RTH, PJP: ETFs To Choose Now

 | Jul 10, 2013 02:58AM ET

The U.S. economy’s modest growth is attributable to the real estate market, corporate debt restructuring and big ticket consumption like auto. All of these areas are extremely rate sensitive. It follows that, with the Federal Reserve “taper talking” 10-year yields higher by 100 basis points (1%), the U.S. economy should slow in the coming months. In fact, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) essentially confirmed the probability of the slowdown with a downward GDP revision from its April assessment.

Yet none of this seems to be hindering exuberance for U.S. stocks. Is this because six months of jobs data have been genuinely impressive? Is this because the Fed expressed a belief that the U.S. economy is gaining in strength, even as the IMF pours cold water on the notion?

It seems the real truth on U.S. stock gains rests somewhere in between. The reality is that the global investing community often weighs the pros and cons of alternatives. And right now, all competing investments seem to lack appeal.

Consider just how harshly rising interest rates stateside adversely impacted foreign yield producers. Market Vectors Emerging Market Local Bond (EMLC) and SPDR DJ Wilshire International REIT (RWX) witnessed top-to-bottom declines of roughly 14% and 18% respectively. The possibility of Fed tightening has resulted in 3-year highs for the dollar, helping to obliterate a currency proxy like SPDR Gold (GLD); the same prospect of tightening via tapering has cremated U.S. bond proxies like iShares 20 Year Treasury (TLT). The IMF’s downward revision of emerging market economic output gives reason for more investors to flee funds like iShares Emerging Markets (EEM); meanwhile, slower global growth hits commodities across the aboard, where funds like PowerShares DB Commodity (DBC) have been decidedly impotent.