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Jeffrey Miller

ETF Update: Time To Diversify?

By Jeffrey Miller on August 31, 2009 | More Posts By Jeffrey Miller | Author's Website

Successful sector investing requires concentrated investments.  A fully diversified portfolio will match the market.  The sector investor seeks to beat the market by finding opportunities with strong potential.  This requires less diversification and more short-term risk.

The right amount of diversification depends upon your time horizon and trading frequency.  It is also helpful to have a method that helps in gauging relative sector strengths.  In our own trading, we select from a universe of 277 ETF’s.  The ratings are based upon technical criteria reflecting Trends and Cycles.  Since our approach adds a bit of Anticipation, we call it the TCA-ETF method.  (For new readers, there is a more complete description of our methods at the end of the article.)

In this article we will consider a completely un-diversified approach, describe how to achieve some level of diversification, and apply the results to the current market.

The Gil Blake Approach

Legendary mutual fund timer Gil Blake was the winner of the United States Trading Championship for five consecutive years and a subject of the Jack D. Schwager book, The New Market Wizards,   He had a strong opinion about diversification.  No!  In response to a question, Blake responded as follows:

I’m not a big fan of diversification.  My answer to that question is that you can diversify very well by just making enough trades per year.  If the odds are 70% in your favor and you make fifty trades, it’s very difficult to have a down year.

Gil Blake famously invested his entire portfolio in a single Fidelity sector fund each day. Later, he used hourly trade data to take similar actions.

Blake’s approach rejected diversification in favor of a short time frame and many trades.  In a system that really works, you can reach the “long run” fairly quickly.  (We wrote more on this topic here.)

Finding a Balance

For most of us, it is impractical and expensive to turn over our entire portfolio every day.  ETF investors may find our approach an interesting contrast to Blake’s.  We use a thirty-day time horizon, but review our ratings twice each day.  While we have an expected holding period, we adjust more frequently and trade more often if circumstances warrant.

We also get us much diversification as possible.  Here are the guidelines:

  • At least six positions
  • No more than 1/3 of all positions in the same specific sector (e.g. banking, Asian nations, chip stocks)
  • No more than 1/2 of all positions in the same super-sector
  • Sacrifice a small ratings difference for more diversification

The Current Market

Despite these guidelines it can be difficult to find diversification without sacrificing performance.  For many weeks the top sectors were all related to finance and real estate.  Last year’s rapid market decline sent sector correlations nearly to 1.0.  This year’s rapid rebound has done the same.

A more measured advance, and even a trading range, provides a great opportunity for the diversified sector investor.

As you can see from the list below, it is possible to include some European country funds (EWO and EWD), European REIT’s (IFEU), insurance (KIE, IAK), banks  and financials (KBE, IYF), and health care (IHF) while sticking to the top portion of the list and solidly positive ratings.  (We further diversified on Friday).

This is a much broader range of opportunities than we have seen in recent weeks.  Perhaps other ETF investors will offer some comments on their own approach to the question of diversification.

Weekly TCA-ETF Rankings

57% (versus 29% last week) of all sectors are now in the penalty box, having violated certain technical criteria.  The index package (near the bottom of the table) shows that the longs are beating the shorts by a wider margin than last week.

We were up about 1.5% on the week, beating the S&P 500 by more than one percent.

Based upon continued, but moderating, strength in the model signals, we continued our bullish position in the Ticker Sense Blogger Sentiment poll.

Here are the top sectors from our expanded universe of 277 ETF’s.  The list also includes the values for the broad market ETF’s and their inverses.

082809

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