A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert (A Commentary)

COMMENT

Crude oil has topped $81/barrel and high prices are here stay. The U.S. should look at what's happening to the shortages in Europe as a warning. Fracnce relies on nuclear energy, but the rest of Europe doesn't produce enough natural gas and oil, and wind energy is intermittent. Europe has far more structural issues than the U.S. which has a lot of nat gas and oil. This year, the S&P hit a peak PE of 23x, and has trickled down to 20x, driven by better earnings. Earnings this quarter will be exciting. Lean into tech as growth slows. Debt to GDP is rising, too, and GDO will be slowing. Stay in secular growth companies, long-term. You can rent smallcaps for now. Energy and materials offer long-term secular growth after doing nothing for the last 10 years.

COMMENT

Oil stocks Crude oil will rise, but oil stocks won't necessarily rise too. It's a dislocation. But we could see more individuals buying oil stocks, which would narrow this gap. The ESG penalty box is real for oil stocks, apart from speculators and hedgers, but she thinks this will change.

COMMENT

The megacap tech names will eventually resume their rally. The S&P in the past 5 days is up 2.6% because MSFT, Apple and Amazon are all outperforming the S&P. Forget this binary outcome for the index, which he feels will go where megacap tech will do. Coming up is the most compelling earnings season since Oct. 2018 when industrials like Caterpillar were fearing tariffs. Now is the same situation but from rising input costs including wages that'll effect company guidance. The current reopening is about stagflation (last year's was about reflation). Smallcaps are still below their March highs. Airbnb, Disney and Uber--reopening stocks--are not ripping to new highs; it's different from 2020's reopening. Input costs and wages are spiking.

COMMENT

He disagrees that this is a large-cap tech rally. Energy, financials, materials and industrials have been leading in the last 3 weeks, instead. In the first quarter this year, the FAAANGs stagnated or dipped, like Amazon and Apple, while the market rallied overall. Delta is the most important factor in the market, but Delta has clearly peaked in the U.S. and globally. This means people are coming out again--flights are way up as well as hotel room rates in Vegas, up double-digits vs. 2019. Also, people are returning to work. There's still a lot of unclogging in the supply chain to come, but it is gradually improving, based on ships anchored off Los Angeles.

COMMENT
In September, we started to see fear of tapering and supply chain problems. China is also having growth problems. Now we are coming into earnings season. This is the calm before the storm. There will be downward pressure if there is tapering. If earnings do not grow at 20-25%, then there can also be a further downward movement.
COMMENT
October to October returns tend to do better than calendar year returns. The biggest market corrections occur in September or October. You enter a market that had a sell off with better prices. Earnings are also positive so it tends to be a good time to step into the market. Time of year he wants to buy. Works about 3 out of 4 years.
COMMENT
Invests in businesses so does not look at particular sectors. Doesn't like to correlate or rotate. Invests in the long run. Every quarter, the cashflow should grow and dividends should grow. Asides from the tech sector, there has been sell offs in the small caps and other parts of the S&P500 that are down 30% from their highs. There are opportunities. Pays attention to portfolio percentage weightings.
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If there are doubles in your portfolio, they may have risen too fast, too much so take some profits. Try to rebalance so you can invest with proper allocations.
COMMENT

Billy Kawasaki’s Insights - Billy’s most-liked answers from 5i Research. The energy rally probably still has some legs to it. A consolidation is not unexpected but it seems oil prices could stabilize around $70 to $80. This could lead to shareholder value being increased through dividends or buybacks. Maintaining proper sector allocation is the best way forward. Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free

COMMENT
Technical analyst Larry Williams says to buy at the end of October or start of November Autumnal seasonality is coming to an end. So start buying? No so fast. Technician Larry Williams's 2021 forecast so far has been dead on, foreseeing dips in April and mid-July and not. Williams forecasts upside near the end of October and will continue to rally through the end of the year. From 1923-2020, rallies begin on October 29. Williams says buy on the 22nd day of trading in October, which in 2021 means November 1. So, buying on November, based on Williams' data also reports rewards.
COMMENT
Markets. He tends to be a cautious investor, not to say that he's negative. Stocks do well in expansions, but there are always corrections. Stocks aren't cheap, but interest rates are low and unlikely to soar. Wage inflation is low. Wage inflation is good for consumer spending. Growth has peaked, but it's still a tailwind. Global lockdowns are easing, so this should lead to an end of supply chain issues and to a moderating of inflationary expectations. Most of the inflation we're seeing is in durable goods, which will ease when lockdowns ease. There's lots of household liquidity, supporting demand for goods and services. An expanding economy is good for stocks.
COMMENT
Investor timeframes. He's a long-term investor, doesn't get too worried about headline news. There's a lot of fast money moving around. Concerns about China, inflation, and debt ceilings can all cause volatility. Stocks did well coming out the pandemic, but people are getting more selective. Now that we're mid-cycle, investors need to be mindful of quality instead of quantity. Make sure you have your risk parameters in place. Don't get over your skis, overly aggressive, investing in companies like cryptocurrencies that don't make any money. Mid-cycle currents can cause ripple effects, so make sure you stick to good quality businesses.
COMMENT
Good quality businesses. Those that touch people's lives on a daily business. Banking, info tech, delightful products and services that people use over and over again. Such as DIS, MCD, online shopping, or a desire to get access to information quickly. You're not going to innovate away these cornerstones.
COMMENT
Markets. Feels like we're starting to get a more permanent rotation from growth to value. Started earlier this year, growth came back over the summer, but now the switch is continuing. An analogy is when we saw a rolling top in tech in 2000, and then there was a huge divergence in performance.
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