OASIS FORUM Post by the Golden Rule. GoldTent Oasis is not responsible for content or accuracy of posts. DYODD.

Back in 1999-2000 the figure $5 Billion was being bandied around as the total combined value of all precious metals mining stocks.

Posted by silverngold @ 14:10 on April 18, 2017  

If you have half a brain this article should clue you in as to who and what is responsible for the lack of PM share performance. If you are trading or investing in the ETF’s you are cutting your own throats and everybody else’s too. Now just ONE ETF is worth $5 Billion and the shares have gone virtually nowhere. Are you getting the picture?? Who owns the ETF’s?? The very banks and institutions who are suppressing the PM shares. WAKE UP PEOPLE!! You are being had!! Your own investments are being used by them to suppress the PM’s……..and this article is designed to drive you out of PM’s entirely by making you think the ETF’s actually own the underlying shares. THEY DON’T!! They only TRACK  the value of the underlying shares and in fact may be shorting the very same shares to suppress them. That means, in this case, they have a $5.4 billion slush fund to use to control every little move while they continue to use your investment against you. If you still cannot see it then I give up because you must be Einstein’s definition of insane, doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Please wake up!!

Popular Gold Miner ETF To Change Dramatically

April 17, 2017

Earlier this week, ETF.com reported that the VanEck Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (GDXJ) may have become too big for its index, the MVIS Global Junior Gold Miners Index. The $5.4 billion exchange-traded fund owns giant positions in its underlying holdings, putting it at risk of violating certain Canadian and U.S. regulatory thresholds.

To avoid crossing those thresholds, the ETF bought up stocks of companies that aren’t in its index―creating a significant divergence between the ETF components and the index components. On Thursday, VanEck (which runs both the ETF and index) acknowledged the divergence by announcing it would broaden the scope of the index and include many more gold miner stocks in the portfolio at the next rebalance date.

Dramatic Transformation For GDXJ

According to a press release from the firm, starting on June 17, “companies ranking between 60% and 98% (currently: between 80% and 98%) of the full market capitalization [of the investable gold miner universe] qualify for inclusion in the MVIS Global Junior Gold Miners Index.”

Translated into market-capitalization terms, that means the market-cap range for new index components may expand from $75 million – $1.6 billion to $75 million – $2.9 billion, according to a Scotiabank report published on Thursday.

The changes to the index will result in a dramatic transformation of GDXJ’s portfolio. Scotiabank estimates that, after the changes, there could be 23 new additions to the index (four of which are already in the ETF). Those 23 new additions could represent 60.8% of the new index portfolio.
To fund the buying of the new index additions, the existing index components will likely face steep selling. The Scotiabank report says that GDXJ “could have to sell $2.6B across existing index constituents,” which represents “2.5% to 8% of the total shares outstanding of each existing index constituent.”

Given the large amount of selling anticipated in its current holdings, GDXJ dropped notably on Thursday even as gold prices climbed to a five-month high. The ETF fell by 3.5%, compared to a 1% gain for spot gold and a 0.1% loss for the larger VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX).

Growing Market Cap

The changes to GDXJ and its underlying index are a reflection of the constraints faced by a large, rapidly growing ETF that invests in a relatively small, niche area of the market. For the time being, the broadening of the index will help the ETF remain sufficiently diversified, even if new money continues to pour into the fund.

However, the downside of the changes is that GDXJ has moved up the scale in terms of market cap, reducing the exposure it offers to the smallest junior gold miners. If the fund continues to grow and again faces issues with concentrated positions, it may have to broaden the index once more.

As Scotiabank points out, the GDXJ universe was first expanded in December 2014, when the ETF faced similar problems. The broadening of the index at the time increased the ETF’s market-cap range from $95 million – $448 million to $95 million – $995 million.

Contact Sumit Roy at sroy@etf.com

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Post by the Golden Rule. Oasis not responsible for content/accuracy of posts. DYODD.