Wall Street had a strong start to the second quarter courtesy of encouraging data released on April 1. In particular, a solid March job report injected further optimism into the economy, driving stocks higher. This is especially true as U.S. hiring continued its strong momentum with 215,000 jobs added last month following the revised 245,000 job additions in February. This is much above Reuters’ expectation of 205,000.
The majority of the additions were seen in retail, health care, and construction that more than offset the decline in the manufacturing and mining sectors. Notably, the economy has been creating over 200,000 jobs per month since 2014. Average hourly wages grew by 7 cents to $25.43 in March bringing the year-over-year increase to 2.3%. This is much better than the 2-cent decline in February but lower than the 2.6% year-over-year wage growth in December that marked the strongest improvement since 2009. However, the unemployment rate ticked up slightly to 5% from an eight-year low of 4.9%.
Meanwhile, the labor force participation rate, which indicates the percentage of working-age people who are employed or looking for work, climbed to the highest level since March 2014 at 63%. The robust pace of job creation suggests that the U.S. is one of the healthiest economies in the world that will be able to withstand global uncertainty. However, the data failed to alter the cautious expectations for a rates hike.
Given this, a few ETFs will severely impact by the solid jobs data while some are expected to gain in the weeks ahead. Below, we have highlighted some of these that are especially volatile post jobs data:
ETFs to Gain
PowerShares DB US Dollar Bullish Fund ((UUP – ETF report))
A healthy job market and the resultant improving economy are expected to pull in more capital into the country and lead to appreciation of the U.S. dollar. UUP is the prime beneficiary of the rising dollar as it offers exposure against a basket of six world currencies – euro, Japanese yen, British pound, Canadian dollar, Swedish krona and Swiss franc. This is done by tracking the Deutsche Bank Long US Dollar Index Futures Index Excess Return plus the interest income from the fund’s holdings of the U.S. Treasury securities.
In terms of holdings, UUP allocates nearly 57.6% in euro and 25.5% collectively in Japanese yen and British pound. The fund has so far managed an asset base of $818.6 million while sees an average daily volume of around 1.7 million shares. It charges 80 bps in total fees and expenses, and lost 0.04% on the day following the jobs report. The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank of 2 or ‘Buy’ rating with a Medium risk outlook.
SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF (XHB – ETF report)
Solid labor market fundamentals along with affordable mortgage rates will continue to fuel growth in a recovering homebuilding sector, creating a buying opportunity in housing-related stocks and ETFs. The most popular choice in the homebuilding space, XHB, follows the S&P Homebuilders Select Industry Index.
In total, the fund holds about 37 securities in its basket with none accounting for more than 5.73% share. The product focuses on mid-cap securities with 65% share, followed by 27% in small caps. The fund has amassed about $1.5 billion in its asset base and trades in heavy volume of about 3.6 million shares. Expense ratio comes in at 0.35%. XHB added 0.7% on the day and has a Zacks ETF Rank of 2 with a High risk outlook.
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