That Was Then, This Is Now for Last Year's Top Performers
By Tom Lydon | January 18, 2008 | 6:27 PM | 0 Comments
If you look at the performance reports, there is so much red, it looks like a sea full of chum. Times for exchange traded funds (ETFs) are a-changin'. What worked for your portfolio in 2007 isn't necessarily going to work now.
A case in point is the iShares FTSE/Xinhua China 25 Index (FXI). Last year, the fund was up 53.3%. Recently, it declined 30% off its high.
ETF investors should be reassessing their portfolios now. If you're holding onto those top performers from last year, it's time to implement that exit strategy: if a fund drops more than 8% of its high or dips below its 200-day moving average, it's time to let it go.
It's clear that we're hurting on a global scale now. Where do investors go? Despite from the looks of things, there are still a number of places to turn.
A quick review of the top-performing funds so far for 2008 tell a pretty big story: inverse ETFs make up the top 24 spots on Morningstar's list. The first long ETF to appear on the list holds the 25th spot - the PowerShares Financial Preferred (PGF), made up of preferred financial stocks from all over the world. Year-to-date, it's up 13.6%.
The top-performing fund, overall, is the MACROshares Oil Down Tradeable Shares (DCR), which is technically not an ETF. Regardless, DCR has performed strongly so far this year, up 42.3%.
A number of other funds are that are bucking the overall downward trend, too. Let's have a look:
PowerShares DB Agriculture (DBA), up 11.3%
B2B Internet HOLDRs (BHH), up 11.3%
iShares S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index (PFF), up 7%
PowerShares DB Silver (DBS), up 9.4%
iShares Silver Trust Report (SLV), up 8.4%
ETF investors should be reassessing their portfolios now. If you're holding onto those top performers from last year, it's time to implement that exit strategy: if a fund drops more than 8% of its high or dips below its 200-day moving average, it's time to let it go.
Disclosure: Some of Tom Lydon's clients own shares of DBA.













