Money Life with Chuck Jaffe

Chuck Jaffe
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Jul 12, 2019 • 1h

Market's at record highs and Martin Pring sees it going much higher

Veteran technical analyst Martin Pring of Pring Research said he expects the stock market to avoid a recession and keep going much higher, noting that the indicators he follows are almost all 'pointing north' as the market ignores any weakness it sees in the economy. He noted that if bad news can't knock the market down, there's not much out there right now that can. Also on the show, Sheraz Mian, director of research at Zacks Investment Research discussed the upcoming earnings season, which he suggested is likely to beat analyst expectations, plu we rebroadcast a recent chat covering market technicals with Buck Klintworth of Chase Investment Counsel and Keith Gangl of Gradient Investments makes his debut in the Market Call.
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Jul 11, 2019 • 59min

Leuthold's Chun Wang: It's late in the cycle, expect trouble in 12 - 24 months

Chun Wang, senior analyst at Leuthold Weeded Asset Management, said that his firm's analysis of the market has made the portfolio managers defensive, slightly below neutral on holding stocks, largely because the long-term picture is showing too many negatives, signs that there could be trouble ahead with a significant correction or bear market in the next year or two. Meanwhile, Lindsey Bell of CFRA Research noted that current conditions appear solid, but that second-quarter earnings results will say a lot about whether hte market can avoid a downturn for the rest of the year; she expects those upcoming quarterly numbers to be better-than-anticipated, allowing the market to at least retain current gains for the rest of the year. Also on the show, Tome Lydon of ETF Trends.com talks about an usual precious metals fund, and Jill Gonzalez of WalletHub covers travel credit cards.
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Jul 10, 2019 • 59min

Kayne Anderson's Foreman: There's still a lot of skepticism about this bull market

Doug Foreman, chief investment strategist at Kayne Anderson Rudnick, said that investors have plenty of reasons to worry about whether the market can hold recent highs, but that if they focus on quality issues, there are plenty of cmopanies worth buying and owning regardless of what the market does next, where investors can buy into strong cash flows and dividend streams that are likely to remain in place even if the market turns for the worse. Also on the show, Cory Bittner and Peter Lang of HighTower Advisors discussed how financial planning helps clients cross the divide from working and accumulating funds to retirement and living off of investments, Izet Elmazi of Bristol Gate Capital Partners discusses how he uses artificial intelligence to help find better investments and manage portfolios, and Jose Rowe of LendingTree discussed a recent MagnifyMoney.com survey on money anxieties.
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Jul 9, 2019 • 59min

PineBridge Investments' Schomer: Growth is slowing, but not to recessionary levels

Markus Schomer, chief economist at Pinebridge Investments, said that while job growth and economic activity are slowing, the anticipated interest rate cuts should reboot business activity and leave the economy at an equilibrium point it can maintain through 2020. Buck Klintworth of Chase Investment Counsel -- while discussing technical analysis rather than the economy -- came to a similar conclusion, noting that while the market is currently 'ahead of itself' and could be due for a short-term setback, declines will be buying opportunities from now through most of the election year, suggesting that investors ignore the noise and instead see the market's potential. Also on the show, Bruce Bond of Innovator ETFs discusses defined-outcome investing, which effectively crosses indexed-annuity products with exchange-traded funds, and Judith Ward of T. Rowe Price discusses a recent survey showing how far behind Baby Boomer women are compared to men when it comes to retirement savings.
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Jul 8, 2019 • 1h

Fidelity study shows money may be the biggest stress for most women, at all ages

A recent study by Fidelity Investments found that money and healthy living are the two greatest concerns that women have, and each often affects the other. Lorna Kapusta from Fidelity said that the surprise in the study was not that 85 percent of women are stressed about finances, but that the high level of stress exists across all age groups of women, meaning that women always feel like they are not doing enough to save and prepare for retirement. Also on the show, Ethan Powell, chief executive officer at Impact Shares, a not-for-profit ETF provider, Sam Mcbride of New Constructs leads a trip to the Danger Zone and the Market Call is a rebroadcast of a recent chat with Michael Roomberg of the Miller-Howard Drillbit-to-Burner.
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Jul 5, 2019 • 60min

Value investing, active ETFs, children and their allowances and more!

In a wide-ranging, free-flowing 'no-pants Friday' show, Chuck talks with Tom Lydon of ETFTrends, who makes an innovative new fund his 'ETF of the Week,' he discusses the future of exchange-traded funds and the evolution of more active funds with John Swolfs, chief executive officer at Inside ETFs, he covers one of his favorite topics -- allowances for children -- with Bankrate.com's Ted Rossman, and then chats value investing, the state of the market and international opportunities with Nick Kaiser, chief investment strategist at Saturna Capital.
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Jul 3, 2019 • 59min

Christopher Davis: Financials are poised to provide outsized returns for the next decade or more

Christopher Davis, chairman of Davis Advisors and portfolio manager for the Davis Funds, said in the Big Interview that financial companies now represent 'growth stocks in disguise,' and he said the financial sector is positioned to deliver oversized gains for at least the next decade. Also on the show, Peter Lang and Cory Bittner of highTower Advisors discuss the many non-financial ways they interact with clients to achieve life goals as well as financial targets, Elyse Cherry of BlueHub Capital discusses impact investing and how investors can find ways to invest that make a real difference in communities they love, and Greg McBride from BankRate.com talks about how everyday Americans and financial experts don't see eye-to-eye on the state of the economy and stock market.
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Jul 2, 2019 • 60min

Kevin Mahn: Market and economy are strong, but look for quality names

Kevin Mahn, president and chief investment officer at Hennion and Walsh Asset Management, said that while the economy is strong and still growing and the market is constructive toward stocks, investors should be focusing on quality, favoring companies with strong balance sheets, entrenched management, a history of growing earnings and dividends and more, noting that as the economy slows and election-year headlines take over it will be the issues with those qualities that stand out. Also on the show,Ted Rossman of CreditCards.com talks about how stressed Americans are over money, Mandi Woodruff of MagnifyMoney.com covers the places where someone might earn six figures but still go broke, and Mark DeVaul of the Hennessy Equity and Income fund talks stocks in the Market Call.
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Jul 1, 2019 • 59min

More than half of Americans think the government tracks our credit-card spending

Jill Gonzalez, spokesperson for WalletHub, said that her site's annual 4th of July survey found that millions of Americans are feeling more financial freedom this year, but that nearly one-quarter of Americans wish they could be free of credit-card debt, second by a hair only to over-eating as something people want to cut back on. The study also showed that Americans believe that the federal government is watching their spending, tracking their credit-card activity, despite no real proof or reason to believe it is. Also on the show, author Michele Cagan talks about real-estate investing to generate income streams, Sam McBride of New Constructs puts the Securities and Exchange Commission in the Danger Zone over a recent rules change, and we rebroadcast a recent Market Call with Charlie Bobrinskoy of the Ariel Funds.
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Jun 28, 2019 • 58min

Ron Sanchez: Time to be neutral on the market, and playing defense

Ron Sanchez, chief investment officer at Fiduciary Trust International, said that the current market environment is not great for taking risks, but it also isn't terrific for avoiding risks. That means investors should stay neutral on buying stocks and bonds, putting their portfolios at their basic, starting-level allocations, not overweight or underweight anything while waiting for signs from the market about what will happen next. Also on the show, Jeffrey Hirsch from the Stock Trader's Almanac talks technical analysis, Catherine Yoshimoto from FTSE Russell discusses the reconstitution of Russell's indexes -- which happens after today's market close -- and Doug Cartwright of the Buffalo Emerging Opportunities fund makes his debut in the Market Call.

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