One of the most well-received results of the ETF boom has been
the incredible number of options now available to investors in the
commodity world. Now, everyday investors can gain exposure to
commodity futures in any number of sectors in a way that was once
reserved for hedge funds and institutional clients.
While gold and silver were reasonably accessible before, the
real surge has been in the soft commodity space which is
inappropriate for physically-backed investments. This sector—which
includes staple products like corn, coffee, and livestock—is also
one of the more volatile corners of the commodity world, making it
perfect for those seeking to make short-term trades.
In terms of ETF options in the space, many investors have sought
exposure to the segment via the PowerShares DB Agriculture
ETF (DBA). This fund has amassed close to $2 billion in
AUM and sees volume of over one million shares a day (see Top
Commodity ETFs In This Uncertain Market).
Yet, despite this impressive lead and the presence of seven
other funds in the broad agriculture ETF space, United States
Commodity Funds believes that investors might have a better choice
with their relatively new US Agriculture Index Fund
(USAG).
This product looks to give investors exposure to the SummerHaven
Dynamic Agriculture Index Total Return which is a benchmark of
agricultural futures contracts. The product looks to charge
investors 95 basis points a year in fees and is structured as a
commodities pool making the product technically a limited
partnership.
With this focus, the commodity ETF will choose from 14 eligible
products, switching in and out on a monthly basis. The group
includes a variety of commodities including; corn, soybeans, soft
and hard red winter wheat, soybean oil & meal, canola, sugar,
cocoa, coffee, cotton, live cattle, feeder cattle, and lean
hogs.
Thanks to this, the product looks to act as a broad benchmark
for the space instead of just holding a few specific commodities in
the agriculture sector, as all fourteen commodities are held every
month (see more on ETFs at the Zacks ETF
Center).
In order to determine the weights, the company first starts with
its ‘base weight’ for each of the products. Currently, this is
broken down as follows among the various commodities:
Commodity
|
Base Weighting
|
Soybeans
|
12.5%
|
Corn
|
12.5%
|
Soft Red Winter Wheat
|
8.0%
|
Hard Red Winter Wheat
|
4.0%
|
Bean Oil
|
3.0%
|
Soybean Meal
|
6.0%
|
Coffee
|
10.0%
|
Cocoa
|
6.0%
|
Sugar
|
10.0%
|
Canola
|
3.0%
|
Cotton
|
6.0%
|
Feeder Cattle
|
3.0%
|
Live Cattle
|
10.0%
|
Lean Hogs
|
6.0%
|
Based on these base weights, the company then adjusts them on a
monthly basis to play market trends. This is done via a three step
process:
- The issuer finds the annualized percentage price differential
between the closest-to-expiration benchmark contract and the next
closest-to-expiration contract. The four commodities that have the
four highest differentials are given a 2% boost in their total
weight.
- For the remaining 10 commodities, the percentage price change
for the agricultural products is calculated. The three that have
the highest percentage price change are given a 2% boost in their
total weight.
- Then, finally, the seven products that were not selected using
the criteria listed above experience a 2% reduction in their
weighting in the index.
This strategy looks to help investors minimize contango and
maximize backwardation by looking at the futures curve as well as
observed inventory levels. The firm believes that by doing this
investors can have a better commodity ETF investing experience that
is more in-line with spot prices.
While the methodology might seem a little strange, investors
should note that a similar product tracking the broad commodity
market already exists; the USCF Commodity Index Fund
(USCI). This ETF has
amassed more than $400 million in AUM and sees average trading
volume approaching 90,000 shares a day, suggesting that the
technique has caught on with investors so far (see Is USCI The Best
Commodity ETF?).
However, investors should remember that the agricultural space
is fraught with competition and not just from the aforementioned
DBA. Beyond that popular product is another relatively new fund
from Teucrium, the Teucrium Agricultural Fund
(TAGS). This product
only holds a handful of commodities in its basket, but the
company’s focus on reducing contango could make it a quality rival
to USAG (read Teucrium Launches New Basket Agriculture ETF).
Thanks to this heavy competition, USAG could have some difficult
seeing inflows among a wide variety of investors. This is
especially true given that USCI has had a difficult time
outperforming more traditional benchmarks over the past 52 week
period.
However, USCI has shown a history of outperforming—or at least
matching broad benchmarks—during periods of commodity bulls quite
frequently in its history. Given this, some agricultural commodity
investors may want to give USAG a closer look as a more
‘quantitative’ choice in the agricultural ETF space.
This could be especially true if agricultural markets continue
to surge and inventory levels in some key grain products fall in
the months ahead. In fact, corn prices have risen by about 16%
since the beginning of June while wheat prices had added a similar
amount in the time frame thanks to the sweltering heat. Should this
trend continue, USAG could be well positioned in a number of
futures contracts and ride this to outperformance.
Arguably, this has already started to happen as of late as USAG
has managed to outperform its main counterpart, DBA, over the past
month. In this time period, USAG has added 5.4% while DBA has
gained just 3.6% in comparison (see Five ETFs to Buy in 2012).
Clearly, USAG’s solid methodology has helped in producing this
marked outperformance over this relatively short-time period, and
particularly so over the past week. Should this continue, inflows
seem certain to flow into the still-new ETF, making USAG a viable
option for investors looking to play the hot weather and ride grain
prices higher in the summer months.
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PWRSH-DB AGRIC (DBA): ETF Research Reports
TEUCRIUM AGRICL (TAGS): ETF Research Reports
US-AGRICULTURE (USAG): ETF Research Reports
US-COMMODITY IF (USCI): ETF Research Reports
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