Zacks Investment Ideas feature highlights: Berkshire Hathaway, Market Vectors Morningstar Wide Moat Research ETF, iShares Dow Jones Transportation Average ETF and SPDR S&P Insurance ETF

For Immediate Release

Chicago, IL – November 16, 2012 – Today, Zacks Investment Ideas feature highlights Features: Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), Market Vectors Morningstar Wide Moat Research ETF, (NYSE: MOAT), iShares Dow Jones Transportation Average ETF (NYSE: IYT) and SPDR S&P Insurance ETF (KIE)

INVESTMENT IDEAS

Invest Like Warren Buffett with These ETFs

Warren Buffett is widely regarded as one of the greatest investors of all-time, and for good reason. The ‘Oracle of Omaha’ has built up the one time struggling textile manufacturer of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) into a global behemoth with investments in a variety of industries and sectors.

Buffett’s incredible track record is best demonstrated by the rise of Berkshire Hathaway’s stock price over the years; the security was trading around $340 in 1980 and is now well over $120,000/share today. Meanwhile, since mid-1990, an investment in BRK.A would have added about 1700% compared to an S&P 500 return of roughly 300% in the same time period (read Four ETFs up More Than 30% YTD).

Clearly, Warren Buffett has been able to perform quite well over a very long time period, further adding to his mystique and overall legend. This has led many investors to apply Buffett-like strategies to their own personal portfolios as well, hoping that the deep value strategies of Buffett would rub-off on their overall returns.

In order to tap into these techniques, investors can certainly buy up Berkshire Hathaway shares as a proxy for Buffett’s methodology. Yet one has to wonder if this is still the best strategy, given how large Berkshire has become. After all, it could be argued that Buffett, thanks to the size of his firm, can no longer apply his strategies as he once could when Berkshire was much more nimble.

Warren can now only make large bets in order to truly move the needle, a situation which has undoubtedly hurt the investor’s impressive returns. In fact, a recent study suggested that in the 00’s Buffett didn’t add any alpha at all, a far cry from the nearly 19% alpha that he generated for Berkshire in 1956-1968 and the ‘golden age’ of Buffett’s performance in the 1977-1981 period in which he added nearly 30% a year in excess gains (see Inside The Two ETFs Up More Than 140% YTD).

Given this trend, investors may be looking for another way to apply Buffett-like strategies to their portfolios without the clear issues that Berkshire is facing. Warren is no spring chicken at this point anyway, so why take on that added risk of his retirement (or worse) when it is very easy to apply his ideas to the broader stock market without Berkshire’s help.