Will oversold conditions help the stock market? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, September 30th, 2023

Responsible Investor is a weekly newsletter and an Apple/Spotify podcast for those who are interested in investing responsibly. Go to responsibleinvestor.dk for more information and to read our disclaimer. This week’s newsletter is titled “Will oversold conditions help the stock market?”, and was written on September 30th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices were mixed this week, as US treasury yields rose and portfolio managers increased spending as part of the end of quarter ‘window dressing’. The European stock market fell for the second week in a row despite better thank expected inflation data in the Eurozone. The 2-10y spread tightened significantly this week and is still inverted at -44 basis points. A strong jobs report and cooler than expected PCE data were this week’s highlights in terms of US economic data. In corporate news, Micron and Accenture guided lower while Nike jumped on strong guidance. Despite the vast majority of the S&P500 companies having now reported Q2 earnings, there are still notable ones due to be published next week such as McCormick, Tilray, Constellation Brands and Levi’s.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished -1.3% lower (+1.1% year to date) while the S&P500 lost -0.7% (+11.7% year to date), the Nasdaq rose +0.1% (+26.3% year to date) and the Russell 2000 gained +0.5% (+1.4% year to date). Gold finished -3.7% lower (-3.2% year to date) while Silver tanked -4.3% (-10.9% year to date). Crude Oil gained +1.2% (+20.4% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield rose +0.7% (+20.6% year to date). The European stock market gave up -1.3% (+8.6% year to date). The Euro lost -0.68% against the US Dollar (-1.26% year to date).

Weekly pitch

Technical analysis can help assess the market direction from time to time. With the market currently in oversold conditions, there is a fair chance of a bounce. This week’s performance was masked by end of quarter movements. New money pours in at the beginning of the month which might sustain the stock market at the beginning of next week. In the medium term, however, yields are likely to affect where the markets go from here. In the long term, earnings and earnings expectations drive stocks. Responsible Investors should exercise caution and maintain a healthy proportion of their portfolio in cash and hedges as well as a diversified portfolio with some exposure to the European stock market and to emerging markets.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we have taken full profits on our Ross Stores short position (+8.5%). We have initiated a long position on Boeing and a consumer staples ETF, and accumulated on our Newmont Mining long position. Cash, US treasury bills, precious metals and hedges amount to 38% in our portfolio (decreased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

The Gap +6.9% (Apparel)

Callon Petroleum +5.5% (Oil)

ProShares UltraPro Short Dow 30 +4.4% (3x inverse the Dow)

Denbury Resources +2.2% (Oil)

Hilton Worldwide Holdings +1.8% (Hotels & Leisure)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 49% (increased)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (unchanged)

Emerging markets long positions 4.5% (unchanged)

US stocks short positions 0.5% (reduced)

Hedges 7.5% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2% (unchanged)

US Treasury bills 2% (unchanged)

Cash 26.5% (decreased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +12.6% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +17.8%.

Invest responsibly!!!

What does a rising 10-year yield mean for the stock market? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, September 23rd, 2023

Responsible Investor is a weekly newsletter and an Apple/Spotify podcast for those who are interested in investing responsibly. Go to responsibleinvestor.dk for more information and to read our disclaimer. This week’s newsletter is titled “What does a rising 10-year yield mean for the stock market?”, and was written on September 23rd, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices finished markedly lower this week, as the Fed decided to pause interest rate hikes at its September FOMC meeting and the ‘dot plot’ alluded to a ‘higher-for longer’ monetary policy. The European stock market returned to losses on news of economic slowdown within the region and particularly in France. The 2-10y spread tightened slightly this week and is still inverted at -66 basis points. It was a slow news week in terms of economic data. In corporate news, both Stitch Fix and Fedex rose on a Q2 earnings beat while Kb Home slumped. Despite the vast majority of the S&P500 companies having now reported Q2 earnings, there are still notable ones due to be published next week such as Nike, Carnival, Micron and Costco. Accenture will report its Q3 earnings, also.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished -1.9% lower (+2.5% year to date) while the S&P500 lost -2.9% (+12.5% year to date), the Nasdaq gave up -3.6% (+26.2% year to date) and the Russell 2000 fell -3.8% (+0.9% year to date). Gold finished -0.4% lower (+1.0% year to date) while Silver gained +1.4% (-5.2% year to date). Crude Oil lost -0.3% (+19.8% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield jumped +2.8% (+17.0% year to date). The European stock market gave up -2.5% (+10.0% year to date). The Euro lost -0.19% against the US Dollar (-0.58% year to date).

Weekly pitch

The risk-off experienced this week was driven by the sell-off in US bonds, particularly in the 10-year which reached the 4.5% yield mark. This is particularly negative for long duration stocks as their price to earnings ratio is harmed by rising yields. Long duration stocks include tech stocks as well as speculative stocks. Should the Fed continue to exert pressure on interest rates for longer this will end up hurting the stock market and reduce valuations. Responsible Investors should exercise caution and maintain a healthy proportion of their portfolio in cash and hedges as well as a diversified portfolio with some exposure to the European stock market and to emerging markets.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we have taken full profits on our Academy Sports and Outdoors short position (+9.8%) and partial profits on our Ross Stores short position (+6.1%) as well as our triple inverse Nasdaq ETF long position (+2.4%). Sells stops were trigger on our HRB short position. Cash, US treasury bills, precious metals and hedges amount to 39% in our portfolio (increased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

ProShares UltraPro Short Russell 2000 +11.3% (3x inverse the Russell 2000)

iPath Series B S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures TM +10.7% (Volatility ETF)

ProShares UltraPro Short QQQ +8.8% (3x inverse the Nasdaq)

ProShares UltraPro Short Dow 30 +5.1% (3x inverse the Dow)

iShares Silver Trust +2.3% (Silver ETF)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 47% (increased)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (unchanged)

Emerging markets long positions 4.5% (unchanged)

US stocks short positions 1.0% (reduced)

Hedges 7.5% (reduced)

Silver & Gold 2% (unchanged)

US Treasury bills 2% (unchanged)

Cash 27.5% (increased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +13.2% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +15.0%.

Invest responsibly!!!

Did the ECB send a bullish signal to the stock market? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, September 16th, 2023

Responsible Investor is a weekly newsletter and an Apple/Spotify podcast for those who are interested in investing responsibly. Go to responsibleinvestor.dk for more information and to read our disclaimer. This week’s newsletter is titled “Did the ECB send a bullish signal to the stock market?”, and was written on September 16th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices finished mostly lower this week, except the Dow which rose marginally in a week which was affected by a significant sell-off on Friday despite the success of the ARM IPO. The European stock market ended its 6-week negative streak and returned to gains despite the euro continued weakness relative to the dollar. The ECB hiked interest rates by another 0.25%. The 2-10y spread tightened slightly this week and is still inverted at -69 basis points. In economic data, the core inflation (CPI) as well as the inflation at producer level (PPI) are running hotter than expected. Retails sales data were also strong which indicates further borrowing by the consumer. In corporate news, both Adobe and Lennar dipped despite beating Q2 earnings expectations. The launch of the new Apple models and the French ban on the iPhone 12 did not help the stock which fell this week. Despite the vast majority of the S&P500 companies having now reported Q2 earnings, there are still notable ones due to be published next week such as Stitch Fix, Autozone, General Mills, Fedex and Kb Home.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +0.1% higher (+4.4% year to date) while the S&P500 lost -0.2% (+15.9% year to date), the Nasdaq gave up -0.4% (+31.0% year to date) and the Russell 2000 fell -0.2% (+4.9% year to date). Gold finished -0.1% lower (+1.0% year to date) while Silver lost -0.3% (-7.2% year to date). Crude Oil gained +4.5% (+20.3% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield rose +0.8% (+14.0% year to date). The European stock market gained +0.8% (+12.9% year to date). The Euro lost -0.52% against the US Dollar (-0.45% year to date).

Weekly pitch

One of the ways central banks fight inflation is through increasing interest rates. Both the Fed and the ECB have been using this weapon over the past months. Following this week’s inflation data, there is now a 40% chance that the Fed will hike again in November. The ECB just hiked interest rates this week though the significant news is that it suggested it may be done for this cycle. This is a bullish signal for the stock market and also for the bonds of the EU member states. Responsible Investors should exercise caution and maintain a healthy proportion of their portfolio in cash and hedges as well as a diversified portfolio with some exposure to the European stock market and to emerging markets.

Weekly Portfolio Update

No movements this week. Cash, US treasury bills, precious metals and hedges amount to 38.5% in our portfolio (unchanged compared to last week). It was a good week for our precious metals stocks.

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Sibanye Stillwater +16.7% (Precious metals)

ProShares UltraPro Short QQQ +5.3% (3x inverse the Nasdaq)

MP Materials +4.4% (Rare-earth materials)

Newmont Mining +3.6% (Precious metals)

Denbury Resources +3.3% (Oil)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 44.5% (unchanged)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (unchanged)

Emerging markets long positions 4.5% (unchanged)

US stocks short positions 4.0% (unchanged)

Hedges 8.0% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2% (unchanged)

US Treasury bills 2% (unchanged)

Cash 26.5% (unchanged)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +11.8% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +14.1%.

Invest responsibly!!!

Can Q2 earnings save the stock market from recession fears? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, June 24th, 2023

Responsible Investor is a weekly newsletter and an Apple/Spotify podcast for those who are interested in investing responsibly. Go to responsibleinvestor.dk for more information and to read our disclaimer. This week’s newsletter is titled “Can Q2 earnings save the stock market from recession fears?”, and was written on June 24th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices finished lower this week, with the S&P500 and the Nasdaq breaking a 5 and an 8-week positive streak, respectively. Recession fears drove the narrative as the yield inversion breached the psychological threshold of 100 basis points intra-session. The European stock market underperformed the US stock market, spooked by the surprise move of both the Bank of England and the Norway’s central bank who hiked interest rates by 0.5%. The 2-10y spread continues to widen and has now an inverted value of -97 basis points. In economic data, the US housing starts data published this week surpassed economists’ expectations as low existing home inventory continues to push buyers into the new home market. In corporate news, Accenture exceeded expectations while Darden Restaurants underwhelmed investors. Next week there are a handful of Q1 earnings left, including Carnival, General Mills, Micron and Nike.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished -1.98% lower (+1.8% year to date) while the S&P500 dropped -1.75% (+13.3% year to date), the Nasdaq lost -2.11% (+28.9% year to date) and the Russell 2000 tanked -3.6% (+3.4% year to date). Gold finished -0.89% lower (+1.9% year to date) while Silver gave up-3.35% (-8.7% year to date). Oil dropped -2.37% (-9.3% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield was +0.27% higher (-1.4% year to date). The European stock market finished -4.9% lower (+14.7% year to date). The Euro lost -0.4% against the US Dollar (+1.8% year to date).

Weekly pitch

When the return of short-term bonds exceeds that of long-term bonds, economists talk about yield ‘inversion’. Over the years this phenomenon has been a precursor of recessions. After weeks of positive sentiment fuelled by AI frenzy, this week the markets have experienced a reality check and taken a step back. With the next Fed decision not due until late July, investors will now turn to Q2 earnings which will kick off week after next. Earnings and earnings forecasts have consistently been the most important driver of the stock market. Until the current Q2 earnings expectations are confirmed, responsible investors should exercise caution and maintain a healthy proportion of their portfolio in cash and hedges as well as a diversified portfolio with some exposure to the European stock market.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we took partial profits on our Gold ETF long position (+7.2%), as well as full profits on our Plug Power long position (+10.4%); a stop loss was triggered on our Tesla short position. We initiated long positions on a Thailand ETF, a Silver ETF, ACI Worldwide and Dish, as well as a short position on Thor. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 40.5% in our portfolio (reduced compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

ProShares UltraPro Short Russell2000 +8.7% (3x inverse the Russell 2000)

ProShare UltraPro Short Dow30+4.5% (3x inverse the Dow)

Meta +2.8% (Tech)

ProShares UltraPro Short QQQ +2.7% (3x inverse the Nasdaq)

Centene +1.0% (Managed Healthcare)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 49.5% (increased)

EU stocks long positions 10% (increased)

US stocks short position 2% (reduced)

Hedges 8.0% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2% (reduced)

Cash 28.5% (unchanged)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +10.7% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +14.6%.

Invest responsibly!!!

Is your portfolio protected from liquidity risk? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, June 17th, 2023

Responsible Investor is a weekly newsletter and an Apple/Spotify podcast for those who are interested in investing responsibly. Go to responsibleinvestor.dk for more information and to read our disclaimer. This week’s newsletter is titled “Is your portfolio protected from liquidity risk?”, and was written on June 17th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices finished higher this week, after the Fed opted for a widely expected ‘pause’ which was labelled as “hawkish”. The European stock market was also very strong, though the Euro weakened relative to the US Dollar as the ECB hiked the interest rate by another quarter percentage point. The 2-10y spread continues to widen and has now an inverted value of -93 basis points. In economic data, the May CPI report came in mostly in line. The stock market appeared to ignore the initial jobless claims report which came in weaker than expected. In corporate news, Lennar’s earnings exceeded expectations while Kroger underwhelmed investors. Next week there are a handful of Q1 earnings left, including Fedex, Kb Home and Darden, as well as Accenture’s Q2 earnings report.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +1.3% higher (+3.5% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +2.6% (+14.9% year to date), the Nasdaq rose +3.3% (+30.8% year to date) and the Russell 2000 gained +0.5% (+6.5% year to date). Gold finished +0.6% higher (+4.1% year to date, we are long) while Silver gained +1.9% (-1.3% year to date). Oil rose +2.9% (-7.2% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield was -1.8% lower (-0.6% year to date). The European stock market finished +4.1% higher (+20.7% year to date). The Euro lost -1.88% against the US Dollar (-2.3% year to date).

Weekly pitch

The Dow was the third major index to break-out this week, after the S&P500 and the Nasdaq. The macro picture does not support the strong move to the upside seen in recent weeks, however: in fact, the growing divergence between the indices and liquidity is concerning. AI and fear of missing out seems to be fuelling the bulls. When greed is at its peak, responsible investors should exercise caution and maintain a healthy proportion of their portfolio in cash and hedges as well as a diversified portfolio with some exposure to the European stock market.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we took partial profits on our Draftkings long position (+31.7%), as well as full profits on our Desktop Metal (+28.7%) and Freeport McMoRan (+10.0%) long positions; a stop loss was triggered on our Coinbase short position as well as on our XPO Logistics short position. We initiated a long position on Zimmet Biomet Holdings and short positions on Tesla, Lennar and UPS. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 42% in our portfolio (increased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Plug Power +15.3% (Electronic Tech)

Duerr +10.5% (Industrial Machinery)

Meta +6.1% (Tech)

BorgWarner +6.0% (Construction Machinery)

BUD +5.5% (Alcoholic Beverages)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 48.5% (reduced)

EU stocks long positions 9.5% (unchanged)

US stocks short position 3% (unchanged)

Hedges 8.0% (increased)

Silver & Gold 2.5% (unchanged)

Cash 28.5% (increased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +15.6% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +20.2%.

Invest responsibly!!!

OIL PRODUCTION CUT AND THE SPECTRE OF STAGFLATION | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, April 8th, 2023

Responsible Investor is a weekly newsletter and an Apple/Spotify podcast for those who are interested in investing responsibly. Go to responsibleinvestor.dk for more information and to read our disclaimer. This week’s newsletter is titled “Oil production cut and the spectre of stagflation”, and was written on April 8th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices were mixed in a 4-day week of trading which was dominated by the surprise oil production cut by OPEC (more in the weekly pitch). Economic data included the ISM manufacturing PMI on Monday and non-manufacturing PMI on Wednesday which both missed, and the March nonfarm payroll data which came in near expectations on Friday. The European stock market continued to show its strength and so did the Euro. The 2-10y spread finished flat at -52 basis points. In corporate news, Fedex announced a restructuring and General Motors overtook Toyota as the top US automaker last year. Next week the Q1 2023 earnings season kicks off: any significant misses may result in another market leg down.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +0.7% higher (+1.02% year to date) while the S&P500 lost -0.1% (+6.9% year to date), the Nasdaq gave up -1.1% (+15.5% year to date) and the Russell 2000 tanked -2.5% (-0.39% year to date, we have a 3x inverse position). Gold finished +1.8% higher (+7.8% year to date, we are long) while Silver gained +3.4% (+3.0% year to date, we are long). Oil was +6.5% higher (+4.05% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield lost -6.1% (-13.3% year to date). The European stock market gained +0.7% (+16.8% year to date). The Euro finished +0.7% higher against the US Dollar (+1.84% year to date).

Weekly pitch

Rumour has it that OPEC decided to cut oil production by 1.6 million barrels as a reaction to Biden’s decision to not refill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR). For us investors the main consequence is that this is an inflationary move which comes at a rather delicate time: will it delay the Fed’s pivot? The main reason inflation has cooled off lately is that energy prices have come down from the 2022 cycle highs: if oil prices go up, the risk of stagflation will increase and this may contract earnings. Last week we went over the strong link that exists between earnings and stock prices, hence prudence is of the essence. In order to protect themselves on the downside, responsible investors should raise cash, buy hedges (including precious metals and carefully selected corporate bonds) and be well-diversified.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we took profit on our World Wrestling Entertainment long position (+3.0%). Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 39.5% in our portfolio (unchanged compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Ely Lilly & Co. +7.24% (Pharmaceuticals)

ProShares UltraPro Short Russell 2000 +8.11% (3x short the Russell 2000)

Newmont Mining +6.18% (Precious metals mining)

Denbury Resources +5.84% (Oil)

Callon Petroleum +5.80% (Oil)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US Long stock positions 51.5% (unchanged)

EU Long stock positions 9% (unchanged)

US Short stock position 4% (increased)

Hedges 7.5% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 5% (unchanged)

Cash 23% (reduced)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is -1.5% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 loss of -8.8%, which corresponds to a +7.3% market beat.

Invest responsibly!!!

Declining earnings alert! | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, April 1st, 2023

Responsible Investor is a weekly newsletter and an Apple/Spotify podcast for those who are interested in investing responsibly. Go to responsibleinvestor.dk for more information and to read our disclaimer. This week’s newsletter is titled “Declining earnings alert!”, and was written on April 1st, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices rallied this week, enough that they all finished positive for the quarter. The Nasdaq had the best quarter since 2020. The European stock market staged an even stronger gain and has now more than doubled its year to date return compared to the US stock market; in fact, since the mid-October 2022 bottom, the European stock market is up 36% versus a 10% gain by the S&P500. The PCE core inflation data published on Friday was slightly softer than expected, which helped the rally. Next week more economic data are due, including the ISM manufacturing on Monday and the ISM services on Wednesday. The banking sector borrowing continued and so did outflows in deposits, albeit at a slower pace than in recent weeks. The 2-10y spread reversed and reached -58 basis points, corresponding to a 20 basis points drop: these are not small changes. In corporate news, both Electronic Arts and Roku announced cuts of their respective workforce by 6%.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +3.22% higher (+0.38% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +3.48% (+7.0% year to date), the Nasdaq rose +3.37% (+16.8% year to date) and the Russell 2000 appreciated +3.89% (+2.34% year to date). Gold finished -0.1% lower (+4.9% year to date, we are long) while Silver gained +4.71% (-0.7% year to date). Oil was +3.97% higher (-2.11% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield lost -0.96% (-7.88% year to date). The European stock market gained +5% (+16.2% year to date). The Euro finished +0.64% higher against the US Dollar (+1.3% year to date).

Weekly pitch

Stock prices follow earnings and earnings expectations. Analysts continuously track earnings forecasts for all S&P500 companies: this enables to determine a bottom-up target price for the index. Over the past 3 months, the 2023 S&P500 target price has declined and is now 221.5$; with a current price of 4040$, the P/E multiple of the S&P500 is just over 18. According to Facset, the cut in the forecasted Q1 2023 earnings per share is the largest recorded in the 5-year, 10-year, 15-year and 20-year average. The earnings decline and the credit crisis are two reasons to stay nimble if you are invested in the stock market. In order to protect yourself on the downside, responsible investors should raise cash, buy hedges (including precious metals and carefully selected corporate bonds) and be well-diversified.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we initiated a new short position on Dexcom. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 39.5% in our portfolio (unchanged compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Gap +11.56% (Retail)

Sandvik +9.74% (Construction Machinery)

Denbury Resources +8.57% (Oil)

Freeport McMoRan +7.63% (Non energy minerals)

World Wresting Entertainment +7.43% (Consumer services)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US Long stock positions 51.5% (unchanged)

EU Long stock positions 9% (unchanged)

US Short stock position 3.5% (increased)

Hedges 7.5% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 5% (unchanged)

Cash 23.5% (reduced)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is -2.4% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 loss of -9.3%, which corresponds to a +6.9% market beat.

Invest responsibly!!!

From credit crunch to credit crisis: brace for impact! | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, March 25th, 2023

Responsible Investor is a weekly newsletter and an Apple/Spotify podcast for those who are interested in investing responsibly. Go to responsibleinvestor.dk for more information and to read our disclaimer. This week’s newsletter is titled “From credit crunch to credit crisis: brace for impact!”, and was written on March 25th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

All the US stock market indices finished higher in a week which saw a 0.25% interest rate increase by the Fed and a dovish commentary. Consensus sees a 90% probability for a rate hike pause at the May FOMC meeting. The banking sector continued borrowing at a pace which reduced the systematic quantitative tightening by a third. Europe had a strong week despite concerns of the Credit Suisse contagion spreading to Deutsche Bank. 94% of European Stoxx 600 companies have reported Q4 2022 earnings now, with an 8% growth which is superior compared to the US (-5%). The 10-y yield continued its fall and resulted in the 2-10y spread dropping again this week to reach -38 basis points. Recall that the spread had reached -107 basis points just two weeks ago. In corporate news, Activision sees the concerns of its merger with Microsoft alleviated, and Disney announced the layoff of 7000 staff at its ESPN unit.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +1.18% higher (-2.7% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +1.39% (+3.4% year to date), the Nasdaq rose +1.66% (+13.0% year to date) and the Russell 2000 appreciated +0.52% (-1.49% year to date, we have a 3x short position). Gold finished +2.06% higher (+6.39% year to date, we are long) while Silver gained +4.19% (-4.27% year to date). Oil was -0.67% weaker (-10.51% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield tanked -6.27% (-10.89% year to date). The European stock market gained +2,89% (+10.5% year to date). The Euro finished +0.79% lower against the US Dollar (+0.5% year to date).

Weekly pitch

If you have been affected by the great financial crisis of 2007-2008, you will remember the challenge of borrowing money over that period: whether it is retail or commercial loans, this is what happens in a credit crunch. A credit crisis, however, is a much serious economic phenomenon whereby the banks themselves struggle to borrow either from each other or from the central banks. The graph below shows that the amount banks have borrowed at the Fed discount window in 2023 has exceeded the 110 billion USD top from the GFC and is near-vertical. The earnings decline and the credit crisis are two reasons to stay nimble if you are invested in the stock market. In order to protect yourself on the downside, responsible investors should raise cash, buy hedges (including precious metals and carefully selected corporate bonds) and be well-diversified.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we took profits on our Newmont Mining (+8.1%) and ACI Worldwide (+6.3%) long positions; we initiated new long positions on Halliburton, EOG Resources and MP Materials. Sell stops were triggered on our Adobe and Lennar shorts and on our US Banks ETF. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 39.5% in our portfolio (reduced compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Sanofi +8.44% (Pharmaceuticals)

Sonoco Products +7.95% (Process Industries)

Meta +5.32% (Technology)

Electronic Arts +5.01% (Gaming)

Denbury Resources +4.63% (Oil)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US Long stock positions 51.5% (increased)

EU Long stock positions 9% (unchanged)

US Short stock position 3% (reduced)

Hedges 7.5% (increased)

Silver & Gold 5% (unchanged)

Cash 24% (increased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is -4.4% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 loss of -12.2%, which corresponds to a +7.8% market beat.

Invest responsibly!!!

Has the Nasdaq just saved the stock market? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, March 18th, 2023

Responsible Investor is a weekly newsletter and an Apple/Spotify podcast for those who are interested in investing responsibly. Go to responsibleinvestor.dk for more information and to read our disclaimer. This week’s newsletter is titled “Has the Nasdaq just saved the stock market?”, and was written on March 18th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices were mixed in a week which was dominated once again by the banking sector being under pressure despite notable interventions on First Republic in the US, and on Credit Suisse in Europe. The Nasdaq was very strong partly due to a golden cross finally forming on Wednesday, and joins all the other major US indices who already achieved the mother-of-all technical signals weeks or months ago. Europe experienced the second week of decline as the ECB raised interest rates by 0.5%, with more hikes seen ahead due to inflation still being high: this move may help the Fed justify at least a 0.25% hike at next Wednesday’s FOMC meeting. The 10-y yield staged a sharp reversal to the point that the 2-10y spread dropped to -42 basis points. In corporate news, Adobe and Fedex beat Q4 2022 estimates while Dollar General reported in-line.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished -0.15% lower (-3.9% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +1.43% (+2.0% year to date), the Nasdaq shot up +4.41% (+11.12% year to date) and the Russell 2000 lost -2.64% (-2.01% year to date, we have a 3x short position). Gold finished +4.33% higher (+7.07% year to date, we are long) while Silver gained +3.22% (-6.8% year to date). Oil tanked -7.0% (-14.15% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield finished a whopping -6.68% lower (-10.49% year to date). The European stock market gave up -2.5% (+7.4% year to date). The Euro finished -0.12% lower against the US Dollar (-0.36% year to date).

Weekly pitch

I am fundamentally a value investor but like using technical analysis to guide entry/exit points in my positions from time to time. According to technical analysis a ‘golden cross’ occurs when the 50-day moving average crosses above the 200-day moving average. Many algorithms use this event as a prompt to buy an asset. Conversely, a ‘death cross’, ie when 50-day moving average crosses below the 200-day moving average, is seen as a bearish sign. As mentioned in the weekly summary, the Nasdaq finally saw a golden cross form this week, and is the last of the major US stock indices to do so after the Dow (mid December 2022), the Russell 2000 (late January 2023), and the S&P500 (early February 2023). The flows in equities were stable this week, and it is possible that had the Nasdaq not experience a golden cross the markets may have had another sharp decline.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we took profits on our Williams-Sonoma short position (+6.5%); we initiated new short positions on Adobe, Pinterest, Snapchat and Five Below. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 40% in our portfolio (reduced compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Newmont Mining Corp +14.26% (Precious metals)

ACI Worldwide +13.38% (Technology)

Google +12.58% (Technology)

Microsoft +12.41% (Technology)

Silver +9.38% (Precious metals)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US Long stock positions 51% (increased)

EU Long stock positions 9% (unchanged)

US Short stock position 4.5% (increased)

Hedges 7.5% (increased)

Silver & Gold 5% (unchanged)

Cash 23% (reduced)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is -3.5% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 loss of -11.2%, which corresponds to a +7.7% market beat.

…in case you missed it

Check out our first 2023 weekly newsletter to read the 5 things I got right in 2022…and the 5 I got wrong.

Invest responsibly!!!

Responsible Investor Portfolio Weekly Update, May 8th, 2021 | $TCEHY $NEM $BK $SYF $CLIX $PCG $LVMUY $LRLCY $STLA $IMPJY $TERRF $DSV.CO $DANSKE.CO $BRK $UMC $JD $ADSK $GMAB $ORSTED.CO $NIO $CMG $RH $RBLX $COIN $VIAV $MSFT $TRYG.CO $LOW

The Big Picture

Our weekly blog returns after a week of gains for most stock markets with the notable exception of the Nasdaq which finished 1.5% lower and has now lost ground for the third consecutive week: if you are still holding on to the stocks which made great gains in 2020, chances are that you are in the red so far in 2021. There appear to be greater opportunities for capital appreciation in value stocks which also feature good momentum.

The jobs report unexpectedly disappointed and this fuelled a rally on Friday as retail investors pumped more money in the stock market on the assumption that heavy borrowing and low interest rates will continue indefinitely. Despite some of the indices hitting all time highs the risk for a correction is still there which is why it is important not to be fully invested at this time. Scroll below to see what percentage of our portfolio is in cash.

88% of the S&P500 stocks have reported their Q1 earnings so far: the numbers are impressive such that there are several analysts discussing the possibility of this past quarter coinciding with the peak in earnings which would suggest an impending bearish cycle.

Market Performance

Most of the stock market indices recovered this week following last week’s decline: in the US the Dow was the best performer with a 2.7% gain, followed by the S&P500 which finished 1.2% higher whereas the Nasdaq which finished markedly lower (-1.5%). In Europe, the Stoxx gained 1.8% while the Italian stock market was even stronger and finished 2.0% higher. The Danish OMX20 is on a bullish 9-week streak and was 1.0% higher this week. The US Dollar lost 1.1% on the Euro. Crude $oil gained 2.8% and $Gold showed great strength by appreciating 3.6%. $BTC-USD swung within a 10% range and finished 2.1% higher.

Earnings

Eight of our stocks reported Q1 earnings the week before last:

  • DSV beat on earnings and revenue
  • DANSKE beat on net profit
  • ORSTED missed on revenue
  • SYF beat on earnings and revenue
  • UFC beat on earnings and missed on revenue
  • NEM missed on both the top and the bottom line but the
  • PCG missed on earnings but beat on revenue and reaffirmed guidance
  • BRK-B beat on earnings.

$GMAB announced their Q1 earnings on Wednesday with solid gains compared to the same quarter in 2020. The company reported a five-fold increase in operating results and maintained the guidance for 2021 set out earlier in the year. $ELC.MI reported their earnings on the same day and beat consensus as well as raised their guidance: we have a 4.4€ target price on this stock which is already up 41.4% since we bought it.

Next week $JD and $INW.MI will report their Q1 earnings.

Dividends

$OR.PA and $STLA.MI paid their dividend the week before last: our total dividend yield so far is 1.3%. Next week $WBD.MI goes ex-dividend. Our Danish stocks paid their annual dividends earlier this year. Italian stocks traditionally pay an annual dividend in late May. US stocks distribute quarterly dividends.

Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio gained 1.8% this week whereas the weighted average of the relevant market indices finished 1.5% higher, which corresponds to a 0.3% market beat.

This week’s portfolio winners were $STLA.MI which was up 8.1% and mining company $NEM which gained 7.9% (+16.6% since initiation) helped by gold strength.

Our Responsible Investor portfolio is now up 35.1% (36.4% including dividends) in 49 weeks and is beating the market by 3.3% over the same period. We are about 64% in stocks & ETFs and 36% in cash.

The table below summarises the portfolio performance since inception.

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