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| From HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
11:16 PM
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Labels: General Market , International
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
3:00 AM
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Labels: General Market
"On a personal note, I have never found a metric or metrics that allow me to have the combination of conviction that a bubble exists, that the correction will be large enough and/or that the correction will happen within a reasonable time frame, to be a market timer. Hence, I don't try! You may have a better metric than I do and if it yields more conclusive results than mine, you should be a market timer."
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
10:44 AM
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Labels: Week Ahead
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
5:15 PM
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Labels: Commodities , Economy , General Market
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
11:55 AM
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Labels: General Market , International
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
- "Aggregate Cash Grew 7%: The S&P 500 (ex-Financials) cash and marketable securities balance grew 6.6% year-over-year to a balance of $1.34 trillion at the end of Q1. However, cash declined sequentially by 4.7%, primarily as a result of Verizon Communications (VZ) closing its acquisition of the remaining stake of Verizon Wireless."
- "Free Cash Flow Grew 9%: Cash flows from operations amounted to $282.0 billion in Q1, which marked an increase of 7.4% year-over-year. Free cash flow to equity increased by 8.7%."
- "Capital Expenditures Grew 6%: Capital expenditures (“CapEx”) accelerated growth to 6.2% in Q1. In the past four quarters, growth had not exceeded 1.5%. Analysts project that the 2014 growth rate for CapEx will be 6.7%, but also predict it will turn negative in 2015 (-1.2%)"
- "Net Debt Issuance Positive for Fifteenth Straight Quarter: Cash inflows from net debt issuance were positive for the fifteenth straight quarter. Inflows of $74.1 billion were the second highest quarterly amount over that period."
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
1:39 PM
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Labels: General Market
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
- The year-over-year growth rate of the forward estimate is now 8.60%, once again at a new multi-year high, after dipping slightly last week. The forward growth rate hasn’t been this high since January 13, 2012 when it was 9.4%.
- ...just looking at the revisions and forward estimates around SP 500 earnings. The fact is, despite the negativity, S&P 500 earnings are growing at mid to high single digits, and starting to improve.
- For all practical purposes, with the SP 500 at 16(x) forward earnings, and with it becoming increasingly likely that SP 500 earnings growth could hit 10% (easily) this year, p.e expansion to 20(x) that forward estimate wouldn’t be a stretch.
- John Butters of Factset and now Gregg Harrison of ThomsonReuters have started to write about the lack of downward pressure on the q2 ’14 expected earnings growth rate of 6.6%. That same q2 ’14 estimated growth rate was +8.5% on April 1, 2014.
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
11:41 PM
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Labels: Week Ahead
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
2:04 PM
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Labels: Sentiment , Technicals
- "The lower share count pushed up earnings per share significantly (defined as a 4% impact) for 99 issues in the S&P 500, with the Q1 poster child being Apple."
- "The key question for Q2 is did they do it to boost a poor Q1 earnings period that was impacted by weather conditions, or was it a shift towards more enhanced earnings via share count reduction, similar to what we experienced in 2006 and 2007?"
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
8:49 PM
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Labels: Dividend Analysis , General Market
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
5:45 PM
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comments
Labels: Week Ahead
"While cap-weighted indices measure many things, there is (at least) one important thing that they do not measure. The return of a cap-weighted index represents the performance of the average invested dollar, not the performance of the average stock. What is the average stock’s performance? The process of adding each stock’s return and dividing by the total number of stocks is precisely how the return of an equally-weighted index is calculated."
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
3:02 PM
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Labels: Investments
| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
4:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: General Market
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
5:30 PM
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comments
Labels: Week Ahead
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
4:07 PM
2
comments
Labels: General Market , Technicals
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
10:22 AM
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Labels: Dividend Analysis , Dividend Return
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
"In a possible preview of coming attractions, S&P Capital IQ thinks investors should proceed with caution, especially those who are starving for yield and seem to be on a constant quest for cash. Our advice is to regard last year’s knee-jerk reaction to higher rates, as well as the restrained recovery, as a possible preview of coming attractions when rates move higher once again."
"From April 30, 2013 through the end of the year, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose from 1.7% to slightly more than 3%. Now it has drifted back down to 2.5%, in what we believe is a counter-trend rally before moving higher once again as economic data confirm the improvement in U.S. GDP growth. Indeed, Standard & Poor’s Economics, which operates independently of S&P Capital IQ, projects the 10-year yield to end 2014 around 3.1% and creep even higher by the end of 2015 to near 3.5%. In addition, even though history should be viewed as a guide and not gospel, the monthly difference between headline CPI and the yield on the 10-year note during the past 60 years implies a year-end 2014 level that approaches 4%."
"Taken from an individual stock perspective, investors should consider returns during the past year, along with valuations, when making investment decisions. S&P 500 companies yielding 2.5% or more recorded an average total return of 11%, versus 19% for all companies in the “500,” and 25% for those yielding 1.5% or lower. Even more telling, is that nearly one-quarter of all companies yielding 2.5% or more are still under water, having recorded a decline in price and dividend in the past year. This percentage of decliners is more than 10 percentage points higher than the average for those companies yielding less. And while valuations (P/E ratios based on forward-year EPS estimates) for the higher-yielding category is currently below the lowest yielding category, they trade at a 20% premium to the middle-yielding group and for the cap-weighted S&P 500 Index."
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
10:44 AM
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comments
Labels: Dividend Return , General Market
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
4:21 PM
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comments
Labels: Week Ahead
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
3:28 PM
0
comments
Labels: Financial Planning , Investments
Below is a post originally written by Ali Meshkati of Zenolytics. Ali has provided us with permission to republish the post he recently wrote for his readers. As much as sentiment can be a confounding concept, the below commentary seems to sum up the state of the current market.
SPRINTING SCARED by Ali Meshkati of Zenolytics
As the persistence of the current bounce becomes apparent, the trembling, crooked fingers of the average asset manager have become increasingly disfigured rendering them unable to pick up their saltine crackers and grape juice as they ponder ways in which to allocate their cash in a comfortable manner. And that right there is the problem or perhaps, the solution, to the current perception of this recent rally. The comfort level in buying this run up on some of the lightest volume we have seen in years is simply not there. It doesn’t exist. Leaving asset allocators no choice but to stew in their own rigidity as they await what may never come.
According to the BofA Merrill Lynch fund manager survey released some weeks ago, fund manager cash levels are at two year highs. Nothing Earth shattering in an overly-bearish tone, but still relevant in judging the perception of the current market. When institutions increase cash levels it is because they either 1) believe that equities will become cheaper at some point down the road, allowing them to buy back in over several months OR 2) are unsure in their belief of the equity markets, rendering them unable to make any decisions of consequence as to how assets should be allocated. Cash then becomes the safest bet until the market convinces them otherwise.
In both cases, institutional fund managers will have their hands forced by a market that presses to the upside. This is because institutions do not have the luxury of sitting out rallies in their benchmark based on simple theory. Not after what has transpired in terms of under-performance for the past 5 years paired with an increasing array of options for investors to gain exposure to equities without the need for an asset manager that has under-performed greatly.
In the current circumstance, you can see a market that is intentionally running away from those who are attempting to coax it back into a position that would provide the comfort needed to gain exposure. Each headline that passes with news of an all-time record high in the S&P 500 is similar to a jab to the gut of the fund manager who is neither comfortable, competent nor desirous of exposure to a creature he frankly does not understand.
As averages that have been abhorred as under-performers and dead money in 2014, such as small-caps and growth continue their surge, more pressure will build on those who are under-invested to catch up. Eventually leading to the catch up trade that typically marks short to intermediate term highs in the market.
During the entirety of this exercise in articulate buffoonery, everything from volume to valuations to generic, yellow boxed macro concerns will be cited as evidence of the need for conservatism in the face of record highs in the popular indices. To no avail, however. In the end, the need to have a job trumps theory in any shape or form. And the quickest way to lose a job on Wall Street is to trail behind it. A trait that has become oddly commonplace among far too many.
In essence, fear not, the markets are doing their duty in cajoling future french fry artists and ice cream masons onto the path that destiny has chosen. The difficulty in buying this market is as bullish an element in any as assessing its upside potential. Be confident in that fact.
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
3:54 PM
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Labels: General Market , Sentiment
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| From The Blog of HORAN Capital Advisors |
Posted by
David Templeton, CFA
at
9:17 PM
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comments
Labels: General Market , Technicals