Time To Harvest Energy ETFs?

 | Dec 09, 2013 03:04PM ET

How good were the employment reports of October and November? It depends who you ask. Those who believe the job market is dramatically improving want you to look at the raw number of new jobs created as well as the headline U-2 unemployment percentage; several hundred thousand jobs have been added to payrolls each month and the 7.0% unemployment “stat” represents a 5-year low. On the flip side, those who feel the job market is stagnant want you to examine the mass exodus from the labor force by working-aged individuals as well as the “quality” of the job creation itself; the unemployment rate adjusted for labor force participation is 11.0% while a scary percentage of the jobs created are part-timers in low wage positions.

For investors, the only real question is how it all plays out at the Fedreal Reserve. After all, the Fed’s emergency bond-buying policy (a.k.a. “QE”) is the primary driver of riskier assets. So what do most investors foresee? They anticipate an exceptionally accommodative central bank over the intermediate-term (4-6 months) that is likely to favor stocks. The belief stems from the fact that the Janet Yellen Fed is aware that real household income has fallen 4.4% over the course of the current economic recovery (6/2009-11/2013), suggesting that wage growth is weak and implying that employment well-being might be overstated. It follows that, while the most recent data are encouraging, the investing population is not expecting the Fed to make any huge changes.

(Note: Should Yellen and company reduce the electronic money printing from $85 billion per month to $75 billion sometime soon, this would not be a change in direction; rather, it would merely be an effort to walk the tightrope between acknowledging the need to move away from a 5-year rate manipulating endeavor and avoiding the consequences of a substantial spike in interest rates — a yield spike that the global economy is not presently capable of enduring.)

ETF advocates should not deviate far from their present invested positions as 2013 winds down. The Fed’s not genuinely backing off its stimulus in a meaningful way, minimal top-line revenue at corporations has not dissuaded anyone from “stocking up,” and all of the major benchmarks demonstrate powerful technical uptrends. If you’re holding what I’ve been holding throughout the year — funds like iShares Russell 1000 (IWB), iShares Small Cap Value (

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