Displaying items by tag: equities
Biggest ESG Stocks to Buy Right Now
Investors are doubling down efforts to carry out specific reviews of companies ESG compliance, as a new survey found that 72% carry out reviews compared to a meager 32% a couple of years ago. Some stocks are standing out from the crowd as good ESG investments moving forward. Microsoft stands out by their detailed yearly reports that will stand up to scrutiny and their pledges to reduce their carbon footprint seem very plausible. The next big stock is Nvidia which has one of the highest ESG ratings in the chip manufacturing industry and GPU and other chip demand will only grow moving forward. Dividend darling Coca-Cola should also be on investor’s radar as it has a long positive history of supporting sustainable initiatives. Rounding out the best picks is American Express which has an AA rating on ESG efforts putting it in the industry's 93 percentile.
FINSUM: Stock pickers should look out for consistent ESG benchmarks as this will likely lead to outperformance moving forward.
Did the fourth industrial revolution kill mean reversion investing?
Value has outperformed the market tremendously for a portion of this year and value managers must be starting to get a little of that old feeling back...see the full story on our partner's site
Goldman Sachs Says the Bull Run Is Over
(New York)
The post-pandemic run has been marked by staggeringly low volatility and all-time highs in both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones. However…see the full story on our partner Magnifi’s site.
Why You Need to Worry About a Correction Right Now
(New York)
On the surface, the last few weeks could not have gone better. Vaccinations are up, inflation worries are down, economic indicators are surging, and earnings are great. This has led to a nice relief rally after a rough later winter/early spring. However, the reality is that the summer may again be a tough time for markets. The reason why—a lot of good news is fully priced in, but bad news no longer is. Think about it: if an incredible piece of news came out today, do you think the market would react as strongly as if a very bad piece of news came out? Your gut is probably telling you the latter would have a much stronger response.
FINSUM: We have to agree that the market has gotten a lot of relief from recent news. But really, it would only take one really bad inflation report to send volatility spiking.
Why Tech Losses are About to Get Worse
(San Francisco)
The Fed has continued to reiterate low rate accommodations…see the full story on our partner Magnifi’s site