Money Life With Chuck Jaffe Daily Podcast
- Autor: Vários
- Narrador: Vários
- Editora: Podcast
- Duração: 2056:54:18
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Sinopse
Money Life with Chuck Jaffe is leading the way in business and financial radio.The Money Life Podcast is sorting through the financial clutter every day to bring you the information you need to do better with Money Life
Episódios
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Edward Yardeni: A productivity boom could spur the 'Roaring 2020s'
31/03/2022 Duração: 01h27sEdward Yardeni, president and chief investment strategist at Yardeni Research, says that the current wage-price-rent spiral is likely to spur businesses to spend money to increase the productivity of workers. If that innovation and change occurs -- and Yardeni believes there will be a 'productivity boom' -- a decade that started out pretty badly could instead turn into the Roaring 2020s. Yardeni says that solid economic underpinning will make it that inflation and interest rate hikes will not turn into a repeat of the 1970s, avoiding deep, long recessions or worse even while conditions feel bad. Also on the show, Tom Lydon of ETFTrends.com looks to emerging markets and internet/e-commerce for his ETF of the Week, and Ryan Jacob, chief investment officer of the Jacob Funds, talks technology stocks in the Market Call.
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Higher inflation hurts, but it will not break you
30/03/2022 Duração: 59minThere is nothing about inflation hitting its highest levels in 40 years that makes anyone feel good, but Chuck looks beyond the big number to talk about the actual impact that higher prices are having on people, and concludes by noting that the costs and the choices inflation is creating are uncomfortable but manageable. As a result, while he understands the grumbles -- saying he complains himself every time he fills up his gas tank -- his bigger message remains that 'Higher inflation is not going to break you.' Also on the show, Marketwatch columnist Brett Arends discusses the fallout from Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy calling Warren Buffett 'washed up,' a call that looks particularly foolish given the time since when Warren Buffett's personal fortune roughly doubled to over $100 billion in short order. Mark Hamirck of Bankrate.com discusses his site's latest survey of workers and their outlook on jobs and working conditions, and Jillian DelSignore of FLX Networks discusses the evolution of the ETF bu
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Bitwise's Hougan: Regulatory efforts will unlock the next crypto bull market
29/03/2022 Duração: 59minMatt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise Asset Management, says that the cryptocurrency market's fear over regulation is misplaced, and while threats of regulation send the market into a tizzy, he thinks that worry is misplaced and directed toward heavy-handed regulatory efforts. He thinks the potential for regulation will turn from a headwind to a tailwind, because decentralized finance goes mainstream through regulatory guidance that makes consumers more comfortable with digital assets. In a wide-ranging interview, Hougan also talks about how cryptocurrencies have performed against inflation, in the war in Ukraine and more, and discusses how non-fungible tokens are the latest verse in an age-old song of how societies develop arts and cultures during times of financial success. Also on the show, Shelly-Ann Eweka, senior director for advice strategy for TIAA, talks about how gig workers and others with non-traditional jobs can still participate in traditional retirement-savings programs, and David Mil
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New Constructs' Trainer: Hubspot would fall 85 percent just to reach fair value
28/03/2022 Duração: 01h41sDavid Trainer, founder and president of New Constructs, says that HubSpot is worth only about 15 percent of what its stock currently is trading for, and he's putting it in 'The Danger Zone' because it faces stiff competition in an industry that is being commoditized, leaving it littel room to grow profitably, let alone at the incredibly high valuation the market has given the stock for now. We've also got Mike Bailey of FBB Capital partners, back to discuss his new book 'Stop. Think. Invest: A Behavioral Finance Framework for Optimizing Investment Portfolios, plus Ken Mahonet of Mahoney Asset Management talks stocks and ETFs in the Market Call, and Chuck shares his thoughts and appreciation for Ned Johnson, the man who built Fidelity Investments from a family business to the world's largest and most influential financial-services firms.
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NDR's Kalish: Expect rate hikes until the Fed hits its inflation target
25/03/2022 Duração: 58minJoe Kalish, chief global macro strategist at Ned Davis Research, says that longer-term inflation will be what determines whether the economy can continue to avoid a recession and the market can sidestep a protracted downturn. With that in mind, Kalish expects the Federal Reserve to raise rates repeatedly until it can be confident that inflation has peaked, is passing through temporary troubles and gets to long-term target levels at 2.1 percent. Kalish, says, though, that he believes that goal will take longer than the Fed expects to be accomplished, meaning that economic doldrums will also go on for longer than forecast. In The NAVigator segment, Mitchel Penn of Oppenheimer and Co., talks about the challenges of analyzing and evaluating business-development companies, highlighting why one particular BDC -- Runway Growth Finance Corp. -- appears ready to outperform the market and the competition. And in the Market Call, Mike Bailey, director of research for FBB Capital Partners, talks about taking a "beat and
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Haverford's Smith: Ignore forecasts and uncertainty, stay fully invested
24/03/2022 Duração: 01h01minHank Smith, head of investment strategy for The Haverford Trust Co., says that rising volatility and heightened uncertainty shouldn't push investors out of the market, because times like these prove the value of being fully invested in all conditions, and having money in the market whenever a bottom is reached. In the Market Call, Smith talks about how owning great companies with long histories of dividend payments creates the confidence to ride out tough times en route to long-term success. In the 'ETF of the Week' segment, Tom Lydon, chief executive at ETFTrends.com, discusses one of the biggest, most-popular ETFs -- a Standard and Poor's 500 Index fund from Vanguard -- noting that the pick isn't just trending but it's an appropriate allocation for investors with too much cash on the sidelines. Also on the show, Kirsten Grind, co-author of 'Happy At Any Cost: The Revolutionary Vision and Fatal Quest of Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh,' and Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate.com discussing the site's 202
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Payden's Cleveland: 'The labor market is VERY strong and inflation is FAR too high'
23/03/2022 Duração: 57minJeffrey Cleveland, chief economist at Payden and Rygel, says that he expects inflation to settle down and for the economy to reach full-employment levels by the end of the year, creating earnings and economic growth that sidesteps any potential recession. Cleveland expects the market to recover its early-year losses and show modest profits by the end of the year. Also on the show, Shelly-Ann Eweka of TIAA discusses survey results showing that women's finances in retirement make them much more financially vulnerable than men are, and Samuel Adams, chief executive officer of Vert Asset Management -- which runs the Vert Global Sustainable Real Estate Fund -- talks environmental, social and governance (ESG) in the Market Call.
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Schwab's Kleintop: Market will finish the year with respectable gains
22/03/2022 Duração: 59minJeffrey Kleintop, chief global market strategist at Charles Schwab & Co., says that earnings will continue to power the stock market which he expects to overcome current concerns about high inflation and rising interest rates to finish the year with the kind of high single-digit gains he was expecting several months ago when he posted his annual outlook. Kleintop says he expects inflation to calm quickly enough that investors might forego the traditional hedges in favor of international investments, which he says tend to do well in inflationary times and which will outperform the standard inflation-driven portfolio moves. Also on the show, Sham Ganglani discusses Fidelity Investments' latest State of Retirement Planning study, noting the conditions of the typical retirement saver coming out of the pandemic, and Eric Boughton of Matisse Capital talks about closed-end fund investing in the Market Call.
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Zuma Wealth's Spath: Times and troubles are a call for commodities
21/03/2022 Duração: 59minTerri Spath, founder and chief investment officer at Zuma Wealth, says that stock market and economic conditions have her lightening up on technology stocks but adding to commodities, going up to her traditional limits on commodities because that's where managers can deliver a better return in markets currently affected by the war in Ukraine and more. Spath notes that she is moving away from bonds, most notably floating-rate bonds -- despite a rising-rate environment that has many experts expecting them to thrive -- high-yield corporates and even Treasury bonds. Spath says she still believes the stock market will book gains for 2022, with most of the positive action coming in the second half of the year. Also on the show, Julia Pollak, chief economist at ZipRecruiter, discusses the latest Economic Policy Survey out today from the National Association for Business Economics, Kyle Guske of New Constructs says a classic mutual fund with one of the most veteran managers ever -- more than 50 years at the helm -- i
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Market is showing signs that 'less bad can turn into a good thing'
18/03/2022 Duração: 01h29sMatt Harris, chief investment officer at The Hausberg Group, says that it has been a market year of extremes, a polarizing year where the stock and bond markets have been oversold, gold has been overbought and investors and their emotions have been whipsawed by the moves. Yet he sees many of the factors creating those conditions as mitigating and calming down now, and as those factors stabilize he notes that things will get 'less bad,' which should be enough to keep the market on solid footing and with slow gains moving forward. Craig Callahan, chief executive at ICON Advisers returns to the show, following on Thursday's discussion about his book on 'unloved' bull markets, noting that he sees stocks on average right now to be about 9 percent below the firm's fair value estimate right now. Further, Callahan says that 2022 may be a year where there are positive outcomes despite no catalyst for a market rally, because 'if you priced in horrible and it turns out just being bad, you could have a rally.' Plus, Seth
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Don't lose sight of good values in the fog of war, inflation and rising rates
17/03/2022 Duração: 59minCraig Callahan, founder of ICON Advisers and author of a new book, 'Unloved Bull Markets,' says that investors who have relied heavily on price-earnings ratios to evaluate stocks have been fooled. He says that p/e ratios are 'totally worthless in predicting future returns, and notes that stocks were never overvalued in the long bull market run after the 2008 financial crisis, nor are they overvalued now, in a bull market that has only been stalled by current events. He adds that investors who focus on macro concerns like war, inflation and interest rates are missing the ground level action where individual companies look good. Also on the show, Tom Lydon of ETFTrends.com heads to the oil patch with an energy pick impacted by global events for his 'ETF of the Week,' Chuck gives his quick take on how to read the Federal Reserve's moves and statements from Wednesday, and Tom Plumb of the Plumb Funds talks stocks in the Market Call.
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NinetyOne's Power: 'Boring' strategies have merit in these volatile times
16/03/2022 Duração: 59minMichael Power, strategist at NinetyOne, says that investors might be tempted to run away from the market, but there is no real place to hide with high inflation and low yields making it that the traditional safe-havens are losing purchasing power. Power says that there is a possibility of recession arriving late last year or early in 2024, which makes diversification across asset types and around the globe prudent. Also on the show, Lou Harvey, president at DALBAR Inc., discusses the firm's research on asset-allocation models and about their new Prudent Asset Allocation method, which has adherents lock down the core of their nestegg but be more aggressive with their remaining holdings to produce bigger-but-safer results. Plus Carol Anderson of MQ Research and Education discusses how well financial advisers are building and retaining trust at a time when meetings are infrequent, and Chuck reads a special letter he received from an audince member who is about to have his pursuit of life overtake his pursuit of
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Cambria's Faber: Market has flipped to 'expensive downtrend'
15/03/2022 Duração: 57minMeb Faber, co-founder and chief investment officer at Cambria Investments, says that investors aren't just dealing with headline issues of war, inflation and rising interest rates, but he notes that the market has turned to what he called an 'expensive downtrend,' which is historically a time when returns tend to be zero or negative. Faber says he worries that this could be a moment where investors could blink and turn around to say 'Wow, when did all of these stocks go down 75 percent.' He says that the right way for investor to get through these kinds of conditions is through proper diversification, including significant international exposure even though current events make it hard emotionally to invest overseas. In the Talking Technicals segment, Gene Peroni of Peroni Portfolio Advisors says that conservative investors should be waiting for the market to see several strong consecutive days -- or a 1,000-point plus day -- before they consider the recent downturn as potentially turning into a buying opportu
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Godfather of 'life planning' warns against changes based on current events
14/03/2022 Duração: 59minGeorge Kinder, president of The Kinder Institute of Life Planning -- generally recognized as the biggest moving force behind the life-planning approach to personal financial management -- says that investors need to look at where they can minimize risks in current conditions, but do that without blowing up financial plans because they are better off holding to their plans than changing them just because of current or even persistent economic and global events. Kinder says that the pandemic and other conditions have actually helped many people make progress on their life plans, because it simplified the economics for many people and helped them focus on what is important. In the Danger Zone segment, Kyle Guske of New Constructs looks at Airbnb and Squarespace, two stocks that have been hammered during the market's recent fall but where he believes the troubles are only starting and there's another big loss to come. And in the Market Call, hedge-fund manager Steven Grey of Grey Value Management discusses the im
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Virtus' Terranova: Be patient, a U-shaped recovery is coming
11/03/2022 Duração: 59minJoe Terranova, chief market strategist at Virtus Investment Partners, says 'the enemy right now for investors in the market is time,' and understanding how to be patient, because the market's current troubles are masking economic strength and the likelihood of a U-shaped recovery. He expects that a record year for corporate buybacks and an investing public that is flush with cash should buffer the market against any prolonged downturn, creating a recovery for patient investors who ride it out. In the Talking technicals segment, Matt Fox of Ithaca Wealth Management says we are currently experiencing a cyclical bear market within a secular bull market, but notes that that charts are 'screaming caution,' and that investors who have been conditioned to buy every dip should be waiting for 'a wash-out in sentiment before the charts give an all-clear.' Also on the show, Mike Taggart of Taggart Fund Intelligence and the Active Investment Company Alliance returns to The NAVigator to answer listener questions about the
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NW Mutual's Schutte: Narrative is changing, but market will rally from this
10/03/2022 Duração: 01h33sBrent Schutte, chief investment strategist for Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management Co., says that war, inflation and more are changing the narrative for the market, but mostly for the short term. He still believes the domestic stock market is positioned to outperform later this year and into 2023 as the strong economy is able to flex its muscle and have influence that overcomes the headlines. He suggests looking for companies in areas that are becoming undervalued now, like small-cap stocks. Also on the show, Tom Lydon, chief executive officer at ETFTrends.com, makes the ETF of the Week a trend-following play on a commodity and, in the Market Call, Dave Sekera, chief U.S. market strategist for Morningstar, makes his debut talking about stocks and a market that he says has pivoted from overvalued to about 10 percent undervalued now after the early struggles of the year, making it much easier to find stocks worth buying.
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Current conditions are sucking the life, confidence from investors
09/03/2022 Duração: 01h22sEd Carson, news editor at Investor's Business Daily says that current conditions are worrisome enough that investors may not be able to adjust their attitudes quickly, as they do in more normal times. Discussing the IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism Index, Carson discusses how the big decline this month was caused by gas prices as much or more than by war in Ukraine, but he notes that given how fast prices have risen at the pump, the decline in confidence may just be getting started. Also on the show, Chuck answers a listener's question about which investment companies are avoiding Russia, and author Joe Sanok chats about changing your lifestyle and making Thursday 'the New Friday.' In the Market Call, Andrew Graham of Jackson Square Capital talks stocks and in the lightning round revisits three securities that Chuck discussed on yesterday's show with David Harden of Summit Global investments.
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Franklin Templeton's Dover: With the big picture chaotic, focus on the micro
08/03/2022 Duração: 58minStephen Dover, chief market strategist at Franklin Templeton Investments, says that the experts have been off the mark in forecasting how the market would respond to the war in Ukraine, to rising inflation and more, which has him focusing on individual stocks and their fundamentals rather than letting the macro-economic outlook determine investment positions. Turning to the market's technicals, Michael Kahn, senior market analyst at Lowry Research Corp., says the current decline is not yet a buy-the-dip opportunity, and that he will remain on the sidelines until the tide turns and investors start rushing to put their cash to work. nd in the Market Call, David Harden, chief investment officer at Summit Global Investments, talks during the Market Call about managing volatility in stocks during these back-and-forth times.
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WisdomTree's Weniger: Expect big job gains to power the economy, market
07/03/2022 Duração: 58minJeff Weniger, head of equity strategy at WisdomTree Asset Management, says he expects unemployment to drop potentially below the 3 percent level -- which is better than so-called 'full employment' -- which takes 'the stag' out of stagflation possibilities. With the jobs market not being stagnant, Weniger says the economy can power through rising inflation and interest-rate concerns to keep moving forward, even if consumers and investors suffer some discomfort along the way. Also on the show, David Trainer re-visits Danger Zone picks Shopify and Coinbase after their recent earnings reports and says that the big recent declines in each stock are still just the beginning of the problems for investors who stick around. In the Market Call, Bernie Horn of Polaris Global Value talks stocks and the impact that the war in Ukraine is having on global markets.
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Fairlead's Stockton: The war isn't why the market is range bound
04/03/2022 Duração: 59minKatie Stockton, founder at Fairlead Strategies, says the market appears to be in a long-term trading range for 2022, not because of the geopolitical concerns over war in Ukraine or the worrisome inflation numbers or pressure on interest rates at home, but instead based on technical reasons which show that the major indexes have lost upside momentum and will struggle to get it back. In the Big Interview, Scott Knapp, chief market strategist for CUNA Mutual Group, says that the conflict in Ukraine has changed the headlines, but it shouldn't have changed portfolios much because economic struggles were easy to foresee at the end of last year; likewise, he's not changing his outlook or strategy for 2022 until he sees a slowdown in demand and a reduction in gross domestic product. This show also features John Cole Scott of Closed-End Fund Advisors and the Active Investment Company Alliance, discussing the promising investments created by an important recent evolution in closed-end funds, and Kevin Kelly of Kelly ET