Author Archives: Scalper1

Facebook Buy Button Push Could Create Online Mall

Facebook (FB) could turn into an online mall, says a Morgan Stanley research report on buy-button product initiatives by social network platforms. While Apple (AAPL) Pay and other mobile wallets struggle to gain traction with consumers, buy buttons could expand e-commerce on mobile phones, says Morgan Stanley. “Consumers are increasingly spending time and conducting commercial transactions on their mobile phones, but the checkout experience can

Long/Short Equity Funds: The Best And Worst Of October

By DailyAlts Staff Long/short equity mutual funds bounced strongly in October. Not only did the category post a 2.88% gain in the aggregate, according to Morningstar – recovering from the prior month’s 1.78% losses – but the two worst-performing long/short equity funds in September were the category’s two best performers in October. (click to enlarge) Top Performers in October The three best-performing long/short equity mutual funds in October were: The Catalyst and Tealeaf funds returned +10.71% and +9.05%, respectively, outpacing the #3 fund’s +8.73% for the month. But while the Giralda fund posted gains for the first 10 months of 2015, STVIX and LEFIX were both in the red for the longer-term period. Indeed, STVIX and LEFIX were September’s worst performers. STVIX’s 10.71% gains in October don’t quite make up for its 11.12% losses in September. The fund, which debuted in 2010 and recently had just $7.8 million in assets under management (“AUM”), lost 15.13% of its value in the first 10 months of 2015, and was down a painful 18.66% for the three months ending October 31 – despite October’s big gains. Similarly, LEFIX’s 9.05% October gains weren’t enough to make up for its 10.72% September losses. Where the fund differs from STVIX is in its one-year returns through October 31: STVIX lost 18.26% for the period, while LEFIX gained 3.43%. LEFIX launched in 2013 and recently had $2.5 million in AUM. Finally, the Giralda Manager Fund, which gained 8.73% in October, rounded out the long/short equity category’s top three for the month. With around $190 million in AUM, the fund is much larger than its counterparts, and its long-term track record is much stronger: GDAMX debuted in 2011 and had three-year annualized returns of +12.59% through October 31. (click to enlarge) Worst Performers in October The three worst-performing long/short equity mutual funds in October were: The CMG Tactical Futures Strategy Fund was the month’s worst performer, falling 6.74%. The fund is younger and much smaller than the others on this list, having debuted in 2012 and with only $7 million in AUM as of a recent filing. For the year ending October 31, the fund returned a devastating -25.72%. Its three-year annualized returns through that date stood at -10.43%. Unlike the CMG fund, the Highland and Turner funds have much better longer-term returns, despite October’s poor performance. HHCAX lost 5.54% and TMSEX lost 4.99% in October, but the funds had respective three-year annualized returns of +13.59% and +11.67% for the period ending October 31. Both funds are rated “5-stars” by Morningstar, and had comparatively large AUM of $802.3 million [HHCAX] and $133.2 million [TMSEX], as of a recent filing. (click to enlarge) September’s Best and Worst: Follow-Up September’s top-performing long/short equity mutual funds included the LJM Preservation and Growth Fund (MUTF: LJMIX ), the AQR Long-Short Equity Fund (MUTF: QLEIX ), and the Longboard Long/Short Equity Fund (MUTF: LONGX ), with respective one-month gains of 5.25%, 3.98%, and 3.47%. In October, the funds returned -1.44%, +5.25%, and +2.54%, respectively. The Catalyst Hedged Insider Buying and Tealeaf Long/Short Deep Value funds were September’s worst performers at -11.12% and -10.72%, respectively. They bounced back to be October’s best performers, as detailed earlier in the article. The third member of last month’s triumvirate, the Goldman Sachs Long Short Fund (MUTF: GSLSX ) – which lost 7.45% in September – returned -3.74% in October, continuing its underperformance. Past performance does not necessarily predict future results.

Charter-TWC OK May Slide To June, Thanks To Calif.

Approval of the Charter Communications (CHTR) acquisition of Time Warner Cable could be pushed back to June, as California state regulators take a close look at the cable TV industry merger. Charter, on its Q3 earnings call on Oct. 29, already had said TWC deal approval could slide into the first quarter of next year. Now it seems it might slide further. Nevertheless, while Comcast’s (CMCSA) proposed acquisition of TWC — announced in February 2013