Standard & Poor's Announces Changes In The S&P/TSX Canadian Indices and the S&P/TSX Venture Composite Index
September 11, 2009-Standard & Poor's Canadian Index Operations announces the following index changes:
Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited (TSX:FFH) has announced a proposal to acquire the outstanding shares of Odyssey Re Holdings Corp. that it does not already own. The relative weight of Fairfax Financial will increase in the S&P/TSX Composite and Capped Composite, the S&P/TSX Completion and Equity Completion, the S&P/TSX Equity and Capped Equity and the S&P/TSX Capped Financials indices to reflect the issuance of new shares as part of the transaction, which will be effective after the close of trading on Monday, September 14, 2009.
Standard & Poor's will make the following changes in the S&P/TSX Venture Composite Index after the close of trading on Friday, September 11, 2009:
The shares of Mega Silver Inc. (TSX-V:MSR) will trade under the new name Mega Precious Metals Inc. The new ticker symbol will be "MGP" and the new CUSIP number will be 58516L 10 8. There is no consolidation of capital.
Company additions to and deletions from an S&P equity index do not in any way reflect an opinion on the investment merits of the company.
Source: Online News
SEC To Hold Securities Lending and Short Sale Roundtable
September 11, 2009-The Securities and Exchange Commission will hold a roundtable about securities lending and short sale issues on September 29 and September 30.
The roundtable will feature an in-depth review of securities lending practices and also analyze possible short sale pre borrowing requirements and additional short sale disclosures. Panelists are expected to include investors, corporate issuers, financial services firms, beneficial owner lenders, lending agents, borrowers of securities, self-regulatory organizations, international regulators and the academic community.
The roundtable agenda is available. The list of panelists will be announced at a later date.
The roundtable discussion will be held in the auditorium at SEC headquarters at 100 F Street NE in Washington, D.C. On September 29, the roundtable will focus on securities lending issues and take place from 9:30 a.m. to approximately 4 p.m. On September 30, the roundtable will focus on short sale pre-borrowing and additional short sale disclosures and take place from 9:30 a.m. to approximately 12:30 p.m.
The public is invited to observe the roundtable discussion. Seating will be available on a first-come, first-served basis. The roundtable discussion also will be available via webcast on the SEC Web site.
For additional information about the roundtable, contact the SEC's Division of Trading and Markets at (202) 551-5720.
Additional Materials
Notice of Roundtable Discussion;
Request for Comment
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Investors Pull $2.1 Billion out of Leveraged ETFs
September 11, 2009--Investors pulled nearly $2.1 billion out of inverse and leveraged exchange-traded funds in August, the second consecutive month of losses for the funds, which have come under regulatory scrutiny.
Overall, assets in the 755 ETFs in the U.S. rose $20.1 billion in August, up 3.3% from the previous month, to $661 billion, according to a report from State Street Global Advisors. The increase marks the sixth consecutive month of increases for the funds, which trade daily on exchanges like stocks.
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Source: WSJ.com
US ETP ASSETS HIT ALL TIME HIGH
Latest data from the ETF Research and Implementation Strategy team at Barclays Global Investors reveals US ETP net inflows of US$54.3 Bn push US ETP Assets to an all time high of US$678 bn at end August 2009, driven by fixed income, commodity and emerging market ETPs.
Contrasting this to the latest data from Strategic Insight, net inflows to mutual funds (excluding ETPs) domiciled in the US were minus US$50.5 Bn in the first six months of 2009.
Deborah Fuhr, Global Head of ETF Research & Implementation Strategy at BGI said, “The net inflows of US$54.3 Bn in the past eight months shows demand for ETPs is still growing as clients view ETPs as useful tools to help them implement many types of exposures”.
Fixed income ETPs have seen the largest net inflows with US$29.5 Bn net new assets YTD. The most popular fixed income exposure has been Corporate bond ETPs with US$8.7 Bn net inflows, followed by inflation linked ETPs with US$6.7 Bn, and ETPs tracking aggregate bond benchmarks with US$4.3 Bn.
Commodity focused ETPs was the second most popular asset category in terms of net flows, with US$23.8 Bn. Precious metals commodity ETPs grew the most with US$12.9 Bn net new assets, followed by energy ETPs with US$5.0 Bn and broad commodity exposures with US$3.7 Bn.
Emerging markets equity ETPs was the third most popular asset category with US$12.9 Bn net inflows. Broad emerging market equity exposures saw net inflows of US$6.1 Bn YTD, followed by Brazil focused ETPs with US$2.2 Bn, and ETPs tracking Chinese benchmarks with US$1.3 Bn net new assets.
Source:ETF Research and Implementation Strategy, Barclays Global Investors
XTF Enhances Country Rotation and Fixed Income ETF Portfolios
Adds Seven New Countries to Rotation Portfolio, Adds Fixed Income Asset Classes
January 15, 2008 -- XTF Global Asset Management, an asset manager that builds and manages portfolios of ETFs, today announced that it has added seven new country-focused ETFs to its country rotation portfolio. XTF also announced that it has enhanced its fixed-income ETF portfolio by adding several fixed income asset classes. These product enhancements are designed to leverage the diversity and appeal of new ETFs that came to market in 2007.
The seven new country ETFs increase XTF's Country Rotation Portfolio's (CRP) exposure to emerging markets. New countries include: Spain, Mexico, Sweden, South Korea, Malaysia, China and Taiwan. The CRP now can invest in up to 20 ETFs that each track the economies of foreign countries. Previously, CRP invested in up to 13 countries, including: The Netherlands, Germany, France, Switzerland, Italy, United Kingdom, Belgium, Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan, Canada and South Africa.
"We've been tracking these seven countries' financial and economic data over the past year and determined that it is now appropriate to add them to our portfolio," said Jeff Buetow, XTF's chief investment officer. "We initially limited the CRP to developed markets to take advantage of the safety of their long track records as well as the sound structural characteristics of the corresponding ETFs. Now that emerging market ETFs have become far more attractive from an investment perspective, we believe it's the right time to provide emerging market exposure as part of a well diversified portfolio."
Since its January 2007 inception, the CRP has outperformed its benchmark index, the Country Rotation Composite Index, by nearly 200 basis points. Part of its success is due to XTF's model-driven investment approach, which actively manages exposure to foreign equity markets. The model tracks foreign equity market economies, fundamentals, risk and technical factors, generating buy or sell signals for each country. The CRP's performance to date validates this approach.
The CRP is designed to take advantage of changes in the risk and the appreciation potential of the individual countries it follows. XTF models each country independently, and compares its risk/reward profile to an equivalent investment in intermediate-term U.S. Treasuries. If the country profile is favorable versus U.S. Treasury yields, XTF invests in the country. Alternatively, if Treasuries are more favorable, XTF invests in the Treasuries. Each country in the CRP is equally weighted at five percent of the overall portfolio. XTF uses a binary investment strategy, and makes an "all or none" decision to invest in each country.
"The Country Rotation Portfolio is designed to function as an enhancement to investors' core portfolio. By taking a broad, long-term view of international equities, CRP also is a strategy that investors can deploy to mitigate against short-term volatility in their portfolios," said Tom Scuccimarra, XTF's head of sales and distribution. "By moving into fixed income ETFs, we can hedge against potential downturns in the foreign equity markets, stabilizing investor portfolios further."
XTF Global Asset Management