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One Stop Shopping for "Energy" Exposure: Blackrock Energy and Resources (BGR( |
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| Jun 09, 2009 06:00 PM UTC |
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Analyst
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Via Fund my Mutual Fund:
Let me preface this piece by saying I stole this specific instrument from Jeffrey Saut, who mentioned it in his weekly missive. The BlackRock Energy and Resources Trust, BGR, is a perpetual closed-end equity fund. BGR commenced operations in December 2004 with the investment objective of providing total return through a combination of current income and capital appreciation. Under normal market conditions, the Trust will invest at least 80% of its total assets in the equity securities of energy and natural resources companies and equity derivatives with exposure to the energy and natural resources industry. Companies in the energy and natural resources industry include those companies involved in the exploration, production or distribution of energy or natural resources, such as gas, oil, metals and minerals as well as related transportation companies and equipment manufacturers. Daily volume is 200,000 which is not bad; it's liquid enough for most people to get in and out of easily. The fund also has about half a billion in assets so it's not some new entrant into the ETF landscape. Performance is as follows
There are about 65 positions, with 30% in the top 10 holdings - but as I noted above the key with this name is the incredibly broad exposure to the entire energy food chain. There are a plethora of names we've owned individually in the past... Here are the top 5 holdings (with weightings) as of 3/31/09
Other major holdings by sector
There are also a host of options, both puts and calls, written which is interesting. You can see the entire list of holdings here per SEC filing. Country exposure is very dependent on the US with 75%, and Canada second as 12%. You also get great diversification in terms of market cap - large caps over $10B make up over a third of the holdings but companies of the $300M to $2B market cap are 20%. But like I said above - when 'reflation' is on, companies of all sizes will move together so it's a bit of a moot point. And while you are buying this sort of name because hedge funds across the land are piling into the same old trade, you also get a 5%+ dividend yield to boot. Long BHP Billiton, Potash in fund; no personal position
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