Tag Archives: apple

Apple iPad Pro launches, signals trouble for Intel

Apple’s (AAPL) iPad Pro hit the market on Thursday amid mildly positive reviews and hopes that it can help revitalize tablet sales. Pundits also weighed the impact the jumbo-screen tablet could have on Apple’s Mac computer business and the company’s relationship with chipmaker Intel (INTC). The iPad Pro went on sale in Apple’s retail stores Thursday after the company began taking online orders on Wednesday. Apple is selling three models of the

3 Top-Rated PIMCO Mutual Funds To Strengthen Your Portfolio

Pacific Investment Management Company, LLC (commonly known as PIMCO) is a renowned investment management firm, headquartered in Newport Beach, California. The company was founded in 1971. In 2000, the company was acquired by Allianz Asset Management of America L.P. However, it continues to operate as an autonomous subsidiary of Allianz ( OTCQX:AZSEY ). It boasts more than 2,000 employees working in 13 offices across 12 countries. It manages assets worth $1.52 trillion (as of June 30, 2015). It offers a broad lineup of investment solutions to its clients that encompass the entire gamut of equities, bonds, currencies, real estates, alternative investments and risk management. Below we share with you the 3 top-rated PIMCO mutual funds. Each has earned a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy) and we expect the fund to outperform its peers in the future. PIMCO High Yield Municipal Bond Fund A (MUTF: PYMAX ) invests a major portion of its assets in debt obligations that are expected to provide income that are free from federal income tax. PYMAX may invest in investment grade municipal bonds and not more than 30% of its assets in “private activity” bonds. The PIMCO High Yield Municipal Bond A fund has returned 5.2% in the last one year. PYMAX has an expense ratio of 0.85% as compared to a category average of 0.97%. PIMCO Mortgage-Backed Securities Fund A (MUTF: PMRAX ) seeks total return. PMRAX invests a large portion of its assets in a diversified portfolio of mortgage-related Fixed Income Instruments. PMRAX may also invest in derivative instruments including options, futures contracts and swap agreements. The PIMCO Mortgage-Backed Securities A fund has returned 1.9% in the last one year. As of June 2015, PMRAX held 550 issues, with 11.28% of its total assets invested in FNMA. PIMCO Global Bond (USD-Hedged) Fund A (MUTF: PAIIX ) invests the majority of its assets in Fixed Income Instruments that are economically linked to a minimum of three nations including the U.S. PAIIX generally invests at least 25% of its assets in Fixed Income Instruments, which are economically tied to non-U.S. countries. PAIIX may also invest in derivative instruments. The PIMCO Global Bond (USD-Hedged) A is a non-diversified fund and has returned 1.5% in the last one year. PAIIX has an expense ratio of 0.90% as compared to a category average of 1.03%. Original Post

Jeremy Siegel’s Case For Equities

Jeremy Siegel has done more work on historical stock returns than pretty much anyone. He literally wrote the book on it, pulling stock data going back to 1802 for Stocks for the Long Run . In a recent Master in Business podcast interview he summed up his case for equities simply: What I showed was when you stretch out your holding period, up to 15, 20, 30 years, stocks actually were safer than bonds – had a lower variance and lower volatility than bonds. The long term, of course, gets overlooked with stocks. Everything – returns, variance, volatility – smooths out once you start to stack years together. I’ve broken down the S&P 500 returns over longer periods before. Since 1926, one-year returns range from a 54% gain to a 43% loss. If you put five years together, the annual returns range from a 29% gain to a 12% loss. Ten-year annual returns range from a 20% gain to a 1% loss. Fifteen-year annual returns range from a 19% gain to a 1% gain. Notice a trend? The range of possible returns shrinks as you extend the holding period. This is why stocks are Siegel’s asset of choice: If we know that return over that longer period of time is going to beat bonds by 3-4-5% per year, wow, that becomes the asset of choice for the long run. So why not only own stocks? Because people still fixate on one-year returns. It’s not much of a reach to suggest that fixation does more harm than good. It drives action. People look at one year’s return and expect it to continue. So money flows into stocks after a great year, and out after a terrible year. This need to act is why diversification is so important. Bonds become a psychological buffer for the short term craziness in the markets. And then there’s valuation. There are times when stocks become so expensive in the short term that it negates much of that long-term potential. The difficulty is in trying to time these periods because a high valuation doesn’t guarantee immediate poor returns – high priced stocks can always go higher in the short term – and valuation tools, like the CAPE ratio , don’t help the cause. Prior to the dot-com bubble, Siegel was a devout index fund fan: I was wedded to cap-weighted at the same time I said tech was crazy. And I didn’t know how to reconcile those two. Your typical index fund is market-cap weighted , which makes it extremely efficient. There’s just one big flaw. If a few stocks become wildly inefficiently priced (like internet stocks during the dot-com bubble) there’s no way to sell those stocks in a cap-weighted index. Rather, the cap-weighted index fund continues to buy more as the market cap rises. So Siegel’s solution was to change the weighting – essentially creating fundamentally-weighted index funds based on objective earnings data and opening the door for the rise of smart beta. Now, the fundamental weighting method isn’t perfect either. It won’t magically prevent a losing year. But if you’re only focused on one-year returns, it won’t matter anyway, you’ll be too busy acting before you ever see the benefits.