Will Texas Tea Hit $75 Per Barrel By Year’s End?

Image Shown: The performance of the VanEck Vectors Oil Refiners ETF (CRAK) since its launch in August 2015. We’ve witnessed our fair share of fits and starts from energy resource pricing during the past few years, but could the global crude markets finally be rebalancing? Let’s talk about our thoughts on whether the outlook for energy resource pricing is improving in a sustainable way. By Kris Rosemann and Brian Nelson, CFA It may have taken longer than we initially anticipated, but crude oil prices (USO) appear to be on the verge of making a sustained recovery, though we always caution that sentiment can change on a dime, especially in the speculation-heavy commodity price markets. If you recall, we thought the … Read more

Valuentum’s 3 Breakthroughs in the Field of Finance and More

Valuentum’s President Brian Nelson pauses for a picture before speaking at the CFA Society of Houston in March 2017. By Valuentum Editorial Staff Let’s cover Valuentum’s 3 major breakthroughs in the field of finance. The first one is big and may challenge you to rethink everything you think you know about investing. 1. On a logical framework, Valuentum has debunked John C. Bogle’s landmark syllogism that has paved the way for the concept of index investing. Index investing has been built on a logical shortcoming, whether supported by evidence or not. We think it is important that the investment community know of this. Read (pdf): The “Luck” and “Randomness” of Index Funds (2018), Brian Nelson, CFA See video documentation: /FALLACY_of_Index_Funds To … Read more

Panera Eaten Up; SeaDrill’s End, Cisco’s Dividend Hike and Much More

Let’s go around the horn with recent investment-related news. Let’s say goodbye to Panera, talk about SeaDrill’s infamous demise, follow up on the Coach dividend saga, address Cisco’s payout strength and attractive valuation, update readers on Medtronic’s portfolio optimization initiatives, and try to reason through Tesla’s recent price surge.   By Kris Rosemann and Brian Nelson, CFA Goodbye Panera I think most of us were surprised a bit Wednesday morning, April 5, to see Panera Bread (PNRA) taken private by JAB Holding Company for $315 per share in cash. Shares of Panera started the year just above the $200 price tag, so the buyout is a nice payoff for investors that have been holding strong in the fast-casual concept. JAB … Read more

This Oil Stock Is Surging!

The Valuentum analyst team digs into recent developments in the oil and gas space and highlights one of the most leveraged ways to play rising crude oil prices. ~12 mins. If you cannot view the podcast below, please select the link here or view the transcript that follows. Tickerized for Valuentum’s oil and gas coverage universe. Chris Araos: Hello, this is Christopher Araos at Valuentum Securities, and today with us is Brian Nelson and Kris Rosemann. Today, we are going to talk about the outlook on oil and gas. Brian Nelson, CFA: Thanks Mr. Araos. I think to kind of set the stage for this conversation, we probably need to bridge the gap between what was truly the depths of … Read more

Is OPEC For Real This Time?

By Kris Rosemann On September 28, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) reached an agreement to cut crude oil production levels for the first time since 2008. The cartel reportedly agreed to limit production of member nations to a range of 32.5-33 million barrels per day (bpd) while leaders met at the International Energy Forum in Algiers, Algeria. As would be expected following such news, the price of crude oil has bounced, bringing market sentiment surrounding energy-related stocks higher along with it. The proposed production could be a reduction of up to 750,000 bpd from OPEC production levels in the month of August, but how the group of nations will reach such a production cut has yet to … Read more

Dividend Growth ‘Bubble’ To Continue But For How Long?

You’ve heard about low interest rates. You may have even heard about a ZIRP, zero interest-rate policy, as had been the case in the US for years, but have you heard of NIRP, negative interest-rate policy? Well, that’s the latest with respect to Japan (EWJ), which is home to the third-largest national economy in the world after the US and China. On January 29, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) introduced a negative benchmark interest rate of -0.1%, meaning that instead of paying interest on deposits, it will charge commercial banks to hold their money. This may make Japanese exports cheaper to stimulate growth, but my goodness, talk about a move to push “parked” assets out of the country. The US … Read more

Breaking: Markets in Free Fall

By Brian Nelson, CFA I was up late last night watching the 10-year Treasury fall below 2%, crude oil drop below $28 (and now below $27) per barrel, and the Dow futures collapse more than 500 points. Asset correlations are going to 1 — so much for modern portfolio theory, right? The benefits of diversification are sometimes absent at the very time you need them the most. If market observers didn’t learn this during the Great Depression, certainly they must have learned it during the Financial Crisis of 2008-2009. That’s why we like cash so much at times. We have a 35%+ cash weighting in both newsletter portfolios. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) is now down ~400 points (-2.5%), … Read more

The Markets Swoon Again

The broader US markets (SPY) swooned again January 7 as fears of a slowdown in China (FXI), or worse, a dislocation in Asia’s currency markets, and ongoing concerns about the sustainability of some of the most leveraged “players” in the energy complex took the spotlight again. None of this should be surprising. As we’ve done many a time before with the mortgage REITs, namely American Capital (AGNC) and Annaly (NLY), SeaDrill (SDRL) and the latest with Kinder Morgan (KMI), our members are far ahead of developments. That’s our job – we’re not reporters. We strive to get the right information to our members before it becomes “information,” and using the newsletter portfolios as an indication of our views on capital … Read more

Is the Worst Behind Us? Not Likely

By Brian Nelson, CFA US natural gas prices (NGAS) recently dropped to the lowest level in nearly 14 years. Unseasonably warm weather may be to blame for the near-term drop, but we point to more structural concerns that may keep natural gas prices low for some time. Including both unconventional and conventional global natural gas resources, for example, there are more than 200+ years’ of supply based on the current trajectory of demand, and that doesn’t account for technology advances that will inevitably be made in the coming decades. Can you believe it? The situation with crude oil prices is not much better. West Texas crude oil prices (USO) dipped below $35 per barrel recently, still the high end of … Read more

Dividends Not Safe as Energy Markets Swoon

We’ve been cautious on the oil and gas markets (XLE, AMLP) for some time, and that includes our October move closer to market neutral on the sector, but we’re still underweight the group. We’ve been saying that crude oil prices are more likely to hit the $20 per barrel level than move significantly higher, and we maintain our view that they may never again return to the $100 per barrel, a level many have grown accustomed to. After all, why should they? Unfortunately, the fallout continues to punish traditional “buy and hold” investors who have been trained to ignore most “news” and may still be holding on the belief of the fallacy of mean reversion, something that we believe cannot … Read more