Use This ETF To Help Reduce Exposure To Earnings Season Volatility

 | Jan 25, 2021 03:58

Wall Street is on track this week for a flood of quarterly earnings reports from some of the US's biggest companies. Investors will be paying special attention to Big Tech}} and other businesses whose results could move the markets.

Last week saw the four major US indices hit new record highs. However, along with robust price action, {{44336|volatility could easily return to equities and put pressure on names that could disappoint if they don't meet market expectations.

Recent research by Juhani T. Linnainmaa, and Conson Y. Zhang of the University of Southern California suggests :

"Many return anomalies relate to earnings announcements. Stock prices tend to move in the direction of recent earnings surprises."

In addition to analyzing income statements, balance sheets and cash flow statements, market participants will now be keen to get a better sense of companies' forecasts, not just for the upcoming quarter but especially for full-year 2021. Over the past several months, earnings estimates for many sectors have been rising, leading to the run-up in share prices, too.

Put another way, much of the good news for early 2021 could already be factored into the current index levels. In the case of potential warnings from any of the leading names, choppiness and profit-taking could be the immediate effect.

J. Christopher Hughen and Peter P. Lung of the University of Denver highlight : “the relatively poor performance of growth stocks occurs in quarters with negative earnings surprises.”

Against that backdrop, here is today's exchange-traded fund (ETF).

h2 Nationwide Risk-Managed Income ETF/h2
  • Current Price: $27.70
  • 52-Week Range: $23.50-$29.01
  • Distribution Yield: 7.78%
  • Expense Ratio: 0.68%

Today's ETF, the Nationwide Risk-Managed Income Fund (NYSE:NUSI), was launched in December 2019. Assets under management are close to 200 million.

The fund's aim is to generate income and mitigate risk in order to enhance total returns. To achieve this aim, portfolio managers use dynamic options strategies, including covered calls}} and protective puts as well as options-based ETFs, which we have discussed. We also discussed buffered ETFs.