Solar ETFs Not Chasing Vivint Deal

The acquisition of Vivint Solar Inc. (VSLR) just is not having a broad spillover. Sure, some solar players rallied on the news, but the reality is that on a relative basis the solar exchange traded funds (ETFs) just have not participated in the rally.

There is of course a reason why: tracking error risks due to so many foreign company issues in the ETFs. Some investors might think that a $2.2 billion buyout of a solar company that had been poorly received after coming public last year might create more of an impact.

The Guggenheim Solar ETF (TAN) was last seen up by only 1.9% at $38.21, and on a meager 84,000 shares or so right before noon. The Guggenheim Solar ETF has a 52-week range of $31.77 to $50.00 and generally trades almost 300,000 shares per day.

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The Market Vectors Solar ETF (KWT) was up even less than its Guggenheim rival, with a gain of 0.9% to $72.37. This volume is a tiny 551 shares. Yes, really, less than 1,000 shares. With an average daily volume of less than 2,000 shares, the market Vectors Solar ETF has a 52-week range of $62.81 to $90.47.

SunEdison Inc. (SUNE), the acquirer of Vivint, is actually the largest holding of each of these ETFs. Even SunEdison's gain of 4% to $32.83 is not powering the solar ETFs higher. When investors see a gain of over 40% in an acquisition, it is surprising when the fallout or the secondary bounce is so muted. Vivint Solar shares were last seen up 44% at $15.68 on over 7.5 million shares traded.

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The following is an expandable image showing the top holdings of these two key solar ETFs. Many are foreign companies that are largely unknown to U.S. investors.

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