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Author Archives: CFAMNEB

Distinguished Speaker Series Featuring Bob Doll, CFA, CPA – Event Recap

16th February, 2016 · CFAMNEB · Leave a comment

By Harvey R Peck, CFA

On Thursday, February 11, 2016, CFA MN hosted a presentation by Bob Doll, Senior Portfolio Manager and Chief Equity Strategist at Nuveen Asset Management. After a light dinner at the Minneapolis Club, Mr. Doll shared his highly respected views and perspectives on the global equities markets. You may recognize Bob Doll as a regular on CNBC, Bloomberg TV and Fox Business News with Doll being quoted in other business publications.

Vicious negative feedback loop
Doll opined the equity markets are in a “terrible funk”, a vicious negative feedback loop. As global growth estimates decline, oil prices drop, earnings estimates are revised down, stock prices fall, there is forced selling, credit standards tighten, then global growth estimates decline, and the cycle repeats itself.

How do we extract ourselves from this funk? Oil needs to stop going down. The U.S. dollar needs to stop appreciating. Problem: Oil and commodities are in a multi-year bottoming process.

Can the U.S. economy avoid importing these global deflationary trends?
Doll noted the U.S. economy is doing better than most other developed economies. It is primarily a domestic consumer economy. Doll is forecasting U.S. real growth at mid 2% and nominal GDP growth at 3-4%.

The U.S. consumer economy is doing relatively well as supported by strong new housing starts, firm home resale prices and record auto sales.The Federal Reserve’s inflation targets are within reach. Rising U.S. domestic inflation expectations is supported by two factors: (1) a tightening labor market showing upward labor price pressures and (2) housing rents and home prices increasing.

Bull market in bonds over
The bottom in yields likely occurred back in July 2012. By 2016 year-end, Nuveen forecasts U.S. Treasury yields to be higher. Doll expects high yield credit spreads to be narrower and yields to be lower by year end. Nuveen contends high yield spreads are currently overreacting to the declining creditworthiness in energy and materials. However, these factors should not affect other non-industrial areas of the economy such as medical, information processing technology and media. Currently the high yield markets have corrected too much and the correction was too fast.

Political Issues
The U.S. federal deficit improvement trend is over. Rising entitlement costs over the coming years will cause the deficits to expand. The growing deficit is not yet problematic. Investors are encouraged to wait until the government’s ability to service debt is rising faster than GDP before implementing defensive strategies.

The U.S. needs bipartisan congressional action to address the problem of corporate income taxes on foreign based earnings. The current tax law is fostering large capital outflows from the U.S. economy. This is a very important issue for the long-term viability of the U.S. economy.

Recommendations
Nuveen recommends overweighting allocations to equities, underweighting bonds and fixed-income and holding an overweight in cash reserves. They expect above average volatility. Most investors will be frustrated by the current environment of higher volatility and low returns.

We thank Bob Doll and Nuveen Asset Management for sharing their thoughts and recommendations. You can follow Bob Doll’s commentaries and other Nuveen Asset Management research publications at www.nuveen.com/home. Thanks again to Nuveen Asset Management for their support of CFA MN.

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Posted in Hot Topic Commentary, Local Charterholders | Tags: Bob Doll, CFA, CFA Events, CFA Society MN, CPA, Distinguished Speaker Series, Nuveen Asset Management |

2016 Annual Economic Dinner Featuring Michael Pettis – Event Recap

1st February, 2016 · CFAMNEB · Leave a comment

By Mark Carlton, CFA 

Last Thursday night we were pleased to welcome Michael Pettis, Professor of Finance at Guanghua School of Management at Beijing University, to speak at our Annual Economic Dinner.  He is perhaps the most sought-out speaker anywhere on the economic changes and challenges China currently faces.

First, addressing the gyrations in the Chinese stock markets over the past two years (first soaring more than 150% and then giving back all of that and more) he informed the crowd that the Chinese stock market is not a predictor of future profits.  Instead, it is a call option on the credibility of the Chinese government.  While foreigners may be blamed internally for market instability, he said, they actually account for just 2% of trading volume.

He then went on to describe the difficult transition China is currently undergoing.  He gave us a modern history of China in four stages, starting with the liberalizing reforms of Deng Xiaoping in the 1980s.  During that stage the government removed impediments to private market transactions.  Stage two was marked by an infrastructure investment program and was very successful. Because that sector had been long neglected, return on capital was very high at a time when the real interest rate on borrowing was extremely low.  As time passed, however, this fortunate set of circumstances changed.  The current stage, three, began several years ago as the value of new projects no longer covers the rising cost of capital.  In every other instance when this situation has occurred (Japan in the 1980s and Brazil more recently were cited), the country has ended up with a debt crisis as borrowing continues past the point at which it makes economic sense; internal politics make that transition too difficult.

The key point he made was that growth in China needs to decline rapidly to avoid making the debt situation worse.  At the same time, they need to promote domestic consumption so as not to have a depression.  Mr. Pettis stressed that the Chinese leadership understands the issue and that the reason for the government’s anti-corruption campaign.  The elites oppose reform (as they tend do everywhere, he stressed) so the government has had to centralize power so that it can implement the necessary reforms.  He emphasized that this type of transition has never been successfully executed in a command economy and is rarely successful in a free market economy.  He was optimistic that the Chinese leadership has done the right things needed to give themselves a chance of success, but their job was a tough one.

He predicted that Chinese growth will slow to 3% or less over the next decade.  That will allow debt to grow slower than GDP (it is currently growing more than twice as fast as GDP).  This will be a problem for global growth as the world already faces insufficient demand.  He believes that the global economy can still grow in a sub-3% Chinese GDP world, much as it grew in the 1990s with Japan growing at just 0.5% per year.  Pettis thinks hard commodity countries are going to continue to struggle as a result, but soft commodity countries can prosper.  He believes the ultimate impact of the Chinese economic transition can be mildly positive on balance, but that the benefits will be unevenly distributed.

Finally, he addressed the question of what makes a rich country rich.  He argued that rich countries have domestic institutions (i.e. private property rights, the rule of law, etc.) that enable citizens to be maximally productive.  By that measure, China is a long way away from being a rich country.

The audience was appreciative.  It was a great night marked by a very informative speech.

 

The event was also featured in the StarTribune. Click here to read the interview with Michael Pettis by the Star-Tribune’s Evan Ramstad, team leader for business coverage

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Posted in Hot Topic Commentary, Local Charterholders | Tags: Annual Dinner, CFA Society MN, China, Chinese Economy, Economic Dinner, Michael Pettis, Pettis |

Developments in Volatility & Option Markets – Event Recap

18th January, 2016 · CFAMNEB · Leave a comment

by Steve Dixon, CFA

On January 12, 2016, Mr. Russell Rhoades from The Options Institute shared his insights and observations on the options market with Society members and other event attendees.  The discussion centered around the innovation of Weeklys just a few years ago and the proliferation of more frequent settlement of stock and index options that has resulted.  Weeklys are now available on about 350 stocks and about 70 ETFs.  Still, Mr. Rhoades was puzzled by the relatively slow uptake by institutions to utilize options contracts that settle each week compared to the traditional monthly settled contracts.  Outside of the institutional realm, trading in Weeklys has been the source of growth of the CBOE over the past several years.

Mr. Rhoades spent time explaining the opportunity inherent in selling at-the-money options with a week or less to expiration to capture the time decay of the contract premium.  This time value, which erodes gradually during much of the contract’s life, accelerates toward zero in the final few days to expiration thereby providing the sweet spot for traders looking to capture the natural decay of part of the contract’s value.  This acceleration isn’t as prevalent for contracts trading in-the-money.

The discussion turned to VIX, as all do these days.  Weeklys on VIX were introduced about six months ago and seem to provide the closest replication of VIX that is possible at present.  In a graphical display, Mr. Rhoades showed the overlay of a VIX Weekly contract over the final five trading days to expiration with the index itself.  The two moved very similarly even when VIX experienced sharp changes.  The mean-reverting nature of VIX provides opportunity for traders and hedgers as well.  The complication has been the effective replication of VIX, to which Mr. Rhoades believes short-dated VIX options provide the best solution to date.

Noting that “the market takes the stairs up and the elevator down”, Mr. Rhoades highlighted several indexes that the CBOE has created that pair traditional long-only positions with a variety of options strategies.  Among his favorite are the CBOE S&P 500  PutWrite Index and the CBOE S&P 500 2% OTM BuyWrite Index.  The former generating absolute and risk-adjusted returns superior to the S&P 500 Index over the past 25-plus years.  Displaying his innovative foresight, one society member suggested that the CBOE consider a 30-Delta PutWrite Index, which seemed to preoccupy Mr. Rhoades with excited anticipation for the remainder of the presentation…only at a CFA luncheon could such a sentence be written!

Mr. Rhoades was an effective presenter, drawing on CBOE trading data and personal experience to illustrate what’s new in the world of options.  Keep an eye on Russell 2000 Index options as they have been the fastest growing index option series of late and as volume improves may offer better opportunity for more effectively hedging portfolios.

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Posted in Hot Topic Commentary, Local Charterholders | Tags: CFA, CFA Minnesota, Chicago Board Options Exhcnage, Option Markets, Options Institute, Russell Rhoads, Society luncheon, Volatility |

2015 Midwest Financial Compensation Survey White Paper

4th January, 2016 · CFAMNEB · Leave a comment
2015 Midwest Financial Compensation Whitepaper 1

Click image to download white paper

CFA Society Minnesota is pleased to share with you the comprehensive findings from the 2015 Midwest Financial Compensation Survey. The data from this research provides you, and the rest of the industry, with a unique comparison of salaries, job satisfaction, and other industry trends in the financial and investment sectors across the entire Midwest region.

We’re also pleased to have expanded this year’s survey beyond Minnesota and the Dakotas to provide data for financial and investment professionals located in Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, and Wisconsin. These insights deliver not only localized compensation levels and pay structure, but also aggregate-level data for your peers for the entire region. We trust you will find this information highly valuable and insightful.

To those who completed the survey, thank you for your participation and for taking the time to provide our industry with this unique market intelligence.

 

CFA Society Minnesota Results

View the CFA Society Minnesota survey results here

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Posted in Hot Topic Commentary, Local Charterholders | Tags: 2015 Compensation Survey, 2015 Midwest Compensation Survey, Compensation Survey, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, White Paper, Wisconsin |

CFA Society boasts three Top Women in Finance

30th November, 2015 · CFAMNEB · Leave a comment

On Thursday, November 19th, Finance & Commerce Magazine hosted its 15th annual “Top Women in Finance” awards dinner to recognize the outstanding efforts of women in Minnesota who are making noteworthy contributions to their professions, their communities and society at large. The CFA Society of Minnesota is proud to have had three of its members receive this honor in 2015. They are:

Erica Bergsland, Vice President and Director of Research and Trading at Advantus Capital Management.

Jessica Murray, Intermediate Portfolio Manager at Thrivent Asset Management, and Treasurer of the CFA Society of Minnesota.

Debra Ann Sit, Senior Vice President of Sit Investment Associates, who received the award posthumously. Debbie passed away in June 2015 after battling cancer. Her husband, Peter Berge, accepted the award on her behalf.

To be considered for this award, each candidate was nominated by co-worker or other associate. All nominations were vetted by a panel of expert judges representing business and academic interests across Minnesota. All three women have been outstanding Investors, committed to their profession and to their respective communities, and strong supporters of the CFA Society of Minnesota for many years.

In their remarks to Finance & Commerce Magazine, both Erica and Jessica voiced continued commitment to achieving both excellence and diversity within the Investment community. The different viewpoints and experiences of the Society’s members have been a source of strength that both hope will continue to grow.

All three women exemplify the CFA’s high standards of professionalism and integrity. Please join the entire CFA Society of Minnesota as we congratulate Erica, Jessica, and Debbie.

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Posted in Hot Topic Commentary, Local Charterholders | Tags: CFA, Debra Sit, Erica Bergsland, Finance and Commerce, Jessica Murray, Top Women in Finance Minnesota, women in finance |
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