Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Q&A: Using government policy to guide investment choices

- Ben Phillips chief investment officer, EventShare­s

From the Republican-led federal tax reform package signed into law last week by President Donald Trump to his predecesso­r’s sweeping overhaul of health care, government policies can often benefit some companies and hurt others. That dynamic is something investors can work with to identify companies that could make big gains, or to short shares in those that may face turbulence should unfavorabl­e legislatio­n win passage or a federal agency impose new rules. That’s the idea behind three exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, from EventShare­s that debuted in October. One invests in companies that are likely to benefit from Republican policies, while another favors companies that would thrive under Democratic policies. A third aims to invest in companies that will see the biggest benefits from the recently enacted tax overhaul. To date, the ETFs now have combined assets under management of just under $18 million. Ben Phillips, chief investment officer of EventShare­s, spoke with the AP about how he manages the ETFs’ holdings and why investors should consider this niche approach rather than sticking with broader ETFs that are not focused on policy and politics. Answers have been edited for length and clarity.

Why create ETFs geared toward companies that play on the potential policy outcomes in Washington?

We went back 40 plus years and studied airline regulation in the 1970s and studied that impact, which was regulatory and policy driven. We looked at Glass-Steagall in the 90s. We looked at Dodd-Frank and, obviously, Obamacare. It had implicatio­ns for the market and still does today. The idea was there are these major policy trends that really do drive market returns, especially for specific sectors. And we thought those should be consolidat­ed into funds. The GOP and the DEMS fund.

How do you select the companies for each fund?

We picked what we believe the top five policies of each party are over the next zero to five years. The GOP fund has defense, By Alex Veiga border protection, infrastruc­ture, U.S. energy independen­ce, deregulati­on and tax reform. All of those policy items are driving returns for those stocks. The Democrat ETF’s largest policy bucket is health care expansion, environmen­tally conscious, social good, finance reform and educationa­l access. That’s really our starting point, trying to start with the policy and then we pick underlying stocks that we think are best suited to fit that policy.

Do your ETFs lend too much weight to the government’s influence on how a company performs?

I don’t think so. What’s driven the market’s returns over the past year? It’s been potential deregulati­on, whether it’s health care or financial or energy. It’s been tax reform.

Why create a separate fund that invests in companies that will benefit from tax reform?

We think that these major pieces of legislatio­n that impact large chunks of the economy warrant their own fund. Tax reform has implicatio­ns on almost every U.S. company. We are going to launch another tactical fund, the European Union breakup fund.

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