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Monthly Archives

October 2014

Federal Reserve ends it’s QE program today

By General

Fed made the following historic announcement today:

  • QE program would end at month end
  • Fed will keep reinvesting principal payments from its holdings to maintain its balance sheet at approx. $4.4 trillion
  • The QE program had met the Federal Reserve’s goal of reducing unemployment
  • Acknowledged that the labor market slack is “gradually diminishing”
  • Assured its support of low interest rates for a considerable period of time, unless the economic data improves faster than its forecast
  • Pointed to short-term downside risk to inflation
  • Future rate hikes will depend on the pace of improvement in the job market

Fed Balance Sheet

(Source: WSJ, Fed)

 

How To Invest Like The Ivy League Endowments with ETFs

By Alternative Investments, ETF Related

Seeking Alpha published an article by Prateek Mehrotra outlining how ETFs can help investors build institutional quality portfolios diversified into liquid alternative investments designed to improve long-term risk adjusted returns. The article summary

  • The country’s largest endowments aim to preserve capital while producing income and appreciation with less correlation to the stock market regardless of market conditions.
  • Performance among Ivy League endowments and retirement plans that invest like them varied widely last year but in the long run, they posted stellar risk-adjusted returns.
  • You can invest like an Ivy League endowment yourself with a basket of ETFs offering exposure to all of the major asset classes in their portfolios.

The entire article can be read on the Seeking Alpha website.

U.S. CPI under 2% and poised to cool off

By Inflation Watch

The Labor Department on Wednesday reported that its consumer-price index rose 0.1% in September from August, as did the core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices. That put both measures up just 1.7% from a year ago.

Credit Suisse estimates that as a result of falling gasoline prices, by the end of the first quarter the CPI will be up less than 1% versus year earlier, all else being equal.

One place there has been inflation is shelter costs, which is primarily rent and imputed rent—what people would pay if they rented the home they own. These were up 3% in September from a year earlier. Absent them, core prices rose a scant 0.9% year over year. Owners Equivalent Rent is the big gorilla in the inflation room. It accounts for 24% of the total CPI and 31% of the core. So why isn’t the accelerating OER rate pushing up the core? Because other factors are offsetting the upward push.

The biggest drag is the downward pressure on goods prices coming from overseas.

Policy makers and economy-watchers now seem more worried about disinflation rather than accelerating inflation. That wasn’t the expectation at the start of the year. In January, economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal expected inflation–measured by the consumer price index–would end 2014 at a 2.3% annual rate, up from the 1.5% rate of 2013.

(Source: WSJ, BLS)

Endowment Wealth Management Records New Radio Spot Discussing Retirement

By News

Rob Riedl, Director of Wealth Management at Endowment Wealth Management talks about 61% of Americans without a retirement plan should develop a road map to help them to their retirement destination in a new radio spot running the week of October 13, 2014 on WHBY 1150, a radio station dedicated to news, sports and talk programming in the Appleton, Green Bay and Fox Cities area.

Click to listen:  EWM-Radio-Rob-Riedl-on-Retirement-2014.10.13

member01

 

 

 

Robert Riedl, CPA, CFP®, AWMA®

Great quote for today’s markets

A Macro View – Volatility Spike

By General

Quite the week it has been. For much of the year, we have been recommending that periods of market placidity should be used as precious opportunities to assess and re- position. Those benign times are when changes are best made, but of course, human nature being what it is, those times are also when it feels less urgent to make such changes.

Now we have been greeted with volatility, and then some. One to two percent moves daily in stocks; currencies globally declining with the dollar strengthening; and sovereign yields dropping with negative cascade effects on emerging-market and high-yield instruments. Some of these sharp moves may have been triggered by warnings from the IMF that Europe was on the edge of another dip into recession and that global growth is weakening. Some may be a product of continued digestion of the end of quantitative easing by the Fed. And some may be a nervous environment in the face of multiple global concerns such as Ebola spreading and ISIS advancing.

Next week, market attention will turn to the slew of third quarter earnings, which will likely offer some decent upside surprises akin to what we saw in July. Even so, once markets plunge into volatility, it takes a while to subside. We have had a few bouts this year already, early in the year and again in August, and the past week felt even more substantial. While the S&P 500 has only declined about 5% from highs, other areas of the market are much, much weaker, especially small-cap stocks (as measured by the Russell 2000 Index) which are already in correction and are off in excess of 10% from their highs. While this is not an optimal time to trade and react (unless you are a trader…), it may be a time to dip into sectors or asset classes that seemed too pricey only a few months back. The operative word is dip, given that what now looks less expensive may of course be less expensive still if the current downtrend continues.

Still, this sell-off and global market unease has not been triggered by any clear or radical deterioration, or by a sudden unexpected shift in anything other than sentiment. That matters, as absent genuine crisis, markets will sooner or later follow underlying fundamentals, especially stocks. Those fundamentals may not be stellar (and have not been at any point in the past few years), but they are hardly terrible. Markets can detach from that for a while, but not completely.

Endowment Wealth Management In the News: Tactical Allocation Funds Prove Market Timing Is Just Hype

By General

October 10, 2014

ETF Model Solutions Chief Investment Officer, Prateek Mehrotra was published in an article on Seeking Alpha today discussing the poor results that tactical mutual fund managers have delivered to their investors.  The article, titled Tactical Allocation Funds Prove Market Timing Is Just Hype  discusses that, in general, because of high fees and poor returns, investors would be better served by maintaining a pre-set allocation and periodically re-balancing.  Quoting Morningstar, “only 10 tactical allocation funds have managed to beat moderate allocation funds in a five year basis, with not a single one beating the S&P over that same time period.”

To read the entire article, as well as other content written by Prateek, visit his Seeking Alpha page at seekingalpha.com and click on “All Articles” link in the left margin located under his picture.

 

Prateek Mehrotra, CIO of ETF Model Solutions

Global M&A activity