NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- In an effort to avoid the regulatory uncertainty plaguing many popular futures-based commodity funds, Jefferies (JEF Quote) has continued to expand its equity-based commodity ETFs with two new fund offerings.
The Jefferies TR/J CRB Global Agriculture Equity Index Fund (CRBA Quote) and the Jefferies TR/J CRB Global Industrial Metals Equity Index Fund (CRBI Quote) began trading yesterday, following in the footsteps of Jefferies' first commodity ETF, the Jefferies TR/J CRB Global Commodity Equity Index Fund (CRBQ Quote). (New Commodity ETF Skirts Limits) CRBA and CRBI are actually slices of Jefferies' original CRBQ, which launched earlier this month. CRBQ has already attracted a robust average daily trading volume of 67,000 shares, a testament to the growing interest in commodities. CRBA has a 0.65% expense ratio and tracks a basket of firms that derive their business from agriculture. Top holdings include Deere & Co. (DE Quote), Potash of Saskatchewan (POT Quote) and Archer Daniels Midland (ADM Quote). CRBA's underlying portfolio includes 34 global agriculture companies, with America as the largest country allocation, at 48%. The new metals offering, CRBI, tracks 34 global equities and also has an expense ratio of 0.65%. Top holdings in CRBI's underlying portfolio include Anglo American (AAL.LN Quote), Rio Tinto (RTP Quote) and BHP Billiton (BHP Quote). Jefferies' new equity-based ETFs will skirt some of the problems recently experienced by their futures-based peers. The Commodities Futures Trading Commission will be handing down new regulatory limits on futures positions, effectively limiting the size of ETFs that track to-be-regulated futures contracts.( ETF Regulation Battle Bad for Investors) Ahead of the regulation, ETFs like United States Natural Gas (UNG Quote) and PowerShares DB Commodity (DBC Quote) have restructured their portfolios to stay within futures contracts limitations. Across the spectrum of futures-based funds, the upcoming regulation has caused disruptions in creation of new shares and portfolio strategy. (Commodity ETF Rebuilt)- Loading Comments...
- Loading Comments...
Recent Comments
Featured Photo Galleries
-
Swiss bank UBS returns to profit
BBC
-
China's Auto Sales Rise Sharply
The Wall Street Journal.
-
U.S. Stocks Rally on Growing Prospects for Bailout of Greece
BusinessWeek Online
-
Google Adds 'Buzz' to Gmail
The Wall Street Journal.
-
Japan Airlines Decides to Stick With American Airlines
New York Times
-
Why fret about Greece?
The Economist
-
Stiglitz Sees No Greek Default as ‘Speculative Attacks’ Persist
BusinessWeek Online
-
Opels Strategy Has Fewer Jobs and Less Capacity
New York Times
-
Tuesday Reads
The Big Picture
-
BLS: Few Job Openings in December
Calculated Risk
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,058.64 | 1,070.52 | 2,150.87 | 36.33 |
Oil *
72.02
|
|
UP
150.25
|
UP
13.78
|
UP
24.82
|
UP
0.41
|
10 Yr
3.63%
SPDR Gold
105.45
|
|
+1.52%
|
+1.30%
|
+1.17%
|
+1.14%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |
More From TheStreet
Latest HeadlinesBrokerage Partners
Sponsored Links














