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Yale Bock is the founder, owner, and operator of Y H & C investments, a registered investment adviser based in Las Vegas, NV. He earned the right to use the Chartered Financial Analyst designation in 2007 and has an M.B.A. from UC-Irvine's Paul Mirage Fraduate School of Management in ...more

Trump Talks Tarrifs, Powell Cuts Rates And Stocks Sell Off By 3%

Date: Saturday, August 3, 2019 4:32 PM EDT

Trump's Talks Tariff's, Powell Cuts Rates, and Stocks Sell Off by 3%! 1

When you get to middle age, you want peace in your life.  You want less stress, more comfort.  You want things easy.  No muss, no fuss.  Dealings with entities which take your time and energy are not good.  Anything which is quick and simple and efficient is wonderful.  As ones life is planned and executed, the greater the percentage of your time which is non confrontational and with no controversy or argument, the better off things are.  Now, if you have a good home life, you are familiar with the saying, ‘Happy wife, happy life.’  If all of this makes sense, good, it is should.  Of course, and you knew this was coming, nobody’s life goes one hundred percent according to plan.  Everybody has problems.  As we all understand, a real problem is an eight year old with cancer or a serious illness.    Everything else you generally can handle.  In an age of digital efficiency and technology, many people have things arranged quite nicely and might not have many chances for too much disruption.  However, there are always organizations and people who go out of their way to make things difficult.  In grade school or high school these are the people who had to have all the attention, all the time.   You might encounter that government agency which has to have the document, and the copies, and a signature from a superior.  It may also be the customer who just is not satisfied with the product.  Maybe it is the individual who is not happy with the fees they are being charged, or the service they have received.  It could be anything which just throws a fly into the ointment.  I am sure you can relate to these kinds of things.  With that said, I bring this up because the capital markets are increasingly faced with this kind of situation.

Trump's Talks Tariff's, Powell Cuts Rates, and Stocks Sell Off by 3%! 2

Last week, after Federal Reserve Chairman Jay Powell announced to the globe the decision to cut interest rates for the first time in a decade (25 basis points or a quarter of one percent) to 2.25%, the equity market sold off hard.  The day after, investors were reconsidering this reaction because under any circumstance, financial instruments not related to a floating interest rate (think variable rate loans or certificates of deposits) are going to more valuable.  Stocks are worth more when interest rates go down, as are bonds.  Ask the professors, ask the historians, ask the investment bankers, the hedge funds, the private equity guys.  You will get the same answer.  It is why the investors decided to start buying stocks on Thursday and the market was flying high, up about two hundred fifty points.  Mid morning, about ten o clock Pacific Standard Time, the financial markets were faced with their version of someone who must be the center of attention, and you can guess who that might be.  Yes, our headline craving leader, the Donald, was at it again, over trade, announcing a further 10% tariff on  $300 billion of Chinese imported goods, starting September 1.   Financial markets have generally been pleased with the regulatory policies of Mr. Trump, and he is well aware of what goes on in the financial markets.  In fairness to the Donald, there is a legitimate issue regarding what China’s restrictions are on the import and treatment of U.S. products, which has long been the case.  It will probably take a good while longer to see if some sort of agreement can be reached with China.  Some believe he makes policy based on the stock market, and his ongoing criticisms of Federal Reserve Chairman support that theory.  The double whammy of the Federal Reserve and the Donald took the starch out of the market to the tune of three percent for the week (depends on the specific index in terms of percentage losses).  As there are some of us with plenty of memories and summer squalls for the market, let me offer a bit of perspective.

Trump's Talks Tariff's, Powell Cuts Rates, and Stocks Sell Off by 3%! 3

A few years ago, right at this time of the year, in August, there was volatility in the Chinese markets which spilled over to the United States.  Our indexes fell about 10% in the short span of maybe two weeks or less.  There have been other years where hot temperatures bring hot money, and equities swoon.  August is a  month where many people are on vacation, which includes the investment world.  Volumes are low.  Liquidity for falling individual securities can dry up.  After a near twenty percent run up in 2019, it seems like the opportune time to take profits, especially when Donald is on the warpath about China and tariffs.  My own thought also revolves on the kinds of equities you own.  If your portfolio is full of well run, highly profitable, and growing businesses, Donald’s desire for attention and other investors fragile psychological state should not be a cause for concern.  July’s job report came in pretty much as expected at 164 thousand jobs created, with the unemployment rate staying at 3.7%   My advice is to keep your eyes focused on one or two company stocks which you have long desired, and if the price is falling and in area where you feel it is attractive, well, just keep your mind open about it.

On the earnings front, reports continue to roll in with heavyweights like General Electric, Qualcomm and Met Life all reporting last week.  Others of note telling their performance included Western Digital, Altice, Avalon Bay Communities, Scotts MiracleGro, Chuchhill Downs, and Coors.  In Las Vegas, the temperatures are scheduled to hit 113 today, and I am sure it is quite in other areas across the United States.  As such, the blistering heat can affect people by rendering them hot and bothered, which is what many of us in middle age are trying to avoid.   Let’s hope the weather will cool down during the rest of August and people will be inclined to make things easy for us.

Thanks for reading the blog this week. 

Yale Bock, Y H & C Investments, its clients, and the family of Yale Bock have positions in the securities mentioned in the blog,  Investing in securities involves risk and the potential loss of ones principal.  Past performance is no guarantee of future results.  All investment decisions should be considered with respect to ones risk tolerance, return objectives, liquidity needs, tax considerations, and one’s overall financial situation.  The fact that Yale Bock has earned the right to use the Chartered Financial Analyst in no way means or guarantee performance better than market indexes.
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