Thursday, February 3, 2011

Fw: Egyptian Riots ... ETFs ... and the Opportunities


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Thursday, February 3, 2011








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Egyptian Riots ... ETFs ... and the Opportunities
by Ron Rowland

Dear Subscriber,

Ron Rowland

If you turned on your TV in the last week or so, you almost certainly saw coverage of the protests in Egypt. Almost overnight, the media narrative moved from Washington to Cairo.

Unfortunately, much of the commentary I heard was not exactly helpful. The networks trotted out the same pundits they turn to for commentary on politics and Hollywood. Entertaining, but not exactly enlightening.

For instance, we didn't hear much about why those people in the streets are so unhappy. I suspect their concerns are far more economic than political. That's usually the case when countries enter such turmoil.

I can't tell you how it will all end — but I can tell you how it may impact your ETF investments.

Let's start with ...

Egyptians take it to the streets.
Egyptians take it to the streets.

Three ETFs with Direct
Egyptian Exposure

ETF sponsors have been busy trying to fill every niche they can over the last few years. In the process they've introduced several Middle East products for American investors, who eagerly snapped them up.

Some of those investors may be saying "oops" right now. Stocks based in Egypt swooned when the protests erupted and then stopped trading completely when local exchanges were closed. The result for ETFs that hold those stocks varied, depending on how much Egyptian exposure they have.

Not surprisingly, Market Vectors Egypt (EGPT) was hurt the most since it has 100 percent of its assets in Egyptian stocks. From its high point in the first week of the year, this relatively new fund (inception date 2/18/2010) was decimated. EGPT plunged more than 21 percent before making up a little of its loss.

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You've heard me say many times: "Emerging markets ETFs are volatile." EGPT is a good example, but it's far from the only one. Just in recent memory, we've seen similar sudden pullbacks in ETFs covering Thailand, Vietnam, and others. It will happen again elsewhere.

Market Vectors Africa (AFK) may not sound like it would have much to do with Egypt. But check your World Atlas: Egypt is part of Africa. It's a big part of Africa, too, at least in financial terms.

AFK has about 21 percent of its assets in Egyptian stocks. In percentage terms, it wasn't hit quite as badly as EGPT last month, but the drop was still very noticeable.

PowerShares MENA Frontier (PMNA) specializes in stocks from the Middle East and North Africa ("MENA" is lingo for the region). PMNA has about 16 percent of its portfolio directly invested in Egypt, making it almost as vulnerable as AFK.

Then there is the ...

Spillover Effect to
Other Regional ETFs

Will instability in Egypt spread through the  region?
Will instability in Egypt spread through the region?

One of the more disturbing aspects of Egypt's crisis is the potential for unrest to spread elsewhere. In fact, the protests in Cairo were sparked by a popular uprising in Tunisia. This can happen far more easily now than it did in a pre-Internet world.

Here are a few more ETFs with significant Middle East exposure. All are at risk if instability turns infectious:

  • SPDR S&P Emerging Middle East & Africa (GAF)

  • WisdomTree Middle East Dividend (GULF)

  • Market Vectors Gulf States (MES)

  • iShares MSCI Turkey (TUR)

Please note, I'm not predicting problems for any of these ETFs. I'm just pointing out what could happen. They may do just fine.

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Sector Impact: What to Watch

Investment crisis events can have effects far away from the geographical area involved. The effects can be either bullish or bearish, too. Case in point: Egypt's problems appear, so far at least, to be quite beneficial for the worldwide energy sector.

Oil prices carry a risk premium.
Oil prices carry a risk premium.

There are two reasons for this:

First, instability in major oil-exporting countries always creates a "risk premium" in oil prices. That means more profits for anyone with oil to sell.

Second, the possibility (however remote) that Egypt's oil reserves could become inaccessible makes oil fields elsewhere even more valuable. This is good news for the energy service companies who would be called on to bring new fields into production quickly.

Here are three energy ETFs that have been moving up in the last two weeks:

  • iShares Dow Jones U.S. Oil Equipment & Services (IEZ)

  • SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Equipment & Services (XES)

  • PowerShares S&P SmallCap Energy (XLES)

Emerging markets ETFs can move up just as fast as they went down. And crisis often creates opportunity. So I won't be surprised if the protesters in Egypt turn out to have handed us a golden chance for profit in some way.

It's something I always watch for. I suggest you do likewise.

Better yet, check out my International ETF Trader. This service is designed to help you profit from ever-changing global market conditions, like we're seeing in Egypt now, by identifying which ETFs have the most potential at any given time.

Best wishes,

Ron


Ron Rowland is widely regarded as a leading ETF and mutual fund advisor. You may have read about Mr. Rowland and his strategies in publications such as The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Investor's Business Daily, Forbes.com, Barron's, Hulbert Financial Digest and many more. As a former mutual fund manager from 2000 to 2002, Ron was a pioneer in using ETFs inside of mutual funds. Today, he is the editor of International ETF Trader, dedicated to helping investors use ETFs to profit from ever-changing global market conditions.


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