What caused the big rally on Friday? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, October 7th, 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 caused the big rally on Friday?”, and was written on October 7th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices were mixed this week, as US treasury yields kept rising while the recently strong oil prices fell substantially. The European stock market managed to stay afloat and was helped by the first signs of dollar weakening in weeks. The 2-10y spread tightened significantly this week and is still inverted at -30 basis points. In economic data, there were strong job reports on Tuesday and Friday as well as ISM non-manufacturing data almost in line. In corporate news, McCormick and Levi’s published disappointing earnings reports while Constellation Brands beat expectations. Next week the first significant batch of Q3 earnings will come in, as large US banks such as JP Morgan, Wells Fargo and Citi report.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished -0.3% lower (+0.8% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +0.5% (+12.2% year to date), the Nasdaq rose +1.6% (+28.3% year to date) and the Russell 2000 gave up -2.2% (-0.9% year to date). Gold finished -1.0% lower (flat year to date) while Silver lost -3.0% (-10.4% year to date). Crude Oil tanked -6.8% (+9.8% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield rose +2.2% (+26.1% year to date). The European stock market was barely higher at +0.1% (+8.7% year to date). The Euro gained +0.26% against the US Dollar (-1.10% year to date).

Weekly pitch

It was a fairly negative week on the stock market as several positive jobs report came in better than expected leaving investors little chances to hope for a shift in monetary policy. Oversold conditions worsened at the start of the week and the S&P500 approached its 200-day moving average. And yet, despite the very strong report on Friday, the US markets staged a significant rally probably due to the average hourly earnings coming in cooler than expected. Investors can be unreasonably selective in terms of which data to base their decisions on. In the medium term, however, yields and inflation data 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 partial profits on our Halliburton long position (+30.4%). We have accumulated on our Boeing, Newmont Mining, Brazil ETF and silver ETF long position. Sell stops were triggered on our Desktop Metal long position. Cash, US treasury bills, precious metals and hedges amount to 37% in our portfolio (decreased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Foot Locker +14.1% (Apparel)

ProShares UltraPro Short Russell 2000 +6.6% (3x inverse the Russell 2000)

Google +5.2% (Tech)

Meta Platforms +5.1% (Tech)

Walt Disney +2.3% (Entertainment)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 49% (unchanged)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (unchanged)

Emerging markets long positions 5.0% (increased)

US stocks short positions 0.5% (reduced)

Hedges 7.5% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2.5% (increased)

US Treasury bills 2% (unchanged)

Cash 25.0% (decreased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +9.2% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +15.1%.

Invest responsibly!!!

Earnings surprise! What to do now | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, April 29th, 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 “Earnings surprise! What to do now”, and was written on April 29th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices finished higher this week, though the Russell 2000 didn’t participate. Q1 GDP data published this week reported a 1.1% growth in the US while the Europe area stopped at 0.1%, and avoided a recession by a hair. The European stock market saw an end to multi-week gains but is still leading year to date, globally. The 2-10y spread was flat and is still inverted at -60 basis points. Oil now in negative territory after the first four months of 2023. In terms of economic data, March headline and core PCE inflation came in mostly in line. Personal income and spending for March was reported slightly higher than expected. In corporate news, mega cap companies like Microsoft and Meta smashed Q1 2023 earnings, Alphabet reported a beat while Amazon’s guidance underwhelmed. Many other long positions in our portfolio reported an earnings beat this week, Chipotle and Fielmann above all. Next week 126 S&P500 companies report earnings, including AMD, Apple and Novo Nordisk.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +0.86% higher (+2.9% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +0.87% (+8.6% year to date), the Nasdaq advanced +1.28% (+16.8% year to date) and the Russell 2000 lost -1.26% (+0.4% year to date). Gold finished flat (+6.5% year to date, we are long) while Silver lost -0.74% (+3.0% year to date, we are long). Oil tanked -2.7% (-0.8% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield gave up -1.79% (-9.0% year to date). The European stock market lost -0.4% (+19.7% year to date). The Euro gained +0.24% against the US Dollar (+2.9% year to date).

Weekly pitch

The earnings estimate for the S&P500 companies in Q1 2023 was just over 50$, in aggregate, at the beginning of the earnings season. After 222 companies reported so far that number has increased by 2.5%. If this increase is representative of the other half which will report in May, the overall figure may increase to 54-55$, ie one of the largest in recent years. It is important to note, however, that the year to date increase on the index is led by very few companies, therefore now more than ever before it is a stock picker’s market. Until more earnings data is available over the next couple of weeks, responsible investors should exercise caution and maintain a healthy proportion of their portfolio in cash and hedges. Analysts now believe that another quarter point rate hike will happen at next week’s FOMC meeting, with an 86% probability. This week we have taken full or partial profits on long and short positions and initiated new long positions.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we took profits on our Eli Lilly (+13.9%) long position, on our Snapchat (+2.6%) and Pinterest (+16%) short positions and partial profits on our Microsoft (+15.3%), Halliburton (+4.5%), Raytheon Technologies (+4.3%), Sibanye Stillwater (+4.2%) and Capri Holdings (+3.6%) long positions. We initiated long positions on three Chinese ETFs. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 40% in our portfolio (increased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Fielmann +16.43% (Medical Specialties)

Chipotle Mexican Grill +14.87% (Restaurants)

Meta +12.88% (Technology Services)

Microsoft +7.52% (Technology Services)

Centene +4.46% (Managed Healthcare)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US Long stock positions 50% (reduced)

EU Long stock positions 10% (unchanged)

US Short stock position 4% (reduced)

Hedges 7.5% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 3.5% (reduced)

Cash 25% (increased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +4.2% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 loss of -2.8%, which corresponds to a +7.0% market beat.

Invest responsibly!!!