2 ETFs That Could Benefit From The Return Of The Reflation Trade

 | Dec 14, 2021 03:42

Wall Street has been paying attention to the “reflation trade,” a term that has been used somewhat loosely in 2021. Reflation policies typically follow a period of economic contraction. Economists highlight :

“Monetary easing via central banks is one method, the other is fiscal stimulus and increased spending from governments, both trying to halt deflationary pressures and lift the economy.”

Stimulating the economy by investing in jobs and infrastructure as well as specific policies by the Federal Reserve, like quantitative easing, have been efforts to reflate the U.S. economy. Since the start of the pandemic in 2020, many other countries have taken similar steps to get their deflated economies reflated and working well again.

When inflation follows after a bottom in the economic cycle, we have reflation as depressed prices begin to recover. In addition, we see employment as well as wage growth. Therefore, a reflation trade is the view that certain segments of the market should perform better as the economy starts to recover and “normalize.”

Wall Street has been debating which industries and stocks should benefit the most if the reflation trade holds in the coming weeks. The expectation is that value stocks as well as commodities, miners, financials, real estate and infrastructure names should do well.

For instance, private equity giant KKR & Co suggests :

“Buy price makers, avoid price takers…. [W]e suggest overweight positions in infrastructure, real estate and asset-based finance… In terms of global equities, we are overweight Europe, Japan, small- to mid-cap stocks in the U.S., and select Emerging Markets.”

KKR also points out that investors should avoid “popular stocks with rich valuations… [W]e still see many of the most popular growth stocks not doing as well.”

Understandably, not everyone on Wall Street will necessarily agree with KKR’s views. And that difference in opinion is what makes a dynamic market.

With that information, today we introduce two value-focused exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that could see robust returns in 2022.

h2 1. Invesco S&P MidCap 400 Pure Value ETF/h2
  • Current Price: $93.60
  • 52-Week Range: $30.13 - $99.71
  • Dividend Yield: 1.23%
  • Expense Ratio: 0.35% per year

The Invesco S&P MidCap 400® Pure Value ETF (NYSE:RFV) invests in mid-capitalization U.S. stocks from the S&P Midcap 400 Index that offer fundamental value. Fund managers rely on ratios like book value-to-price, earnings-to-price and sales-to-price.

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