Eq: Large Cap

(London)

If you are thinking about putting some money into foreign stocks, you might want to wait. Overseas stocks need to go through a bear market before they are worth buying again, and they may be well on their way. The MSCI EAFE is seriously underperforming the US market, but don’t be fooled, it has historically done so when when it is ready to continue to underperform, not the other way around.


FINSUM: The big question is why foreign stocks are underperforming The perceived wisdom is that investors want to chase fast moving growth stocks, which are predominantly in the US.

(Washington)

In a new bill to help small US banks, some of the biggest beneficiaries are exactly the opposite. The new bill is set to raise the threshold for strict oversight from regulators to $250bn in assets (up from $50 bn). However, three huge custody banks—BNY Mellon, State Street, and Northern Trust—will also see a major benefit. Because of their custodial structure they will be able to exclude some deposits, pushing their total deposits down under the $250 bn threshold. This development seems likely to boost earnings per share at the custodial banks by 8%.


FINSUM: Talk about regulation going right for these banks.

(New York)

Markets have been falling in aggregate, but the real damage has been to the tech sector (and utilities to a lesser extent). Facebook, for instance, fell a whopping 6.8% yesterday on fears of fallout over its data breach. But Amazon, Netflix, and Google, all tumbled as well. Tech stocks have been such a leader for markets, and now amount to such a major percentage of indexes ($2.2 tn), that some are worried tech losses could rattle the whole market. Mounting fears over regulations seem to be weighing on the sector.


FINSUM: The odd thing is that it is not fears over tech businesses that are causing losses, but rather fears of regulation. We do absolutely believe big losses in tech could shake the confidence of the market as a whole.

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