IYG Vs. EUFN ETFs: U.S. Banks Seem More Protected Than European Ones

Chetan Woodun profile picture
Chetan Woodun
6.16K Followers

Summary

  • After the turmoil which has embroiled banks on both sides of the Atlantic, in addition, to metrics, behavioral science also determines how depositors and investors behave.
  • Tools used by regulators as well as innovative rescue plans indicate that America has put in place better contagion risk containment mechanisms than Europe, and also when compared to 2008.
  • To make my point I use two ETFs, namely, the iShares U.S. Financial Services ETF and the iShares MSCI Europe Financials Sector Index ETF.
  • IYG is a buy while EUFN is a hold while waiting for the ECB's inflation control measures to take effect while its financial stability mechanism proves itself.
  • To start with, a comparison of the price action is particularly useful.
2006 Barclays Classic iShares Cup AM-AM

Al Messerschmidt

The iShares U.S. Financial Services ETF (NYSEARCA:IYG) currently trading around $150 has underperformed the iShares MSCI Europe Financials Sector Index ETF (NASDAQ:EUFN) by about 15% in the last year. This period has been characterized by a rapid pace in

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Chetan Woodun profile picture
6.16K Followers
My aim is to provide differentiated insights, whether it is for investing, trading, or informational reasons. For this purpose, I am not a classical equity researcher or fund manager, but, I come from the IT world as the founder of Keylogin Information and Technologies Co. Ltd. Thus, my research is often backed by analytics and I make frequent use of charts to support my position.I also invest, and thus, in this tumultuous market, I often look for strategies to preserve capital. As per my career history below, I have wide experience, initially as an implementer in virtualization and cloud, and I was subsequently a team leader and project lead, mostly working in telcos.I have also been a mediocre entrepreneur in real estate, and a farmer, and like to dedicate at least 5 hours per week to working on a non-profit basis. For this purpose, I regularly contribute peer reviews and opinions for enterprise tech and help needy families by providing sponsored work.As for Research, I started with Tech stocks before going Multi-Tech with Fintechs, Biotechs, and Cryptotechs.I have been investing for the last 25 years, initially in mutual funds where the "learned economists" would always advise you to "think long term". Got a lot of experience in the 2008/2009 downturn when I lost a lot. Since then I do my own research and have fallen in love with Seeking Alpha because of the unique perspectives it provides to someone investing hard-earned money as well as access to some of the best financial advisors.We live only once but can have many "investment lives" especially when investing in individual stocks.

Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Additional disclosure: This is an investment thesis and is intended for informational purposes. Investors are kindly requested to do additional research before investing.

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