Markets. Timing of any Fed rate increase, slowdown of China and emerging markets, and valuation have been plaguing markets all year. There is a relief rally on feelings that a rate increase has moved further out based on numbers released. When he sees opportunities he steps in, but recommends investors keep something on the sidelines. Value is appearing in US large cap tech, European financials and Japan. He thinks China is a value trap and it is too early to step in. There is no question that stronger players use opportunities such as in our energy sector to do M & A.
Educational Segment. Turning the Volatility Index into the Opportunity Index. The VIX index has been nicknamed the ‘fear’ index. That is wrong. Turn it upside down and call it the ‘Opportunity Index’. It is VIX divided by the square root of 12 get the monthly number and by the square root of 252 to get the daily number. When the opportunity index is below the decline of the S&P from 52 week highs, that is a period of opportunity.
Markets. The markets are testing the lows, but he does not know if it is over. He is finding it a lot easier to find good value. He looks at a percentage of stocks above their 200 day moving average. It was below 20% last week, which tells you the market is pretty beaten up. There has been a lot of internal damage that has taken place. The financial world revolves around selling transactions where as his job is to manage money, so he does jump at things. He is seeing robust signs in the economy. The global demand for oil is hitting record highs. US economic activity is a little slow, but it is in the range of normalcy. The European crisis seems to have melted away for now.
Markets. Job numbers were a little disappointing. We are seeing some slowing in the data. It gives the bears more ammunition. They can argue it is the beginning of a global recession. At the end of the day it will be another buying opportunity. You’ve seen some indicators in China that shows there is a slowdown in the deceleration. If you look at the dividend yield in the S&P vs. the 10 year T-bill in the US, where would you put your money? As long as you are in a global expansion, you should buy stocks. Valuations are now down and create great buying opportunities. He is constructively picking away at them. The epileptic moves we saw recently are over.
Markets. It hard to guess if equities have found their bottom. They have gone into a Friday finishing in the red so you could fear next week. He has been observing a widening of credit spreads. Earnings growth will be very critical to the businesses you want to focus on. The market has been pricing in 10 times earnings year over year. A lot of it has been acquisition driven. We will feel the effect of commodities impacting thing negatively in some cases and positively in others. Some retailers should benefit. Apparel guys have been trading at 25 times earnings for a couple of years. In Europe he is looking at credit spreads coming into banks. The Canadian banks vs. European banks show European banks have room to grow. In emerging markets the banks don’t have room to grow.
Markets. He expects more volatility because this season is normally tough on the markets and then the Fed not raising rates in September has added another unknown to this market. European inflation numbers are at or below zero and is there going to be more QE. Commodity companies have had a difficult time. There are a lot of little things going on that create a lot of uncertainty. This is seasonally a tough time. The market should try to test the lows of August. If you get through this volatility you should bounce off there afterwards. Stocks aren’t expensive and dividend rates are high. With this pullback you can look at names that were too expensive previously.
Markets. Over the span of his career, things are back to normal. The last few years have been a bit too linear. That is not how markets normally work. Nobody likes a bumpy ride, but in markets like this you want to get something for something. You want to outperform and then see markets get back into a healthy state. He made a call in the spring to move away from industrials with more FX exposure and that helped quite a bit. Clients want to be up, but you have to realize that the markets give you a premium for the risks you take. The US is the place to be for a portion of his clients’ assets.
Momentum ETFs. E.g. First Asset Momentum ETFs. He mentions those that make up the majority of the market. He is not a momentum guy so these don’t appeal to him. He feels these are excellent momentum ETFs.