D-Day ETFs for Quantitative Easing and QE2 Today (FAS, FAZ, XHB, FXF, CYB, UUP, GLD, DGP, TLT, TBT, SPY, DIA, QQQQ)

November 3, 2010 by Jon C. Ogg

The elections are over and the Republicans took over the House but not the Senate as expected.  Today is D-Day for Quantitative Easing or QE2… Decision Day.  Now it is time to deal with the FOMC’s version of quantitative easing and its short-term and long-term implications.  Ben Bernanke and friends are expected to show at least some data on what measures will be taken around 2:15 PM EST this Wednesday.  The consensus seems to be that longer-dated Treasuries will be bought through time in order to attempt lowering longer-term interest rates while Ben Bernanke and friends keep the short-term rates at near-zero for an extended period.  Much of the news is likely already priced in if you see the September and October gains.  We wanted to give the most liquid and the most relevant ETFs for each major sector that stands to win or lose as a result of QE2.

Some of the key ETFs we see having longer-term pricing issues after QE2 are some of the main go-to ETFs for traders, but some of our ETFs are inverse and leveraged as well due to the volatility that is sought by traders.  Some of the ETF and ETN products were are tracking are Direxion Daily Financial Bull 3X Shares (NYSE: FAS) and Direxion Daily Financial Bear 3X Shares (NYSE: FAZ); SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE: GLD) and the PowerShares DB Gold Double Long ETN (NYSE: DGP); CurrencyShares Swiss Franc Trust (NYSE: FXF), WisdomTree Dreyfus Chinese Yuan (NYSE: CYB), and PowerShares DB US Dollar Index Bullish (NYSE: UUP); then there is the iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond (NYSE: TLT) and the ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (NYSE: TBT).

Financial Stock ETF Winners, Hopefully… and Maybe Housing

Banks and financials have been under pressure due to mortgage put-back fears on mortgage fraud and foreclosure woes.  If any sector could be helped by QE2 and lower rates, it would be banks and financial stocks.  Despite that they are earning very low interest, they also have to pay almost no interest as well.  The triple-leverage funds from Direxion are perhaps the most liquid and most volatile of all in the sector.  There is the Direxion Daily Financial Bull 3X Shares (NYSE: FAS) and Direxion Daily Financial Bear 3X Shares (NYSE: FAZ) that move at triple the intraday moves of the Russell 1000 Financial Services Index.  The bullish shares trade close to 35 million shares a day and the bearish shares trade close to 45 million shares a day.  There is deemed a greater risk of tracking error on these due to the volatility, futures contracts, and more, but these are very volatile and very actively traded ETF products.

SPDR S&P Homebuilders (NYSE: XHB) stands to win if housing wins from QE2.  If the foreclosures can be cleared out and if the borrowing rates will stay down at historic lows, then perhaps more consumers will be able to afford houses in 2011 and 2012.  Whether they buy used homes and foreclosed homes is one thing, but many still want that new home that is all theirs and comes with no baggage.  This ETF is full of homebuilding stocks and is meant to track the S&P Homebuilders Select Industry Index, which represents the homebuilding sector inside the larger S&P TMI.

QE2… A Bet Against Currencies or the Dollar

It seems that many developed nations are trying to devalue their currency simultaneously even if the dollar is not in favor.  The only safe bet for a country that might try to hold the line is Switzerland for their Swiss Franc, and the Swiss Franc can be traded via the CurrencyShares Swiss Franc Trust (NYSE: FXF).

Another exception is potentially the Chinese Yuan depending upon how the newly elected Congress decides what tone they will use against China.  Almost all investors agree that if China were to de-peg then the Chinese Yuan would rise appreciably against the US Dollar.  China’s reserves are higher and its economic fundamentals are among the best globally.  The two direct beneficiary ETF/ETN products here that will win if China is forced to de-peg the Yuan from the Dollar are WisdomTree Dreyfus Chinese Yuan (NYSE: CYB).

If you think that US Dollar’s decline will not go on and on endlessly, then there is the PowerShares DB US Dollar Index Bullish (NYSE: UUP).  This ETN tracks the Deutsche Bank Long US Dollar Futures index, which is comprised of long futures contracts rather than being comprised of raw currencies.  This is against a basket of currencies, and it is less volatile than many other direct single currency.

Driving Down the Borrowing Cost to Buy Gold

QE2 makes borrowing money cheaper for those creditworthy institutions, but it may ultimately springboard inflation down the road if unchecked. We have also noted how gold and precious metal ETF/ETN products have reached a critical mass in size and most are now even larger.   The SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE: GLD) is king of gold ETFs with millions of shares traded each day and with assets well above $50 billion.  If inflation is going to be a FOMC-manufactured event and if the shiny yellow can keep rising, then the PowerShares DB Gold Double Long ETN (NYSE: DGP) is your answer.  This is an exchange-traded note rather than a true asset trust with physical gold.  The “DGP” gives double the performance of gold, but there may be some tracking issue and the ETN status brings on more issues than merely an ETF.  Taxation on precious metals holdings may also be different than just capital gains for many investors.

How Low Can Bond Yields Go?

If you think that the FOMC will drive long-term rates to under recent lows, there is the iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond (NYSE: TLT) ETF.  It pays dividends (Treasury yield coupon payments) based on the current yield of the underlying Treasury index, yet there is no leverage.

There is a leveraged angle for ETF and ETN investors and traders.  The ProShares Ultra 20+ Year Treasury seeks daily investment results of double the daily performance of the Barclays Capital 20+ Year U.S. Treasury Index. Want to bet against QE2 and if you see rates rising?  The ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (NYSE: TBT) which is double-short the Barclays Capital 20+ Year U.S. Treasury Bond index.  These are just a sample of the many ETFs/ETNs covering short-term and long-term bonds.

General Stocks Via ETFs, The Go-To Names

If you have high hopes that QE2 will just help every sector out there, there is nothing more liquid than the SPDR S&P 500 (NYSE: SPY).  This has no leverage to it, but it trades almost 200 million shares a day and generally tracks within a few basis points of the S&P 500.  The SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average (NYSE: DIA) is meant to track the Dow Jones Industrial Average within a few basis points. This one also has no leverage and it trades “only” about 7 million shares a day.

If you just want NASDAQ or tech-oriented ETFs, there is the PowerShares QQQ (NASDAQ: QQQQ).  This tracks the NASDAQ 100 and trades over 70 million shares on an average day.  Just keep in mind that the QQQQ has almost 30% of its weighting tied up in Apple (almost 20% alone), Microsoft and Google.

We have noted the basic ETFs here for or against QE2 but there are dozens of other secondary or tertiary ETF and ETN products out there. We usually default to the most liquid and most active with the highest market cap.

The FOMC cannot lower rates on the short-end, and a recent TIPS Treasury auction actually generated a negative yield.  The FOMC is likely to promise low short-term rates for the future and QE2 can be effected by buying up debt on the long-end of the yield curve simultaneously.  The new verdict seems to be a few hundred billion spread out through time rather than all at once.  Some would like to see more, others would prefer no QE2.

The consensus is no longer for a double-dip recession, but growth estimates for what lies ahead remain muted or have come down of late.  It seems that the current inflation is too low for the Fed targets but the recent trends in commodities may be taking care of much of the lack of inflation.  Extremely slow growth is not enough despite a recovery, and the hope is that more jobs will ultimately be created.

The FOMC wants inflation higher despite the recent up-tick in inflation as commodities have risen and as the double dip recession argument has petered out for now.  The paradox is that the FOMC also wants rates to stay very low for an extended period of time.  It seems that our government is about to turn on the printing presses so it can buy debt… a move to devalue the dollar and to artificially keep the rates lower by buying the debt up.  Maybe the United States balance sheet will need to adopt pro forma accounting and non-GAAP earnings.

The rule is and has always been, “Don’t Fight the Fed.”  That might be true for many, but there are many careers which have been made and broken against fighting the Fed.  Whatever QE2 happens to be, we’ll find out what at least the first phase of it will be around 2:15 PM EST today.

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JON C. OGG

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