Eq: Large Cap
(San Francisco)
Investors in Facebook, and possibly tech more broadly, need to be worried. New news has broke which says that Facebook has been sharing its data with China. The company has been sharing data with device makers like Huawei, among others. The news comes just at a time when fury over Facebook’s data policies have caused a global uproar among the public. According to the Financial Times, “Facebook shared user data including information on religious and political leanings with the device makers, and personal data collected from users who had asked for it not to be shared with third parties”.
FINSUM: We don’t know if there are legal ramifications for this, but it will certainly only add weight to the current push to subject the tech industry to greater regulation.
(New York)
One of the key story lines that has been driving global equities gains over the last year and a half is that economic growth has finally returned to all corners of the world. Yet just as that story was becoming very believable, it is starting to fade. Global benchmarks for measuring growth have fallen undeniably since January, especially in Europe, and inflation is cooling in developed economies, both signs that the boom in expansion might have come to an end. Everything from shipping costs to copper prices have fallen as demand has waned.
FINSUM: Are we headed towards a global recession? It is always hard to forecast, but it seems as though we may be.
(New York)
As if higher rates and Europe weren’t enough, there are plenty of other dangers currently weighing on the stock market. The two big ones are a potential trade war—sparked by Trump’s proposed tariffs on metals and beyond—which could lead to a bitter battle between the US and Europe or the US and China. The other big risk is FAANG, or big tech, regulation. Tech stocks have become such a stalwart of the market, that regulations reigning them in could prompt major losses.
FINSUM: The market does appear ripe for some regulation of tech stocks. GDPR just passed in Europe and the political climate seems ready for some regulation, but we believe it is still more likely that nothing happens.
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(New York)
If you are worried that much higher rates will cause an exodus from the stock market, you are not alone. Many advisors across the country are closely watching the markets to see signs of a mass departure. The big worry is that even three-year Treasury bills now have yields which exceed the dividend yield of the S&P 500. So while for the last several years the theme was “there is no alternative”, now there are some very good ones, which could scuttle the market.
FINSUM: The good news here is that the so-called “Great Rotation” into stocks never really materialized, so there is not going to be a great rotation the other way, or at least everyone hopes so.
(San Francisco)
Remember all those privacy policy email updates you got over the last few weeks? Well in case you were not paying attention, they arrived because of a landmark change in the way the EU is governing data, and even US companies needed to comply if they had any European customers. Well, under the new rules, Google is already seen as the big winner, which we thought investors might like to know. Google has been able to get data use consent from users much more successfully than others, and in turn, it has been routing many of its ad customers to its own ad exchanges instead of those of vendors.
FINSUM: As was always going to be the case, it looks like the big tech powers will be able to use the new data regulations to their advantage. Theoretically this could be a boost to Google’s cash cow Adsense business.
(New York)
In what could be a big gain for banks, US regulators are poised to roll back parts of the dreaded Volcker rule, or the Dodd-Frank regulation that virtually ended proprietary trading on Wall Street. One of the big points of loosening is that it will no longer be assumed that if a position is held for less than 60 days that it is a violation of the rule. Banks will also be able to demonstrate that they are market-making rather than proprietary trading much more simply.
FINSUM: Banks have long complained that the Volcker Rule meant they could not provide as much fixed income liquidity to markets as they once did. That should change now, theoretically.