Russia (RUS) : Great comeback

Lyxor ETF Russia (RUS) - 03/07/2018

Short Term strategy: Positive (90%) / Trend +
Long Term strategy: Positive (95%) / Trend +

Characteristics of the ETF

The ETF Lyxor RUS (Russia), created in 05/2007, is listed in Euro on Euronext and seeks to replicate the Dow Jones Russia GDR $ index consisting of 11 Russian stocks. The Dow Jones Russia GDR Index is an index that measures the performance of 85% of GDRs (very close to ADRs, an instrument of listing abroad for a non-US or UK company) traded on the London Stock Exchange, with the largest floating capitalization. The index is weighted by the free-float capitalization of each GDR.

The expenses of this ETF are 0.65% and the AUM of approximately 453M €. Replication is indirect (via Swap) and there is a policy of capitalization of dividends.

Alternative ETFs: RSX (Vaneck Vector in USD), ERUS ( iShares in USD)

 

Index & components

The ETF RUS is made up of only 11 companies, so it is very narrow compared to other national indices.

However, the Russian index is fairly representative of the country's economy, highly concentrated on energy, whose weighting is about 65% due to the presence of the giants Gazprom, Loukoil and Rosneft, while the banking sector accounts for 22% including two large banks, Sberbank and VTB Bank, the remaining 20% ​​are divided between mining companies and industrial companies (consumer goods and technology).

Over the past 10 years, the performance of the Russian index has been negative, which is due to the fall in oil prices and the Western sanctions following the annexation of the Crimea. The Russian economy is at about the same level as Spain, with a GDP of about $ 1200 billion, a diversified economy based on raw materials (gas, oil, minerals, diamonds), and mainly European exports, as well as domestic consumption, which tends to increase gradually, while industry employs nearly 30% of the population, mainly in the chemical, metallurgical and defense sectors.

By 2015, Russia has sunk into the crisis that began in 2014, mainly because of the fall in oil prices that weighs on hydrocarbon revenues, even though non-oil revenues are penalized by weak activity and sanctions that continue to impact the economy. The situation deteriorated in 2015, with the economy entering recession (-3.8%). Inflation continued to rise and a banking crisis hit more than 70 Russian banks, as a result the country's financial reserves melted, the budget deficit widened and the volatility of the ruble worsened. This context continued in 2016 while at the same time easing somewhat (-0.6%), with private consumption, the main driver of activity, remaining constrained. Russia has emerged from the recession in 2017, but it is not due to virtually non-existent reforms and the challenges remain: lack of competitiveness, under-investment, low production capacity, dependence on raw materials, poor business climate, lack of structural reforms, aging population and authoritarian drift of Vladimir Putin.

Russia is currently enjoying a lull with the recovery of oil prices around $ 50 after the agreement with OPEC and a stabilization of supply. Russia sees its situation on the external scene improving somewhat, due to a certain success in Syria and a stabilization of its relations with Europe. The chaotic policy of the United States led by D.Trump also allows W. Putin's Russia to finally appear as a more reasonable actor. A remoteness from Europe and the USA could lead to a later rapprochement between Europe and Russia and to envisage a lifting of sanctions on condition that favorable developments emerge in Ukraine.

 

Latest developments

 The performance of RUS in 2016 was + 59%, which also includes changes in currency Ruble / Euro, and which corresponds to a violent rebound, parallel to that of oil.

In 2017, the index fell 6%, but rose again by 5.9% in 2018 in the wake of crude prices.

The Russian index is highly correlated with energy and especially with oil prices, which affect the ruble's price and the entire undiversified economy. Russia's influence in managing crude oil prices alongside OPEC seems more and more important. In the short term, Russia's influence on OPEC is gaining momentum even though Trump is trying to influence Saudi Arabia in the direction of easing cuts in production.

In the short and medium term, structural factors - the investment gap for the past three years - should lead to higher oil prices, which provides a favorable backdrop for Russia. In the longer term, too much dependence on crude prices, lack of diversification of the economy and reform could prove to be penalizing.

Weekly data

The weekly chart shows that the medium-term trend continues to increase, with however regular consolidations that come back to test the EMA100 or the EMA200. Prices are ironed above moving averages 13 & 26, which are rising again. The MACD seems close to crossing up, which would be an additional positive factor.

Daily data

On the daily chart, the trend is clearly positive and accelerating. A double-bottom structure with a neck line at the level of € 32 is about to be crossed up, which should trigger a bullish acceleration. The set of technical indicators is again bullish, which predisposes the index to reach again  its highs of the year to 34 €.

Objectifs de l’ETF

RUS is a UCITS ETF which seeks to replicate the Dow Jones Russia GDR USD index (11 russian companies)

Characteristics

Inception date 20/06/2006
Expense ratio 0,65%
Issuer Lyxor
Benchmark Dow Jones Russia GDR
Ticker RUS
ISIN FR0010326140
UCITS Yes
EU-SD Status Out of scope
Currency
Exchange Euronext Paris
Assets Under Management 456 M€
Replication method Indirect (swap)
Dividend Capitalization
PEA (France) No
SRD (France) Yes
Currency Risk Yes
Number of Holdings 11
Risk 4/5

Country Breakdown

Russia 100%

Sector Breakdown

Energy 64%
Financials 23%
Materials 8%
Consumer staples 5%

Top Ten Holdings

Sberbank 20%
Lukoil 20%
Gazprom 18%
Tatneft 10%
Novatek 8%
MMC Norilsk Nickel 8%
Rosneft 5%
Magnit 3%
Surgutneftegas 3%
VTB Bank 2%