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Tag: Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund

  • Fmr. Wells Fargo CEO Dick Kovacevich: Based on the data the Fed should have increased not paused

    Fmr. Wells Fargo CEO Dick Kovacevich: Based on the data the Fed should have increased not paused

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    Dick Kovacevich, former Wells Fargo CEO, joins ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to explain why he thinks the Federal Reserve made a mistake by pausing rate hikes.

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  • Fed Chair Jerome Powell: We’re constantly watching banks and credit conditions for our rate settings

    Fed Chair Jerome Powell: We’re constantly watching banks and credit conditions for our rate settings

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    Fed Chair Jerome Powell answers questions from reporters after the central bank announced a Fed rate pause on interest rates with two more hikes possible in 2023.

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  • Goldman Sachs isn’t just spinning records it’s breaking records, says Wells Fargo’s Mike Mayo

    Goldman Sachs isn’t just spinning records it’s breaking records, says Wells Fargo’s Mike Mayo

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    Mike Mayo, Wells Fargo managing director, joins ‘Last Call’ to discuss a new Wall Street Journal report that Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon may be the target of continuing frustration inside the company.

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  • Regional banks aren’t out of the woods yet but are showing signs of value, says Invesco’s Matt Brill

    Regional banks aren’t out of the woods yet but are showing signs of value, says Invesco’s Matt Brill

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    Matt Brill, Invesco head of North America investment grade credit and senior portfolio manager, joins ‘Fast Money’ to discuss where value is in the banking sector, inflow trends among investors, and more.

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  • Watch CNBC’s full interview with Kate Kelly and Larry McDonald

    Watch CNBC’s full interview with Kate Kelly and Larry McDonald

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    Kate Kelly, New York Times reporter, Larry McDonald, The Bear Trap Report founder, and CNBC’s Leslie Picker join ‘Last Call’ to discuss the latest comments from Janet Yellen on the banking crisis, the ongoing debt ceiling debate, and more.

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  • Nubank CEO David Vélez says the Brazilian banking sector is solid despite turmoil in the U.S.

    Nubank CEO David Vélez says the Brazilian banking sector is solid despite turmoil in the U.S.

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    Nubank CEO David Vélez joins ‘Closing Bell Overtime’ to talk the state of banking in Latin America and the changing fintech landscape in the region.

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  • Bank of America’s underperformance creates buying opportunity, says RBC’s Cassidy

    Bank of America’s underperformance creates buying opportunity, says RBC’s Cassidy

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    Gerard Cassidy, RBC Capital Markets managing director, joins ‘Fast Money’ to discuss the fallout of the banking crisis, Bank of America’s recent performance, and more.

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  • Earnings momentum: Analysts are raising expectations on these stocks going into their reports

    Earnings momentum: Analysts are raising expectations on these stocks going into their reports

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  • ‘Be mindful of your risk’: Money manager tackles Silicon Valley Bank fallout on ETFs

    ‘Be mindful of your risk’: Money manager tackles Silicon Valley Bank fallout on ETFs

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    There’s speculation the Silicon Valley Bank collapse could expose problems lurking in ETFs tied to specific sectors.

    Astoria Portfolio Advisors CIO John Davi has financials topping his watch list.

    “You need to be mindful of your risk,’” Davi, who runs the AXS Astoria Inflation Sensitive ETF, told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” this week. The fund is an ETF.com 2023 “ETF of the Year” finalist.

    Davi contends the Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLF) could be among the biggest near-term laggards. It tracks the S&P 500 financial index.

    His firm sold the ETF’s positions in regional banks this week and bought larger cap banks, according to Davi. He sees bigger institutions as a more stable, multiyear investment.

    The XLF ended the week more than 3% lower. It’s down almost 8% since the SVB collapse March 10.

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  • Op-ed: Financials may get more love amid sustained higher interest rates

    Op-ed: Financials may get more love amid sustained higher interest rates

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    Credit card providers are benefitting from post-pandemic travel and increasing card usage in general, with balances way up in recent months.

    Valentinrussanov | E+ | Getty Images

    Financial stocks were so out of favor for most of 2022 that perhaps their tickers should have been appended with a Nathaniel Hawthorne-esque “U” — for “unloved.” Yet after some decent gains so far this year, the sector could draw suitors aplenty as 2023 progresses.

    The present allure of financial stocks, stemming from low valuations and high levels of capital, is especially strong as higher interest rates are making lending money more profitable.

    As of mid-February, the Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF had recovered about half its 2022 losses. Amid this comeback, robust earnings have kept the sector’s price-earnings ratios low, as reflected by XLF’s P/E of 14.5 in mid-February.

    Buckets are out at the banks

    Low share prices are the norm

    Despite gains this year, share prices of this sector are still quite low, considering good earnings and a long history of corporate performance.  

    One reason for the low prices is fear of recession. But even if the most widely anticipated recession ever actually becomes reality, assuming that the short-and-shallow camp turns out to be right, financial sector earnings could easily prove more resilient than normally expected in a downturn.

    A close haircut for regional banks

    Regional banks, which took a close haircut early last year after hitting a five-year peak in January, are also recovering. The bellwether ETF for this group, SPDR Regional Banking, was up nearly 9% year to date as of mid-February. Many regional banks have recently been buying back shares to support a floor on prices and give shareholders more total return without getting locked into dividend increases.

    Meanwhile, credit card providers are benefitting from post-pandemic travel and increasing card usage in general, with balances way up in recent months. Also positive are prospects for exchanges and data providers, a sector category whose earnings in recent years have grown twice as fast as those of the S&P 500.

    Here are some attractive financial stocks with strong growth prospects and fundamental metrics signaling low downside risk:

    • Truist Financial: Formed in 2019 by a merger of equals — regional banks BB&T Corp. and SunTrust — Truist is now the nation’s seventh-largest bank, with a capitalized ratio nearly twice what’s required by regulators. Truist’s dividend has more than doubled in the last 10 years. Post-merger kinks typically dampen companies’ share price growth, so Truist’s recent underperformance relative to KRE was expected. And Truist’s growth could exceed peers’ because it operates in rapidly growing regions — primarily, the mid-Atlantic and Southeast.
    • East West Bancorp: This is a fast-growing, full-service commercial bank with locations in the U.S., serving the Asian-American community, and in China. Shares were up nearly 19% year to date as of mid-February. This growth is expected to accelerate from China’s reopening from Covid lockdowns. CFRA has this bank as a strong buy, forecasting 2023 growth of 17% to 19%, in part because net interest income currently makes up 89% of its revenue, versus 73% for peers. Also, the bank has “no exposure to mortgage banking or capital markets, which have been severely impacted by rising rates and economic uncertainty,” CFRA states, citing balance sheet momentum, a discounted valuation and the advantage of a Chinese population in the U.S. that’s growing faster than the whole.
    • FactSet Research Systems: FactSet is the star of the sector’s data-provider segment. It’s an interesting, attractive play with recurring revenues of 98%, largely because financial firm customers rely so heavily on FDS’s data. You can see it cited on brokerage platforms and analyst reports. FDS’s software, data and analytics supports the workflow of both buy-side and sell-side clients. Customers include asset managers, bankers, wealth managers, asset owners, hedge funds, corporate users, and private equity and venture capital professionals. The company has an excellent track record of maneuvering through tough economic times, evidenced by its top-line sales growth for 42 consecutive years and annual dividend raises for the last 23 years. The difficulties of changing data providers amount to an economic moat that’s daunting to competitors.
    • American Express: This is the right business at the right time, with business travel improving, China reopening and consumer spending among the affluent strong. Revenue growth went from a 10-year stretch of 2% annually to 25% in 2022, with 17% growth forecast for this year. Connecting better with millennials and Generation Z customers than its peers, American Express is acquiring new cardholders at an increasing rate. Analysts expect earnings to rocket up 30% over the next two years, while those of competitors appear likely to shrink. And because of well-heeled customers, this company has less credit risk than its peers.
    • Chubb: Chubb is the world’s largest publicly traded property and casualty insurer, operating in 54 countries but with 60% of its revenue from North America. CB has a market-leading position in industrial, commercial and mid-market traditional and specialty property-casualty coverage. It is also a leader in high net worth personal-insurance coverage, a category unlikely to feel pain from an economic downturn. Chubb has high-quality underwriting, but shares are trading at a discount to peers with lower-quality underwriting. Higher premiums, a 98.4% customer-retention rate and higher interest rates should all contribute to strong earnings growth, and shares are widely viewed as significantly undervalued.

    The current, higher rates aren’t going down anytime soon. This sector is currently positioned for sustained earnings strength and likely price growth throughout this year and into 2024.

    By Dave Sheaff Gilreath, CFP, partner and chief investment officer of Sheaff Brock Investment Advisors LLC and Innovative Portfolios LLC.

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  • The ‘Halftime Report’ investment committee weighs in on Q4 bank earnings

    The ‘Halftime Report’ investment committee weighs in on Q4 bank earnings

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    Stephanie Link, Joe Terranova, Josh Brown and Jim Lebenthal join the ‘Halftime Report’ to talk big bank earnings takeaways, macro pressures facing banks and those best positioned for 2023.

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