Trending on ETFdb.com: Back to Normal as Brexit Shock Fades Out

ETFdb.com analyzes the search patterns of our visitors each week. By sharing these trends with our readers, we hope to provide insights into what the financial world is concerned about and how to position your portfolio.

There was no central theme this week, but readers were attracted by news-making headlines. Japan is again in the spotlight; although, this time not because of its safe-haven appeal but due to signals from the country’s top brass of fresh fiscal stimulus. Italian banks’ woes have also been on investors’ minds together with Inverse bonds, which are present in our list for the second consecutive week. In addition, ETFs tracking mortgage-backed securities are third from the top, while aerospace defense stocks are last.

Bubblechart
Bubblechart

Japan: A New Glimmer of Hope

Japan’s authorities have finally delivered a piece of good news that boosted stocks and dragged down a threateningly strong yen. The announcement of possible new fiscal stimulus attracted 137% more visitors to Japan equities compared to last week, as investors have cheered the news by bidding stocks up. For example, the iShares MSCI Japan ETF (EWJ A) has jumped 3.80% in the last 5 days, trimming year-to-date losses to 1.80%.

Ewj
Ewj

Following a landslide victory in elections last weekend, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe promised a new round of fiscal stimulus aimed at jumpstarting demand in a flailing economy. The measures are primarily part of what Abe has called the second arrow of his plan to end a twenty-year stagnation, and consist of investments in infrastructure, agriculture and tourism. The first arrow is about monetary stimulus measures, which have been deployed consistently throughout the past years, and the third arrow comprises structural reforms to liberalize the labor market and counteract the effects of an aging population. Here, Japan has been less effective, and perhaps that could be the main reason why the so-called Abenomics has largely failed to bring the promised economic growth and inflation back to normal levels.

For now, however, markets are animated by the news. The Bank of Japan is also expected to inject fresh stimulus as soon as this month, possibly bringing the yen further down and underpinning the country’s equity markets.

Inverse Bonds: After the Storm

Inverse bonds ETFs, meaning funds gaining from rising yields, have seen their traffic increase 82% this week compared to the week-ago period, as many of them have grown over the past five days. For example, the iPath US Treasury 10-year Bear ETN (DTYS A) has risen 11% in the last 5 days and jumped another 5% this morning, benefitting from relative calmness in the markets following the Brexit storm, which had pushed yields further down across the board. Year-to-date, however, the fund’s performance and that of many similar others, remains deeply in negative territory. The iPath US Treasury 10-year Bear ETN is down 43.5% and has yet to recover from the Brexit debacle.