Dow 21,000+; Forward P/E on S&P 500 ~18!!!

By Brian Nelson, CFA To say that the broader equity market is “extended” is an understatement. After testing the 20,000 mark on the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA), stocks have now plowed through 21,000 in such a fashion that can only be compared to the euphoric trading activity of 1999 when the index surged to 11,000 from 10,000 over roughly the same time frame. Who remembers the days of the dot-com bubble? The market is clearly off its rocker, but the market isn’t always on its rocker. Stock prices under and overshoot intrinsic value all of the time. It’s a part of the markets, as much as oxygen is necessary for human life. The markets overshot to the downside during … Read more

Is It Time or Timing in the Market?

Image Source: Dimitris Kalogeropoylos By Brian Nelson, CFA Since joining the workforce after undergraduate studies, those that will be turning 30 years’ old during 2017 will have never witnessed a meaningful bear market, large down year, or even a substantial “correction” in the stock market during their working lives. That’s right — many workers that were born in the mid-1980s when Ronald Reagan was President are probably starting to believe that they’ve found the secret to investing success and that broader US markets only go up (or down just a little at times, but they always recover and go higher). No matter if this assessment of their opinion of the markets is true or not may not matter. At the … Read more

Image: Returns Following the Trump Victory

To download the table for easier viewing, please select the link . Financials: Trump’s Treasury Secretary choice Steven Mnuchin wants to repeal most of the burdensome Dodd-Frank legislation. A steepening yield curve is helping banks and may drive improved net interest margins in coming periods. Goldman Sachs is ripping higher, leading the Dow’s charge.   Crude Oil: The world is moving to a better balance in supply/demand dynamics in the energy markets. OPEC is talking, has agreed to cuts, and expectations for improved economic growth are helping energy resource pricing. High-beta companies such as Continental Resources are rallying hard.   Energy: Capital spending cuts are bolstering free cash flow in the upstream space as energy resource pricing improves. Reduced regulations could help … Read more

Podcast: FALLACY of Index Funds!

The Valuentum Analyst team digs deep into the logical fallacy that paved the way for index funds, and the very real risks investors take while driving with their hands off the wheel looking only through the rear-view mirror. Summary Please read the first 3 minutes of the presentation (there is no audio at the beginning). Pause the program if you require more time to read. If you still don’t see the FALLACY that paved the way for the creation of index funds, be sure to comment below. The last 10 minutes of the program comprises a discussion by the Valuentum team of active versus passive. Looking forward to a good discussion. Please be sure to view the transcript below if … Read more

Pop the Bubbly? Everyone Is Getting Rich

Image Source: Bryan Rosengrant “Imagine a bank that pays negative interest. In this upside-down world, borrowers get paid and savers penalized. Crazy as it sounds, several of Europe’s central banks cut key interest rates below zero in 2014, and now Japan has followed…some 500 million people in a quarter of the world economy (are) living with rates in the red.” — Bloomberg By Brian Nelson, CFA In April 1979, Paul Volcker became the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, and after a series of rate hikes, the federal funds rate reached a high of 20 points by the end of the year and into 1980. Though the move was to combat double-digit inflation at the time, it’s worth pondering what such … Read more

A Kleenex? Consumer Staples Trading At Nosebleed Levels

Image Source: Alan Levine “The forward 12-month P/E ratio is 17.0. This P/E ratio is based on Thursday’s closing price (2170.06) and forward 12-month EPS ($127.93). The P/E ratio of 17.0 is above the prior 5-year average forward 12-month P/E ratio of 14.6, and above the prior 10-year average forward 12-month P/E ratio of 14.3. It is also above the forward 12-month P/E ratio of 16.6 recorded at the start of the third quarter (June 30).” – FactSet Earnings Insight, July 29, 2016 Kleenex anyone? Because we’re at nosebleed valuations in the consumer staples (XLP) sector! At arguably no time in the history of the stock market have investors been willing to pay so much for each unit of earnings … Read more

Nelson’s Warning to the Board Rooms of America

Image Source: Robert Lyle Bolton “In some ways, a cash dividend is like paying shareholders with their own money, and making a big deal about it!” — Brian Nelson, CFA To the Board Rooms of America: We learn a lot from the culture we live in, the education system we promote, and the games we play. Who hasn’t played Monopoly, the age-old game that Hasbro scooped up from Parker Brothers, first published in 1935? For more than 80 years now, men and women of all ages have been collecting $50 from the “bank” after pulling one of the more-fortuitous Chance cards. Ingrained in society has become the belief that a “dividend” is incremental, that something is “given” to shareholders that … Read more

Understanding the Market Melt Up

Image Source: Martin Thomas A previous version of this article appeared on our website April 15, 2016, “The Bubble Is Still Inflating.” No – things are not getting better. The discount rate is shrinking – and that means rising equity values. The laws of finance continue to be bent. NIRP (negative interest rate policy) has changed everything. The world is upside down, and it seems as though every week, we hear of another country or yet another long-er duration bond that has breached below the 0% threshold, “Japan’s 20-Year Government Bond Yield Goes Negative for First Time (July 2016).” The 10-year Treasury yield hit all-time lows just last week. We wrote extensively on the NIRP topic in the February 1, … Read more

Brexit: Secession Bells Are Ringing!

First Baptist Church in Columbia, S.C., where the first secession convention in the United States opened on Dec. 17, 1860. Source: Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Photo. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Web. 24 Jun. 2016. Global markets are plunging, and the implosion may still be in the early innings. Market valuations remain stretched among stagnant global economic growth, and “Brexit” may be the catalyst for a correction. In the paraphrased words of the well-known The Day of the Jackal author, Frederick Forsyth: the peasants have spoken. On June 23, the UK (EWU) held a referendum, in which anyone of voting age could take part, to decide whether the country should leave the European Union. The turnout was incredible at nearly 72%, and … Read more

Why The Fed Matters

By Brian Nelson, CFA I tread very lightly in how I communicate broad macroeconomic information. There are investors that are purely macro-focused asset-allocators, there are eternal optimists that believe the sky is the limit regardless of any economic considerations (perhaps like the Oracle of Omaha these days?) and then there are legends like Peter Lynch who is attributed with saying that “if you spend more than 13 minutes analyzing economic and market forecasts, you’ve wasted 10 minutes,” and that “if all the economists in the world were laid end to end, it wouldn’t be a bad thing.” Peter Lynch was the manager of the Fidelity Magellan Fund that averaged a near-30% annual return during the 13-year period ending 1990, “You … Read more