Money Life With Chuck Jaffe Daily Podcast

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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

  • 'Quant Guy' Bierman: 'We're not in a bubble, but certain sectors are'

    25/07/2023 Duration: 01h49s

    Jeffrey Bierman, founder of The QuantGuy.com and chief market technician at TheoTrade.com, says that the market is overheated and overbought, but it very well could rise from here and re-touch record highs before a likely correction ahead. Bierman says technology and leisure are the areas that have made the market frothy and are overdue for a correction of 30 percent or more, and while oil and financials will help the overall market cushion the fall, Bierman believes utilities and pharmaceutical stocks will be areas to outperform while the market goes through 'unavoidable' pain. Brian Payne, chief strategist for private markets and alternatives at BCA Research talks about the wide-ranging opportunities in the private credit markets, and how senior loans and other private credit varieties can goose a portfolio's yield. Plus, forensic accountant Tracy Coenen identifies three common red flags pointing to signs of financial fraud in the latest installment of 'Find Me The Money,' and Eric Boughton, chief analyst a

  • Investors are unusually bullish, but consumers are getting cautious

    24/07/2023 Duration: 01h11s

    Retail industry analyst Dana Telsey, chief executive at Telsey Advisory Group, says that inflation has forced consumers to become more discerning with their spending, using more on essentials and trying to keep powder dry, and while it's not enough of a pullback to tank the economy, the longer inflation persists at high levels, the harder it will be for the consumer to keep propping up the economy. Meanwhile, bullish investor sentiment -- the expectation that the stock market will gain ground in the next six months -- reached "unusually high" levels  in the latest American Association of Individual Investors survey, with Charles Rotblut -- who runs the survey for AAII -- noting that extreme sentiment levels often are a precursor to the market changing directions. Plus, Kyle Guske of New Constructs says puts Tesla and Netflix back into the Danger Zone, noting valuations after recent earnings reports have them poised for a setback and, in the Market Call, Tobias Carlisle of the Acquirers Funds puts his take on

  • Elliott Wave Trader's Gilburt sees both bear market and banking crisis ahead

    21/07/2023 Duration: 58min

    Avi Gilburt, founder of the ElliottWave Trader continues to see the market rallying to new highs but then setting off on a years-long bear market, but in his other role as founder of Safer Banking Research, he notes that the economic downturn will include much more pain for banks, noting that the bank collapses from earlier in 2023 are just the tip of the iceberg, and investors who flee the market for the safety of banks may soon be worrying about just being able to get their money back. Also on the show, Mark Asaro of Noble Wealth Management discusses how investors should not replace individual bonds with traditional bond funds, and Ted Rossman of Bankrate.com talks about the financial costs of travel problems that consumers have been facing this year. Plus Ryan Kirlin of Alpha Architect and the U.S. Quantitative Value  and U.S. Quantitative Momentum ETFs talks systematic investing in the Market Call.

  • Paribas' Dailey: Economy can avoid a deep recession and market can rally late in '23

    20/07/2023 Duration: 01h01min

    Geoff Dailey, head of U.S. equities at BNP Paribas, says he expects the economy to go through a recession, but not one that is particularly deep or long, provided that the Federal Reserve's moves work toward reducing inflation. Dailey expects the market to be particularly volatile around news events like inflation and unemployment reports, but says that volatility will remove much of the building pressure for something bigger and more painful; his worry is that if inflation doesn't cool, the Fed could keep pushing until the economy craters, causing the worst-case scenario of a deep downturn. Also on the show, Mark Yusko of Morgan Creek Capital Management talks about the 'FANGMAN' stocks -- which he considers highly overvalued despite leading the market this year -- as well as funds and ETFs in the Market Call, Sam Huisache discusses a recent Clever Real Estate survey showing Americans don't feel that marriage is much of a factor when it comes to home buying, and Tom Lydon of VettaFi makes a consumer-centric

  • Trillium's Smith: The coming recession will bring a bear market with it

    19/07/2023 Duration: 59min

    Cheryl Smith, economist and portfolio manager at Trillium Asset Management, says she expects a recession and the bad news of that economic downturn will be contagious, with the recession hitting employment, rising unemployment will impact income levels, which hurts spending, and declines in spending injures corporate profits. That cycle could lead to a relatively long sideways period, especially if the Federal Reserve takes its time before changing its rate outlook. Also on the shot, MIT professor Yossi Sheffi discusses his latest book, "The Magic Conveyor Belt: Supply Chains, A.I. and the Future of Work," and in the Market Call, Steven Grey of Grey Value Management talks about how even a diehard stock jockey like himself should be considering bank deposits as a possible alternative during the rough times he sees dead ahead.

  • Hartford Funds' Jacobson: 'The market has one opinion: soft landing'

    18/07/2023 Duration: 58min

    Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson, global investments strategist at the Hartford Funds, says risk markets are pricing in the likelihood that the Federal Reserve can orchestrate and navigate the economy to a soft landing, and yet her base case is for a recession and history shows these conditions typically end up in a rougher landing. That's how she sees things playing out, despite the current emotions of the market. Forensic accountant Tracy Coenen talks about the importance of digging into tax returns when coming up with equitable settlements in divorce cases in the latest episode of 'Find Me The Money.' Meredith Lepore discusses a Credello survey on how parents are contributing to their kids' student loan payments and how it is stressing their ability to save for retirement and more, plus Michael Loukas, chief executive officer at TrueMark Investments -- which runs the TrueShares ETFs -- talks winner-take-all stock investing in the Market Call.

  • TruStage's Knapp: The Fed will induce a recession, and the landing will be rough

    17/07/2023 Duration: 01h01min

    Scott Knapp, chief market strategist at TruStage, says that while there has been rolling softness in the economy, he believes the Federal Reserve sees inflation as being worse than unemployment, which makes the central bank so determined to curb inflation that it hikes rates and/or delays rate cuts until the jobless rate rises enough to trigger a recession. And while Knapp acknowledges that the Fed could thread the needle perfectly, he notes that he doesn't think a soft landing is the probable outcome. Also on the show, Kyle Guske of New Constructs puts a mutual fund in the Danger Zone for performance that he says has been much less than management's investment style should have produced, Olivia Newport covers a Choice Mutual survey showing that inflation has impacted Americans' funeral preferences, and author Michael Thomsen discusses his latest book, 'Cage Kings: How an Unlikely Group of Moguls, Champions, and Hustlers Transformed the UFC into a $10 Billion Industry.'

  • Carson Group's Detrick: 'We do not see recession any time soon'

    14/07/2023 Duration: 01h03s

    Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, says the first-half upside surprise from the stock market and economy has positioned the market for a big second half of the year. Detrick says that when the market posts double-digit gains in the first half of the year, historically it has added another 10 percent in the second half; he's forecasting for this year to continue the trend, with the Standard and Poor's 500 projected to gain 21 to 25 percent for the year, a prediction that's way up from the 12 to 15 percent gains he was calling for '23 when he made his annual forecast at the end of last year. Detrick's bullish view was echoed -- albeit for different and more technical reasons -- by Jeff Bishop, chief executive at RagingBull.com, who says the market is no longer range-bound, having broken out to the upside and with most technical indicators suggesting it could get all the way up to all-time high levels before the year is done. Also on the show, securities attorney  Kenneth Burdon of Skadden Ar

  • Invesco's Hooper expects short, downturn before a leg up to end the year

    13/07/2023 Duration: 01h01min

    Kristina Hooper, chief global market strategist at Invesco, says that she expects the stock market to remain range-bound for a few months, with the potential for a small pullback before it starts its next upward move at the end of the year. Hooper says she expects that we're less likely to see a serious economic downturn that she was earlier this year, noting that the Federal Reserve "is enjoying being in a more normal rate environment and wants to hold onto that for as long as it can." She also talked up the opportunities in fixed income, while downplaying concerns about the inverted yield curve, noting that investors need to start looking to lengthen maturities now to take advantage of the changing rate conditions. Also on the show, Dave Gilreath, chief investment officer at Innovative Portfolios discusses stocks -- and particularly the 'Bulls of the Dow' strategy, Tom Lydon of VettaFi makes a pioneering mutual fund that created its own niche and now dominates the asset class his pick as ETF of the Week, an

  • ICON's Paul: Anyone expecting rate cuts this year is kidding themself

    12/07/2023 Duration: 57min

    Jerry Paul, senior vice president of fixed income at ICON Advisers, says that inflation is going to remain stubbornly high, which leads him to expect two more rate hikes and to doubt anyone expecting the Federal Reserve to start reducing interest rates. He believes it will be 2024 before rate cuts become a remote possibility. Meanwhile, Paul says there are plenty of fixed-income opportunities, though they aren't nearly so attractive in traditional areas like junk-bonds as they are in areas like banking paper or closed-end bond funds. Also on the show, University of Connecticut professor Richard Langlois discusses his recent book, 'The Corporation and the Twentieth Century,' and how 'managerialism' has changed not just the working world but maybe how investors decide which stocks are worth buying. Plus, in the Market Call, Jeff Auxier of the Auxier Focus Fund talks stocks for the long run.

  • Barry Ritholtz: 'I hope Powell doesn't snatch defeat from the jaws of victory'

    11/07/2023 Duration: 59min

    Barry Ritholtz, chief investment officer at Ritholtz Wealth Management, says the Federal Reserve has done a good job reducing inflation, but he worries that chairman Jerome Powell could over-tighten the economy into a recession, largely because the central bank is tied to models from the 1970s and following an outdated gameplan from that era that could make inflation worse today. In a wide-ranging conversation, Ritzholtz expresses a largely optimistic view predicated on the Fed's strategy not making difficult conditions worse than they need to be. Also on the show, Chris Vermeulen, chief market strategist for The Technical Traders, says that the big indexes have 'hit a wall,' and that the market needs to gather itself with a sideways move or slight step-back before it can break out of its current range. Plus, in the latest edition of 'Find Me The Money,' forensic accountant Tracy Coenen talks about the spending and money-movement patterns that are telltale signs that family money is being diverted, noting tha

  • AGF's Valliere: 'Not a recession but nothing to write home about'

    10/07/2023 Duration: 01h01min

    Greg Valliere, chief U.S. policy strategist at AGF Investments, says there's a pleasant surprise coming in that the Federal Reserve will not have to be too aggressive to get inflation under better control, noting that he expects a slowdown in the second half -- fueled by labor issues including a potential strike at UPS -- but that the downturn stops short of being a recession. Also on the show, Kevin Crain discusses a Bank of America study showing that the average 401() account balance for men exceeds that of women by 50 percent, David Trainer of New Constructs puts a stock in the Danger Zone that he expects to have one of the biggest earnings misses when quarterly earnings start rolling out in the next few weeks plus, in the Market Call, Manny Weintraub of Spears Abacus talks stocks that produce and compound income.

  • S&P's Gruenwald: There must be 'a landing, 'there will be a slowdown'

    07/07/2023 Duration: 59min

    Paul Gruenwald, chief economist for S&P Global Ratings, says that the economy must land but the question is 'Can it land in a reasonably smooth way or do we have a sharp correction downward' that triggers a recession. Gruenwald says the Federal Reserve has been surprising the market with its determination to reach its goals, and that while it puts off rate cuts for the next six to 12 months the market will adjust in ways that result in a slowdown and some profit-taking. Also on the show, Kimberly Flynn of XA Investments discusses the rapid growth in interval funds holding alternative investments, noting that the industry is in the 'second inning' of a dramatic growth cycle. And in the Market Call, David Barse of Xout Capital discusses the ins and outs of a system that seeks to invest in the best of the stock market's top companies.

  • Evergreen Gavekal's Hay: Expect a downturn and more banking woes by year's end

    06/07/2023 Duration: 01h01min

    David Hay, co-chief investment officer at Evergreen Gavekal -- the author of the Haymaker newsletter -- says the economy has been throwing 'a huge head fake right now' that has convinced a lot of pundits that the Federal Reserve can pull off a soft- or no-landing scenario. That's not what he's expecting, however, noting that there are plenty of indicators to suggest that troubles are mounting. Also on the show, Tom Lydon of VettaFi turns to an income fund for his ETF of the Week, Catherine Collinson of the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies discusses the changing outlook that different generations have for their retirements, and William Smead of the Smead Value fund taks stocks -- and holding unpopular positions for a long time -- in the Market Call.

  • RiverTwice's Karabell: Past economic patterns don't foretell the future

    05/07/2023 Duration: 59min

    Zachary Karabell, president of RiverTwice Capital and founder of The Progress Network, says that investors who are looking to past economic patterns to predict what's next could be off base because, among other things, they are looking for a recession instead of trying to gauge whether we are already in one. He notes that the wide variability of potential outcomes from here shouldn't scare investors much, because the mid- and long-range outlooks generally appear to be positive, despite concerns like inflation, the inverted yield curve and more. Plus, Cassandra Rupp, financial advisor at the Vanguard Group discusses the firm's study on 'Higher Education Perspectives and The State of Saving,' which showed that an alarming number of Americans don't know much about the best and most popular vehicles to use for saving for college. In the Market Call, Andy Braun, portfolio manager for the Impax Large Cap fund talks brand-name stocks bought and sold today with a social/ESG mindset.

  • Can you really improve your chances of winning a lottery?

    03/07/2023 Duration: 01h02min

    With surveys showing that most young adults feel they won't be able to afford to buy a home if they don't win a lottery, Chuck talks with Ajaie Albert, communications director at Lotto N Crowd -- a site that tries to mix financial literacy with lottery insights and the ability to join ticket pools -- about whether there is much anyone can do to meaningfully impact their chances of winning. Speaking of the struggles to buy a home, Emily Thornton discusses a study showing that homeowners are struggling too, with nearly 4 in 10 postponing repairs due to the effects of inflation. Plus forensic accountant Tracy Coenen talks about getting tax documents from reluctant spouses and their accountants, and then discusses red flags that show up in credit-card transactions in the latest episode of 'Find Me The Money,' and Scott Davies, chief investment officer at CDAM, talks stocks in the Market Call.

  • Mariner's Krumpelman: 'Just keep it right down the middle, folks'

    30/06/2023 Duration: 01h02min

    Jeff Krumpelman, chief investment strategist at Mariner Wealth Advisors, says the economy looks like it can avoid a hard landing, and that should be enough to keep the stock market performing above investors' expectations. turning any downturn into a buying opportunity in conditions that he says should take the Standard and Poor's 500 up to about 4,800 over the next six to 12 months. Also on the show, John Cole Scott, president of Closed-End Fund Advisors, discusses four funds that have earned his interest -- and big chunks of his clients' money -- during the first half of 2023, Megan Sanctorum discusses a Bonus.com survey showing that nearly 40 percent of Americans are using credit-card rewards and cash-back offers to manage their day-to-day finances, and 'Turtle Trader' Jerry Parker of Chesapeake Capital Corp. talks about momentum and trend-following in the Market Call.

  • Rayliant's Wool: With or without recession, a correction is coming soon

    29/06/2023 Duration: 01h27s

    Phillip Wool, head of research at Rayliant Global Advisors, says that equities aren't really pricing in even the possibility of recession, which is setting up a correction "when the economy starts to visibly roll over," when "earnings forecasts and analyst revisions get more negative." He expects that correction in the next six to 12 months, noting that the current rally has been a false indicator because it has been so narrow, with two handfuls of stock driving the index. Tom Lydon of VettaFi talks about small-company cash cows as a diversifier for the narrow market in his ETF of the Week, Jenn Tracy discusses an IPX1031 study showing that more than 60 percent of Americans wish that shopping malls would make a comeback, noting that nearly 70 percent of the populace lives within an hour of a dead or abandoned shopping mall. In the Market Call, Justin Carbonneau of Validea.com talks about the investing methods of the masters, and applies them to the stock market to find the buying signals today.

  • T Rowe Price's McCormick: U.S. investors are underinvested in bonds

    28/06/2023 Duration: 59min

    Andy McCormick, head of global fixed income/chief investment officer at T. Rowe Price, says that investors are 'cyclically underinvested in fixed income for a long time,' due to the low yields that were available, and they are also under-represented in foreign bonds -- which are not facing the inverted yield curve that's happening here -- and so diversifying into safe domestic and foreign bonds makes sense as a way to ride out current volatility. Julie Ramhold of DealNews.com sets us up for the coming Amazon Prime Days, and what investors should expect to save big on and how Amazon's competitors will also offer good deals to watch for, Matt Brannon discusses a recent survey by Clever Real Estate which showed that nearly 60 percent of millennials are spending more than 30 percent of their income on housing, and that many members of that generation don't think they will ever be able to afford a home. And in the Market Call, Simon Lack of SL Advisros and the American Energy Independence Index talks midstream and

  • Schwab's Wander: It's time to increase your exposure to credit

    27/06/2023 Duration: 01h45s

    Brett Wander, chief investment officer for fixed income strategies at Schwab Asset Management, says that if yields start to fall in money markets -- which will happen whenever interest rates get cut -- he would expect investors to turn to credit to get better returns. With that in mind, he thinks investors should be looking at investment-grade and high-yield credit now. He also suggests that investors go out the yield curve now -- even though it seems like they're not being paid for the risk -- to lock in the long-term rates and reduce reinvestment risk. Michael Sincere -- author of Michael Sincere's Long-Term Trader -- says the technical conditions suggest that the market is likely to keep drifting higher through the summer before taking a hit in the fall when current worries take root. Plus, forensic accountant Tracy Coenen talks about finding the treasure map to uncover where a spouse might be hiding money, and Joe Rinaldi of Quantum Financial Advisors talks stocks and ETFs int he Market Call.

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