Financial ETFs Set to Rally in Earnings Season

After days of discussion on the fiscal cliff finally coming to an end, investors are now turning their attention to the earnings announcements. Leaving aside all technical and basic factors that impact prices of stocks, it is the earnings of companies that have traditionally been impacting stock price movements (Does Your Portfolio Need a Financial ETF?).

At the cusp of the heart of earnings season, investors are keenly following the financial sector. Financials is said to be the leading indicator of the overall market. Financials for the matter of fact may prove to be a good investment opportunity this earnings season.

Lately the sentiment for the sector has been quite bullish. The recent rally in the equity market was mostly attributable to the performance of financial stocks (Three Financial ETFs That Avoid Big Bank Stocks).

In fact, financial sector ETFs were one of the best performing sectors in 2012 and if the numbers from bank stocks come in positive the sector may sustain its relative strength this earnings.

After posting poor results in the second quarter, bank stocks tapped the growth momentum in third quarter earnings. In the third quarter, banks reported solid growth in profits not seen in the last six years. Profits surged nearly 7% in the said quarter (Banking ETFs 101).

The momentum is likely to sustain in the final quarter of the year. In fact, banks are expected to post double-digit growth this quarter. Investors should further note that after three years, the rise in profits would issue principally from traditional sources of revenue rather than from curtailed funds reserved for bad loans.

The last few sessions actually saw the financial sector ETFs on the verge of a breakout. If the numbers from the banks do not disappoint these ETFs may breakout yet again forming new highs (Three Financial ETFs Outperforming XLF).

Earlier in the season, Wells Fargo (WFC) was the first major financial institution to report earnings. The bank reported strong numbers with profits gaining 24% and revenue beating expectations. However, the low interest rates have continued to impact the bank’s margins.

With upbeat results from Wellls Fargo and expectation of double-digit growth in earnings from other financial houses, investors may opt to capitalize on the gain in ETF form instead of tracking individual banks.

So investors who believe that financial institutions will post solid numbers this quarter and ETFs tracking the Financial sector will do good business this earnings, any of the following three Financial ETFs could make for an interesting pick at this time.