50% off Premium Yearly

TSE:ZLU
Chart shows it has been going sideways, but that is at a time where the rest of the market was actually going down. Thinks it is back in a situation where we are going to see it going up. This is very much consumer oriented. They have 25% utilities, 24% consumer staples, 17% healthcare and 10% consumer discretionary.
Low volatilities have exploded ever since the launch of PWSH S&P 500 Low ETF (SPLV-N). BMO’s spin on this has been very good and has outperformed quite a lot with everyone wanting US$s. With the recent action in the Cdn$ going down, and the contemplation that the US$ could depreciate, BMO and many others launched currency hedged versions such as Low Volatility US Equity Hedged (ZLH-T). This is a call on whether you think the US$ is going to go up or down.
This has very low volume and volume is very important. Technically ETF providers will tell you that the underlying benchmark or Index is key as to whether you can get liquidity in the market, from the standpoint of being able to redeem or create, but we are not in that market, so the next is the secondary market. He doesn’t Buy ETF’s that don’t trade actively every day.
This is a way to participate in a broad base. Their beta is .76. It has 25% utilities, 25% consumer staples, 20% in healthcare and 10.9% in consumer discretionary. These are companies that are not particularly multinationals, which is what he wants. Feels the high US$ has hurt some of the big multinationals. These tend to be more domestic.
Low volatility stocks have not done as well as some of the higher volatility stocks, which would typically be your momentum plays. Low volatility products have tended to underperform, which may continue for awhile. Until we get higher rates and more volatility that is when you want to be in this type of product.
Hasn’t done much recently, and is probably in a Buy range. They hold 25% utilities, 25% consumer staples, 20% healthcare and 12% consumer discretionary, so these are broad-based US companies towards the consumer side. Focused somewhat away from multinationals. Still thinks the US$ will continue to be strong. Good diversification.
This has been down 3 straight sessions, and today’s drop was a fair size. This is US stocks denominated. It works against you if the Cdn$ rallies to the US$. The dollar has gone from $1.27 to $1.23, which makes up a big chunk of the reversal of this ETF. Nothing wrong with the name and he thinks it is a terrific name. He wouldn’t get concerned with any short-term moves.
(A Top Pick July 31/15. Up 15.75%.) This has been one of his favourites for a while. It has a flexible portfolio in that they rebalance it once a year. It is not nearly as volatile as the market or individual securities can be.