Displaying items by tag: stocks

Tuesday, 17 July 2018 09:25

A Major Bear Market Warning Light is Flashing

(New York)

Most of the indicators that the media is discussing at the moment have to do with a recession (e.g. an inverted yield curve). But today, there is an important one that speaks directly to a bear market—flows in pension funds, insurers, and sovereign wealth funds. There is a combination of factors happening which shows markets have reached the end of this cycle. On the one hand, pension funds and insurers are pulling money out of public markets in order to chase private investments (e.g. real estate and infrastructure). But at the same time, the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds are now pulling out of private market investments because there is too much money chasing too few deals. In other words, valuations have gotten too high everywhere and some of the world’s biggest investors are moving into cash.


FINSUM: When the world’s biggest investors are getting out of both public and private markets, it seems to indicate that the end of the market cycle is near. That said, this bull market has revived itself many times.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Tuesday, 17 July 2018 09:21

A New Boom Time for Financials

(New York)

US financial shares might be in for a quick ride higher. Bank of America’s earnings came in 33% higher than last year, leading to a blowout for the sector. The news followed strong earnings from JP Morgan and Citi. BAML’s shares rose over 4% on the news with one analyst commenting that the numbers were “almost all you could have hoped for”. Rising interest rates were a key factor in the increasing earnings, as banks earned more from net interest margins.


FINSUM: These are great numbers, but they may only be temporary. Consumers have not yet started demanding higher interest payments on savings, but once they do (and we think they will), then banks’ net interest margins will start shrinking again.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Tuesday, 17 July 2018 09:20

Is the Market Denying Political Reality?

(Washington)

Something very odd has been going on in markets for the last few weeks—investors are completely tuning out politics. The political situation both domestically and internationally has grown steadily worse in recent weeks. The US has a growing trade war with China, Brexit is a complete mess, Trump is meddling with allies etc., yet markets continue to move higher. Even emerging markets have rallied.


FINSUM: On top of politics, recession fears are also growing. Accordingly, it is slightly concerning markets are rising. Markets have learned to not take Trump’s comments too seriously, but that lack of sensitivity might be serving investors poorly right now. The Wall Street Journal says it best: “Markets are notoriously bad at pricing changes in the political weather until they are forced to”.

Published in Politics

(New York)

The market is currently facing a large number of headwinds: higher rates, a flattening yield curve, a growing trade war, and a high degree of international political tension. Yet, according to Barron’s, the path of least resistance for the S&P 500 may be higher. The reason why? Despite all the hovering the market has done this year, one big thing has fundamentally changed very recently—market breadth is increasing. In other words, the number of stocks which are advancing versus declining is improving. When the market does so, it is often a sign of better things to come.


FINSUM: We do take increasing breadth as a positive sign, as it reflects that investors across all sectors are feeling better and not just a handful hiding out in a few places.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Monday, 16 July 2018 09:17

The Best Small Cap Stock Funds

(New York)

There is no denying it, small cap stocks are having their moment in the sun. The Russell 2000 is up over 10% this year, while the S&P 500 is up only 3.2%. A number of factors are powering them: tax cuts that benefit small companies more than large ones, better US than overseas growth, and a rising Dollar amid heightening trade disputes. In light of this, the WSJ has picked 3 small cap stock funds for investors to consider. They are: DFA US Small Cap Value Portfolio, T. Rowe Price QM U.S. Small-Cap Growth Equity Fund, and the Harbor Small Cap Value Fund.


FINSUM: Reading about their strategies, the T.Rowe offering looks particularly interesting and has the best five-year annualized return of 14.6%.

Published in Eq: Large Cap

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