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CGW  Claymore S&P Global Water Index ETF
 
Claymore S&P Global Water ETF seeks investment results that correspond generally to the performance of the S&P Global Water Index. The Index is comprised of approximately 50 equity securities selected, based on investment and other criteria, from a universe of companies listed on global developed market exchanges. The universe of companies includes all companies classified by Standard & Poors Global Industry Classifications as being associated (in a manner representing a major component of such companies business) with the global demand for water, including water utilities, infrastructure, equipment, instruments and materials.

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Seeking Alpha News
1/17/2010
tom lydonTom Lydon (ETF Trends) submits:

Water ETFsAs the global water supply becomes increasingly unbalanced, the case for “hydrocommerce” becomes more clear. Investors can access efforts to fix this dire situation with water-industry focused exchange traded funds.

The need for clean water is a pressing one. Based on recent surveys, groundwater levels, reservoirs, lakes and other forms of water capture and supply sources are running dangerously low around the world. Worse, investment in water infrastructure is nearly non-existent – the EPA estimates that the United States alone is $600 billion behind in water system upgrades.


Complete Story »
1/17/2010
Hao Jin submits:
The stock rally that began last March might slow down this year because the market isn't cheap anymore. I went through all 147 iShares ETFs with net assets over $100 million and found that most of them have a P/E over 20. There are only 7 iShares ETFs that have a P/E of less than 16, as shown below:
Fund Name (Symbol)
P/E (ttm)
MSCI Turkey Investable Market Index Fund (TUR)
14
Dow Jones U.S. Aerospace & Defense Index (ITA)
14
MSCI Spain Index Fund (EWP)
14
S&P Global Utilities Sector Index Fund (JXI)
15
Dow Jones U.S. Utilities Sector Index Fund (IDU)
16
S&P Global Telecommunications Sector Index (IXP)
16
Dow Jones U.S. Healthcare Providers Index (IHF)
16
The stock market might have a much rockier ride in the coming years. If the bull market begins to slow, it will pay to own sectors that are paying generous yields. PIMCO, the world's biggest bond fund, saw assets under management exceed $1 trillion for the first time last week, underscoring investors' appetite for yield. However, yields on bonds are insufficient for income investors. Utilities and telecom stocks might be a better place to get higher payouts.
The Dow Jones U.S. Utilities Sector Index Fund (IDU) has net assets over $500 million and yielding 3.6%. Below are its main holdings:
Top 15 Holdings inside IDU
Name (Symbol)
P/E
Forward P/E
Yield
Market Cap
Debt/FCC
EXELON CORP (EXC)
11.3
12.8
4.2%
32.05B
6
SOUTHERN CO (SO)
16.6
13.7
5.2%
26.68B
-20
DOMINION RES NEW (D)
13.9
11.9
4.5%
23.20B
-20
DUKE ENERGY (DUK)
20.5
13.1
5.6%
22.05B
-9
F P L GROUP INC (FPL)
12.3
11.4
3.7%
20.89B
-10
AMER ELECTRIC (AEP)
12.5
11.7
4.5%
17.20B
-9
PUB ENTRPR GP (PEG)
11.2
10.2
4.0%
16.51B
9
PG&E CP (PCG)
11.7
13.2
3.8%
16.70B
-40
ENTERGY CP (ETR)
14.8
12.2
3.6%
15.46B
-19
FIRSTENERGY CP (FE)
13.0
13.0
4.7%
14.23B
51
SPECTRA ENERGY (SE)
17.5
15.1
4.6%
14.31B
21
CONS EDISON INC (ED)
15.2
13.7
5.1%
12.60B
-19
SEMPRA ENERGY (SRE)
11.2
10.0
2.9%
12.92B
-28
PPL CORP (PPL)
22.6
9.6
4.2%
12.02B
26
PROGRESS ENE (PGN)
15.0
12.5
6.3%
10.82B
-40
Lower wholesale power prices and slower demand pressured earnings in recent quarters for utilities. However, there might be a recovery in power demand and the long-term power outlook looks bright, once the recovery continues.
Exelon Corp (EXC) is a Chicago-based company that operates electric utilities in Illinois and Pennsylvania. The regulated traditional utility business accounts for only a third of the company's operating profits. The remaining two-thirds are generated from unregulated areas, which sell power to other utilities. Its debt to free cash flow is 6, one of the best in the industry. In other words, it could pay out its debt in 6 years. Currently its yield is 4.2% with a payout ratio of less than 50%.
Southern Company (SO) has paid dividends to its shareholders for 249 consecutive quarters – dating back to 1948.
Top 7 Utility ETFs
Following are 7 utility ETFs with net assets over $100 million. The biggest one is the Utilities Select Sector SPDR (XLU).
Fund Family
Fund Name (Ticker)
Claymore Exchange-Traded
Claymore S&P Global Water (CGW)
iShares Trust
iShares Dow Jones US Utilities (IDU)
iShares Trust
iShares S&P Global Infrastructure Index (IGF)
iShares Trust
iShares S&P Global Utilities (JXI)
Merrill Lynch
Utilities HOLDRs (UTH)
Select Sector SPDR Trust
Utilities Select Sector SPDR (XLU)
Vanguard Index Funds
Vanguard Utilities ETF (VPU)
Most ETFs in the same sector are me-too products. The chart below shows the last 5 years of performance for XL U and IDU: they were almost identical.
Conclusion
When things are going well, we tend to get overconfident and move more money into risky assets, making us vulnerable to downturns. Today we have more modern systems, but we also have unprecedented risks that were nonexistent in the Great Depression. This recovery might take much longer than we thought because of the severity of the decline and the fact that financial companies were at the center of the problem.
High-yielding stocks might suffer when interest rates rise. That's because in a rising rate environment, bond yields are more attractive than stock dividends. The other drawback for the utilities sector is that it tends to have a heavy debt load and negative free cash flow. PG&E, then California's largest utility, once declared bankruptcy in April 2001.
Even though the utilities are not a safe haven, investors can still use it as a downside buffer. With a forward P/E of 12 and higher than 10-year Treasury yield, this sector is still attractive.

Disclosure: I have long position on EXC. Data are from iShares and Yahoo Finance as of January 15, 2010.


Complete Story »
11/30/2009
Michael Johnston submits:

Lisle, Illinois-based Claymore, the ETF issuer that was acquired by Guggenheim Partners earlier this year, announced last week that it will close four of its lightly-traded ETFs. December 11 will be the last day of trading for the following funds:

  • Claymore/Morningstar Manufacturing Super Sector Index ETF (MZG)
  • Claymore/Morningstar Information Super Sector Index ETF (MZN)
  • Claymore/Morningstar Services Super Sector Index ETF (MZO)
  • Claymore U.S. -1 – The Capital Markets Index ETF (UEM)

“We have taken a reflective review of our current product lineup and after careful evaluation, we feel that these changes are in the best interest of shareholders,” said Christian Magoon, President of Claymore Securities, Inc. The NYSE Arca will halt trading in the four ETFs by December 14, and any investors remaining on December 18 will receive a cash distribution into their brokerage account representing the value of their shares on that date.


Complete Story »
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Holdings as of 12/31/2009 
N/A Geberit AG, Jona 10.27%
VIE VEOLIA ENVIRONNEMENT 7.74%
UU. UNITED UTILITIES PLC 6.53%
DHR DANAHER CP 5.02%
SVT.L SEVERN TRENT 5.01%
N/A Kurita Water Industries Ltd. 4.9%
NLC NALCO HOLDING CO. 4.75%
ITT I T T CORPORATION 4.31%
N/A WorleyParsons Limited 3.66%
PNN PENNON GROUP ORD 3.53%
Related Funds Utilities
PUI PowerShares Dynamic Utilities Portfolio
PHO PowerShares Water Resource Portfolio
UPW Ultra Utilities ProShares
SDP UltraShort Utilities ProShares
RYU Rydex S&P Equal Weight Utilities ETF
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