Power Hedge is an independent stock research and analysis firm with a passion for macro- and microeconomic analysis. The company was founded in 2010 by Daniel E. Gibbs. Mr. Gibbs has a very interesting background. He graduated summa cum laude from the Pennsylvania State University with a B.S. in ...
morePower Hedge is an independent stock research and analysis firm with a passion for macro- and microeconomic analysis. The company was founded in 2010 by Daniel E. Gibbs. Mr. Gibbs has a very interesting background. He graduated summa cum laude from the Pennsylvania State University with a B.S. in finance and entrepreneurship. He then went to work at the Travelers as an Information Systems Consultant. He spent many years in this role, using most of his paychecks to invest in dividend-paying stocks, primarily in the energy industry. He left this position to start up Powerhedge, LLC, which had managed to obtain a contract with an asset management company in Pennsylvania to be their primary provider of research. Mr. Gibbs has since expanded the company into private equity and investment banking, which is illustrated by it being behind the largest real estate deal in Pittsburgh in 2016. The company today operates as both a boutique investment bank and a stock research firm focused on dividend investing.
Power Hedge focuses our research primarily on dividend-paying, international companies of all sizes with sustainable competitive advantages. Power Hedge is neither a permabear nor a permabull. However, we believe that, given the current structural problems in the United States, the best investment opportunities may lie elsewhere in the world. The firms strategy is primarily buy and hold, but will stray from that strategy on occasion. Our ideal holding period is forever, however we realize that both internal and external forces can impact an investment. For this reason, we believe that it is vital to keep a close eye on all of your investments. We do not believe in changing an investment based on short-term market swings.
Traditionally, we have not always responded to comments but in order to improve the quality of our research, comments will be reviewed and we will respond to issues regarding errors or omissions. This does not include our premium service, Energy Profits in Dividends, which is available from the Seeking Alpha Marketplace. This service does include detailed discussions with our team both on the reports themselves and in a private forum.
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Latest Comments
The U.S. Stock Market: Best And Worst Performing Sectors In 2022
To be fair though, a lot of the weakness that we saw in stocks in 2022 was in the sectors that were ludicrously overvalued heading into the year.
When you can't get "free money" from the Fed to stay in business, you have to actually turn a profit. Apple's profit was based on consumer spending but consumers want food more than a new iPhone. The rest of the tech companies never earned enough to justify their values.
Excuse Me For Pointing Out That Free Money Does Not Combat Inflation
I seriously wonder who taught these politicians economics. All the free money over the past several years is the cause of the inflation! More free money will just make it worse.
2023: You Wanted Endless Stimulus, You Got Stagflation
I agree. 2023 is going to be a far more difficult year than most are envisioning. You can't stop 7% inflation by raising rates to 5.15% (as the market expects) and then holding steady. You need to raise rates to about 10%, which will obliterate the economy and the budgets of nearly every developed nation in the world (including the USA).
A 75% Chance The Fed Hikes Interest By 75 Basis Points On Wednesday, Then What?
The problem is that even 3% is not anywhere close to enough to save the economy when inflation is at 9.10%!
Antero Midstream’s 9.73% Yield Is Running Out Of Gas
Why are you using free cash flow and not distributable cash flow?
I see your point though. Let me investigate this one further and maybe I'll have a response for this article.
Norwegian Strikes Could Sever NatGas Supplies To UK
The problem here is that there's no easy way to play short-term natural gas price increases in Europe for Americans. LNG won't work because that normally requires a 15-20 year commitment. I can't see any LNG producer agreeing to just give Europe a couple shipments.
Why There Won't Be Another Shale Renaissance Thanks To ESG
Shale companies have been largely focusing on generating free cash flow too and letting production die off. An inability to obtain financing almost certainly points to substantially higher energy prices going forward.
The Election Trade Is Not Stocks
I think it's becoming even more obvious now with that $1.9 billion stimulus package!
The Pandemic Recession And Central Banks
I don't know. Thus far there has been inflation, but it's been confined to the financial market and other assets like real estate. It hasn't resulted in inflation yet (as the Fed reports inflation) because the new money hasn't entered the economy. The question is, what will happen when people actually want to spend their wealth on things other than stocks or real estate? There's also some issues with the way the Fed measures inflation. The price of food, for example, was 3.90% higher in September 2020 than in September 2019. It was actually much higher over most of this year once the money-printing started: tradingeconomics.com/united-states/food-inflation I don't know about you, but I'd call a rise in the price of food inflation! It's hard to deny that the cost of healthcare is still rising. I'd call that inflation too. The Fed's calculations tend to ignore things like this because that would mean that the government would have to pay out bigger cost-of-living increases to Social Security and other benefit recipients and that would strain the Federal budget more than it already is. So I don't think we'll see inflation as reflected in the Fed's numbers. I think we're already seeing it in the cost of goods that the average person buys!
The Pandemic Recession And Central Banks
Interesting. The question is whether or not this unprecedented money supply expansion will lead to inflation.