USCF Launches Agricultural Commodity ETF - ETF News And Commentary
14 Mars 2012 - 12:21PM
Zacks
Alameda, California based United States Commodity Funds
LLC is a privately owned Asset Management Company and one
of the leading providers of commodity ETFs. The $ 3.39 billion
asset under management firm has recently made the eleventh addition
to its product portfolio in the commodity ETF space by introducing
the United States Agricultural Index Fund
(USAG).
The firm caters to investors looking for exposure in commodities
with products ranging from individual commodity funds targeting
natural gas, heating oil, gasoline, crude oil, as well as a broader
market commodity fund (USCI). However,
USAG will be their first step in the broad
agricultural commodity space (read Is USCI The Best Commodity
ETF?).
Commodity ETF Investing
Commodity ETFs have had a slightly disappointing picture over
the past quarter given the global economic and political pressures.
Issues pertaining to global economic growth, political drama in
Iran over crude oil, dollar strengthening against other major
currencies, and the debt crisis in Greece are some of the factors
that were responsible for pushing commodity prices lower, thereby
resulting in the dismal performance of commodity ETFs in the time
period (read Three Commodity ETFs That Have Not Surged).
However, agricultural commodities are a different story. It has
little or no correlation with the above mentioned economic and
political factors. Moreover, most of the agricultural products like
wheat, cotton, coffee, sugar etc. are necessities and the demand
for which are never going to fade away. Given the optimistic
premise, let’s have a closer look at the brand new agricultural
commodity ETF from USCF:
USAG In Focus
The ETF will look to replicate the daily yield performance of
its units’ Net Asset Value with that of the daily yield performance
of the SummerHaven Agriculture Index Total Return, before adjusting
for fees and expenses of the fund. Futures contracts for the
agricultural commodities comprising the Agriculture Index can be
considered to be highly liquid and regulated as these contracts are
continuously traded on ICE Futures US, ICE Futures Canada, the
Chicago Board of Trade, the Kansas City Board of Trade and the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
At any given time the fund invests in future contracts of 14
commodities listed in the index. The weightings of those 14 futures
contracts are revalued and rebalanced on a monthly basis. The
commodities are initially assigned a base weight on factors such as
marketability and overall economic impact of a particular
commodity. The initial weights that are assigned to individual
commodities serves as a reference for future weight calculations
corresponding to the index by applying some quantitative formulas
developed by SummerHaven relating to the current prices of futures
contracts. The weights then decide the composition of assets in the
fund and the performance of the fund varies accordingly.
According to ETF Daily News, the index overweighs the components
that are assessed to be in a low inventory state and underweighs
the components assessed to be in a high inventory state. The
explanation for this is that it results in lower contango for the
underlying commodities and low inventory products tend to perform
better due to worries over supplies. Unfortunately, investors have
to pay for this unique methodology, as the current management fee
for the product comes in at 95 basis points a year (see Inside The
FlexShares Natural Resource ETF).
Competition
The newly launched ETF will definitely serve as a niche product
as it will cater to the investors looking to get exposure in the
broader commodity space and not just particular commodity specific
funds. While most of the funds in this space are commodity specific
products such as-- UBC, CORN, GRU--
USAG may face severe competition from
PowerShares DB Agriculture Fund (DBA) and
E-TRACS UBS Bloomberg CMCI Agriculture ETN (UAG),
two very impressive agriculture-focused ETPs.
DBA holds all of its assets in widely traded
and highly liquid commodity futures. It has an expense ratio of
0.85% compared to a category average of 0.92% and total assets
worth an impressive $ 2.09 billion. Similarly, UAG
also holds all of its assets in 12 agricultural commodity futures
contracts, representing 12 of the most liquid contracts. The fund
charges a mere 65 basis points for fees and expenses which is one
of the lowest in this category. The fund was launched in the year
2008 and since then it has managed $ 13.98 million in its total
assets (see IndexIQ Files For Industry First Diamond ETF).
Given the above numbers, it is prudent to think that
USAG could see huge inflows in its asset base. The
product will remain highly in demand as the investors clearly have
an interest in ag commodity products but the options are still
limited. One of the major drawbacks of the product is that it is
comparatively expensive to its counterparts. Yet, with a proactive
management technique, and asset selection based on proven
mathematical research, the fund could have a bright future, much
like its counterpart, USCI.
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