FINSUM

FINSUM

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Friday, 02 February 2018 10:20

US Oil Output Surging

(Houston)

Oil prices have been rising strongly on the global market. However, those gains took a breather yesterday when eye-opening new info emerged on the oil market—the US is now producing more than 10 million barrels of crude oil per day. The mark was hit in November, and arrived much sooner than anyone expected. The US has only broken that threshold twice in the past, both times in 1970.


FINSUM: Okay so our big concern with the oil market right now is that these higher prices are not sustainable. The fundamental oversupply of oil has not been solved. The only thing holding up prices is the fact that OPEC members, for the moment, are happy to let the US benefit disproportionately from their output cuts. This output figure might change that.

Thursday, 01 February 2018 07:57

The New Advisor Tool to Replace ETFs

(New York)

ETFs have been the dominant investing trend for the last half decade or so, eating away at mutual funds’ grip. However, what will be the next major investing trend? The answer may have just debuted. Orion Advisor Services has just announced a new product called ASTRO (Advisor Strategy & Tax Return Optimization tool). ASTRO “allows advisors to build tax-efficient SMA portfolios that can take into account clients’ environmental, societal and governmental concerns”, according to Michael Kitces, who says that the new technology is a threat to asset management and could prove highly disruptive, as it would allow better loss harvesting and more tax-sensitive liquidations in retirement. The system would allow advisors to “buy, own and manage a portfolio of all the underlying individual investments directly”.


FINSUM: This sounds like it could be a very potent offering, but we do not expect ETFs do go away any time soon.

Thursday, 01 February 2018 07:55

Why Liquidity Will Vanish

(New York)

Morgan Stanley went on the record yesterday arguing that market liquidity will likely vanish in the event of turmoil. The bank says that the reduction in bank participation in trading, brought on by post-Crisis regulation, has led to “shadow banks” taking up the burden of liquidity. Such shadow banks including entities like professional trading firms, hedge funds etc. However, Morgan Stanley points out that this type of liquidity provider has never been tested in a tumultuous market, and that liquidity is likely to vanish.


FINSUM: While there may be some truth to it, banks love to over play the amount of liquidity they provide in periods of turmoil. When the market gets ugly, they tighten up just like everyone else.

Thursday, 01 February 2018 07:54

Why You Need to Buy Oil Stocks

(Houston)

So oil has staged a slow and cautious recovery over the last year powered largely by OPEC’s oil cuts. That said, prices are still ~35% below the $100 per barrel threshold. But guess what, it does not matter. In an absolutely eye-watering piece of data that is a testament to both management and technological innovation, Shell oil company is making as much profit barrel with oil at $60 as it did when oil was $100. Exxon performs even better.


FINSUM: Oil companies have done a truly commendable job rejigging their business models and cutting costs to maintain profitability.

Thursday, 01 February 2018 07:53

Why US Home Prices Might Jump

(New York)

While there has been some speculation that the US housing market may be facing a tough period ahead, new data is showing that prices might continue rising. The big worries are that rates will rise quickly, hurting mortgage demand, while at the same time, the new tax package will reduce home-buying because of the lack of deductibility of mortgage interest above a threshold. However, new data shows that housing inventory continues to sink. There are few homes for sale compared to buyer demand, and the building rate of new homes is weak. This means there is much more demand in the market than there is supply.


FINSUM: We are not very worried about home prices, especially in the lower and middle pars of the spectrum. The largest ever US generation—Millennials—is entering the key home buying period of their lives.

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