My Favorite ETF For 2015

  • My favorite ETF is AdvisorShares TrimTabs Float Shrink ETF (TTFS)
  • It has more than doubled since its recent inception
  • Even after doubling, I still think it is an attractive long

Ice is almost out on Rangeley Lake.

With warmer weather ahead, my mind starts to wander to lazy ways to allocate capital without too much work. Thus, one of my few ETF ideas for your consideration.

The goal of AdvisorShares TrimTabs Float Shrink ETF (TTFS) is to beat the Russell 3000 (NYSEARCA:IWV), which it has consistently succeeded at accomplishing since it launched. It also attempts to do so with less volatility than its index.

This $222 million ETF is focused on companies with net share count reduction. One of the keys to its success has been in owning a large number of deal targets. According to Bloomberg, it has had 57 exits via acquisition, which is over one per month. These takeover targets included Kraft (NASDAQ:KRFT). Bloomberg also notes that it contains several prospective takeover candidates including Starwood (NYSE:HOT), Zoetis (NYSE:ZTS), Scripps Network (NYSE:SNI), and Rockwell Automation (NYSE:ROK).

So why do I care? I care because one of the major differences between getting paid as a shareholder and getting paid as a manager is whether or not one cares about value on a per share basis. My favorite management teams focus on value per share. Often, they reduce their shares outstanding over time in companies such as Loews Corporation (NYSE:L):

I don't spend much time philosophizing over whether they are making me money because they are good managers or because they are large shareholders; in the case of the Tisches, I suspect that it is a large measure of both.

Another of my investments with a share price that has been rising while its share count has been falling is Ocean Shore Holding (NASDAQ:OSHC). This small bank is a likely takeover candidate in the near future, but the takeover price per share will be improved by the management's constant buybacks while we await the bank's sale to a strategic buyer:

Other companies have boards and managements that appear to be more in the business of selling shares instead of selling their nominal products and services:

This is a value destruction machine, but it manages to stay in business by constantly selling ever more shares. The most extreme example that I have seen of this phenomenon is Axion Power International (OTCQB:AXPW), a company that is inexplicably a constant source of stock trader chatter on Seeking Alpha:

It appears to be worth exactly $0.00, but it has a market capitalization of over $2 million, while it keeps finding buyers for its probably worthless shares. In percentage terms, its share price is down over 95% while its share count is up over 100,000%:

While an actively managed ETF would generally have almost no appeal to me, the strategy of favoring companies with declining share count makes sense in theory and in my experience.

Disclosure: The author is long OSHC, TTFS.

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Wendell Brown 9 years ago Member's comment

Regarding AXPW, I'm sure that's one of those stocks where the reason for the chatter is people trying to manipulate it. Anything this tiny has little legitimacy. The fact that a search on the company goes first to products on Amazon is a clue too :-)