Displaying items by tag: stocks

Thursday, 15 February 2018 10:35

Be Careful, Tech Isn’t as Resilient as it Looks

(San Francisco)

Many investors may have noticed that despite the big selloffs of the last two weeks, tech stocks have actually held up quite well. The sector is up 2.8% on the year versus an S&P 500 gain of just 0.2%. However, beware, as that number is largely an illusion. The reason why is that the vast majority of that performance comes down to Microsoft and Nvidia, which are up 5% and 20% this year.


FINSUM: The performance of tech during the recent downturn is largely an illusion, so investors need to be careful taking refuge in the sector.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Thursday, 15 February 2018 10:33

Volatility is Back for Good

(New York)

It has been many years since we had significant and sustained volatility. Both 2011 and 2013 had significant moves, but it had been almost five years since the kind of eruption we saw over the last couple of weeks. It was an amazing 404 trading days that the market had gone without a 5% drop. Barron’s says investors need to get used to the recent discord, as the volatility is here to stay. The paper borrows its argument from equity research analysts who contend that market stability is impossible, and any semblance of it an illusion, as the very forces that try to promote stability, such as the Fed, ultimate drive volatility.


FINSUM: This is quite an esoteric argument, but the reality is that with the economy changing gears into a new paradigm, we are likely going to continue to have some bumps.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Wednesday, 14 February 2018 09:47

Has the Market Finally Found a Floor?

(New York)

The Dow experienced mild gains yesterday, with just a 40-point move higher. After so much back and forth recently, nothing could have been more welcome for many investors. The mild move begs Barron’s to ask the question of whether stocks have finally found a floor after a roller coaster two weeks. Stocks started rough, but rallied late in the day, giving signs of renewed optimism. The most interesting part was that after opening down 180 points, bids started to appear which supported the market, leading some to believe that there is actually a market clearing price in place.


FINSUM: Whatever the market did until now is immaterial in our opinion, as it is this morning that inflation data comes out, and that will ultimately be what moves markets in one direction or another.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Tuesday, 13 February 2018 11:16

Stocks Look Like the Definition of a Bubble

(New York)

Well the stock market finally stabilized yesterday with a solid rally (who knows where it will end up today), which may let many breathe a sigh of relief. However, one of the most prominent names in investing, in his typically unemotional way, says that stocks are currently very dangerous as they look like the definition of a bubble. Investors are still buying the market even though they think it is overpriced, saying Schiller. According to him, “that's almost the definition of a bubble. If you think it's overpriced but think it still has time to go, that's the definition of a bubble”.


FINSUM: So our view is that there is still a good deal to be positive about, but that if you really think we are in for a correction, then what just transpired was not nearly enough to “correct” the market.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Tuesday, 13 February 2018 11:12

How Amazon Will Become a UPS or FedEx

(Seattle)

Last week Amazon made big news as it became clear that the company had plans to launch its own full scale delivery network both for its own shipments and for any retailer. The big players in the space are FedEx and UPS, and Amazon sees an opportunity to grab market share. However, the Wall Street Journal has published a “sense check” type of article showing that it would take a massive amount of investment and many years to gain the delivery scale to truly compete with UPS and FedEx. The WSJ reports that “FedEx has roughly 650 aircraft, 150,000 trucks, 400,000 employees and 4,800 operating facilities globally to handle about 12 million shipments a day”. Amazon has just a tiny fraction of that sort of infrastructure.


FINSUM: It is going to take Amazon several years, and a lot of patience from investors, to get in a position to compete with UPS and FedEx. We would never count the company out, but it is a distant goal.

Published in Eq: Large Cap

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