This Rising Rates ETF Might Not Be The Hedge You Think It Is

 | Sep 25, 2017 02:34AM ET

As expected, the Fed kept interest rates where they were at their quarterly meeting this week. The financial markets dipped modestly on the news but quickly rebounded to finish little changed on the day.

Perhaps the bigger news is that the Fed is prepared to raise interest rates again if inflation rises, while the Fed dot plot report forecasted three more hikes in 2018 (take that with a grain of salt though as the dot plot is notoriously inaccurate). Janet Yellen did confirm that the Fed would also begin unwinding its $4.5 trillion balance sheet in October at the rate of $10 billion a month at first and rising to $50 billion a month by 2018. Using that timeline, the Fed will have unwound its entire position in about 8 years.

While the timing is unknown, interest rate hikes are coming and it’s time to begin planning accordingly. We have a fairly good idea of how certain sectors respond to rising interest rates. The bond market tends to drop as existing lower rate bonds look less attractive. The same goes for utilities whose high yields look great in a low rate environment but begin to look less so in the presence of lower risk alternatives. Fund giant Fidelity launched the Fidelity Dividend for Rising Rates (NYSE:FDRR) last year with the objective of investing in securities and sectors that are poised to perform best in a rising rate environment.

The Rising Rates ETF is unique in that it targets stocks that have a high correlation to the 10-year Treasury yield. On the surface, that sounds like just the type of fund you’d want to own if rates are heading up. But look a little deeper into the fund’s strategy and you’ll find this.