Displaying items by tag: stocks

Tuesday, 23 October 2018 09:19

What Stocks Say About Midterms

(New York)

The stock market has been given a lot of time to adjust to the midterm elections and their likely outcome. Most think Democrats will take back the House, while Republicans will hold the Senate. So what is the market saying about how different sectors will perform in that scenario? The answer is that stocks in the defense and infrastructure space are doing well, as most don’t see a fiscal tightening. Infrastructure spending is also seen as a bipartisan issue. Pharmaceutical companies are also benefitting as a split congress would be less likely to pass legislation to lower drug prices. Stocks impacted by trade tensions have continued to suffer as no one sees a bright outcome on that front.


FINSUM: So the market’s assumption are showing through, but that heightens the risk of what happens if the election does not go to plan. For instance, what happens to pharma prices if the Democrats sweep?

Published in Eq: Total Market
Monday, 22 October 2018 10:22

How Preferreds Will Behave as Yields Rise

(New York)

One of the questions that not many are covering is how preferred stock will behave as interest rates rise. Preferreds have been seeing their dividend yields rise as investors have shed Treasuries and exited some preferred-focused ETFs. Some preferreds from prominent companies like JP Morgan and Bank of America are yielding 6%. The largest preferred ETF, PFF, currently yields 5.8%. “We’re incredibly constructive on the market now”, says a preferred fund manager at Nuveen.


FINSUM: Remember that preferreds have a major credit component to them and that issuers are not obligated to pay dividends like they are on bonds. However, corporations take doing so very seriously, which means you can often get junk-like yields from good companies, all with significantly less risk. That said, rates rising will probably spark some further losses.

Published in Eq: Preferreds
Friday, 19 October 2018 09:53

The Bubble is in Bonds, Not Stocks

(New York)

Barron’s ran an interesting article today chronicling the market views of famed investor Leon Cooperman. The legendary hedge fund manager argues that investors should stay away from bonds, but that stocks are “fundamentally cheap”. “My world is cash and stocks … I think bonds are the bubble”, says Cooperman. He argues that a big downturn in stocks is not in the cards because the economy “if anything, is too strong”.


FINSUM: This argument makes sense, bonds do seem overvalued. However, what if stocks and bonds are too pricey? That seems logical too.

Published in Bonds: Total Market
Friday, 19 October 2018 09:50

A Very Strong REIT with a Good Yield

(New York)

How does a REIT with great long-term business fundamentals and eye-popping yields sound? If that sounds good, take a look at Ventas. The REIT owns 1,200 properties, many focused on senior and assisted-living facilities. The long-term business looks very healthy as demographics—including retiring Baby Boomers—are a major growth opportunity for the REIT. The dividend yield is a strong 5.7%, and it appears safe, according to Morningstar.


FINSUM: Definitely seems like a REIT worth some more investigation. We like the combination of good yield and strong long-term fundamentals.

Published in Eq: Real Estate
Friday, 19 October 2018 09:49

Is it Time to Worry About Recession?

(New York)

The markets took another dive yesterday, with the Dow losing well over a 1%, the S&P 500 down almost 1.5% and the Nasdaq down over 2%. That loss jolted investors out of the sense that things might be back to normal after a strong recovery in recent days. This all begs the question of whether it is really time to start worrying about a recession? A new study from Bank of America says no. The bank did analysis of economic performance going back to the sixties and have found that compared to previous pre-recession cycles, the US is actually moving away from recession now.


FINSUM: Relying on historical data is probably not going to be very fruitful right now as the pretext (artificially low rates etc.) is totally different for this economic cycle.

Published in Eq: Total Market

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