Synopsis
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
Episodes
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GMO's White: Expect a good year for fossil fuels but better for energy alternatives
25/02/2021 Duration: 01h32sLucas White, portfolio manager for resources and climate-change strategies at GMO big-oil is due for a big rally. He notes that while oil prices are up 20 percent in the last year, they are still well below pre-pandemic levels, which gives them the potential to register massive gains as the economy starts to shake off its pandemic slumber. Also on the show, Tom Lydon of ETFTrends.com talks about SPACs -- special purpose acquisition companies -- and the ETFs that have jumped in on this new Wall Street Craze, and Brent Wilsey of Wiley Asset Management talks stocks in the Market Call.
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Franklin Templeton's Dover: Stocks and bonds are overvalued, but stick with them
24/02/2021 Duration: 58minStephen Dover, chief market strategist for Franklin Templeton, says in the Big Interview that he sees a rise in inflation, but thinks the economy can put off any serious bump in prices for as much as three years. He recognized the problems and issues for both stocks and bonds, but still says that investors should stick with domestic and international markets for stocks and bonds to take advantage of the market while it keeps running. Also on the show, Freddy Garcia of Left Brain Investment Research discusses when and why investors might want to convert traditional individual retirement accounts into tax-free Roth IRAs, and Jack Murphy of Levin Easterly Partners talks value-oriented, event-themed investing in the Market Call.
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Vontobel's Souccar: Story stocks' tale will get ugly as pandemic market ends
23/02/2021 Duration: 59minDavid Souccar of the Vontobel Quality Growth fund says there are two markets right now, one featuring very speculative stocks and the other being real growth opportunities, and he notes that 'What you do not own will be as important as what you do own when we get out of this.' But Souccar isn't the only guest expecting tough sledding ahead for the market, as Jeffrey Bierman of TheoTrade.com notes that conditions could force interest rates higher -- which he says would be devastating to the market -- and that nine of the market's 11 sectors are significantly already overvalued, giving the market more downside risk than upside now. Also on the show, Simon Zhen of MyBankTracker.com on surprising consumer banking habits in the pandemic and Randy Warren of Warren Financial talking high-conviction stocks in the Market Call.
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ProShares' Helfstein: 2020's investment themes have room to keep rolling
22/02/2021 Duration: 01h06sScott Helfstein, executive director of thematic investing at ProShares, says the big investment themes of 2020 -- stay-at-home/work-from home, cloud computing, cyber security, remote technologies, streaming, gaming and e-commerce among them -- were driven less by consumer sentiment than by underlying fundamentals, and that solid footing will keep those sectors rolling even as the economy emerges from the pandemic over the course of 2021. Also on the show, Ron Ruffinott of Toluna discusses a survey on when Americans will be ready to get back out for travel, when they will revisit shopping malls and more, David Trainer of New Constructs discusses the importance of reading footnotes to find where companies exploit accounting loopholes, and Andy Braun of the Pax World Large Cap fund talks ESG investing in brand-name companies in the Market Call.
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Expert forecasts slowdown as market and economy flip their disconnect
19/02/2021 Duration: 59minRon Sanchez, chief investment officer at Fiduciary Trust Co. International, says that the disconnect between the market and the economy -- with exceptional markets but a poor economy -- is going to be reversed for the next few years, and said he expects the recovery to drag out for several years until unemployment levels return to pre-pandemic lows. Also on the show, Chuck answers a question about rewards cards versus cash-back benefits on credit cards, and closed-end fund expert Maury Fertig of Relative Value Partners talks about the broad trends he sees in the NAVigator, and returns to discuss specific investments in the Market Call.
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Consumers are 'in fantastic shape,' and real estate bubble talk is 'unfounded'
18/02/2021 Duration: 59minBob Fraser, chief financial officer for the Aspen Funds, says that a combination of strong consumers and a housing market with insufficient supply are creating a strong outlook for real estate and the broader economy for at least the year ahead. In the Big Interview, Fraser discusses changes to the real estate market that have been accelerated by the pandemic, but also says that he does not expect those trends to stall or back up as the economy moves into post-pandemic activity. Also on the show, Tom Lydon of ETFTrends.com tabs a unique China-focused fund as his 'ETF of the Week,' Chuck answers two questions from audience members, and 'Turtle Trader' Jerry Parker of Chesapeake Capital talks stocks in the Market Call.
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For low volatility, high dividends, look to financials and health care
17/02/2021 Duration: 59minMichael Loukas, chief executive officer at TrueMark Investments -- which recently launched the DIVZ ETF that focuses on high yielding but low-volatility stocks -- says the financial services and health-care sectors are the sweet spots right now for generating yield without creating much froth in a portfolio. He says in the Market Call which stocks he particularly likes in each space. Also on the show, author Aaron Nannini discusses his new book, 'Cash Uncomplicated,' and how investors must change their mindset to succeed, Janice Quek from Left Brain Investment Research talks about an education stock that is a surprising beneficiary of the pandemic, and Chuck answers an elderly woman's credit-card question with the help of Bankrate.com's Greg McBride.
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NDR's Kalish talks the changing role of bonds, inflation and more
16/02/2021 Duration: 59minJoe Kalish, chief global macro strategist at Ned Davis Research, says that investors using the standard 60-40 stocks-to-bonds asset allocation need to reconsider their strategy because bonds will not deliver historic results in the future. Kalish suggests putting 20 percent of the bond weighting into alternatives, including real estate investment trusts and dividend-paying stocks. Kalish also discusses the return of inflation and where it goes from here, and gives his outlook on the market for 2021. Also on the show, David Trainer of New Constructs.puts Beyond Meat in 'the Danger Zone,' saying its 'fundamentals are beyond ridiculous and its valuation is beyond absurd,' Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at BankRate.com discusses a survey showing that barely half of Americans have more in emergency savings than they are facing in credit-card debt, and Bryan Lee of Blue Zone Wealth Advisors talks stocks in the Market Call.
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Mellon's Reinhart: This isn't a recovery, it's just a rebound
12/02/2021 Duration: 01h40sVincent Reinhart, chief economist at Mellon, says the economic activity is being miscategorized as a recovery because it is just a rebound until we see a return to something much closer to pre-Covid levels on unemployment and economic activity. That bodes well for a broader economic recovery once the pandemic has ended. Also on the show, John Kosar of Asbury research says the market is likely headed for a correction of 10 percent or more before it can get much higher, Bill Pekowitz of the Aberdeen Global Premier Properties Fund talks about how coronavirus 'put real estate in the crosshairs,' and Julian Koski of New Age Alpha talks about avoiding losers in the Market Call.
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Validea's Carbonneau sees improved market breadth post-Covid
11/02/2021 Duration: 59minJustin Carbonneau of Validea.com says that small-cap and value stocks have bounced back hard since last fall's election, but that run has not excluded growth and momentum companies and more, leading to a broad-based rally that he believes can be sustained for a while. Also on the show, Tom Lydon of ETFTrends.com makes a heart-themed ETF his Valentine's-related pick for 'ETF of the Week,' Rance Masheck of iVestPlus discusses trading platforms and why investors may want to use multiple brokerages, and Howard Dvorkin of Debt.com has some Valentine's-related advice on how couples can fall in love and not allow money issues to get in the way and spoil everything.
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Silver trading highlights bull-market opportunities for commodities
10/02/2021 Duration: 59minEverett Millman, precious metals specialist for Gainesville Coins, says that the market is 'in the early innings' of a cyclical bull market for commodities -- with oil and agricultural prices on the rise -- which typically is a precursor to an increase in the price of precious metals. Millman discusses the recent frenzy in silver trading and how it's likely to play out uneventfully. Also on the show, Mark Hines of Left Brain Investment Research highlights the firm's Chosen List and one stock that's on it in February, Kenny Rose, founder of FranShares talks about crowd-funded investing in franchise buyers, and author Jack Schwager talks about his latest book, 'Unknown Market Wizards.'
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Seafarer’s Foster: Best values are in nations still struggling with Covid
09/02/2021 Duration: 59minAndrew Foster, manager of the Seafarer Overseas Growth and Income Fund, says the best bargains in emerging markets are in the countries that are still mired in coronavirus troubles, and he expects normalization to happen until at least 2022, with ‘tough sledding’ keeping markets there depressed in the interim, creating potential investment bargains. Also ont eh show, Jim Welsh of Smart Portfolios says he expects inflation to reach 3.5 percent by the summer and in that time also thinks the Standard and Poor’s 500 to drop down to roughly 3,500 before bouncing back and hitting new highs in the 4,000 range by summertime, Chuck discusses what investors might take from the firing of longtime Fox Business host Lou Dobbs, and Art Amador of the AI Powered Equity fund talks stocks in the Market Call.
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AAM's Lloyd: Stocks will gain, but more slowly, for the next few years
08/02/2021 Duration: 59minMatt Lloyd, chief investment strategist at Advisors Asset Management, says investors may need to adjust expectations for market returns over the next five years, as stocks deal with changes in growth, bonds deal with low interest rates and the economy starts to face down inflation. Also on the show, Rodney Brooks of US News and World Report discusses the Biden Administration's potential plan to eliminate tax-deductibility of 401(k) plans -- favoring tax credits for contributions instead -- David Trainer of New Constructs discusses his firm's win on Gamestop as well as another pairing of stocks looking at what he describes as a 'micro bubble,' and Matt Breidert of the Ecofin Global Renewables Infrastructure fund covers stocks in the Market Call.
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Ally's Bell sounds an alarm on inflation coming this summer.
05/02/2021 Duration: 58minLindsey Bell, chief investment strategist from Ally Invest, says that worries about inflation being spurred by economic stimulus are real, and while she thinks the real troubles with rising prices are still a few years off, she expects an inflation spike this year and says it could be the hot topic this summer, as prices rise but the Federal Reserve holds the line on low interest rates. Also on the show, Wendy Huang of the London Stock Exchange Group, discusses why fund sponsors and businesses are finding it particularly lucrative and timely to open new issues overseas now, and Thomas Kirchner of the Camelot Event-Driven Fund talks stocks in the Market Call.
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FundX's Brown: Small-caps, foreign stocks and value are the places to be next
04/02/2021 Duration: 01h40sJanet Brown, chief executive at the FundX Investment Group -- which invests using an 'upgrader strategy' trying to ride the market segments that are hot -- says that market leadership has been changing and that while domestic large-cap growth stocks aren't falling out of favor, small-company issues, value investments and international funds are all looking like they are ready to take over market leadership in 2021. Also on the show, Tom Lydon of ETFTrends.com makes an international small-cap fund his 'ETF of the Week,' Jeff Lipton of Oppenheimer and Co. talks the municipal bond market and why he thinks investors should favor munis over Treasuries this year, and Chuck takes an audience question about keep-the-change programs like the popular Acorns app.
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Two money managers prove that disagreement makes a market
03/02/2021 Duration: 59minToday, a Money Life first, with two money managers disagreeing about the same stock -- one saying he would buy it now while the other would sell it and avoid it -- on the same show. Learn about the stock and get a lot of broad market reaction and more today from Noland Langford of Left Brain Investment research, Ben Cook, the portfolio manager of Hennessy BP Energy fund, Ted Rossman of Creditcards.com and in the Market Call with Bernie Horn of Polaris Global Value fund.
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Bear Traps Report strategist says GameStop trading points to market trouble ahead
02/02/2021 Duration: 58minMarket strategist Lawrence McDonald of The Bear Traps Report, says that we're living through a 'blood-curdling bull raid, where the bulls are devouring the shorts,' and he says that historically that kind of action happens near market tops. He says the risk-reward balance looking out six months is 'pretty poor.' McDonald also discusses the GameStop situation, as does technical analyst Mark Newton of Newton Advisors, who talks about how the volatile market action shows up in and impacts the technical indicators. Also, Jeff Zananiri, head trader at JoyoftheTrade.com is in talking pairs trades and more in the Market Call.
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Rinker: Buying collectibles is like flushing your money
01/02/2021 Duration: 58minSyndicated columnist Harry Rinker -- who has written his Rinker on Collectibles column weekly for more than three decades -- says that collections have value, but that collectors really should be focusing on the joy they get from their finds rather than the monetary value of their items because collectibles seldom pay off financially. Also on the show, David Trainer of New Constructs puts a small/mid-cap fund in the Danger Zone, and Jon Lansner of the Orange County Register talks about the GameStop situation and its parallels to a long-forgotten stock blow-up from the 1990s.
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Seven Canyon's Stewart: Market appears 'unmoored' from reality
29/01/2021 Duration: 01h01minLong-time growth manager Sam Stewart of Seven Canyons Advisors says that the stock market is experiencing a lot of 'clear-air turbulence,' moving and reacting faster to things that average investors can't see, let alone react to. Coupled with stock prices that he says do not reflect the true growth rates of the businesses, he expects the market to have mild setbacks going forward, even amid the positives of a post-pandemic recovery. Also on the show, Tom Lydon of ETFTrends.com makes a unique fund -- part metals play, part emerging-markets play -- his ETF of the Week, Katie Stockton of Fairlead Strategies gives a technical take on the market, including what Wall Street's wild action on GameStop and other hot stocks is doing to technicals, and Patrick Healey of Caliber Financial Partners talks stocks in the Market Call.
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Oakmark's Nygren: The market's next 10 years won't be like the last decade
28/01/2021 Duration: 59minLongtime value manager Bill Nygren of the Oakmark Fund says that active management tends to shine 'when parts of the market go to extremes that aren't sustainable,' noting that he sees more sectors and companies at unsustainable levels than he has seen in his career. As a result, he expects value investing to extend its recent run of strong performance into something much longer, fueled by a mix of economic recovery, a bump in inflation and a return to investing with an eye on risk rather than on simply buying whatever has been going up. Also on the show, Brian Dress of Left Brain Investment Research discusses how Occidental Petroleum's recovery from a badly timed big buyout is creating an opportunity in its high-yield bonds, and Anne Kritzmire, an independent closed-end fund trustee, discusses why directors of closed-end funds can't get away with relying on the rubber stamp the way their counterparts at traditional mutual funds do.