

Money Life with Chuck Jaffe
Chuck Jaffe
Money Life with Chuck Jaffe is leading the way in business and financial radio. The Money Life Podcast is a daily personal finance talk show, Monday through Friday sorting through the financial clutter every day to bring you the information you need to lead the MoneyLife.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 2, 2022 • 60min
Gateway's Jilek: The market is pitting ''Buy the dip' against 'Run for the hills'
David Jilek, chief investment strategist at Gateway Investment Advisers says that the market of late has been a battle between 'The Buy-the-Dip Crowd' and 'The Run for the Hills Brigade,' and while he makes a case for each argument, he says investors may want to position themselves between those two factions, succeeding more by staying in the middle than by picking sides. In today's Left Brain Thinking segment, Freddy Garcia of Left Brain Wealth Management takes on the classic '4 percent rule' for amassing sufficient retirement savings, noting that today's rising inflation and slowing growth conditions may require asset-allocation changes to reach targets. In the Book Interview, author Rupert Russell discusses his new book 'Price Wars: How the Commodities Markets Made Our Chaotic World,' and how commodities and supply-chain issues have the power to topple governments, and James Abate of the Centre Funds talks stocks and staying focused on the long term in the Market Call.

Feb 1, 2022 • 59min
TrendStar's Toni Turner: Bulls and bears duke it out around 'a tradeable low'
Toni Turner, president of TrendStar Group, says that while she expects the market's bullish case to win out over the longer term, right now the tape is showing a fight between bulls and bears over issues like higher inflation and interest rates, creating what she called a 'tradeable low,' which is a buying opportunity where purchases are backed up by protective stops to limit downside risk in case the market 'gets cranky again.' In the Book Interview, Spencer Jakab of the Wal Street Journal discusses 'The Revolution That Wasn't: GameStop, Reddit, and the Fleecing of Small Investors,' which is out today, and in the Market Call, veteran financial talk show host Moe Ansari of Compak Asset Management is talking stocks based on his take that mixes technicals with fundamentals.

Jan 31, 2022 • 57min
Zacks' Mian: Keep your nerve, as current market problems are temporary
Sheraz Mian, director of research at Zacks Investment Research, says that while the Federal Reserve may have stopped using the word 'transitory' to describe inflation, it's still the right word for most issues currently facing the market, noting that once current headline-driving situations like the supply-chain crisis and labor shortages and inflation can be sorted out, the earnings picture and growth outlook remains strong. He expects the market to struggle for another quarter or more, but to look much better in the second half of the year. David Trainer of New Constructs revisits five successful Danger Zone picks from 2021 -- UBER, AFRM, RIVN, DASH and WRBY -- that he thinks are falling knives, still dangerous despite being down more than 40 percent from their peaks, and nit he Market Call, Michael Robinson, chief technology strategist for Money Map Press, notes that there aren't many great charts to be looking at right now, and he discusses how he is picking and choosing through the increasing volatility and other changing conditions.

Jan 28, 2022 • 59min
PineBridge's Schomer: Economic events are creating a 'yo-yo market' for '22
Markus Schomer, chief economist at PineBridge Investments, says that the big economic headlines and numbers are creating a whipsaw of reactions, which he expects to be reflected ni a 'yo-yo market -- up-and-down, up-and-down, up-and-down' for much of the year. Schomer notes that the economic cycles of nations and regions are not in sync right now, contributing to the back-and-forth. Dncan Farley, manager of the BlueBay Destra International Event-Driven Credit Fund, says those same economic events are creating opportunities for him to find good companies with bad balance sheets or caught in sticky situations, a strategy that can generate above-market returns in time. Also on the show, Ed Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA, talks technicals and trading in this volatile market, and Jeff Lipton, head of municipal research and strategy for Oppenheimer and Co., talks about how bonds in general -- and munis in particular -- are likely to fare as rates start to rise, tax-law proposals hit Congress and more.

Jan 27, 2022 • 1h
Energy Advisor's Gue expects 'an epic up-cycle' in oil, natural gas prices
Elliott Gue, editor at the Energy & Income Advisor, says that the slowdown in energy exploration and development since 2014 -- that was accelerated by the economic shutdown around coronavirus in 2020 -- has created a supply squeeze that will generate 'a prolonged up-cycle in oil prices and natural gas prices' over the next few years. He's in talking stocks in the Market Call, but this show also includes Tom Lydon of ETFTrends.com making a senior-loan fund his ETF of the Week, Ted Rossman of CreditCards.com discussing the site's survey on financial infidelity and the effect secret-keeping can have in personal relationships, and portfolio manager Conor Muldoon of Causeway Capital covering the market and the troubles he sees ahead for the markets, but also the prospects for success in value investing.

Jan 26, 2022 • 59min
Janus Henderson's Peron: 'This is not an immediate buy-the-dip' decline
Matt Peron, director of research at Janus Henderson Investors, says that the market cycle still has room to run, but that the rally is undergoing a reset as it awaits more clarity from the Federal Reserve. As a result, he suggests that investors be patient and wait out the current declines rather than buying into them, noting that the market faces a series of "speed bumps" over the first half of the year before domestic and international markets will resume their climb higher. Also on the show, James Burton of Personal Capital discusses the firm's 2022 Wealth & Wellness Index, Chuck answers a question on the math behind deciding when to take Social Security benefits, and David Brady of Brady Investment Counsel talks growth stocks in the Market Call.

Jan 25, 2022 • 58min
Rob Arnott: 'Focus on what's still going to matter in 3-5 years'
Rob Arnott, founder and chairman of the board at Research Affiliates, discusses how markets move based on narratives that are always changing, and says that investors worried about today's headlines should be asking themselves if the problems will still be big concerns in a few years. He suggests that would calm investors -- and have them looking for opportunities -- about coronavirus, global supply-chain issues and inflation, but would leave them with some real concerns about government debt and more. Also on the show, Kristin Myers, editor-in-chief of The Balance, discusses first-date costs, customs and expectations ahead of Valentine's Day, and Chuck discusses Monday's wild market ride and how investors can take their fingers off the panic button and keep their concerns in perspective.

Jan 24, 2022 • 59min
'Markets will continue their upward pace over the next five years'
Wayne Wicker, chief investment officer at MissionSquare Retirement, says that there is still a lot of economic strength in the United States, which when coupled with a long-term outlook suggests that the stock market can overcome current concerns and a bumpy ride to deliver good returns to patient investors. Also on the show, Lester Jones discusses the latest outlook survey out today from the National Association for Business Economics, David trainer of New Constructs talks about three of the biggest winners -- meaning their stocks were losers -- that he put into the Danger Zone last year and why they are likely to be as bad or worse again this year, and Ken Laudan of the Buffalo Large Cap Growth talks in the Market Call about finding and investing in 'innovative, high-quality, durable large-cap growth companies.'

Jan 21, 2022 • 59min
Whitney Tilson: Despite correction, bull market has innings of play left
Whitney Tilson, founder/chief executive officer at Empire Financial Research, says that while the Nasdaq entered correction territory on Thursday and the market has had some bumps and bruises along the way, the long-running bull market is still in place and looks like it is "in the seventh inning." Amid a wide-ranging market conversation, Tilson also discusses short-selling, cryptocurrency investing, Tesla, meme stocks and how his views have -- and haven't -- changed over time. Also on the show, David Giroux of T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation is back, following up on Thursday's market discussion by talking about his recent book, "Capital Allocation," and describing how the focus on the way companies use their money should shape investment decisions; and Connie Luecke, manager of the DNP Select Income Fund, discusses infrastructure investing and how it is poised to push through current conditions regardless of whether key legislation gets approved in Washington.

Jan 20, 2022 • 59min
T. Rowe Price's Giroux: Inflation will ease, relative bargains will remain
David Giroux, manager of the T. Rowe Price Capital Appreciation fund -- which has one of the best track records in the fund world under his long stewardship -- is 'highly confident' that inflation is headed back to more normalized levels, something in the 2 to 2.5 percent range, but as the market works that out, he is not expecting any major downturn, noting that he is still able to buy relative values with the potential to generate reasonable returns regardless of what the market does next. Also on the show, Tom Lydon of ETFTrends.com makes a fund that buys midstream pipeline plays his ETF of the Week, Taelor Candiloro of Clever Real Estate discusses the site's research on retirement savings -- which showed that about two thirds of Americans have either nothing saved for retirement or have less than 40 percent of the amount experts suggest they should have -- and Bill Staton of Novare Capital Management talks dividend-paying stocks in the Market Call.


