step for the economy and the stock markets as a whole.
Improving conditions in Europe and China would further propel the
market higher.
Though upbeat data and strong momentum in the economy has raised
market speculation over the Fed curtailing its QE3 program and
spread panic in market, a big taper in the near future still seems
unlikely.
The unemployment scenario has brightened a bit, but inflation is
still low at 1.1% in November. Further, the U.S. consumer
confidence continued to decline and dropped to a seven-month low in
November (read: 3 Covered Call ETFs to Pump Up Your Income).
Moreover, even if the Fed tapers, market experts think that the
economy and financial markets could well endure the Fed’s wind-down
plan, suggesting good trading ahead. As a result, the Fed’s curbing
of QE3 does not seem to be much of an issue and Santa Claus could
even bring gifts for various sectors and asset classes in the days
ahead.
ETFs to Consider
For investors seeking to ride out the Santa Claus rally, we have
highlighted some of the ETFs that provide a broad diversified play
in various sectors rather than specific ones. These products have
been leading the large cap space for most of this year, clearly
outpacing the broad market fund (SPY) by a wide margin.
These funds have a top Zacks ETF Rank of 1 or ‘Strong Buy’,
suggesting that the outperformance will continue in the coming
months as well (see: all Large Cap ETFs here).
Guggenheim S&P 500 Pure Growth ETF
(RPG)
This ETF tracks the S&P 500 Pure Growth Index, holding 112
securities in its basket. The fund is widely diversified across
various securities as none of these holds more than 2.7% of total
assets in the basket.
However, the product has a slight tilt toward the consumer
discretionary sector accounting for nearly 30% share while
healthcare, information technology and financials round out the
next three spots (read: Is This ETF a Better Bet in the Consumer
Space?).
The fund has amassed $850.2 million in its asset base while it
trades in moderate volume. The ETF charges 0.35% in expenses and
returned over 39% so far this year.
First Trust Large Cap Growth AlphaDEX Fund
(FTC)
This fund provides a slightly active choice as it uses the AlphaDEX
methodology to select the stocks. The methodology seeks to narrow
the large cap space to only the best positioned growth companies,
eliminating the bottom ranked 25% of the stocks.
This approach produces a basket of 177 stocks, which is widely
spread across various securities as each security holds less than
1.1% of assets. In terms of sectors, the product is skewed toward
consumer discretionary with nearly 30% share, followed by
industrials (19.21%), information technology (15.39%) and
healthcare (11.42%).
The fund is quite unpopular with AUM of $212.2 million while volume
is light. This ensures additional cost in the form of wide bid/ask
spread beyond the expense ratio of 0.70%. FTC added 33.5% in the
year-to-date time frame.
Schwab U.S. Large-Cap Growth ETF
(SCHG)
This ETF follows the Dow Jones U.S. Large-Cap Growth Total Stock
Market Index and holds 392 stocks in its basket. The fund has a
large allocation of 5.8% in the top firm – Apple (AAPL) – while
other firms hold less than 3.5% of total assets (read: 3
Apple-Focused ETFs to Buy This Holiday Season).
The product is also heavy in information technology with 27.8%
share while healthcare, consumer discretionary and industrials also
get double-digit exposure in the portfolio. The fund has
accumulated over $1 billion in its asset base while it trades
in good volume of nearly 121,000 shares a day.
SCHG is the low cost choice in the space, charging just 7 bps in
fees per year from investors. The ETF is up 31% year-to-date.
Bottom Line
Yes, investors, there is a Santa Claus rally. And these large cap
growth funds, seem to be three products that are the likely winners
for the Christmas trend. So look for these to generate above
average returns compared to others in the space, especially when
the markets are rising and investors are feeling cheerful about the
economy.
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FT-LC GROWTH (FTC): ETF Research Reports
GUGG-SP 500 PG (RPG): ETF Research Reports
SCHWAB-US LCG (SCHG): ETF Research Reports
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