Valuing Gold, An Elusive Exercise
We tackle the challenge of appraising an investment that doesn’t produce income or cash flow by weighing the price of gold against other familiar investments and concepts that can be quantified—like home prices and inflation.
Excluding money market, all equity and bond fund categories have captured cumulative net cash inflow that is more than five times the level seen at this time last year. ETF inflow this year has accounted for nearly 80% of all flows.
Read moreThe latest CPI numbers are slightly weaker than expected. We think expectations for higher inflation are still on the high side. The global scope of inflation deceleration adds more weight to the recent soft readings. Patience is the right approach for the reflation trade at this point.
Read moreFollowing 2016 underperformance, High Quality stocks eked out an advantage over Low Quality stocks to begin 2017 (+5.3% versus +2.1%, respectively). Yet, the “Junk Rally” trend seems difficult to reverse.
Read moreQuantitative investing has become an integral component of professional investment management, and smart beta funds have become popular vehicles for advisors as they assemble actively-managed client portfolios.
Read moreThe S&P 500 has labored beneath its March 1st bull market high for the last two months while underlying breadth and leadership trends have remained mostly favorable.
Read moreBull markets bail out bad decisions—like buying the market high ahead of the Great Recession.
Read moreValue has taken its lumps to start 2017, but is it really that bad for the factor and its dedicated followers?
Read moreDespite real GDP growth of just 1.6% in 2016, the median S&P 500 company earned a net profit margin of 9.7%, only 40 basis points below the record high established in 2014.
Read moreAutomotive Retail group takes a backseat while Auto Parts & Equipment takes over the wheel. We examine the market/environmental dynamics that may be causing these groups’ routes to diverge.
Read moreThe dominant theme in the last few weeks has been the notable weakness in macro-economic data.
Read moreThe latest CPI is weaker and the softness was sooner than we expected. More alarming is the recent broad-based deterioration in economic data. Lower inflation expectations have flattened the yield curve recently, which hurt Financial stocks. We believe inflation has likely peaked for the time being and patience is the right approach for the reflation trade at this point.
Read moreWith U.S. real GDP growing about 2% year-over-year and the rest of the Developed world growing even slower, it’s hard to imagine that economic momentum may be peaking.
Read moreSecond-half results showed the U.S. emerging from the 2015-2016 profit recession, and our early read is that the first quarter should show more of the same.
Read moreThe distinction between reported GAAP earnings and adjusted operating earnings has long been a source of debate among fundamental investors, and the choice of “E” will materially impact each investor’s view of the market’s P/E ratio.
Read moreThe S&P 500 has gained about 5% on the year, respectable but hardly consistent with the “melt up” scenario we thought might occur.
Read moreWith the “Trump Trade” in question, investors have been flocking to companies delivering tangible results.
Read moreThe tapering of QE, clearly a tightening move, complicates the definition of the current tightening cycle.
Read moreWe examine past capex spending patterns and identify industries with sales growth rates that have historically been the most responsive to capex cycles.
Read moreThe dovish rate hike is a positive for inflation and credit. A hawkish message right now would have been quite detrimental and self-defeating in terms of realizing two more hikes later this year. We believe achieving sustained 2-3% inflation could be harder than most people expect going forward. Overall, we are encouraged by the dovish hike but we think the real test for inflation is when the base effect starts to wane.
Read moreLow Volatility was in favor once again during February after struggling the previous month. Starting in September, the factor has continuously reversed the previous month’s performance.
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