Apple’s earnings decline again: third time unlucky? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, August 5th, 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 “Apple’s earnings decline again: third time unlucky?”, and was written on August 5th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices were lower this week, as all the major indices were spooked by Fitch downgrading to AA+ the US national debt and by mixed labour market data. The European stock market was also weaker on negative sentiment caused by poor Q2 earnings and 2024 forecasts. The 2-10y spread shrunk again and significantly this week, but it is still inverted at -73 basis points. The Bank of England raised interest rates to a new 15-year high, warning that its fight against inflation may require tighter borrowing conditions for a longer period. In corporate news, one third of the S&P500 companies reported Q2 earnings with Amazon beating and Apple underwhelming investors. Next week more S&P500 companies will report Q2 earnings, including Disney, UPS and Novo Nordisk to name a few.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished -1.1% lower (+5.8% year to date) while the S&P500 lost -2.3% (+16.6% year to date), the Nasdaq depreciated -2.9% (+32.9% year to date) and the Russell 2000 was -1.2% weaker (+11.1% year to date). Gold finished -1.5% lower (+2.7% year to date) while Silver slid -5.0% (-4.4% year to date). Crude Oil appreciated +1.0% (+8.4% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield gained +2.6% (+7.0% year to date). The European stock market tanked -3.8% (+16.7% year to date). The Euro lost -0.1% against the US Dollar (+2.8% year to date).

Weekly pitch

We don’t typically feature individual stocks in the weekly pitch: the comments on Apple that follow are meant to illustrate the link between earnings and stock prices. As a general, well-established trend, stock prices follow earnings and earnings expectations. Last Thursday Apple reported the third consecutive quarterly decline in sales in a row. While the Services income reached an all time high, the decline in overall earnings may put pressure on the stock price, at least until the new lineup of models is presented in September. Responsible Investor has owned Apple on and off over the years (mostly on!), though we are not buyers at these levels. Responsible investors should review their positions during the earnings season, 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 have taken full profits on our Draftkings (+52.9%), Yelp (+28.4%) and Range Resources (+14.3%) long positions and partial profits on our KWEB (+10.5%) long position. We have accumulated our Zimmer Biomet Holdings long position and initiated long positions on Newmont Mining, Hershey’s and Gilead Sciences as well as a short position on XPO Logistics. Cash, US treasury bills, precious metals and hedges amount to 43.5% in our portfolio (reduced compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

iPath Series B S&P500 VIX Short-Term Futures +12.8% (Volatility ETN)

ProShares UltraPro Short QQQ +9.5% (3x inverse Nasdaq ETF)

Duerr AG +4.5% (Industrial Machinery)

ACI Worldwide +4.4% (Packaged Software)

Halliburton +3.6% (Oil Services)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 48% (increased)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (unchanged)

US stocks short position 2.5% (unchanged)

Hedges 8.0% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2% (unchanged)

US Treasury bills 2% (unchanged)

Cash 29% (reduced)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +11.3% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +7.9%, which corresponds to a 3.4% market beat.

Invest responsibly!!!

Q2 earnings decline: now what? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, July 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 “Q2 earnings decline: now what?”, and was written on July 29th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices were higher this week, with all the major indices advancing on news of generally good earnings and positive economic data. The European stock market was also stronger though this week’s gain was offset by the Euro depreciating relative to the US Dollar. The 2-10y spread shrunk after two weeks of widening and is still inverted at -91 basis points. Economic data this week included the FED’s decision to hike by another 0.25%, as widely expected, and core PCE continuing to decelerate. The Bank of Japan surprised markets by announcing it first shift from a decade-long period of monetary easing. In corporate news, one third of the S&P500 companies reported Q2 earnings season with notable beats from Meta, Google and Intel. On the flipside, Procter & Gamble’s 2024 outlook disappointed and Chipotle’s earnings were mixed. Next week 170 S&P500 companies report Q2 earnings, including Apple, AMD, Amazon and Starbucks to name a few.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +0.7% higher (+7.0% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +1.0% (+19.3% year to date), the Nasdaq jumped +2.0% (+36.8% year to date) and the Russell 2000 was +1.1% stronger (+12.5% year to date). Gold finished -0.2% lower (+3.7% year to date) while Silver slid -1.4% (-1.4% year to date). Crude Oil appreciated +1.3% (+5.8% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield gained +1.5% (+4.6% year to date). The European stock market gave up +0.7% (+21.6% year to date). The Euro lost -0.95% against the US Dollar (+2.9% year to date).

Weekly pitch

With 51% of the S&P500 companies having reported Q2 earnings so far, an attempt to draw some preliminary conclusions can be made. Q2 earnings decline is presently -7.3%, lower than expectations of -7.0% at the beginning of the quarter. If this figure is confirmed, it would be the third quarterly earnings decline in a row and the highest since the disastrous Q2 2020 which was due to the pandemic. Even if the forecasted earnings growth in Q3 and Q4 were confirmed, the expected earnings growth for 2023 is a meager +0.4%. Therefore, 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 have taken partial profits on our Meta (+129%) and Campari (+19.3%) long positions. We have accumulated our Disney, Raytheon and Zimmer Biomet Holdings long positions and initiated a short position on Molson Coors Brewing. Stop losses were triggered on our XPO Logistics, Rivian and Overstock short positions. Cash, US treasury bills, precious metals and hedges amount to 44.5% in our portfolio (unchanged compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

The Gap +13.4% (Apparel)

KraneShares CSI China Internet +12.7% (Internet services Chinese companies ETF)

Meta +10.6% (Tech)

Google +10.6% (Tech)

Yelp +9.0% (Tech)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 47% (unchanged)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (unchanged)

US stocks short position 2.5% (reduced)

Hedges 8.0% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2% (unchanged)

US Treasury bills 2% (unchanged)

Cash 30% (increased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +11.9% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of 12.5%.

Invest responsibly!!!

Where have all the bears gone? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, July 22nd, 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 “Where have all the bears gone?”, and was written on July 22nd, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices were mixed this week, with all the major indices advancing except the Nasdaq which finished lower. The European stock market was also weaker and move was further affected by the Euro depreciating relative to the US Dollar. The 2-10y spread continues to widen for the second week in a row and is still inverted at -98 basis points. Economic data this week included the aforementioned CPI report on Wednesday as well as the PPI report on Thursday which decelerated to +2.4% year on year. In corporate news, sixty S&P500 companies reported Q2 earnings season with notable misses from TSMC and Netflix. Thus far the earnings have been mixed but it is too early to draw any conclusions. Next week 166 S&P500 companies report Q2 earnings, including Meta, Google, Visa and Hilton to name a few.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +2.1% higher (+6.3% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +0.7% (+18.2% year to date), the Nasdaq lost -0.6% (+34.1% year to date) and the Russell 2000 was +1.5% stronger (+11.3% year to date). Gold finished -0.9% lower (+3.7% year to date) while Silver slid -1.9% (-0.1% year to date). Crude Oil appreciated +1.6% (+0.8% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield gained +1.3% (+1.2% year to date). The European stock market gave up -0.6% (+20.8% year to date). The Euro lost +0.9% against the US Dollar (+3.9% year to date).

Weekly pitch

The stock market has had a great run over the past 6+ months. Valuation are very stretched and most indices are overbought. After the Nasdaq100 and the S&P500, the Dow Jones has finally broken out. The situation really does beg the question: where have last years’ bears gone? AI frenzy, near-peak interest rate policy and other factors have sustained the market thus far. Q2 earnings and 2024 earnings expectations will be key to determine the market’s direction from here. Until then, 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 have initiated a short position on Thor Industries and Rivian. Stop losses were triggered on our XPO Logistics and JNJ short positions. Cash, US treasury bills, precious metals and hedges amount to 44.5% in our portfolio (unchanged compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Bank of America +9.9% (Banking)

Yelp +8.0% (Tech)

Centene +7.6% (Healthcare)

Range Resources +5.6% (Oil)

Bristol Myers Squibb +4.4% (Pharma)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 47% (unchanged)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (unchanged)

US stocks short position 3.5% (increased)

Hedges 8.0% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2% (unchanged)

US Treasury bills 2% (unchanged)

Cash 29% (decreased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +12.8% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of 13.4%.

Invest responsibly!!!

Nasdaq rebalancing: much ado about nothing? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, July 15th, 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 “Nasdaq rebalancing: much ado about nothing?”, and was written on July 15th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices finished higher this week, with all the major indices reversing previous week’s losses. The better than expected CPI report was largely behind the move. The European stock market outperformed the US stock market and this gain was enhanced by the Euro appreciating relative to the US Dollar. The 2-10y spread resumed is widening after last week’s reversal and is still inverted at -91 basis points. Economic data this week included the aforementioned CPI report on Wednesday as well as the PPI report on Thursday which decelerated to +2.4% year on year. In corporate news, US major banks JP Morgan and Wells Fargo unofficially kicked off the Q2 earnings season and reported a beat on Friday, while Citi disappointed with a weaker-than-expected rebound in investment banking activity. Amazon’s shares leapt 3% after announcing the first 24 hours of its ‘Prime Day’ was their largest sales day ever. Next week 60 S&P500 companies report Q2 earnings, including ASML, Alcoa, Bank of America and Netflix.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +2.3% lower (+4.1% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +2.4% (+17.3% year to date), the Nasdaq rose +3.3% (+34.9% year to date) and the Russell 2000 was +3.6% stronger (+9.6% year to date). Gold finished +1.2% higher (+3.5% year to date) while Silver jumped +8.1% (+1.4% year to date). Oil appreciated +0.6% (-1.8% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield slid -4.1% (+0.7% year to date). The European stock market leapt +5.9% (+21.6% year to date). The Euro gained +2.38% against the US Dollar (+4.9% year to date).

Weekly pitch

The Nasdaq100 index has never seen such a high concentration of its top 10 stocks which exceed 60% of its market capitalisation. Earlier this week a ‘special rebalance’ has been announced which will reduce the relative weight of it top 5 stocks: Apple, Nvidia, Amazon, Tesla and Microsoft. Their total weight of 46% will be brought down to 40%. Even considering the 24 ETFs tracking the Nasdaq-100 index who will be forced to sell to match the rebalance, the impact is expected to be quite small based on the on the rebalance alone. The valuations of these tech giants are very high, therefore 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 profits on our Nvidia (+18.1%) and our Restaurants Brands International long position (+5.9%). We closed the position on Thor’s spin-off Phinia which resulted in 2400-bagger! We have also initiated a short position on XPO Logistics. A stop loss was triggered on our Lennar short position. Cash, US treasury bills, precious metals and hedges amount to 44.5% in our portfolio (increased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

DraftKings +14.4% (Entertainment)

Sibanye Stillwater +12.7% (Precious Metals)

Halliburton +6.6% (Oilfield Services)

The Gap +6.6% (Apparel)

Meta +6.5% (Tech)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 47% (reduced)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (unchanged)

US stocks short position 2.5% (reduced)

Hedges 8.0% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2% (unchanged)

US Treasury bills 2% (unchanged)

Cash 30% (increased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +14.4% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of 18.9%.

Invest responsibly!!!

Is the market more worried about inflation or recession? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, July 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 “Is the market more worried about inflation or recession?”, and was written on July 8th, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices finished lower this week, with all the major indices giving up most of last week’s gains. Volume was lower as the summer season kicked off with Independence Day.

The European stock market underperformed the US stock market though the Euro appreciated relative to the US Dollar.

The 2-10y spread reduced after weeks of widening but is still inverted at -88 basis points.

Economic data this week included a weaker than expected jobs report which fuelled a rebound in stocks on Friday.

In corporate news, Meta’s new Threads, a competitor of Twitter, beat expectations in terms of initial subscribers while Samsung announced a concerning profit-warning.

Next week Q2 earnings kick off with some of the large US banks reporting, such as JP Morgan Chase, City and Wells Fargo. Delta and Unitedhealth are reporting also.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished -2.0% lower (+2.1% year to date) while the S&P500 lost -1.2% (+15.0% year to date), the Nasdaq gave up -0.9% (+31.3% year to date) and the Russell 2000 was -1.3% weaker (+7.8% year to date). Gold finished +0.2% higher (+4.7% year to date) while Silver gained +1.4% (-3.3% year to date). Oil jumped +4.4% (-4.0% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield gained +5.8% higher (+6.0% year to date). The European stock market lost -2.8% (+18.8% year to date). The Euro gained +0.5% against the US Dollar (+2.9% year to date).

Weekly pitch

The stock market did not have much data to justify an up week which meant that down was the path of least resistance. This week two main events are expected to shape the market: the all-important CPI report on Wednesday and the first significant group of large US banks reporting their Q2 earning on Friday. Any match or exceedance of the CPI expectation is likely to send the market higher in the short term. Q2 earnings and earnings forecasts for 2024 will govern long term market moves. 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 profits on our Dish Network (+10%) and our MP long position (+5.2%). We have also initiated a 2% long position on 1 to 3 year US Bonds which seem attractive at near-peak interest rates. Cash, US treasury bills, precious metals and hedges amount to 43% in our portfolio (increased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Tellurian +17.4% (Energy Minerals)

Halliburton +14.9% (Oilfield Services)

DraftKings +14.9% (Entertainment)

Range Resources +6.7% (Oil)

Marriott International +6.4% (Hotels)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 48.5% (reduced)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (unchanged)

US stocks short position 3% (increased)

Hedges 8.0% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2% (unchanged)

US Treasure bills 2% (initiated)

Cash 28% (reduced)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +12.9% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +12.7%, which corresponds to a 0.2% market beat.

Invest responsibly!!!

What is ‘window dressing’ and why does it matter? | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, July 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 “What is ‘window dressing’ and why does it matter?”, and was written on July 1st, 2023.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market indices finished higher this week, with all the major indices recovering after last week’s decline. The Nasdaq has had the best first half of the year ever. The European stock market outperformed the US stock market as the Eurozone flash PMI came in lower than expected, and is ahead of the S&P500 for the third quarter in a row. The 2-10y spread continues to widen and has now an inverted value of -106 basis points. Economic data published this week was mostly positive. In speaking at an event in Europe, Powell stated that future hikes are still a possibility. In corporate news, Carnival beat expectations while Nike and Micron missed. No major earnings reports next week. The Q2 earnings seasons kicks off week after next with some of the largest US banks reporting on Friday the 14th of July.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +2.02% higher (+3.8% year to date) while the S&P500 gained +2.35% (+15.9% year to date), the Nasdaq soared +2.19% (+31.7% year to date) and the Russell 2000 jumped +3.68% (+7.2% year to date). Gold finished +0.2% higher (+1.8% year to date) while Silver gave up -0.7% (-7.4% year to date). Oil gained +4.1% (-8.1% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield was +1.35% higher (+0.69% year to date). The European stock market gained+3.6% (+18.8% year to date). The Euro lost -0.1% against the US Dollar (+1.8% year to date).

Weekly pitch

There wasn’t enough in the economic data reports to sustain the rally that all major indices experienced this week. The end of Q2, however, meant that fund managers were busy with the so-called ‘window dressing‘, an investment practice whereby money managers sell laggards in their portfolio and buy stocks which have had a good run. That way, their portfolios appear to be full of winners. Fund managers move a lot of money in the markets and window dressing may have masked what would have otherwise been a quiet week. 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 Campari long position (+22%), as well as full profits on our ASX long position (+6.5%) and our UPS short position (+4.4%); a stop loss was triggered on our Thor short position. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 42% in our portfolio (increased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Callon Petroleum +9.6% (Oil)

Dish Network +9.5% (Cable/Satellite TV)

BorgWarner +8.1% (Trucks)

Marriott +7.1% (Hotels)

ACI Worldwide +7.0% (Tech)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US stocks long positions 49.5% (unchanged)

EU stocks long positions 8.5% (reduced)

US stocks short position 2% (unchanged)

Hedges 8.0% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 2% (unchanged)

Cash 30% (increased)

1-year Portfolio Performance

Our portfolio performance over the last 12 months is +14.0% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +16.5%.

Invest responsibly!!!

Please donate for the earthquake in Turkey | Responsible Investor Weekly Newsletter, February 11th, 2023

With such a devastating force of nature and ailing shelters, the havoc wreaked in Turkish left at least 23,000 dead, with the count only poised to grow in the coming days. With news like these nothing financially relevant seems relevant, really. So read what follows lightly and make your hearts heavy with grief for those who fell. Donate if you can.

Weekly summary in a paragraph

US stock markets finished lower on Friday after a 3-week and a 6-week rise for the S&P500 and the Nasdaq, respectively. Value continues to underperform relative to growth. Oil higher mostly due to Russia cutting production by 0.5M barrels. The terminal rate is now expected at 5.15% from 4.9% last Thursday. The 2-10y inversion has reached 80 basis points. Economic data published this week threw a spanner in the works of the disinflationary path: it is very difficult to go from 4 to 2% and the Fed does not seems to backtrack from its 2% target. In corporate news, Disney earnings beat expectations on a cost cutting programme while Google got clobbered by losing an AI competition.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished -0.17% lower (+2.2% year to date) while the S&P500 did worse with a -1.1% decrease (+6.5% year to date, we are 1 time short), the Nasdaq tanked -2.4% (+12.0% year to date, we have a 3 times inverse position) and the Russell 2000 lost as much as -3.4% (+9.0% year to date). Gold finished lower -0.1% (+2.2% year to date, we are long) while Silver was -1.6% weaker (-8.8% year to date, we are long). Oil jumped +8.4% (-0.7% year to date). The 10-y US treasury yield jumped +1.9% this week (-1.3% year to date). The European stock market gave up -1.8% (+11.3% year to date). The Euro finished -1.1% lower against the US Dollar (-0.3% year to date).

Weekly pitch

It was too good to be true, wasn’t it? And often when things are too good to be true they just aren’t. The Nasdaq failed to add a 7th week of consecutive gains and retraced after having delivered what were basically a year’s worth of gains in the first 40 days of 2023.

It is tempting to go all in when markets outperform but it is prudent to either keep profitable positions on a tight leash (do you use automatic sell stops and take profits like we do?) or have cash and hedges in one’s portfolio (see our portfolio asset allocation below). We have beaten the market this week and are protected to the downside should there be more pain coming next week when the January CPI is announced.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we took profits on Nucor (+9.3%), Qualcomm (+3.2%) and Global Lithium ETF (+7.9%); take profits were triggered on our Pinterest, Peloton, SL Green Realty and Semrush Holdings short positions. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 39.5% in our portfolio (increased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

ProShares UltraPro Short Russell 2000 +10.8% (3x inverse Russell 2000)

Vix short-term S&P500 future +7.5% (Volatility)

ProShares UltraPro QQQ +6.4% (2x inverse Nasdaq)

Denbury +4.3% (Oil)

Callon Petroleum Company +4.0% (Oil)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US Long stock positions 44% (reduced)

EU Long stock positions 10% (unchanged)

Short stock position 6.5% (unchanged)

Hedges 7% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 4% (unchanged)

Cash 28.5% (increased)

Year to date Portfolio Performance

Our year to date portfolio performance is +4.7% (excl. dividends) vs the S&P500 gain of +6.5%.

…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.

Podcasts

You can now listen to this newsletter on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Invest responsibly!!!

Apple, Google, Amazon and Microsoft disappoint: who is left to save the earnings season? | February 4th, 2023 Newsletter

Weekly summary in a paragraph

Fifth straight week of upside for the Nasdaq despite most of the Q4 earnings reports from the major tech stocks disappointed, the exception being Meta (which we own). Ford, Qualcomm and Starbucks also missed. The Fed confirmed the expected quarter point rate hike on Wednesday and Powell came across as relatively dovish during the press conference. The most notable data point of the week was the January nonfarm employment which was up 517k vs 190k consensus – a clear underestimation, which would suggest continued strength in the job market and brings the unemployment down to 3.4% (vs 3.6% expected). More than half of the S&P500 companies are yet to report: the next two weeks will be key to assess the extent of the year on year earnings decline for Q4.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished -0.1% lower (+2.4% year to date) while the S&P500 did better with a +1.6% increase (+7.7% year to date, we are 1 time short), the Nasdaq gapped +3.3% higher (+14.7% year to date, we have a 3 times inverse position) and the Russell 2000 gained +3.9% (+12.7% year to date). Gold finished lower -3.2% (+4.0% year to date, we are long) while Silver was -5.1% weaker (-6.7% year to date, we are long). Oil tanked -7.8% (-4.6% year to date). The 10-y US treasury retraced -0.3% this week (-6.9% year to date). The European stock market gained +0.9% (+13.3% year to date). The Euro finished +0.7% higher against the US Dollar (+0.82% year to date).

Weekly pitch

Investors have finally been able to catch a breath after a very positive January. Given the steep climb of these first 5 weeks of 2023, particularly for long-duration tech stocks, one wonders whether the Nasdaq has gone up too quickly. Despite finishing up again this week, the fact that all the four biggest tech companies have disappointed is weakening the bullish sentiment in the Nasdaq, at least in the short term.

It is tempting to go all in when markets outperform but it is prudent to either keep profitable positions on a tight leash (do you use sell stops and take profits like we do?) or have cash and hedges in one’s portfolio (see our portfolio asset allocation below).

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we took profits on Newmont Mining (+13%) and Amazon (+8%); partial sell stops were triggered on our Intel, Mattel, Oak Street Health and Williams-Sonoma short positions. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 37% in our portfolio (reduced compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Meta +24.4% (Social media/Tech)

Gap +12.12% (Retail trade)

Thor +11.04% (Recreational products)

Orsted +8.18% (Utilities, Green Power)

NXPI +8.05% (Semiconductors)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

US Long stock positions 47% (unchanged)

EU Long stock positions 10% (unchanged)

Short stock position 6.5% (increased)

Hedges 7% (reduced)

Silver & Gold 4% (unchanged)

Cash 26% (reduced)

Year to date Portfolio Performance

Our currency-adjusted year to date portfolio performance in Euro is +4.51% (excl. dividends) vs the European market gain of +12.51% and +5.6% in US Dollars vs the S&P500 gain of 7.7%.

…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.

Podcasts

You can now listen to this newsletter on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Invest responsibly!!!

If you are getting excited about 2023, read on | January 28th, 2023 Newsletter

Weekly summary in a paragraph

Another positive week for the stock markets around the world. In the US this was helped by positive data points in terms of Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE), which came in at 0.1%, slowest rise since 2021; the US Q4 GDP increased at an annual rate of 2.9% in the fourth quarter of 2022, after increasing 3.2% in Q3. Bank of Canada is the first to pivot on the tightening policy: who will it be next? Notable Q4 earnings this week included Visa beating and guiding higher (we are long) and Intel which reported disastrous results (we are long two other semiconductors which a leading sector in the market). Looking at quarters and calendar years is arbitrary: if one focuses on the last three months, ie since the cycle lows, the European stock market has outperformed the US indices by 27% (currency adjusted): is your portfolio sufficiently exposed to the European market?

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow finished +1.8% higher (+2.2% year to date) while the S&P500 did better with a 2.5% increase (+2.2% year to date, we are 1 time short), the Nasdaq gapped +4.3% higher (+10.0% year to date, we have a 3 times inverse position) and the Russell 2000 gained +2.4% (+7.2% year to date). Gold finished higher +0.4% (4.4% year to date, we are long) while silver was -2.1% weaker (-3.7% year to date, we are long). Oil was lower -3.4% (+1.0% year to date). The 10-y US treasury advanced +0.2% this week (+3.7% year to date). The European stock market gained +1.0% (+10.1% year to date). The Euro was only +0.1% higher against the US Dollar (1.5% year to date).

Weekly pitch

January is likely to finish with a positive print. But is this impressive rally a bull trap? As interest rates eased, long-duration stocks thrived in these first weeks of 2023 trading due to the P/E multiple expansion. In other words, borrowing money has become cheaper and with the E part of that ratio, ie the Earnings, being substantially unchanged, the P part, ie the Price, has gone up. There is a lot more uncertainty on the earnings side going forward: any sign of weakness in the Q4 earnings expected this week may trigger a sell-off, which is why prudent investors are better off not being fully invested and having cash and hedges in their portfolio (see our portfolio asset allocation below).

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we took partial profits on Qualcomm (+11.53%); sell stops were triggered on our Shopify, Discovery Financial Services and Signet Jewelers short positions. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 39% in our portfolio (increased compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

Global X Lithium & Battery Tech ETF +8.93% (Lithium ETF)

Meta +8.88% (Social media/Tech)

Nucor +8.73% (Steel)

Qualcomm +8.54% (Semiconductors)

Old Republic International +8.48% (Finance/Specialty Insurance)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

Long stock positions 57% (unchanged)

Short stock position 4% (reduced)

Hedges 8% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 4% (unchanged)

Cash 27% (increase)

Year to date Portfolio Performance

Our currency-adjusted year to date portfolio performance in Euro is +2.9% (excl. dividends) vs the European market gain of +10.1% and +4.4% in US Dollars vs the S&P500 gain of 2.2% (a +2.2% 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.

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Invest responsibly!!!

Why lower highs are bad news | January 21st, 2023 Newsletter

$QQQ $RTX $CPR.MI $SAND.ST $AMZN WSM $CALM $NVDA $KBE $CSCO $DEN $LIT $QCOM $BRK.B $NUE $DIS $THO $MP $KSS $GL $WMT $TGT $GILD $ORI $CNC $SH $GLD $SLV $SON $NEM $HLT $NXPI $DEN $GPS $JPM $CMG $MSFT $META $BWA $LEA $PSQ $SRTY $SQQQ

Weekly summary in a paragraph

The US stock market was a mixed bag, as the Nasdaq rise for the third week in a row was offset by a weaker S&P500 and a tanking Dow Jones. Europe still looks strong, despite this week’s mild decline. The Bank of Japan continues to be unwilling to change its monetary expansion policy. The second week of Q4 earnings only saw a relatively small number of reports, including the surprise beat by $NFLX: next week will be more telling as the large tech stocks report. In other corporate news, $GOOG joined its predecessor tech giants in cutting a significant amount of its workforce. While investors focus on the savings that such companies may benefit from, they often ignore that unemployment leads to less spending, hence revenue contraction.

Asset classes weekly performance

This week the Dow tanked -2.4% (+0.4% YTD) while the S&P500 did better with only a -0.7% retracement (+2.6% YTD, we are 1x short), the Nasdaq finished +0.7% higher (+5.5% YTD, we have a 3x inverse position) and the Russell 2000 lost -0.8% (+4.6% YTD). $Gold finished higher +0.7% (4.5% YTD, we are long) while silver was -0.6% weaker (-2.2% YTD, we are long). $Oil was mildly higher +0.7% (+3.5% YTD). The 20-y advanced +0.3% this week (+4.1% YTD). The European stock market lost -0.5% (+9.0% YTD). The Euro gave up -0.1% against the USD (1.4% YTD).

Weekly pitch

Investors are better equipped when they rely on both valuation and momentum – that’s to say whether a stock is supported by fundamentals and is liked by the market such that it has more buyers than sellers. Many believe that the Nasdaq has bottomed for this cycle: this argument is sustained by the 3-week upside which started at the turn of the year. However, from a technical analysis standpoint, both the S&P500 and the Nasdaq have continued to make lower highs since their respective all time highs in late 2021. Both these indices are yet to see a golden cross form (ie the 50-day moving average cross above the 200-day moving average). Conversely, the Dow and the Stoxx index have experienced both higher highs and a golden cross: in the short term there may be more justification for these indices to move higher thanks to their underlying stocks belonging to the real economy as opposed to the long-duration, tech firms which represent the lion share of the S&P500 and even more so of the Nasdaq.

Weekly Portfolio Update

Here are this week’s movements: we started a long position in $RTX and $CPR.MI; accumulated on $EL.PA and $SAND.ST (which reported a Q4 earnings beat); took profits on $AIG (+19.66%), $USB (+10.96%), $VWS.CO (+5.31), and $GIS (+6.8%); and initiated a sell position on $M, $QQQ and $DFS; while a SL was triggered on our $SI and $LEN short position. Cash, precious metals and hedges amount to 37% in our portfolio (reduced compared to last week).

Top 5 Weekly Portfolio Performers

$GOOG +6.98% (Technology-Internet)

$CPE +6.23% (Oil)

$CSCO +4.30% (Technology, short position)

$DIS +4.10% (Media-Diversified)

$SRTY +3.20% (3x inverse Russell 2000)

Portfolio Asset Allocation

Long stock positions 57% (increased)

Short stock position 6% (reduced)

Hedges 8% (unchanged)

Silver & Gold 4% (unchanged)

Cash 25% (reduced)

YTD Portfolio Performance

Our currency-adjusted YTD portfolio performance in Euro is +2.0% (excl. dividends) vs the European market gain of +6.4% and +3.40% in USD vs the S&P500 gain of 2.9% (a +0.5% market beat).

…in case you missed it

Check out last week’s newsletter to read the 5 things I got right in 2022…and the 5 I got wrong.

Invest responsibly!!!