Topic: How To Invest

I read with great interest your picks in the alternative-energy sector. I was wondering if picking an exchange-traded fund (ETF) might be a better way to enter that sector. If so, do you have any recommendations? Some that I have been watching are First Trust Nasdaq Clean Edge Green Energy Index Fund, PowerShares WilderHill Clean Energy Portfolio Fund, iShares S&P Global Clean Energy Industry Index Fund and Market Vectors Global Alternative Energy ETF. They all have relatively low MERs.

Article Excerpt

Theme funds are funds that focus on investments in broad areas, such as alternative energy, health, science, resources or whatever. These funds often suffer from pseudo-diversification. That is, they have lots of different stocks in their portfolios, but these stocks all respond to the same economic factors. What’s more, many theme-fund managers gravitate toward speculative stocks and recent new issues, two areas that harbour more than their share of disasters. That’s especially so when the theme comes out in response to a boom in the theme where it wishes to invest. Of course, theme funds can prosper for months or years. But they rarely generate enough profit to justify their underlying risk. We don’t recommend any of the four alternative-energy funds we analyze below. A: First Trust Nasdaq Clean Edge Green Energy Index Fund, $14.86, symbol QCLN on Nasdaq (Units outstanding: 2.7 million; Market cap: $40.1 million), aims to replicate the performance of the Nasdaq Clean Edge Green Energy Index, which…