If the United States goes through another recession, here are ideas that could be valuable:
The Volatility Index
If the U.S. economy goes through another recession, volatility will increase as it does in any period of mass selling and market uncertainty. In today's advanced trading world, one can buy an ETF that follows the Volatility Index. These ETFs include: The ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures ETF VIXY or the ProShares VIX Mid-Term Futures ETF VIXM.
Inverse or Short-Biased ETFs
Since a recession causes massive selling pressures on equity markets, one can delve in to the realm of short-biased ETFs. There are many types of short ETFs, some even include 2 and 3 times leverage built-in. Any short ETF would work, it just depends on how much risk one is willing to take. So basically these ETFs short the exchange it is following. For example, look at the ProShares Short QQQ PSQ. This follows and essentially shorts the NASDAQ Composite Index. One can also buy ETFs that take advantage of leverage. Using the previous example, look at the ProShares UltraShort QQQ QID. This ETF basically shorts the NASDAQ Composite Index using 2x leverage.
A list of inverse or short-biased ETFs can be found here.
Treasury/Bond ETFs
Investors would like a safe-haven to put their money in, and Treasury Bonds would be that place. This is a very low-risk play that could go either way. The iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond TLT is a safe place to put one's money.
A list of other bond ETFs can be found here.
Commodity ETFs
Similar to the previous idea, investors will want to look to put their money in a safe place. This could include precious metals via SPDR Gold Trust GLD, oil & gas via United States Oil Fund USO, or other types of commodities via PowerShares DB Commodity Index DBC. Again, investing in commodities is a less risky play than the short-biased ETF play described above, though it is a little more risky than putting money in Treasury Bonds.
A list of commodity ETFs can be found here.
Neither Benzinga nor its staff recommend that you buy, sell, or hold any security. We do not offer investment advice, personalized or otherwise. Benzinga recommends that you conduct your own due diligence and consult a certified financial professional for personalized advice about your financial situation.
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
Comments
Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.