Archive for the ‘The Market’ Category

First Half Market Update Part 2: Which Asset Classes Provide the Greatest Opportunity At This Time?

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

In a word, none.

Equities are undervalued if you look at their projected price-to-earnings ratios at the end of this year, based upon projected earnings. But the projected earnings may be overstated if the economic recovery slows down or stops altogether. Emerging market equities are the new hobby-horse of the investment community. Our clients’ portfolios hold some, but the attention of the “what’s hot” crowd probably means they will do badly for a while until the investors with ADHD move on to some other “hot” product.

Bonds were the best-performing asset class in the decade just concluded and are the best so far in 2010. But when the Fed starts to raise interest rates (not a 2010 likelihood at this juncture), the value of outstanding bonds will fall. Our two Morningstar award-winning bond managers, Bill Gross at PIMCO Total Return and Dan Fuss and his team at Loomis Sayles, have produced positive returns so far this year while trying to position their funds for interest rate increases down the road.

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First Half Market Update Part 1: Economic Growth

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Global stock markets were down 6% to 13% in the first half of this year (depending upon which index you look at). Starmont Clients were flat to down 1% – 3% (as always, this is net of fees and costs). This is because Starmont Client portfolios underweight the equities market, and our Clients’ fixed income holdings are up for the year but not as much as the equities are down. (July was a better month, and most major domestic stock indexes are around flat as of July 31.)

Through June 30, the year was a tale of two stock markets. The first part of the year through April 25 was a continuation of the strong 2009 bull market. Indexes were up and it appeared that the recovery was taking hold. But things turned, and from April 26 through June 30, the market (as measured by the S&P 500 Index) dropped over 17%.  May was horrible (the worst May for the Dow Jones Industrial Average since May 1940). June was bad as well but not as bad as May.

The questions now are:

     – Whether the economic recovery will continue in the United States and globally, and if so, at what pace, or will the US and/or the global economy slip into a double-dip recession?

     – Where will growth come from?

     – What asset classes present the best opportunity to add value going forward? (This question will be addressed in Part 2 of the First Half Market Update coming tomorrow.)

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Breakfast with the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Things are tough and will stay tough for a while.

So says Richard W. Fisher, president and chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, with whom I had breakfast on Thursday, July 22.

Mr. Fisher says that the problem is not a monetary one that can be addressed by the Fed. Rather, he believes that while there is plenty of money in the economy, it is not being deployed because decision makers are uncertain about the future.

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Growing and Preserving Your Wealth in Unsettled Times – The Podcast

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Did you miss the June 4th seminar on Growing and Preserving Your Wealth in Unsettled times? Well if so you are in luck! The podcasts from the seminar are now available for your listening pleasure at Starmont.com. Please click on the segments below to hear the presentation featuring Rick Lake from Aston/Lake Partners Alternatives Fund.

Part 1—Alternative Funds—What are they?  How are they used in a portfolio? (7 minutes 47 seconds)                     Part 2—Asset Allocation, Diversification and Performance (8 minutes 4 seconds)
Part 3—Volatility, Managing Risk, and the New Normal (9 minutes 50 seconds)

Portfolio Equity Allocation Changes for Starmont Clients

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

A letter from Harvey Rowen, CEO and CIO, Starmont Asset Management LLC

 To Our Valued Clients:

We are lowering portfolio equity allocations so that no Starmont Client has more than 40% of his/her/their/its portfolio in equities—down from 50%.

The decision over the weekend of June 26-27 by the G-20 to forego any further stimulus and to start cutting budgets (firing people) has made the market very nervous about global growth going forward, as was evidenced in recent stock market declines.

While President Obama said that the United States would follow a somewhat different path and keep stimulating now, and then half the US deficit by 2013 once we were out of the recession, it is unlikely that he can get any further stimulus legislation through Congress. This raises the question of where jobs are going to come from, and without jobs, what will drive growth in the United States and abroad?

On the positive side, the current concern about growth has in all likelihood delayed the Fed from raising the Fed Funds rate until sometime in 2011. The proceeds of the equity sales we are now making will go into fixed income, which is showing positive returns for the year, and we should not have to worry about rising interest rates (and lower values on outstanding bonds) for a while.

Best Regards,

Harvey Rowen

Beware of Greeks Bearing Gilts: Virgil, The Aeneid, with Help from the International Monetary Fund

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

May was a hell of a month. And mostly all bad.  Indeed it was the worst May since 1940 for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Major domestic stock averages covering large cap stocks were down around 8%, wiping out the gains of January through April, and making the year slightly negative for those indexes. International averages were worse. But small and mid cap stock indexes, although down in May, are still positive for the year.

Volatility was extreme—with ups and downs reminiscent of an “E” ride at Disneyland.  The Dow posted triple digit losses or gains in 14 of 20 trading sessions in May.

And on May 6th the computers that drive the U.S. stock exchanges blew up, sending the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 1,000 points, and then up 1,000 points, all in the space of less than an hour.  Exchanges and the Securities and Exchange Commission still are not sure what caused the problem—or how to fix it.

The so called “Flash Crash” unsettled investors.  And then fears about Greek sovereign debt problems spreading to the other PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, and Spain), oil spilling out into the Gulf Coast with no way of stopping it yet discovered, North and South Korea stepping up their military stances over the sinking of a South Korean naval vessel, and elections showing a very unhappy and unsettled electorate in the United States, simply overwhelmed the improvement in economic numbers announced during the month.

Fear triumphed over fundamentals.

All of this raises questions about where things go from here—and how to invest your money so as to preserve and grow your net worth so that you can have the life you want to live.

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IT’S OK TO COME OUT OF YOUR BUNKER NOW–But Keep Your Helmet On Just To Be Safe

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

The Great Recession is over.  Don’t pay attention to the Business Cycle Dating Committee of the National Bureau of Economic Research which says it’s too early to call this.  There is always somebody who doesn’t get it. Just look around.  GDP is growing, and the stock market is up.  Companies are hiring temporary help, the step before hiring permanent help.  Consumers are spending again, although cautiously.  Go to a mall, or a restaurant, or the movies, or an airport, and there are more people there than there were six months ago.

But that doesn’t mean that it is OK to take risks just yet.  The recovery is very fragile.  Another dip in the economy (the dreaded Double Dip) is possible, although not likely absent a policy error on the part of the Federal Government.  Some parts of the world, particularly Euroland and Japan, are having financial difficulties.  Individuals and governments are trying to pay off debt they incurred during the party that caused the Great Recession.  So you have to be prudent about where you are going to put your money—and for how long.   (more…)

Starmont’s Chosen Best of Breed Portfolio Managers Honored by Morningstar

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

The ability to evaluate and select consistently successful investment managers is one of Starmont’s most important strengths. Morningstar has recently named their picks for best portfolio managers for the last decade, as well as for 2009, and a number of managers whom Starmont includes in our Best of Breed have been honored. We are proud to recognize their efforts, and want our Clients to feel secure in the knowledge that these highly productive portfolio managers are on their team.

Portfolio Managers of the Decade

Fixed Income
Bill Gross, PIMCO Total Return Bond Fund
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Domestic Equity
Bruce Berkowitz, Fairholme Fund
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Foreign Equity
David Herro, Oakmark International Small Cap Fund
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2009 Portfolio Managers of the Year

Fixed Income
The Team at Loomis Sayles Bond Fund
2009 Return: 36.8% (Percentile Rank 14th)
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Breakfast with the President…Of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank That Is

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

I had breakfast last week with Dr. Janet Yellen, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. The breakfast confirmed much of what Starmont has been saying about a slowly improving U.S. economy, and by implication the slow but continuing rise of the stock market. (more…)

WARNING! High Interest Rates and High Tax Rates Can Be Dangerous to Your Wealth

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Cigarette makers are required to put health warnings on their cigarette packages.  Maybe the Government should be required to put wealth warnings on its decisions.

Federal Reserve Bank Chairman Ben Bernanke has released a game plan for raising interest rates, and has already started to implement that decision with the Fed raising the Discount Rate on February 19th.  Other rate rises are sure to come, including rises in the Federal Funds rate—it’s just not clear when and by how much.  Rising interest rates mean lower bond valuations for outstanding bonds and higher costs to individuals and businesses carrying various kinds of debt.

The so called Bush tax cuts are scheduled to expire on December 31st of this year.  Absent legislation (which is unlikely to come from the current dysfunctional Congress), income tax rates, capital gains tax rates, and estate tax rates will rise January 1, 2011. 

Investment accounts need to reviewed and adjusted as necessary in light of these developments. (more…)

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