Saturday, October 30, 2010

Bond king Gross: Keep your eye on 10-year Treasurys

From Bloomberg:

Bill Gross, manager of the world's largest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co., said a rise in 10-year Treasury note yields would signify success by the Federal Reserve in reviving inflation and economic growth.

"If it does work, here's why the 10-year goes down in yield then back in yield, it's because the out years, five, six, seven, eight, nine, and 10 are vulnerable to inflation and higher policy rates in those particular years," Gross said in an interview today on "Bloomberg Surveillance" with Tom Keene.

The Fed, led by Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, will announce another round of asset purchases when policy makers meet next week after deploying $1.7 trillion to pull the economy out of the financial crisis, according to a survey of the 18 primary dealers that trade debt with the central bank. Fed officials, who already cut interest rates almost to zero, are discussing more purchases of Treasurys to flood markets with cheap money as well as strategies for raising inflation expectations to prevent stagnating prices from undermining the recovery.

Gross, a founder and co-chief investment officer of Newport Beach, California-based Pimco, said yesterday in his monthly commentary that a renewal of asset purchases by the central bank will likely indicate the end of the 30-year bull market in bonds. Treasury yields are near historically low levels in part because Fed purchases make it mathematically impossible for bonds to do much better, he said today.

"It's not an end from the standpoint of over-the-cliff or over-the-edge," Gross said. "It's not a Columbus thing where he thought he was sailing off the ocean and may fall off the edge. It's an end from the standpoint of recognizing that certain maturities can't go much lower in yield."

Total Return Fund

Gross has reduced holdings of government-related debt in the $252 billion Total Return Fund for the third straight month in September, after the securities accounted for 63 percent of assets in June, the highest since it held an equal amount in October 2009.

Pimco hasn't cut the flagship fund's duration, which is in line with the 4.25 years to 4.5 years of Barclays Plc's benchmark index, Gross said. Duration, a measure of a bond's price sensitivity to interest rate changes, generally increases with maturity. The firm is focused on "safe-space" that's not vulnerable to inflationary expectations, Gross said.

"A two-year Treasury and a three-year Treasury only yield 37 to 60 basis points, but that's safe yield because the Fed isn't going anywhere," Gross said. "We've been willing to accept the lower yield in anticipation of a hand-off to federal officials maybe six months down the road."

'Tighten Monetary Policy'

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note dropped from a 2010 high of 4.01 percent in April to a low of 2.33 percent on Oct. 8, according to Bloomberg data, as investors purchased Treasurys in anticipation of further asset purchases by the central bank. The record of 2.04 percent was set in December 2008.

"They have to buy assets and at some point, if inflation starts to get to their target, whether it's a 2 percent target or a price target, then they begin to raise the cost of those reserves, and therefore tighten monetary policy," Gross said.

Pimco added to its mortgage holdings in September to 28 percent of assets, from 21 percent in the prior month. Pimco also expanded its emerging-market debt to 12 percent last month, the highest since at least September 2006. Non-U.S. developed debt was unchanged at 6 percent.

The Total Return Fund, also the world's biggest mutual fund, handed investors a gain of about 11.09 percent in the past year, beating about 76 percent of its peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Pimco, a unit of Munich-based insurer Allianz SE, managed $1.236 trillion of assets as of September.

To contact the reporter on this story: Susanne Walker in New York at swalker33@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Dave Liedtka at dliedtka@bloomberg.net.

More from Bill Gross:

Bond King Bill Gross is dumping U.S. bonds

Bond king Bill Gross loves these emerging markets

Top blogger Zero Hedge: Bill Gross is a supreme hypocrite


View the original article here

Five top dividend stocks on sale today

From Dividend Monk:

Everyone loves a good value. In search of one, it makes sense for most investors to be looking for high quality companies trading for a good price rather than mediocre companies trading at bargain prices.
Companies on this list each face certain risks and are not necessarily recommendations, but they may not be a bad place to look for some solid dividend investments. So, without further delay, here’s five high-quality names currently on the discount rack...
Read full article...
More on dividends:
A list of the world's most elite dividend stocks
These investments pay dividends every month
Record numbers of dividend stocks are yielding more than bonds
View the original article here

Friday, October 29, 2010

Three big signs of an imminent correction are in place

From Gold Scents:
There are three things I watch for as a sign that a correction is imminent. They are in order of importance: cycles, sentiment, and money flows.
The current cycle is already stretched to 45 days. Usually this cycle bottoms between 35 and 40 days so you can see we are now overdue for a top. That covers the cycles part of the equation.
Sentiment has now reached bullish levels (contrary sign) that should be enough to force at least...
Read full article...
More on stocks:
Two more signs that a correction is coming
The huge investment trend you cannot afford to ignore
Top Goldman trader: The market is unbelievably overbought
View the original article here

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Investors are officially giddy about stocks again

From The Big Picture:

Individual investors are now officially giddy for stocks.

As measured by the AAII survey, individual investor bullishness rose to 51.2 from 49.6 last week, to the highest since May 2008 while Bears fell to 21.6 from 25.2, the lowest since Jan 2006.

Luckily, we have to wait less than a week now to see what’s been priced in and what hasn’t been. The 10-year Irish bond yield has broken out to...

Read full article...

More on sentiment:

Everyone hates the dollar right now

Investors are becoming dangerously complacent again

Top manager Hussman: Investors are bearish... but unafraid


View the original article here

A list of top income stocks with tons of room to raise dividends

From Dividends Value:

Dividend sustainability is paramount for the high-yield investor. Having a stock cut its dividend could potentially crush their income. A high-yield investor is less concerned about dividend growth than maintaining the current high-yield. Most traditional dividend growth stocks pay a moderate to low yield, thus sustainability is not enough – the dividend growth investor also expects substantial and consistent growth.

This expectation does not change even when the economy turns down and earnings decline; dividend growth investors still require annual dividend growth. The companies that are able to accomplish this are those with an operating model that generates strong free cash flows with...

Read full article...

More on dividends:

Three signs of an impending dividend cut

Four essential traits of all great dividend stocks

One of the world's best bear-market dividend stocks


View the original article here

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Top trader Gartman: The investing mistake you must never, ever make

From The Crosshairs Trader:
I had the pleasure of attending a recent meeting of the CFA Society of NC with my friend Derek Hernquist. Dennis Gartman, well known trader and publisher of the well respected Gartman Letter, was the sponsored guest and speaker.
Mr. Gartman gave what I consider to be one of the best discussions about the importance of admitting when you are wrong. Beginning traders especially have a hard time admitting when a trading decision is the wrong one. Yet, as you will soon find out - if you have not done so already - admitting you are wrong and closing out a losing trade quickly and with a small loss is...
Read full article...
More from Dennis Gartman:
Legendary trader Gartman: The euro is "doomed"
Legendary trader Gartman: Gold is "hyper-overbought"
Top trader Gartman: How to profit from skyrocketing wheat prices
View the original article here

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Casey Research: We're in the eye of the financial storm

From The Gold Report:

Carlsbad is several hundred miles south of Sutter's Mill, but the experts and investors who gathered for Casey Research's recent Gold Summit were just as enthusiastic about the precious metal as the prospectors who headed into the hills back in 1849.

The Gold Report took the opportunity to speak with some of the many experts on hand. For three days, the leading experts in the resource investment sector gathered with investors to discuss the investment strategies. Doug Casey, Richard Russell, Ross Beaty, Eric Sprott, Ian McAvity, Rick Rule, Robert Prechter, and Bob Quartermain all gave their varied impressions on the market and their investment ideas.

The time was right to focus on gold because...

Read full article...

More from Casey Research:

A great opinion piece on buying gold coins

Casey Research: It's time to "batten down the hatches"

Doug Casey and Rick Rule: How to invest for the End of America


View the original article here

Monday, October 25, 2010

Four essential traits of all great dividend stocks

From Dividends Value:

... Dividend growth investing is not about exit points, momentum swings, relative strength, sector rotation; instead it is about studying fundamentals, selecting superior stocks, and building a portfolio with a long-term horizon. When we buy a dividend stock, we hope to hold it forever.
What makes a good dividend stock? Here are some of the things I look for...
Read full article...
More on dividend stocks:
Four big reasons to sell a dividend stock
This could be the best dividend opportunity of your lifetime
Richard Russell: What dividends are saying about stocks today
View the original article here

Monday, October 18, 2010

Several important companies report earnings next week

From Bespoke Investment Group:

This week was actually very light on the earnings front, but next week things will pick up significantly with 355 companies set to report.

We went through our earnings calendar and found some of the most important companies that will report next week. Below we highlight these names along with a few earnings season stats for each one. The EPS Beat Rate represents...

Read full article (with chart)...

More on earnings:

The best stocks to buy before earnings

The stock market earnings story you haven't heard

David Rosenberg: This could be the world's best market indicator...


View the original article here

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Three methods for finding some of the world's best value stocks

From ValueWalk:

Bruce Greenwald, professor at Columbia University and heir of the tradition of value investing teaching at that university from the father of the theory, Benjamin Graham, presents in his book Value Investing: From Graham to Buffett and Beyond, an interesting framework for analyzing investment opportunities.

He divides the possible methods of assessment in three…

Read full article…

More on value investing:

Value great Berkowitz is betting big on these hated stocks

Legendary value investor Dreman: Buy mining and oil stocks now

Value legend Klarman: Stocks could suffer "another lost decade without any gains"


View the original article here