FINSUM

FINSUM

Email: عنوان البريد الإلكتروني هذا محمي من روبوتات السبام. يجب عليك تفعيل الجافاسكربت لرؤيته.
الأربعاء, 30 أيار 2018 08:51

The Market is Flashing Warning Signs

(New York)

Over the last few weeks the US stock market had looked strong. Stocks had shrugged off a number of geopolitical disturbances with relative ease. However, suddenly, a lot of macro signs are looking poor. The combination of European political turmoil, weaker growth, and a sudden drop in US bond yields, are all coming together in a package that shows things are not as rosy as they might have seemed a few weeks ago. While European sovereign spreads are widening to the largest since 2013, US Treasury yields are plunging and are now well below 2.9%.


FINSUM: This might be the start of a very rough summer for markets, and how fitting that it all began on Memorial day. While some might say “It’s just Italy”, Europe has proved enough to scuttle global markets in the past (see the summers of 2011 and 2012).

الأربعاء, 30 أيار 2018 08:50

The Meltdown is Engulfing Spain

(Madrid)

This is Europe week for financial markets. Italy is currently engulfed in a political, and increasingly markets, crisis. Now the panic and political gloom is spreading to Spain. The country’s Prime Minister, Mariano Rajoy, is set to face a no confidence vote and the outcome is very uncertain. Accordingly, Spain’s sovereign yields have been rising alongside Italy’s. The no confidence vote will be held on Friday and comes following a ruling of corruption against the center-right party of which Rajoy is leader.


FINSUM: Southern Europe is back in the news this week after a six-year hiatus. We don’t think anything major will be caused by Spain, but the Italian situation is very dicey.

الثلاثاء, 29 أيار 2018 08:20

The How DOL Rule May Come Back to Life

(New York)

Nobody in the industry wants to hear it, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t true. Think Advisor has just published an article arguing that the DOL rule may still pose a comeback and that RIAs need to keep the DOL-guided compliance procedures they developed in place. The argument is that though the DOL let the May 1st appeal deadline to its Fifth Circuit Court loss pass, it still has until June 13th to escalate the case to the US Supreme Court. If it does so, a stay in the Fifth Circuit Court’s ruling is likely, meaning the rule would technically still be in place until the Supreme Court delivers its verdict.


FINSUM: Obviously no one knows what the DOL will do, especially because the motivation to escalate this seems to be lacking. That said, it still has the choice and so advisors must keep their compliance policies in place.

الثلاثاء, 29 أيار 2018 08:19

A Summer Storm is Coming for Stocks

(New York)

Investors beware, US stocks may be in for a real summer storm. On the surface things have been looking better. Despite a week in which many geopolitical events went wrong (e.g. trade war, Trump and North Korea, Italian bonds/government), the markets stayed strong. However, underneath the positive surface, there is some real bearishness. The average stock in the S&P 500 is underperforming the market as a whole by almost a whole percent. The S&P 500 is up 3% this year, but the average stock has gained just 2.1%, showing that market breadth has narrowed.


FINSUM: We do not think the current market breadth figures show much of anything, but then again, we are more concerned about the overall economy than the signals the market is sending.

الثلاثاء, 29 أيار 2018 08:18

Italy is Approaching a Meltdown

(Rome)

We do not cover too much European news. This is mostly because our readers don’t pay much attention when we do. However, we thought the crisis going on in Italy warranted special attention. Stocks are plummeting and bond yields soaring on the back of a political uproar over the future of leadership. In particular, two big parties (i.e. the Five Star Movement and the League) who are leading in the polls both propose lavish tax cuts and spending increases which look on the surface to possibly lead Italy to a default, which has bond investors and the European establishment worried.


FINSUM: We feel for Italy, we really do. We think the country has really been crippled by the Euro and now there is no easy way out. We expect positions will moderate, but this could cause some volatility.

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