Stock index futures dropped back towards last week’s lows in early trading suggesting that the selling is not yet over. Last Wednesday’s sharp down day does favor an oversold bounce this week but it would take several consecutive strong positive closes to stabilize the short term outlook, according to MoneyShow’s Tom Aspray.
Even the high flying China ETFs are correcting from their October highs as the evidence continues to indicate that the Chinese economy is indeed bottoming. As I noted last week many of the global markets are acting better than the US market. This suggests that in 2013 some of the non-US equity markets may offer a better return.
Since the start of October, the iShares MSCI China Index Fund (MCHI) is up 6.5% compared to a 4% drop in the Spyder Trust (SPY). That is a spread of over 10% in just six weeks.
According to the Chinese calendar this is the Year of the Water Dragon, which historically is a bullish year for stocks. It lasts until February of 2013 and by then the bottom in the Chinese economy should be confirmed.
These two China focused ETFs offer different ways to participate in the anticipated recovery and one emerging market ETF can provide exposure in China as well as other emerging markets.
Chart Analysis: Though the iShares Trust FTSE China 25 Index Fund (FXI) is considered by most to be the favored China play, there are several reasons that I prefer the iShares MSCI China Index Fund (MCHI).
The Guggenheim China Small Cap ETF (HAO) is a smaller ETF ($215 million) that has 225 stocks in its portfolio. Only stocks with under $1.56 billion in capitalization are included and only 13% is concentrated in the top ten holdings.
NEXT PAGE: A Low-Cost Way to Play China
The Week Ahead: Will 2013 Be Another Double-Digit Year?