Palladium ETF Surging on Tensions in Ukraine - ETF News And Commentary
13 Mars 2014 - 3:00PM
Zacks
The geopolitical tension between Russia and Ukraine has grabbed the
attention of the global investing market to start this year. The
crisis has not been confined to war of words only; the possibility
of war also cropped up in the Crimean peninsula. The Ukrainian
clash is not only a net negative for the East-European territory,
but it could have a ripple effect on the West as well.
The conflict really dated back to November 2013 when the presently
ousted Ukraine president, Viktor Yanukovich abstained from signing
an Association Agreement with the European Union for closer ties
with Russia. The move set off weeks of anti-government protests in
the country overthrowing Yanukovich from his office.
However, Russia still declines to recognize the newly established
interim government in Ukraine, and Russian forces took control of a
Ukrainian border guard post in western Crimea. Russia’s move spread
tension in the U.S. and Europe. Both parties have accused Russia of
violating international law through an army intervention into
Crimea.
Earlier, Crimea was the part of Russia and became part of Ukraine
only in the 1950s. The region houses Russia's Black Sea fleet, and
its chief port is on lease to Russia. Putin is concerned that the
latest Ukrainian government will cancel the Russian Navy's lease,
making matters worse.
The fate of the Black Sea peninsula, which will either move to
Russia or stay with Ukraine, will be decided in a referendum to be
held on March 16 by the local Crimean administration. The latest
developments include the tightening of security in Crimea by
pro-Russian militia.
Consequently, all these have dampened the global stock market
outlook, though presumably for the near term. However, the
mayhem is a blessing in disguise for some commodities like oil and
gas as well as palladium which is found abundantly in Russia (read:
3 Energy ETFs to Buy on the Ukraine Crisis).
A Boost to Palladium Investing
Russia is the biggest producer of Palladium. Concerns of any
economic approval against Russia or trade restrictions (if it
continues to intervene in Ukraine) could upset the export of the
metal that pushed up the price of the commodity palladium. The
European Union earlier has hung up talks on visa liberalization and
an economic agreement with Moscow to disapprove Russia's sortie
into Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula.
Investors should note that the metal is already undergoing a supply
crunch. Diminishing stockpiles in Russia and production outages are
leading to the highest supply deficit since 2000. Stockpiles could
finish by the end of 2014, as per some analysts (Read: Will
Palladium ETF Shine Brightest This Year?).
The Russian geopolitical risk hit at a time when the palladium
market has been bucking under pressure with reduced supplies from
another major produce South Africa owing to a month-long strike in
South Africa’s mining sector. Both these situations have enabled
palladium's price to hit the 11-month high in early March.
Also, the demand for palladium has been steadily rising in the
global auto industry which is also expanding at a fast clip. The
metal is largely used in the production of catalytic converters in
automobiles manufactured in China and the U.S., the world’s two
biggest auto markets (read: Robust Car Sales Bring Auto ETF in
Focus).
Amid hopes for higher prices for the metal, this could be the right
time to invest in the metal. Below we have highlighted the only
pure-play on the metal –
ETF Securities Physical Palladium
Shares (
PALL) – in detail.
Inside PALL
For a bullion-backed approach to palladium ETF investing, investors
can look to ETF Securities Physical Palladium Shares or
PALL. The ETF holds the metal in the form of bullion, or
ingots. The metal is safely stored in London and Zürich on behalf
of the custodian, JP Morgan Chase Bank.
Investing through PALL in palladium represents a cost-effective and
suitable mode for investors. The transaction costs for buying and
selling the shares will be much lower than purchasing, storing and
insuring physical palladium for most investors (read: 3 Commodity
ETFs Still Looking Strong).
This ETF is designed to track the spot price of Palladium bullion
and has amassed about $495.7 million. The expense ratio of 60 basis
points appears reasonable in the precious metals ETF space.
PALL has returned about 7.84% year to date. The performance left
behind the other precious metal products like
iShares
Silver Trust (SLV) and
ETFS Physical Platinum
Shares (PPLT) which added 7.11% and 6.59%, respectively,
in the time frame. Only gold ETFs have outperformed the metal so
far this year in the space.
From a technical standpoint as well, PALL looks attractive. The
short-term moving averages of PALL are above the long-term averages
as depicted in the chart above. This suggests continued bullishness
for this ETF.
However, there is a little drag in the relative strength index that
stands at 65.67 suggesting that the fund is approaching overbought
territory. However, there is still time before the interest in
palladium investing gets stale and investors can easily try out the
latest surge in it.
We give the product a Zacks ETF Rank of 3 or ‘Hold’ rating, though
with the current geopolitical concerns, this could be an
interesting play for investors in the short-term.
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ETFS-PALLADIUM (PALL): ETF Research Reports
ETFS-PLATINUM (PPLT): ETF Research Reports
ISHARS-SLVR TR (SLV): ETF Research Reports
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