Invest in Stocks With High Free Cash Flow Margins Using This ETF

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The Pacer Cash Cows ETF (NYSEARCA:COWZ) has been a smash hit with investors, returning over 30% annually over the past three years and growing to $13.4 billion in assets under management in the process. This, plus the success of other similarly-themed ETFs like the Pacer US Small Cap Cash Cows 100 ETF (NYSEARCA:CALF) led Pacer to add a brand new ETF to the series, the Pacer U.S. Large Cap Cash Cows Growth Leaders ETF (NYSEARCA:COWG).

This newcomer to the Pacer family is similar to its counterparts but focuses on large-cap stocks within the Russell 1000 and places an emphasis on stocks with high free cash flow margins (rather than free cash flow yields, like COWZ and CALF). The COWG ETF only launched this past December, so it doesn’t have much of a track record to judge it by yet, but judging from the success of COWZ and CALF, COWG looks likely to provide solid returns for early investors.

New Cow, Different Strategy

As discussed above, COWG employs a similar strategy to the one that COWZ and CALF have used to great effect, but it tweaks it by focusing on free cash flow margin instead of free cash flow yield. Free cash flow margin is simply a company’s free cash flow divided by its revenue. It allows investors to gauge how much free cash flow a company can generate from its revenue, and it’s a good way to get an idea of the capital intensity of a company.

Pacer says that this is an effective strategy because “companies with high free cash flow margin[s] have historically generated more profitable sales.”

Big Four accounting firm Ernst & Young says that a free cash flow margin of 10%-15% is generally considered a ‘good’ free cash flow margin. However, to be clear, this is not a hard and fast rule, and comparing the free cash flow margins of stocks in different industries is not an apples-to-apples comparison.

Using this as a broad rule of thumb, however, COWG’s methodology looks interesting because after it screens for the 100 companies in the Russell 1000 with the highest free cash flow margins, its holdings have an average free cash flow margin of around 31%, so just over twice the high end of Ernst & Young’s range.

Let’s take a look at how this plays out in practice with the holdings that COWG selects.

COWG’s Holdings

COWG holds 101 positions, and its top 10 holdings account for 23.6% of holdings. Because it caps each investment at a 5% weighting, this ETF offers ample diversification. COWG’s largest holding is Lattice Semiconductor (NASDAQ:LSCC), which makes up 3.6% of assets.

Below, you’ll find a comprehensive overview of COWG’s top 10 holdings using TipRanks’ holdings tool. This screen is a one-stop shop for ETF investors, giving investors critical information like the weighting of each holding within the fund, performance, analyst ratings, analyst price ratings, and Smart Scores.