Don’t stop me now. A record-setting run for Wall Street, seems set to continue after a sans-surprise Fed pledge to start tapering.
Cue the traditional end-year rally?
Onto our call of the day from Michael Cuggino, president and portfolio manager of the nearly 40-year old multiasset Permanent Portfolio Family of Funds
PRPFX,
He told MarketWatch that investors are entering a new and largely unfamiliar era of investing that begs for a diversified approach.
Cuggino outpointed two investor blind spots right now — the potential for higher interest rates, and a widely accepted Federal Reserve view that inflation is transitory and will ease once supply-side issues are ironed out. “I think the inflation story is broader than that and I don’t think it’s been properly priced in yet,” said the manager.
The 58-year old Cuggino said growing up in the ’70s and ’80s exposed him to high single-digit inflation, a misery index and stagflation. “So inflation is a risk and you’ve got two to three generations of investors right now that have never managed an inflationary cycle,” he said. “It’s a risk to equities because of rising costs, lower profit margins.”
Those newbie investors have also never managed a rising interest rate environment, such as he saw in the 1980s. Even five to eight years ago, markets were dealing with a benign geopolitical environment — no inflation and low bond yields even as rates were rising, he said.
Hence the next 10 years could look a lot different, Cuggino said.
As for stock ideas, he’s keen on companies that can withstand rising rates and inflation, and control their cost structure. He believes we’re potentially at the start of a multiyear commodity cycle, which is favorable for dividend-paying copper miner Freeport-McMoRan
FCX,
He also likes fellow miners BHP
BHP,
BHP,
and Rio Tinto
RIO,
RIO,
— two diversified industrial metals companies that both pay dividends. Again, “good ideas for a long-term investor that’s willing to play the fact there might be a longer-term cycle in commodities,” said Cuggino.
Another dividend-paying sector poised to increase those payouts and work well for a long-term investor are financials. He pointed to Morgan Stanley
MS,
among big financial services groups and regional bank First Republic
FRC,
though noted the latter is more expensive to own right now. He owns State Street
STT,
bank in the trust company space.
“The broader you’re diversified about different possibilities, the better chance you have to produce a positive outcome or at least mitigate downside risks. And so that’s why we would be diversified right now,” he said.
The buzz
Earnings are ahead from drug company Moderna
MRNA,
healthcare giant Cigna
CI,
and Duke Energy
DUK,
with travel group Expedia
EXPE,
and drinks group Monster Beverage
MNST,
among those reporting late.
Shares of mobile-chip specialist Qualcomm
QCOM,
are climbing on upbeat results and a rosy outlook. Results cheer is also lifting shares of videogame publisher Electronic Arts
EA,
while solar-energy group SunPower
SPWR,
is down on a loss, and a weak forecast is hitting tech group Roku
ROKU,
As real-estate company Zillow
Z,
continued to tumble Tuesday, Cathie Wood’s flagship exchange-traded fund kept buying.
The U.S. has reached a milestone with more than 750,000 deaths due to COVID-19. And the fully vaxxed mayor of Los Angeles, Eric Garcetti, is quarantining in his hotel room in Scotland at the COP26 climate summit after testing positive. COVID cases in the U.K., meanwhile, have never been higher.
Weekly jobless claims, the international trade deficit, productivity and unit labor costs data are due ahead of the open.
The tweet
Food for thought?
The markets
Stocks are set to hover around records, with Nasdaq-100 futures
NQ00,
higher, but flat elsewhere
YM00,
ES00,
Gold
GC00,
and the dollar
DXY,
are up, and oil
CL00,
continues to slide. It was a mostly upbeat day in Asia. Bitcoin
BTCUSD,
is holding above $60,000. A Bank of England decision is looming and many see a hike coming.
The chart
The tea leaves are pointing to a year-end rally for high-beta stocks, says Bank of America’s equity and quant strategist Savita Subramanian, who provides this chart:
Stocks with higher beta tend to see outsize movements, gaining more when markets rise and fall more when it heads the other direction.
“High Beta stocks typically outperform in November — perhaps attributable to active funds chasing beta to boost performance — and December is also strong. Since 1986, High Beta has outperformed the S&P 500 61% of the time in November by an average 1.6ppt,” said Subramanian, who sees energy and financials stocks as potential winners.
Random reads
What really happened to Tony Soprano? We may finally know.
A very hairy tribute to U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson:
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This post was originally published on Market Watch