Your Money: Looking For Holiday Buys? Try E-commerce
ETFs
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[November 25, 2019] By
Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - First the bad news for
your wallet: Americans are slated to spend more than they ever have this
holiday season - around $730 billion in November and December, according
to the National Retail Federation.
Online shopping alone is expected to amount to $143.7 billion over the
last two months of the year, a 14.1% increase over last year, according
to projections by Adobe Analytics.
Now the good news: There is money to be made on the other side of that
trade.
E-commerce exchange-traded funds are set up to capitalize on all those
online transactions by gathering a bucket of stocks of companies like
Amazon, eBay and PayPal and selling shares of them as a specialized ETF.
Top players include First Trust Dow Jones Internet Index, Global X
E-commerce, Amplify Online Retail and International Online Retail,
ProShares Online Retail, ProShares Long Online/Short Stores and SPDR S&P
Internet.
There is even a new index created by MSCI (https://bit.ly/2OeOn8Z), a
provider of analytics and solutions for financial firms, which
identified the digital economy as one of its societal "Megatrends." That
likely means that more such ETFs will be in the pipeline, since
investment firms can now roll out their own e-commerce ETFs based on
that underlying index.
A few tips for investors who might be stuffing e-commerce ETFs into
their holiday stockings:
* Look under the hood.
Not all e-commerce ETFs are built alike. Some are highly concentrated,
and some are more diversified, so proceed according to your own risk
tolerance.
ProShares Online Retail, for example, has almost a quarter of its entire
assets in Amazon, and another 13% in Chinese Internet giant Alibaba. If
you want to bet on the big winners - and Amazon has certainly been a big
winner - that would be the way to go, said Todd Rosenbluth, head of ETF
and mutual fund research at independent research firm CFRA.
But Amplify’s IBUY has Amazon making up only a more modest 3.4% of its
portfolio. If you want to spread your bets more evenly throughout the
space, that would be a more appropriate pick.
*Dig into the numbers.
Fees are any portfolio's silent killer. Concentrated ETFs may offer
lower expense ratios than traditional mutual funds, but higher than
broader exchange-traded offerings - like, say, Vanguard's Total Stock
Market ETF, and its microscopic .03% fees.
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A Christmas decoration is pictured in front of the German share
price index DAX board at the German stock exchange in Frankfurt
December 10, 2012. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo
In comparison, the relatively new Global X E-Commerce comes with a .68% expense
ratio, and ProShares Long Online/Short Stores carries a similar .65% charge.
As for performance, e-commerce ETFs have generally experienced a bumpy fall,
thanks to trade wars and recession worries. IBUY, for instance, has outperformed
the S&P 500 on a two-year timeframe, but underperformed year-to-date. While that
offers a potential buying opportunity, ask yourself whether you are comfortable
with an occasionally wild ride.
"Typically investors will find more volatility in narrower slices of the market
like this," said Deborah Fuhr, founder and managing partner of independent
London-based ETF consultancy ETFGI.
*Expand your horizons.
The United States may be the 800-pound gorilla of e-commerce, but there is money
to be made outside its borders as well. To wit: the Emerging Markets Internet &
Ecommerce, suggested Fuhr. Its basket includes familiar Chinese names like Baidu
and Tencent, and boasts robust year-to-date returns of over 32%.
* Consider size and scope.
In the ETF world there is a fair amount of churn: If small thematic funds do not
manage to attract enough assets, they occasionally close up shop. So check the
total assets and know that a fund's long-term future is not guaranteed.
* Thematic ETFs are a complement, not a core.
Thematic ETFs are a nice complement to a more broadly diversified portfolio. But
notes Rosenbluth: "Investors shouldn't get carried away with them."
(The writer is a Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed are his own.)
(Editing by Beth Pinsker; Follow us @ReutersMoney or at http://www.reuters.com/finance/personal-finance.)
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