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Why defensive names and bitcoin could be solid plays over the next six months
Why defensive names and bitcoin could be solid plays over the next six months

CNBC

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • CNBC

Why defensive names and bitcoin could be solid plays over the next six months

It may be a strategic time to pivot away from this year's Big Tech winners. Bob Elliott, who runs Unlimited Funds, suggests building portfolios designed to withstand a slowing economy over the next six months should be a priority. "You're talking about positions long bonds, long gold and short the U.S. dollar," the firm's CEO and chief investment officer told "ETF Edge" this week. "That's a very non-consensus view that is also favored by some of the smartest financial minds in the world [and] in the hedge fund community." Elliott's firm Unlimited Funds uses proprietary technology to create accessible alternative investment strategies, including four Unlimited ETFs. According to Elliott, stock and bond market investors are pricing in a near-perfect scenario over the short and medium term. He thinks President Donald Trump's tariffs and an inflation acceleration could expose market vulnerabilities. "Being able to flexibly respond to the policy environment as it evolves... is really important in terms of building a portfolio and getting away from the long-only mega cap tech stock mindset and get to something that's flexible that can navigate through this sort of environment," said Elliott. Meanwhile, Strategas Securities' Todd Sohn thinks underperformers have potential for upside as earnings season gets underway. "The bar is so low for some of these defensive companies," the firm's technical strategist said in the same interview – noting it's "basement bottom pickings." Sohn's contrarian ideas include health care. "There's been a mass exodus of outflows from health care sector ETFs," he said. "Folks are scared of the administration. I get that, but I wonder if you can start to nibble in certain areas." Sohn also finds bitcoin an attractive play right now. The House of Representatives is looking at a series of bills tied to cryptocurrencies this week. "We're about three months off the S&P 500 low back on April 8. The leading category, I like to dig a little level deeper here, has been crypto. Investors are just latching on to this move in crypto," he said. "I think investors are realizing it's an asset that's here to stay." After hitting an all-time high on Monday, bitcoin fell and was below $117,000 as of Tuesday evening.

The paradox of Trump's tariff policy
The paradox of Trump's tariff policy

Axios

time08-07-2025

  • Business
  • Axios

The paradox of Trump's tariff policy

U.S. trade policy has entered the great in-between, a liminal state in which high tariffs on major trading partners are ostensibly imminent, yet also forever just over the next horizon. Why it matters: The good news for American consumers and businesses is that potential price shocks and other disruptions from an all-out global trade war remain at bay — and Wall Street is taking this confusing landscape in stride. The bad news is it's hardly the kind of policy landscape conducive to companies making long-term investments. State of play: With a much-balleyhooed 90-day negotiation period set to expire Wednesday, President Trump issued a slew of letters announcing new tariffs on major trading partners that are close to those originally announced on the April 2 "Liberation Day." The most economically consequential are 25% tariffs on imports from Japan and South Korea, major trading partners and traditional geopolitical allies. But they are not set to go into effect until Aug. 1, three weeks away. Driving the news: On Tuesday morning, Trump insisted that the onset of higher tariffs is real this time, suggesting it's not just a negotiating feint. "TARIFFS WILL START BEING PAID ON AUGUST 1, 2025. There has been no change to this date, and there will be no change," he wrote on Truth Social. "No extensions will be granted," he added. Zoom in: Markets have largely shrugged off those threats, betting that Trump envisions further deal-making — and, implicitly, further punting of tariffs — ahead. Stock, bond, and currency markets have seen only modest moves on the news, in contrast to their early April sell-off. Meanwhile, inflation data came in soft for April and May, contrary to warnings from business leaders and economists that tariff-fueled price spikes and shortages could loom. Between the lines: The combination of a booming stock market and lack of evident economic damage from the earlier rollout of tariffs seems to have empowered Trump to keep pushing tariff talk, rather than strike quick deals and move on. What they're saying: These are, as Bob Elliott of Unlimited Funds wrote, "Schrodinger's Tariffs," simultaneously alive and dead. The administration "has had room to swing back to a more aggressive policy stance on the trade war because so far the effects are not being felt significantly across the economy," he wrote in his newsletter, Nonconsensus. "But a big reason why there has been no impact here is simply because it's taking time to ramp up the prospective tariff collection, and that then is taking time to flow into the real economy given normal lags," Elliott argued. The fact that negotiations with countries like Japan and South Korea were at such a stalemate that Trump has reignited the trade war is a sign of a new normal. "At a very basic level, nothing actually happened based on Trump sending these letters, so there's no reason to panic over headlines," wrote Tobin Marcus at Wolfe Research in a note. "But we think these moves do contain some signal about where the trade war is heading, and that signal is mostly hawkish," he added. By the numbers: If the tariffs announced Monday go into effect and remain in place, it would translate to a 17.6% average effective tariff rate on U.S. imports, the Yale Budget Lab estimates, the highest since 1934. That's up from 15.8% previously and up from 2.4% as of January. If sustained, the currently announced tariff regime would translate to a 1.7% rise in consumer prices, costing the average household $2,300 per year, per the Yale Budget Lab. The bottom line: There is good reason to believe Trump's latest letters to trading partners are a negotiating strategy, but the fact that they exist is a warning sign about the new global trade landscape.

HFGM: Ex-Bridgewater Exec's New Global Macro Hedge Fund ETF
HFGM: Ex-Bridgewater Exec's New Global Macro Hedge Fund ETF

Yahoo

time21-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

HFGM: Ex-Bridgewater Exec's New Global Macro Hedge Fund ETF

Unlimited Funds, a private markets investment firm co-founded by Bob Elliott, a former senior investment executive of Bridgewater Associates, recently introduced a new exchange-traded fund to give investors exposure to global macro hedge fund-style strategies. The actively managed Unlimited HFGM Global Macro ETF (HFGM) is 'dynamically allocating capital long and short across a wide range of global market opportunities in search of mispricing,' according to a press release issued last week. It uses liquid exchange-listed futures contracts and a basket of exchange-traded funds based upon systematic signals and aims to offer diversification benefits by adjusting positions based on evolving market conditions. The expense ratio is 1%. "With the amount of uncertainty in both the stock and bond markets right now, and for the foreseeable future, investors of all types are looking for strategies that have the flexibility to go long and short across major asset classes, providing diversification to traditional long-only positions,' Elliott told 'Global macro strategies have traditionally achieved that." The launch of HFGM is the latest move from Unlimited to offer investors access to hedge fund-style strategies without the high fees and tax inefficiencies that can often come with this type of investing and erode performance. The firm also introduced the Unlimited HFND Multi-Strategy Return Tracker ETF (HFND) in 2022. The firm plans to launch 'several' new actively managed ETFs over the coming months, according to the press release. These include two strategies that have been approved by the Securities and Exchange Commission with launch plans in the works for later this year: the Unlimited HFMF Managed Futures ETF and the Unlimited HFEQ Equity Long/Short ETF. The aim of HFGM is to capitalize on global market mispricing opportunities spanning currency, fixed-income, equity, credit and exchange rate markets, according to the release. Macro strategies can offer meaningful diversification benefits, particularly during periods of elevated market volatility and uncertainty, Rob Kane, director of alternative investments on the Investment Management and Research team at Commonwealth Financial Network, told These environments often prompt decisive action from major market influencers—most notably, central banks—which can create trading opportunities across asset classes, he added. 'To capitalize on these dynamics, successful macro managers typically rely on either an informational edge or a strong ability to anticipate how policy decisions and macroeconomic shifts will impact markets, leading to opportunistic long and/or short positioning,' Kane said. He added that, while his firm hasn't fully analyzed HFGM, 'Investors should recognize that this ETF does not invest directly in underlying hedge fund managers.' Rather, it seeks to replicate positioning by analyzing and decomposing return drivers, risk exposures and portfolio characteristics. 'The strategy also targets a higher level of volatility, helping to align its return potential with that of the hedge fund managers it aims to emulate—many of whom use substantial leverage in executing macro strategies.'Permalink | © Copyright 2025 All rights reserved

Tariff-whipped Wall Street wonders: will Trump blink?
Tariff-whipped Wall Street wonders: will Trump blink?

Zawya

time08-04-2025

  • Business
  • Zawya

Tariff-whipped Wall Street wonders: will Trump blink?

NEW YORK - Investors are trying to game out how much tolerance U.S. President Donald Trump has for stock market losses after his latest tariff policies ignited a more than 10% wipeout on Wall Street, with some still holding out hope of eventual relief. A so-called "Trump put" - the option market equivalent of a presidential backstop for equities - underpinned Trump's first term, as he frequently cited stock market strength as proof his policies were working. Over the course of his first presidency the S&P 500 benchmark rose 68% and scaled record highs, while Trump cheered its progress, tweeting more than 150 times about the stock market. This time around, hope that such a Trump Put still exists is evaporating, or at the least, investors are coming around to the view that Trump is much more inclined to ride out sharp falls. The S&P and Nasdaq are down over 15% and 20% since his inauguration in January respectively. "The whole notion of tariffs and trade policy has been such an integral part of Donald Trump's psyche, I don't see it abandoned," said Michael Rosen, chief investment officer at Angeles Investments, who said any pain level likely to cause Trump to change course remained a long way away. Previous assumptions that Trump's pro-business agenda would buoy risk assets similarly had already been fading as his trade policies rattled investors over the past few weeks. But the more-aggressive-than-anticipated tariffs unveiled on April 2 deepened the market selloff, leaving investors questioning whether the Trump put was gone, or might eventually reappear through tariff rollbacks after any trade deals. For Bob Elliott, chief executive officer and chief investment officer of Unlimited Funds, the selloff still had a long way to go before any policy turnaround. "It takes 20-30% declines in stocks to get there. So the decline so far is not big enough," he said. Some were more hopeful the market fall could eventually induce a change of course. "I don't think (Trump) is going to be highly tolerant of massive stock market declines - he'll see his popularity tank, and it will endanger his whole agenda,' said Kevin Philip, partner at Bel Air Investment Advisors. "I don't see any way out of this if he doesn't come up with deals or reasons to change course.' The huge market falls - not seen since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 - even caused speculation online that Trump was intentionally "crashing" the market to force the U.S. Federal Reserve to lower interest rates while making stocks more affordable to middle-class investors. Trump on Friday retweeted a social media post bearing the caption "Trump is Purposely CRASHING The Market" and featuring images of the president pointing at a large downward red arrow and of him signing executive orders at the White House. Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One on Sunday, Trump said he was not intentionally engineering a market selloff and the rout was the result of a "medicine" needed to fix the U.S. trade deficit. Trump and his team have said their policies may cause short-term pain but will eventually revive manufacturing and spur growth. On Friday he told investors pouring money into the United States that his policies would never change. White House spokesman Kush Desai said in a statement to Reuters: "Just as it did during President Trump's first term, the administration's America First economic agenda of tariffs, deregulation, tax cuts, and the unleashing of American energy will restore American Greatness from Main Street to Wall Street.' PAIN LEVEL Some investors fear that weakening consumer confidence, an escalating trade war, and rising price pressures could deal a harsh and lasting blow to the economy, regardless of any potential economic upside down the line. For Brian Bethune, an economist at Boston College, the disruption caused by the tariffs was too abrupt to allow U.S. businesses to soften the blow, despite their resilience. "You're putting so many sandbags on the balloon, it's going to come back down to earth with a thud," Bethune said. In the two sessions after the tariff decision was unveiled on Wednesday, the S&P 500 has tumbled 10.5%, erasing nearly $5 trillion in market value, marking its most significant two-day loss since March 2020. On Monday, the S&P was down 0.12%. NO CAVALRY Hopes that the market could be propped up by actions by the U.S. Federal Reserve have also taken a knock. Trump on Friday called on Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell to cut interest rates, saying it was the "perfect time" to do so. But stock losses deepened past 5% after Powell on Friday warned that the new tariffs would likely push inflation higher while slowing economic growth, suggesting the Fed was unlikely to rush in to cut rates. "The market is still digesting the great deal of uncertainty and I think it's also digesting the fact that both Trump and Powell have made it clear that the cavalry is not coming to immediately cause things to bounce back up," said David Seif, chief economist for developed markets at Nomura in New York. Rising prices could reduce the Fed's ability to take supportive actions as it has in previous market downturns or if economic conditions deteriorated significantly, analysts said. This could take off the table a so-called "Fed put," or a perceived tendency of the central bank to run to the aid of financial markets. 'Who blinks first? The Fed or President Trump? The Fed has made it clear that with inflation where it is and unemployment where it is, (they're) comfortable without doing anything right now,' said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group in Omaha. 'We think Washington likely has to blink first to present some type of positive news." (Reporting by Davide Barbuscia, Carolina Mandl, Isla Binnie, Ross Kerber, Stephen Culp, editing by Megan Davies and Deepa Babington)

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