Displaying items by tag: S&P 500

Wednesday, 11 July 2018 08:40

Despite Buybacks, Shares are Stagnant

(New York)

One of the really worrying parts of this year’s stock market is that buybacks are booming to new records, yet share prices remain flat. US companies are on pace to buy back $800 bn of stock this year, a figure which would even eclipse 2007’s bonanza. But worryingly, 57% of the more than 350 component companies that have bought shares back this year are trailing the S&P 500’s return. That is the highest share to fall short of the index since the 2008 Crisis.


FINSUM: Aside from the worries about share prices not responding, the other concerning factor is that companies are buying their shares back at very high prices, which seems like it might portend the end of the bull market.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Thursday, 05 July 2018 09:28

The Dividend Trade-Off

(New York)

Investors turned heavily towards income-producing stocks prior to Trump’s presidency. With yields so low, they offered income which was very hard to find elsewhere. More recently, though, high yielding stocks have been losing out as rates move higher. This has caused an exodus from some areas, such as telecoms, which have lost 16% over the last 18 months. However, one important thing to bear in mind as one watches yields fall on stocks is that this is often caused by rising prices. For instance, yields have fallen in six S&P 500 sectors over the last 18 months, but the market has returned 25% in that time frame—a nice pay off for losing some yield.


FINSUM: The key point of this very basic article is to remember that falling yields in equity can mean that the sector is doing very well.

Published in Eq: Large Cap

(San Francisco)

In what is a very odd and counterintuitive change, in just a matter of weeks, both Facebook and Google will be removed from the S&P 500’s “tech” sector. Indexes are changing up their alignments, and Google and Facebook, along with Netflix and Comcast, will all now move to a new group called “communications-services”. The changes are due to take place on September 28th and will force investors to trade in and out of billions of Dollars of holdings to realign their portfolios.


FINSUM: What this means is that the “tech” sector, and in factor no sector, will now be such a dominant component of the S&P 500. It may also reshape trading patterns, and according to some, boost volatility.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Friday, 29 June 2018 09:38

The “Rolling” Bear Market

(New York)

This might be a unique kind of bear market we have on our hands, at least according to Morgan Stanley. The bank’s chief US equity strategist says that this is a “kind of rolling bear market”. Continuing “We are not seeing an ’08 scenario where everything gets hit at once … it’s selectively hitting markets one by one and it’s a rolling sort of correction”. Since that seems to be the case, one good defensive sector to avoid turmoil might be US small caps, which are shielded from trade war and are benefiting from last year’s tax cuts.


FINSUM: We like this description of the kind of correction we are currently in. It might not be a single cataclysmic event that sends the market tumbling, but a series of blows that drives things down continuously.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Friday, 22 June 2018 09:39

Top Strategist Says Recession Imminent

(New York)

Don’t be fooled by the “prophets of boom”, or the many Wall Street and economic leaders who are saying that the US economy is in great shape and will deliver strong growth for years to come. One well known strategist, David Rosenberg, who called the Great Recession before the Crisis, says that a recession is imminent and will arrive within the next 12 months. Rosenberg believes the January 26th high for the S&P 500 will be the peak of this bull market, and that it will ultimately be the Fed that sparks the recession. “Cycles die, and you know how they die? … Because the Fed puts a bullet in its forehead”.


FINSUM: There are a lot of late cycle indicators flashing in the US economy right now. A recession in the next year does seem plausible, if not overly likely.

Published in Eq: Total Market
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