The fund’s 61 holdings are weighted by float-adjusted market capitalization. While no stock is supposed to exceed a 10% allocation at the quarterly rebalancing, presently no holdings need to be capped. The largest position is Sunoco Inc (SUN) at 6.2%, followed by Oceaneering International Inc (OII) 5.3%, Core Laboratories (CLB) 5.2%, Tesoro Corp (TSO) 4.5%, Petrominerales Ltd (PMGLF) 4.3%, and Alliance Oil Company Ltd (ALLZF) 3.9%.
The IOIL portfolio currently spans 14 countries, including both developed and emerging markets. I was somewhat surprised to see Thailand with the third largest allocation but Russia and Mexico not represented at all. My guess is that this reflects the large size of oil-related companies in those places. The rest of the list was no surprise with the U.S. at 45.1%, Canada 11.7%, Thailand 7.5%, Colombia 4.3%, Japan 4.0%, Sweden 3.9%, U.K. 3.9%, Finland 3.0%, and six others combining for 13.5%.
The only other small-cap energy ETF is PowerShares S&P Small Cap Energy (PSCE), but its geographic mandate is narrower. PSCE holds only stocks that are part of the domestically-oriented S&P SmallCap 600 Index.
All in all, IOIL is well-differentiated from the dozens of other energy ETFs and provides a viable new alternative. The fund’s initial expense ratio is 0.75%. Additional information can be found in the press release (pdf), overview page, fact sheet (pdf), and prospectus (pdf).
Disclosure covering writer, editor, and publisher: No positions in any of the securities mentioned. No positions in any of the companies or ETF sponsors mentioned. No income, revenue, or other compensation (either directly or indirectly) received from, or on behalf of, any of the companies or ETF sponsors mentioned.
by Ron Rowland