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Fall-Out Implications for Investors

I would like to quickly share my thoughts on the events in Japan this past week.

First, let me say that my heart goes out to everyone that has been affected by the horrible disaster.

My role as an advisor is to opine on the financial aspects of the disaster, the events occurring here at home (be it the US, or California), the Mid-East, or the emerging markets. more ...

What do the Mid-East and Mid-West have in common?

Answer: Political protests!

While each participant has different political agendas, the commonality I see is contagion, or the spread of unrest.

In the Mid-West, particularly Wisconsin, a battle rages over public sector finances. Elected officials are pushing to eliminate or weaken collective bargaining by government employees' unions with the more ...

September to Remember, Will October Rock?

Wow! What a month; the 2nd best September for the S&P ever, and the best in 72 years. September brought investors a long awaited rally in the markets and bucked the trend in what is generally the weakest month of the year for stocks. The market rallied right from the start, brushing aside any poor economic readings and boosting hopes that our economy may finally be headed to stability. If there is one thing more ...

Inflection in the Market, Heading Up or Down?

The market is at an inflection point; it's very close to making up its collective mind about the direction of the broader economy. It has reached this stage after a robust contest between two competing visions since spring -- one calling for continued recovery; the other seeing another downturn. Read On >> (PDF)

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Mid-Month Update

September ain't all that bad

Who would have guessed it? By mid-September, we're on a bit of a bull market rally, especially on some really mediocre economic news. Investors have looked past the bad news to keep the markets pressing higher. It's been just good enough to keep us from falling below 10,000 on the Dow, and for us to push above the 200 day moving averages (key support and resistance levels) for both the more ...

Muddling Through (Outlook for September, August in Review)

September marks the beginning of fall and with it, college football and the local apple and grape harvests -- things I look forward to. And, here in the Bay Area summer is just beginning as the rest of the country transitions to fall's cooler weather.

Really the only thing I don't look forward to is that September has been a particularly difficult month, historically, for the stock market. And more ...

Assessing the Investment Landscape

Climbing high hills for views to successful investing

If you're a "stock picker" (more precisely, selecting investments), you're likely interested in the financial, economic, social, political, and technological trends creating opportunities, and presenting risks, across the world -- I'm one. While I'm not enamored with the term "stock picker," behind every portfolio there's a stock picker somewhere in the portfolio construction process, more ...

Thoughts on Things in August

Last Friday, August 6th, we received July's jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) which solidified investor fear and drove many from the market on Friday. However, despite mixed economic reports and recovery concerns, the markets managed to build on their recent gains in July. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.8% for the week, the S&P 500 added 1.8% and the Nasdaq gained 1.5%.

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Owl Portfolio

Green Valley's globally diversified complete stock portfolio.1

Created and managed by Eric Linser, CFA, Chief Investment Officer, the portfolio draws upon Eric's 20 years of experience in making investment strategy and asset allocation decisions affecting individual investors.

Strategy & more ...

Dog Days of Summer

As we enter the 2nd half of the year, optimism that greeted the year has evaporated and investors around the world are questioning the strength of the economic recovery. European sovereign debt troubles that have surfaced have now clouded views on the sustainability of global economic growth.

So what's going on? It's not just one thing, it's an accumulation of them. Fears of a second recession (double dip) are more ...

June Gloom

The Leak Continues, Job Numbers Disappoint

Along the California coast, Memorial Day doesn't mark the beginning of hot weather but a long bout of foggy days ahead. In my home of San Francisco, it marks the beginning of Mark Twain's winter (as in, "The coldest winter I ever spent was summer in San Francisco.") Similarly, the fog has been so dense that visibility to the market's future direction has been more ...

Wiping the Chalkboard Clean

Forget everything you've heard or have learned in the last few weeks and just imagine that naive version of you from just the middle of last month still existed. Then, what if we told you that oil had gone from $80 to $68, interest rates had dropped by 0.60% (or 60 basis points) on 10-year Treasuries, that we had the best monthly employment report in over three years, that corporate earnings were growing like more ...

Outlook for May, April in Review

Sell in May and Go Away (until St. Leger's Day)

Or as I remember it some years ago, Sell in May and Go Away; Come November, Here to Stay. No matter how it's phrased, the adage seems to be ringing true this year. Could a simple calendar event be just that easy? (FYI - St. Leger's Day is a horse race held in England in mid-September)

It's based on the notion that the more ...

Outlook for April, March in Review

(an article on the US stock market and technology shares)

Will April showers bring May flowers? Or, for investors, will first quarter earnings reports be enough to justify the market's positive strides made in March, and in the first quarter? We will soon find out, beginning in earnest this week.

Spring is upon us and April is typically a month of market bloomers that lays the groundwork for the spring more ...

March 6, 2010: Open Letter

1 year anniversary of the market bottom, & the sustainability of the market's rally is addressed

Happy Anniversary! If this is the Year of the Golden Tiger (not Woods!) then last year was the Year of the Bull. We should pop open the Champagne because we are a year past the market more ...

Outlook for March, February in Review

(an article on the US stock market and technology shares)

February Marks Markets' Best Month Since November

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended up 2.6% for February, the Nasdaq added 4.2% for the month and the S&P 500 gained 2.9%. The S&P 500 gain for February put a dent in its 3.7% January decline. Eight of the ten sectors were up for the month, with Consumer Discretionary leading the group more ...

Imperfect Pictures of Improvement

Consumer Confidence swooned in February from January. The drop from 56.5 to 46 was far sharper than economists were expecting. The drop was largely due to changing attitudes about the jobs market and the pace of economic improvement according to the Conference Board. Not to editorialize (but we will), the people they interviewed to reach this conclusion must more ...

Outlook for February, January in Review

(an article on the US stock market and technology shares)

It was not the kind of start to the New Year for which investors were hoping. In January, a winter chill settled over the markets and we had our first major sell-off since the "reflective" rebound in stocks in March 2009. The major indexes and many asset classes ended the month lower.

Despite the Federal Reserve's confidence in the recovery, more ...

Jan. 26, 2010: Open Letter

(Reprint of Jan. 26, 2010 E-Newsletter)

Dear Investor:

This past week's market action was like riding a see-saw. We go way up...then way down. However, unlike an actual see-saw, it wasn't much fun for investors. There was concern about China reigning in their bank lending so that their property markets don't overheat (and that's a bad thing?) Note: don't more ...

Ingredients for Your Investment Pie, Slice by Slice

Thematic Investing for 2010 and Beyond

If the crippling financial events of 2008 and 2009 proved one thing, it's that investors need to rethink the entire philosophy of "portfolio management."

Today, some of the best-performing managers around the world manage their portfolios more ...

Predictions for 2010

It is the time of year when market pundits offer predictions for how the coming year will pan out. Such forecasts should always be taken with large grain of salt, given the dynamic nature of markets and the inherent unpredictability of the future. Moreover, successful investing requires flexibility, humility and openness to a range of possible outcomes. This mindset is particularly important in the present environment, given more ...

January (2010) Outlook, December in Review

(an article on the US stock market and technology shares)

Welcome to the New Year (two thousand ten, or twenty-ten?). As we quickly look back on last month and last year and look ahead to January, we believe the main focus of the market for the month will be 4th quarter earnings reports (starting this week) and corporate guidance given for the year ahead. Quite often the market softens in the weeks preceding the more ...

Outlook for December, November in Review

November was another good month for the markets (since the bottom in March), continuing a series of positive months, save one -- October -- which was a slightly down month. Despite the recent drop Thanksgiving week, the stock market ended the month of November with big gains. Major stock indexes were up more than 5%, the best monthly performance since July. The S&P 500 increased 5.7% and the Nasdaq more ...

Outlook for November, October in Review

Overall Market Sentiment

The month of October, and in particular the last week of the month, was the pause in the seven month rally in the S&P 500 that most investors have been expecting for some time. The increased level of investor skepticism after the best run in stocks since the 1930's is understandable given that a widely-expected improvement in 3rd quarter earnings did not propel stocks forward more ...

4th Quarter Economic and Market Outlook

recovery, interest rates, inflation, Muni bonds, global perspective & more

Here is our monthly perspective on events and trends affecting the economy, the financial markets, and investment management. First, let's take a look at an interesting chart and commentary from Morgan Stanley's chief European market strategist, Mr. Teun Draaisma, as to how much further the stock market could rally. We'll take a more ...

August in Review, Outlook for September

The doldrums of summertime were all but that as Wall Street extended its gains from its early March lows. Stock markets, domestically and internationally, continued their winning ways. For the month of August, the S&P 500 rallied 3.4%, Nasdaq rallied 1.5%, the MSCI World Index was up 3.9% (in US dollar terms), while the MSCI Emerging Markets Index lost 0.5% (in US dollar terms). Year to date (through the end of August), the more ...

Dog Days of August

Last Friday (August 14th), investors received news that the University of Michigan/Reuters Consumer Sentiment Index fell to 63.2 from 66.0 in July. The expectation was for a gain to 69.0. Surprise! This number likely caused our drop that day. Stocks turned in a very summer performance last week, shifting on an almost daily basis based on news. The recent upward trend is still in force, but it is starting to lose momentum. One more ...

How Did Various Asset Classes Perform through July?

Here, I show you various charts of multiple asset classes. Take my thoughts to heed and actively implement broader diversification into your portfolios.

Key:

Dow Jones Ind = Dow Jones Industrial Average (US large stock index)

S&P 500 = S&P 500 (US large stock index)

NASDAQ = NASDAQ (US mid-large stock index, no financials)

Russell 2000 = Russell 2000 more ...

Debunking the 60/40 Asset Allocation Approach

I remember an advertisement in the 1980's with GM trying to rekindle the Oldsmobile brand but proclaiming that "It's not your father's Oldsmobile." It obviously didn't work, and in 2004 the last Olds rolled off the assembly line. In a similar vein, the tried-and-true static asset allocation that has been preached for ages of having your investments allocated 60% to stocks (equities) and 40% to bonds (fixed income) has gone the way of Oldsmobile or for that matter, GM.

Well, I think more ...

Warren Buffet's Advice

Did you follow Warren Buffett's advice last year to buy American stocks? In that now famous October 17, 2008 Op-Ed piece in the New York Times, Buffet shared his simple rule for buying stocks: "Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful." Certainly at that time fear had gripped the markets and investors were fleeing equities into cash.

Well if you did buy at that time, then you are one of the few, the proud, and the bold value more ...

Tortoise and the Hare - Returns of Stocks vs. Bonds

It is the story of the tortoise and the hare - one of Aesop's fables - about how a hare was one day ridiculed by a slow-moving tortoise. In response, the tortoise challenged his swift mocker to a race. The hare, confident of winning and having left the tortoise far behind, took a nap. When he awoke, he found that his competitor, crawling slowly and steadily, had already won the race.

There are similar stories more ...

What Should I Keep in Mind in All Financial Climates?

Recently, we were reminded of just how unpredictable the market can be. And while we can't really control the market, we can remember some basic fundamental truths1 that will help us weather any storm.

Twelve fundamental truths of investing

1. Over the long term, stocks have had greater total returns than bonds.

2. Over the long term, bonds have had greater total returns than money market funds.

3. On average, stocks are much riskier than more ...

Global Warming....Economically, Not Ecologically

With the markets on the right trajectory as of recent, it seems safe to come out of our bunkers again. The rocky start to the year has revealed an almost unprecedented opportunity for investors -- a chance for a fresh start to 2009. After an abysmal start in January and February, March, April and May have rewarded investors with a nice sustained 3-month rally which has brought us back to being flat to up for the year. Just as the more ...

Disclaimer: All articles are for informational purposes only and do not constitute offers/solicitations to sell or purchase any security or investment product or service; this information is provided solely for your personal use and is not intended to be investment advice; all investments are subject to risks, including possible loss of the principal amount invested; diversification does not protect against a loss in a declining market or ensure a profit; stocks of companies in emerging markets are generally more risky than stocks of companies in developed countries; foreign investing involves additional risks including currency fluctuations and political uncertainty; prices of mid- and small-cap stocks often fluctuate more than those of large-company stocks; investments in bonds are subject to interest rate, credit, and inflation risk; past performance is no guarantee of future results; nothing constitutes tax or legal advice; investment products described herein are not bank deposits; are not insured by the FDIC or any other governmental entity; are neither obligations of, nor guaranteed by Green Valley Wealth Advisors, LLC. We are not responsible for the accuracy or content on third party websites; any and all links are offered only for use at your own discretion; and our privacy policies do not apply to linked websites.