The Scary Reality of Indexing

The S&P 500 Index Fund, and derivative ETF products such as the widely-followed S&P 500 SPDR (SPY), are perhaps the most common equity-based indexing instruments on the market today. The pioneer of index mutual funds, the Vanguard Group, defines indexing as follows (1): Instead of hiring fund managers to actively select which stocks or bonds the fund will hold, an index fund buys all (or a representative sample) of the securities in a specific index, like the S&P 500 Index. The goal of an index fund is to track the performance of a specific market benchmark as closely as possible. That’s why you may hear it referred to as a “passively managed” fund. Vanguard’s founder Jack Bogle launched the first … Read more

Here Comes the Correction

The S&P 500 (SPY) has been stuck in neutral for most of 2015, and we’re not surprised. The forces against a further advance have been mounting for some time. Not only are valuations stretched on some of the strongest business models, but global economic growth remains sluggish, perhaps punctuated by falling gross domestic product in the US during the first quarter of the year. But that is not all that is ailing the global equity markets as of late. Nothing short of a 1929 US-equivalent stock-market crash in China (FXI) is currently ensuing, and the government is doing all that it can to prop up the markets to ensure stability. The Shanghai Shenzhen 300 Index has fallen an incredible 30% … Read more

I Need a CFA® Charter Holder in My Practice – Financial Advisor

Financial advisors and individual investors are always looking for the best. I had a conversation with one of our most valued clients this week. I’ve withheld his name and firm for the sake of privacy. We talked extensively about the significant back-testing he performed in constructing a portfolio that was optimized for a number of dynamics. The portfolio he created performed significantly better than the broad market benchmark during the past decade, but most importantly, its maximum drawdown at the depths of the Great Recession was a mirror fraction of that of the S&P 500 (SPY), and the length to recovery was materially shorter than it took the broader market to get back on its feet. I was impressed with … Read more

The US Economy Is Shrinking

“The way you lose money in the stock market is to start off with an economic picture. I also spend fifteen minutes a year on where the stock market is going.” and “If you spend more than 13 minutes analyzing economic and market forecasts, you’ve wasted 10 minutes.” – Peter Lynch I’m not so much a Peter Lynch disciple as I am a logical thinker. According to the legendary fund manager, you have a total of three minutes to read this piece on broader economic activity, and then move on to more useful analysis.  There’s no time to waste! Peter Lynch was the manager of the Magellan Fund at Fidelity Investments through the late 1970s and during the 1980s, where … Read more

The Invincible S&P 500?

This is the performance of the S&P 500 (SPY) since the March 2009 panic bottom. It’s incredible, to say the least. US stocks, as measured by the S&P 500 have more than tripled since the doldrums of the Financial Crisis, and for those of us that lived and breathed the markets during every day of the Financial Crisis, the lack of volatility and the ongoing, steady advance seemingly month after month during the past 6-plus years have been incredibly peculiar–and perhaps contradictorily–less-than-comforting. Any market that sets prices on the buying and selling behavior of a wide-variety of participants with differing views shouldn’t be so coordinated and one directional. It seems unnatural, or at the very least, unusual. While others are … Read more

The Market Top?

For those that are following along closely, you shouldn’t be surprised if the market corrects 5%-10% in the coming months. Let’s talk about this. From a technical standpoint, it may not be too far of stretch to say that we’re likely going to test the bottom of the S&P 500 (SPY) uptrend, and that could feasibly mean a drop to the 200-day moving average (blue line above). My technical alerts are telling me that with respect to the S&P 500, we’ve just dipped below the 50-day moving average, an arbitrary simple rolling average but one that is no less self-fulfilling than value investing itself. Don’t panic though. We’ve cut through the 50-day moving average many a time before during this … Read more

When “Bad” News Is “Good” News…Take A Euro Trip?

Pack the bags, kiss the grandkids, it’s time to do some traveling!!! Maybe to Europe? From a global perspective, for those whose wealth and income is generated in US dollars, you can arguably buy more with one US dollar today than at any other time in the past 12 years, according to a popular index that measures the value of the dollar versus a basket of other currencies. Expectations are being ratcheted up for impending interest rate hikes by the Fed, and this means that assets are flying into US greenbacks from all over the world. The dollar is strengthening against the euro, the pound, the loonie, the aussie, the rand, and the list goes on and on. This decade … Read more

When the Facts Change

The most valuable quality of any portfolio manager is the ability to change his or her mind, and not look back. When the facts change, so should the thesis. And the facts have changed with Dividend Growth portfolio holding Chevron (CVX). A look at the oil giant’s fourth-quarter results revealed a balance sheet that we flat-out were hoping to avoid, particularly for a commodity-producing entity. What was once a healthy net cash position just a few quarters ago has now ballooned into a $15 billion net debt position and a $27 billion total debt position overall. The pace of change has been incredible, and Chevron continues add more leverage as we write. Just last week, it sold another $6 billion … Read more

What Was Once Resistance Is Now Support

The S&P 500 (SPY) hit another new high February 13 after basing for much of the past few months. What once was resistance is now support. We find the resilience of the equity markets almost hard-to-believe. Geopolitical uncertainty, threats of an interest rate hike, foreign currency headwinds, slowing growth in the US and China, damage across the energy sector (XLE) and many other commodities, and the list goes on and on… Yet, the broader equity markets continue to notch new highs…this time on news of a whopping 0.3% growth in the Eurozone economy for the fourth quarter. Yes, you read that correctly: 30 basis points, three tenths of one percent, of expansion in a quarter that’s already in the past. … Read more