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Grading ETF Risk: Why Tech ETFs and Biotech ETFs Are Half As Risky As Financial ETFs

23 September 2009 at 11:47 am by Gary Gordon     Bookmark and Share

Seven years ago, you may have opted for the SPDR Select Financials (XLF) as a moderate risk method for acquiring dividends in a “stable” economic sector. In contrast, you may have run screaming from the SPDR Select Technology Fund (XLK) or the iShares Biotechnology Fund (IBB), as “dot-coms” and “drug start-ups” were symbols of the Nasdaq collapse.

Today, standardized measures of risk show that Biotech (IBB) as well as Tech (XLK) present about half the risk of Financials (XLF). Specifically, the popular web portal, “Risk Grades” rates both IBB and XLK as having ”risk grades” of 91 and 89 respectively, while XLF is marked with a 180.

Note: RiskGrades.com developed a standardized method of assessing volatility such that a score of 100 represents the average risk of a globally diversified basket of equities. In effect, if the iShares MSCI All World ACWI Index (ACWI) rates at 100 and the Claymore BRIC Emerging Market Fund (EEB) turns in a grade of 150, EEB may be said to be 1.5x as volatile as ACWI.

Yet having 1.5x or 2x the risk of another investment isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Portoflio risk will depend on how your assets collectively rate. Moreover, if you’re willing to take 2x the risk, you would at least be hoping for 2x the reward.

How did that play out for Biotech (IBB), Tech (XLK) and Financials (XLF) over the last 5 years? Biotech had a 5-year total return of +15%, Tech (XLK) shows a total return of roughly 9% and “2x-the-risk” XLF lost an astonishing -45%. One may have hoped to see a total return of 30% for XLF, as that would be indicative of 2x the reward.

Biotech Versus Financials Over 5 years

It follows that volatility alone, even standardized volatility, can’t quite account for systemic risk or bear market math risk. Nevertheless, an understanding of how much your investments may vacillate is helpful in constructing your portfolio.

For instance, Emerging Asia (GMF) at a “risk grade” of 140 is not much different than the risk you would take with a broader emerging investment like Vanguard Emerging Markets (VWO) at 136. If you’re a believer in the region, GMF may provide more pop for your euro, yen or yuan.

Conversely, PowerShares Wilderhill Clean Energy (PBW) and Global Solar (TAN) received grades of 172 and 243 respectively. while SPDR Select Energy (XLE) came in at 125. Getting “TAN” for 2x the risk of ordinary energy? I’m only seeing the downside risk without the requisite “2x-the-reward.”

XLE Versus TAN 2009

Simply stated, there may be little reason to go with the alternative energy concept. TAN may be a tad too speculative for the volatility involved at this stage.

If you’d like to learn more about ETF investing… then tune into ”In the Money With Gary Gordon.” You can listen to the show “LIVE”, via podcast or on your iPod.

Disclosure Statement: ETF Expert is a web log (”blog”) that makes the world of ETFs easier to understand. Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC, may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds and/or index funds mentioned above. Investors who are interested in money management services may visit the Pacific Park Financial, Inc. web site.

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