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Stock Spin-off Exchange Traded Fund Has A Lot Going For It

March 24th, 2010 by john | 636 Comments | Filed in Spin-off Investing, Value Investing

In a recent article on CSD, the stock spin-off exchange traded fund, Claymore/Clear Spin-Off, Michael Johnston has given a very concise and complete look at the ETF.

CSD,  can serve the value investor seeking better than average returns in serveral ways.

  • Of course, you can simply buy the fund.
  • You can also use its portfolio as one source for building your watch list.
  • And, the content of its quarterly and annual reports is a good source of educational information on spin-off stocks.

Depending on when you got into CSD it has been a very rough or a very rewarding ride for investors so far as shown by the chart below.

Chart for Claymore/Beacon Spin-Off (CSD)

Splits:none

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Spin-off Stock ETFs A Bad Idea?

December 1st, 2008 by john | 1,478 Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

If spin-off stock investing is as good an idea as several studies and books would have us believe, then why would an ETF that invested in stock spin-off situations be doing badly?  Has spinoff investing had its day in the sun and now is old news?  Or, might it be something else going on?

A recent article on the Claymore/Clear Spin-Off (CSD) ETF in the Toronto Globe and Mail suggests that the popularity of the approach itself is the likely culprit in the ETF’s declining value.  Could be true, but no one ever thought that successful investing or trading was really that simple, did they?

Each of my sons has gone through stages of having figured out “all you’ve got to do to make money”.  It usually starts with something like figuring out the right kind of letter to write Bill Gates and then meanders closer to reality on successive trials.  Buying spin-offs and waiting the amount of time that the historical studies have determined to be ideal seems a lot like writing the letter to Bill Gates or at least like waiting for a good stock that has gone way down and buying it and then just waiting.  I’ve come to think of it as the “all you’ve got to do” wish.

I have tried to be careful to portray following the activity in stock spin-offs as a way to populate a watchlist, implying that choosing from that watchlist what you will buy when depends on your own system.  Doing anything else is crazy.

If you don’t think so, just look at the news about spin-offs over the last few months.  Most often it has looked more like a way of getting toxic waste off the balance sheet than structuring a win-win for shareholders and management.

Now to be fair, the economic situation has made this the case and a number of them haven’t happened in the end, but it has highlighted the simple fact that the spin-off may or may not be in your or my best interests.  Deciding whether it is or not remains up to us.

Writing during the Great Depression, Gerald Loeb said that you are looking for a move and a reason.  Either one alone is not sufficient (unless you’re a skilled scalper, then maybe just the move will suffice, but for the rest of us having both is the better part of valor.)

The spin-off is the reason, but it never seems to hurt to require the move also.

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