Monthly Archives: August 2015

Investors Take A Vacation

  It’s summertime and the stock market has taken a vacation, and it’s unclear when prices will return from a seven month break. It may seem like a calm sunset walk along the beach now that Greek worries have temporarily subsided, but concerns have shifted to an impending Federal Reserve interest rate hike, declining commodity…

Puerto Rico – Has The Default Train Left The Station?

by Chad Farrington, CFA, Senior Portfolio Manager, Head of Municipal Credit Research and Matthew Stephan, Senior Municipal Credit Analyst, Columbia Threadneedle Investment The first payment default on Puerto Rico governmental debt is likely to occur Monday, August 3, when the Commonwealth is expected to miss a payment on debt issued by its Public Finance Corporation (PFC)….

Investment Silver Demand Draining COMEX Vaults

If there are words to characterize the precious metals markets for July, it would be “divergences” and “shortages.” There was heavy selling in the leveraged futures market and extraordinary buying demand and shortages in physical coins, rounds, and bars. Despite turmoil surrounding Greece and a huge sell-off in Chinese equities, traders dumped wheelbarrow loads of…

Bond Blast-Off

I pointed out on my Tastytrade show last Thursday that bonds looked poised for a lift-off. Well, once the modest resistance (tinted in green) was breached, it was off to the races. Interest rates seem destined lower (obviously). (ZBU5=ECBOT 30 Year Treasury Bond Future September 2015)

Millennials Getting The Short End Of The Stick

The New York Times ran a surprising op-ed on Sunday highlighting some structural problems in the US economy. The issues raised in the column titled “We’re Making Life Too Hard for Millennials” by Wall Street executive and NYT contributing opinion writer Steven Rattner won’t surprise our regular readers. In fact, you will find the analysis…

DUST Up

Checking back in with old friend DUST hourly.  Still no resolution as it levitates within a pattern that still does not look pleasing.  If it proves unpleasant for DUST, it would be a short-term pleasing sight for the slap happy gold mining sector.

Port Of Houston Enjoying Record Year

For the folks who remain mystified why Houston’s economy has not collapsed with the price of oil, please read below. It hasn’t collapsed because the Houston economy of today bears little resemblance to the Houston economy of the 1980’s.  In the 1980’s (30yrs ago) the Port of Houston was not significant on a national scale,…

NextEra Energy Surpasses Q2 Earnings, Keeps 2015 View

NextEra Energy, Inc. NEE announced second-quarter 2015 adjusted earnings of $1.56 per share, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.50 by 4%. On a year-over-year basis, earnings climbed 9.1% on the heels of higher revenues from Florida Power & Light Company and NextEra Energy Resources. On a GAAP basis, NextEra Energy recorded second-quarter earnings of $1.59 per…