FINSUM
Morningstar Says Vanguard Has the Best Model Portfolio
(New York)
The model portfolio world has grown highly confusing over the last few years. The explosion in popularity of models has led to thousands on the market, making it very hard to sort one from another. Luckily, Morningstar has launched a new product to help do just that. Morningstar’s new ratings are on a one to five scale (like their mutual fund ratings) and they have increased coverage recently from 76 models to 139. They are also now covering not just SMA models, but theoretical ones. Morningstar gave only 2 out of 1,500 models its top “gold” rating, and one of the pair was Vanguard’s CORE portfolio. According to Morningstar, CORE has “an extremely appealing price tag along with top notch, highly diversified underlying index funds”.
FINSUM: This rating system will be a great resource for advisors, especially as coverage continues to increase. These scores will be useful not just for investment selection, but also for highlighting their utility and legitimacy to clients.
Munis May Be About to Tumble
(Washington)
The muni market has been heating up with a huge influx in cash and stimulus. Additionally, as concerns grow…see the full story on our partner Magnifi’s site
Goldman Says Crypto is the Key to Outperformance
(New York)
Goldman Sachs released a key report to its clients this week detailing…see the full story on our partner Magnifi’s site
Chinese Manufacturing Booms with Global Demand
(Beijing)
China saw a rise in both imports and exports that outpaced…see the full story on our partner Magnifi’s site
Why Midcaps May Be Poised to Outperform
The conventional wisdom in markets has always been that large caps hold up better in periods of volatility, and small caps outpace in returns when markets start to recover. The reality, however, is far different. If you take a look at a series of turbulent periods of the last few decades, you can see a clear trend: midcaps actually perform better. They suffer similar losses during periods of volatility, but actually recover faster than both “domestically-focused” small caps and “mature” large caps. In periods of high volatility, midcaps have fallen by 41% on average, slightly less than large caps at 42.93% and small caps at 45.05%. In periods of recovery, it has taken midcaps only 304 days to recover versus 544 for large caps, and 432 for small caps.
The data highlights the significant outperformance of midcaps versus their peers. So how can investors best commit capital to midcaps? Take a look at State Street’s SPDR S&P MIDCAP 400 ETF.
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n.b. This is sponsored content and not FINSUM editorial.
Source: https://www.ssga.com/library-content/pdfs/etf/us/mid-caps-defy-conventional-wisdom.pdf