3 Seemingly Crazy ETF Ideas

 | Nov 17, 2014 11:27PM ET

Japan has now registered two consecutive quarters of economic contraction – a persistent absence of growth that defines most recessions. For worse or for better, the world’s third largest economy will simply commit additional electronic money printing resources to acquire more Japanese stock and bond assets. This activity weakens the yen which, in turn, emboldens carry trading institutions to ratchet up the borrowing of the depreciating currency to invest more in the U.S. stock market. As one popular financial blogger joked yesterday evening, “By the laws of QE, U.S. stocks will hit record highs on Monday.”

Whereas the Federal Reserve may or may not have been particularly successful at helping the U.S. economy (former Chairman Greenspan recently expressed that the central bank of the U.S. failed in this regard), at least the U.S. economy is actually expanding. In contrast, neither the Bank of Japan nor the European Central Bank (ECB) have been particularly successful at improving the gross domestic output of their respective regions. Ominous? Perhaps. Yet it’s not as if investors in Japan are throwing in the towel; WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity (DXJ) is still near a 52-week peak.