Fed Rate Decision, UAW Strike Continues, Microsoft Ups Payout

Image Source: Mike Mozart By Brian Nelson, CFA If you’re thinking like us about the ongoing Fed rate-hiking cycle, you’re probably thinking that perhaps we’ll see another rate hike or two down the road, even if the Fed pauses at today’s September 20 meeting. However, whether the Fed pauses from here on out or executes a couple more rate hikes, it really shouldn’t matter much to long-term investors. From where we stand, the conversation about interest rates should now be shifting away from worries about elevated inflation to the future positive prospects that correspond to the work that the Fed has already done. With the market-cap weighted S&P 500 (SPY) just a stone’s throw away from all-time highs, despite aggressive … 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

Still Bullish — Stocks for the Long Run!

Excuses not to pick stocks are only exposing biases these days. By Brian Nelson, CFA The S&P 500 (SPY), Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) and Nasdaq (QQQ) continue to hover near all-time highs, and all appears well. We maintain our bullish take on the markets and believe that we are in the early innings of a long bull market that started following the washout March 2020 during the depths of the COVID-19 meltdown. Stock bull markets tend to average about 4.4 years in duration, with the last one enduring ~11 years, while bear markets are very abrupt, lasting only 11.3 months on average, the last one a very short 1.1 months, according to data from First Trust. We’re about 15 … Read more