Access Commodities Intelligently: Question and Answer

This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

Commodities may offer a hedge against inflation, as well as portfolio diversification. We address questions about the VanEck CM Commodity Index Fund in this Q&A.

Commodities can enhance portfolio diversification and provide access to global growth. Historically, commodities have also acted as a hedge against inflation, outperforming U.S. stocks and bonds. Even in periods of modest inflation (2-6%) commodities have outperformed U.S. stocks. This blog intends to answer frequently asked questions about the VanEck CM Commodity Index Fund, a passively managed fund that tracks the UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index (CMCI)1 and offers “pure” commodity exposure by investing in commodity-linked derivative instruments and more conservative fixed income securities, such as short-term U.S. treasuries.

Q: How does the UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index (CMCI) gain exposure to commodities?

A: CMCI diversifies across 26 commodity components and up to five maturities, and can efficiently adapt to the changing economic environment. CMCI chooses between futures contracts with maturities of three, six and 12 months, as well as two- to five-year maturities for certain commodities. This can be done either selectively for individual commodities to diversify over time, or collectively for all those included in the index to diversify both across commodities and over time. CMCI is rebalanced monthly to bring components back in line with their target weights.

CMCI invests in commodity futures contracts and is diversified across five sectors: energy, agriculture, industrial metals, precious metals and livestock. The weighting process for the Index is designed to reflect the economic significance and market liquidity of each commodity.

The selection and weightings of the futures contracts are reviewed annually and new target weights are determined. The Index is rebalanced to the new target weights during the maintenance period, which is the final three CMCI business days of July.

The performance of CMCI has three components: income return (interest earned on investment collateral), spot return (gain or loss on the commodity price) and roll return (gain or loss from rolling the futures contract forward). Commodity futures contracts, unlike stocks, expire monthly, or at another predetermined point in time. This expiration point is known as the contract’s “maturity,” or time to physical delivery.