Hi! My name is Matthew Levy, and I am part of the Financial Analysis team at Sunshine Profits, where I apply my knowledge of securities analysis and risk-management techniques to maximize our readers return on their investment portfolios. I graduated from the University of Victoria in 2010, where ...
moreHi! My name is Matthew Levy, and I am part of the Financial Analysis team at Sunshine Profits, where I apply my knowledge of securities analysis and risk-management techniques to maximize our readers return on their investment portfolios. I graduated from the University of Victoria in 2010, where I earned a Bachelor of Science in Economics, with an option in Finance and Business. It was there that I developed a passion for helping people meet their goal of financial success through robust long-term investment portfolios. My education led me to formal training in Intermediate Macroeconomics and Intermediate Microeconomics, Theory of Corporate Finance, Financial Economics, and Econometrics Mathematical Economics. From there, I started in the portfolio management and securities analysis industry. To maximize the success of my clients portfolios, I undertook and completed the CFA Charter in 2015, which is a rigorous professional credential program. Overall, it enhanced my experience in institutional and retail portfolio management and allowed me to further my understanding of how to manage and build excellent risk-adjusted portfolios. My overall experience includes managing portfolios for high-net-worth retail and institutional clients, including managing and co-managing over $600MM in cumulative assets for private households, retail, and institutions. I also have a vast background in securities analysis, new issue analysis and syndication, portfolio research, trading, and back-testing. Additionally, in my prior career, I was a registered Portfolio Manager and Securities Retail Supervisor. In 2019, I left my career in retail wealth management to travel abroad and move to Europe, a journey that was unfortunately cut short due to the global pandemic that occurred in early 2020. However, I refocused my efforts and launched a financial writing career all from my laptop while stuck in quarantine after flying back home to Canada from Ireland. I have not looked back ever since and look forward to bringing my experience and skill to my readers so they can accomplish their financial goals. I recommend strategic and tactical allocation shifts for investment strategies and deliver market and portfolio updates for clients utilizing our internal investment strategies. This helps clients and readers with trading fixed income, equity, and other securities. I also plan to give macroeconomic updates and identify leading and lagging sectors within the markets to help the reader get a feeling for how professionals manage funds in markets. Outside of work, I enjoy playing various sports in my spare time, including baseball, basketball, rugby, sailing, and winter sports. And while my home base is in Western Canada, I have spent considerable time in the United States and have traveled extensively in Southeast Asia and Europe. Some of the places I have traveled to in Asia include Taiwan, the Philippines, Cambodia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, and India. Additionally, I have traveled to several European countries including Spain, Portugal, the UK, and Ireland. Gaining insight on vastly different cultures has given me a unique perspective on world markets in our increasingly interconnected world.
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Latest Comments
A Sleepy Week For The Indices?
This is just kind of typical of market excesses. There are going to be pockets of the markets that behave irrationally far longer than you would think, as well! Yes, it's nice to get some chatter from the big banks like BoA saying similar things to I have in the last few weeks, but even they are unsure. I've played in these types of markets for a long time now though, and given some indications we're seeing and the massive disconnect between the economy and stock market highs, there's bound to be a correction sooner rather than later. As Cramer (Mad Money) said last week, "No one has ever gotten burned by taking profits"
Will Stocks Be Brady Or Mahomes?
Thanks @[Erikas Ivan](user:150662)! Patience is something that many investors are lacking nowadays. It's funny, long-term investing isn't seen as years anymore, it's months. Looking forward to providing more content!
GameStocks - Fun While It Lasted...
I wouldn't be comfortable recommending only commodities to an investor myself @Monica Kingsley. @William K. You set yourself up for failure when you do not diversify properly for the long term. You might luck out and get in for an upswing (which seems possible here with a reflation trade), but I would not dismiss all stocks as an investment. Allocate some of your portfolio to stocks for the long term, and buy ETFs to get the diversification you need at minuscule prices. I personally have about 70-80% of my holdings in stocks that are not correlated to commodities or commodity assets themselves.
GameStocks - Fun While It Lasted...
In your case, it may be better to take a longer term approach and invest more passively? There's a reason passive ETFs have outperformed the vast majority of hedge funds in the last 10 years...
GameStocks - Fun While It Lasted...
Hi @[William K.](user:30001)! Yes, most companies would have an idea of their intrinsic values on shares, but you would be surprised at the amount of newsletters / stock traders / institutional investors that get into stock markets without any plan for an exit - what do you do if the price runs (to the moon)? What do you do if the price drops? Generally, a correction is defined as a 10% loss, with a bear market being 20%, but I think to put a hard number is not the best way to go overall - there are certainly markets that pulled back 19.5% that you could call a bear market, and 9.5% that you could call a correction, for example. So it is dependent on more than just a pure number, in my opinion. Of course, I went into more detail about these calls in the full paid version on Sunshine Profits, but if you didn't know already, I would highly recommend checking out Bob Farrel's 10 rules of investing - I look at them often in bull and bear markets to try to take my emotions out of investing, which is no easy task! www.cnbc.com/.../...cable-to-this-bull-market.html Thanks for your comment, let me know if you have any questions about the piece. -Matthew
Short Squeeze Mania - Stocks Swoon
Hi Monica, "calling the rally" can be a dangerous way to turn trading into biases. We all suffer from the same emotional attachments to investing, and must be aware of them. The point of these articles is to help readers manage risk in their overall portfolios, diversify properly, and professionally manage volatile markets. Markets do not always go up, and a correction is likely around the corner - they tend to happen at least once a year. With the analysis above, I think taking risk off is prudent at this time as a correction (10%+) is looking more probable even as we go higher today and this week. Lots to catch up on over the next week, and when everyone thinks the market is going up, history tells us not to go with the herd for too long.
Has The “Stock Market Bubble” Started To Pop?
Hi Monica, I disagree, although it's hard to exactly time corrections, of course. What I really want to concentrate on is the type of risk you should be taking at this level in the markets - identifying conditions to take some risk off in your portfolios that are backtested is something to pay attention to (i.e. bond market moves, utilities' price action, gold to lumber ratio, etc.). It is possible that markets continue to move higher, but risk is being signaled everywhere right now, epitomized by the extreme moves in some highly shorted stocks in the last couple of weeks. If you're not noticing these types of risk off signals, you're either not paying attention, or you're ignoring them to support a thesis. I prefer to stay nimble and protect assets - alpha in your portfolio comes from being down less, not marginally higher in a market that has gone very fast to the upside from market lows.
Short Squeeze Mania - Stocks Swoon
I don't think 10% is out of the question at all, even despite today's rally @[Monica Kingsley](user:149790). It could happen extremely fast, akin to the March correction in 2020, but it's definitely within the realm. 20%? probably not.
Short Squeeze Mania - Stocks Swoon
I completely agree. The market needs a healthy correction at this point, though, which is why in the ST I think its best to take some profits and / or be wary, even after the move today. Medium to long term constructive, but a lot will depend on if inflation rears it's ugly head after massive stimulus across the globe - will this time be different?
Short Squeeze Mania - Stocks Swoon
good thing March is included in Q1!