Money Life with Chuck Jaffe

BNP Paribas' Morris says the big worry now is economic 'overheating'

1 h 2 min · 29 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio BNP Paribas' Morris says the big worry now is economic 'overheating'

Descripción

Daniel Morris, chief investment strategist at BNP Paribas Asset Management [https://bnpparibas-am.com], says that his primary concern right now is the risk that the economy could overheat, thanks to above-trend growth and inflation that could prompt the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates in an effort to slow things down. If that fails to cool inflation, the economy could then struggle and the market could step far away from its current uptrend. Morris' base case, however, is for continued earnings growth that can power the market into 2028, noting that while growth will slow down, there is still plenty of room to keep going and not have the economy resemble past bubble times. In The Book Interview, Chad Bown [https://chadpbown.com], co-author of "'How to Win a Trade War: An Optimistic Guide to an Anxious Global Economy [https://simonandschuster.com/books/How-to-Win-a-Trade-War/Soumaya-Keynes/9781668221310]," discusses how there are reasons and ways for trade-war scenarios to play out well, and the trade-offs today's leaders would have to make for current trade tensions to pass without plunging the global economy into a deep funk. In "The Week That Is," Vijay Marolia [https://vijaymarolia.com], chief investment officer at Regal Point Capital [https://regalpointcapital.com], discusses why he will continue to ride with Micro Technology, even as it reports growth numbers that are hard to believe, nt notes that he is giving Nike the boot, especially when he compares it to another popular rival in the public eye during the World Cup, adidas. Plus, he worries about how artificial intelligence may make inflation stickier for longer.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Money Life with Chuck Jaffe!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

300 episodios

Portada del episodio CFRA's Stovall: Rising volatility creates buying opportunities with a year-end payoff

CFRA's Stovall: Rising volatility creates buying opportunities with a year-end payoff

Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research [https://cfraresearch.com] says investors should "be prepared for some additional volatility" at least until and through the midterm elections, but he thinks it represents "a reason to buy, not to bail." Stovall says that he's looking for solid double-digit earnings growth into 2027, and he makes the case that the technology sector has been driving the market higher but remains trading at a relative discount in price/earnings ratio. Traditional summer market doldrums, therefore, set up chances to profit from a rally he expects once the voting is done. Further, he points to the market's expanded breadth which, when combined with a positive first half of the year, historically is a sign that the market will rise over the rest of the year. Stovall's big worry for the economy and market involves the Federal Reserve and the potential for higher rates to lead to stagflation and other condition changes, but he's not expecting the Fed to move rates this year, so he thinks those worries are further into the future. Todd Rosenbluth, head of research at VettaFi [https://vettafi.com], has focused a lot of his recent ETF of the Week picks on actively managed funds, but today he goes with a hot fund based on a technology-heavy index as something that would work well for investors who expect the market's uptrend to continue. In the Market Call, Manny Weintraub, principal at Cannell & Spears [https://cannellspears.com], talks about how he finds "super great stocks that are not going to kill you" and whether stocks in the hottest sectors are being set up to murder investors when market conditions and sentiments change.

16 de jul de 20261 h 2 min
Portada del episodio Freedom Capital's Woods: Block out the noise, be patient during earnings season

Freedom Capital's Woods: Block out the noise, be patient during earnings season

Jay Woods, chief market strategist at Freedom Capital Markets [https://freedomcapmkts.com], says that the market has a "Janet Jackson - What Have You Done for Me Lately" attitude, which has made earnings cycles particularly volatile, and he thinks that will be amplified with the earnings on tap right now powering market moves, especially around market misses. While he believes earnings will be strong, he warns in the Market Call that "prices may not follow them," particularly as the market enters its slowest time of the year around a mid-term election cycle. Woods says that the stock market has seen a healthy rotation, but he expects a pullback before a year-end rally; in the meantime, he warns against chasing rallies. Adam Mead of Mead Capital Management [https://meadcm.com] and Watchlist Investing [https://watchlistinvesting.com] — author of "The Complete Financial History of Berkshire Hathaway" — talks about the evolution of legendary investors Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger, how the company they ran is changing with Buffett's retirement and the legacy they will; have in the decades ahead. The new edition of the book was inspired after Mead saw Buffett at Berkshire's annual meeting after the nonagenarian announced his retirement. Plus, Chuck answers a listener's question about hiring a financial adviser and whether working with the brand-name firm that has renewed its nationwide advertising blitz on television would be all that it's cracked up to be. (Spoiler alert: Not exactly.)

Ayer1 h 2 min
Portada del episodio TheoTrade's Bierman: 'Get ready for a spectacular year-end rally'

TheoTrade's Bierman: 'Get ready for a spectacular year-end rally'

Jeffrey Bierman, chief market technician at TheoTrade [https://TheoTrade.com] — where he runs the Genesis Cog and Burn Signal platforms [https://theotrade.com/jeff-bierman-services/] — says the stock market remains "ridiculously strong," but that won't allow it to sidestep a summer slowdown and a difficult fall, before picking back up with a tremendous rally near the end of the year. He makes it clear that current conditions are not looking like a bear market or a bubble, and while the market has gotten a bit ahead of itself, he's thinking it's mostly choppy with maybe a small setback before it starts the next leg up. David Leiter, who runs The Ultimate Investor [https://theultimateinvestor.com] website, discusses his new book, "Stop Making Stupid Investments [https://theultimateinvestor.com/stop-making-stupid-investments]," and gives his take on everything from initial public offerings — and pre-IPO investments — to cryptocurrency and more, and focuses on the emotional control that helps investors avoid the key blunders that can bring a portfolio crashing down. In the Market Call, Max Wasserman, co-founder and senior portfolio manager at Miramar Capital [https://Miramarcap.com], talks about how everyone is jumping so hard into technology stocks that it's "hard to find a great company at a good price." He discusses where he is finding the right valuations for his dividend-driven investment style, and what kinds of companies fit his long-term buying perspective now.

14 de jul de 20261 h 0 min
Portada del episodio Argosy's Stewart: An 'under-housed' country is creating opportunities

Argosy's Stewart: An 'under-housed' country is creating opportunities

Andy Stewart, co-chief executive officer at Argosy Real Estate Partners [https://argosyrep.com], says that housing affordability issues that have made headlines are real and persistent, but there are some solutions over time, coming from building smaller homes, changes in interest rates and in public policies like the new affordability legislation that became law on Friday. It also means there are big opportunities in the single-family build-to-rent market and more, and those opportunities should be persistent and long-term. Stewart also talks about issues in data center construction — and whether the opportunity is moving too fast — and the continuing evolution of commercial real estate, where he sees "a generational buying opportunity" for patient, long-term investors. Vijay Marolia [https://vijaymarolia.com], chief investment officer at Regal Point Capital [https://regalpointcapital.com], says the record domestic IPO for SK Hynix last week and ASML Holdings on Wednesday, should remind investors to balance big numbers with appropriate caution, because the profit potential comes with white-hot volatility. He also looks at how financial and banking stocks could be in for a rough earnings cycle when they start reporting results this week, with their numbers reflecting how right or wrong they were in anticipating how the Federal Reserve and new chairman Kevin Warsh would respond to economic conditions. Plus, he also looks at housing affordability and how new legislation may impact the picture. David Trainer, founder and president at New Constructs [https://newconstructs.com], looks at current earnings trends and sees some ugly misses coming during the second quarter, not because companies are sandbagging earnings expectations, but because they're not as solid as the Street believes. He says a number of those stocks — and he singled out Fidelity National Information Services — are headed for trouble when the street figures things out after seeing an earnings miss.

13 de jul de 202659 min
Portada del episodio Stack Financial's Jonson foresees a 'bear market waterfall' ahead

Stack Financial's Jonson foresees a 'bear market waterfall' ahead

Zach Jonson, chief investment officer at Stack Financial Management [https://stackfinancialmanagement.com], says the stock market is building towards "one of the biggest or largest bear markets of our generation," but he says that decline will impact passive, broad-index investors the most. "We see a true long-term, 12- to 18-month, 45 to 50 downturn, and that's in the S&P; if you look at the Nasdaq, you could really see some losses that are in excess of 70 percent," Jonson said. He's worried about a "bear market waterfall" — where every decline is not met with a quick return back to new highs — that makes it emotionally difficult for investors to buy into dips, but he does say that being patient and strategic should allow investors to find pockets of opportunity amid the decline, positioning them to profit when the pendulum swings back to the upside. Axel Merk, president and chief investment officer at Merk Investments [https://merkinvestments.com], discusses Saba Capital's [https://sabacapital.com] activist campaign that recently saw him booted as portfolio manager for ASA Gold and Precious Metals Ltd. [https://asaltd.com], a closed-end fund that was up nearly 200% last year and that was at the top of its peer group since Merk took it over in 2016. Still, the activist shareholders labeled it a poor performer, and are working now to capture the fund's discount. Meanwhile, Saba has installed new leadership which Merk says has no experience running a gold fund. He filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission [https://sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1230869/000121390026074304/ea0296746-px14a6g_asagold.htm] and made other efforts to save the fund [https://saveasa.com], but acknowledges that a change in status is unlikely. Merk also discusses his outlook for gold in the interview. Adam Gebler, head of wealth for the Americas at FTSE Russell [https://lseg.com/en/ftse-russell], discusses the firm's 2026 U.S. Wealth Pulse Survey [https://lseg.com/en/ftse-russell/research/2026-ftse-russell-wealth-pulse-survey], which showed that private markets — both equity and credit — are continuing to move into the mainstream with affluent investors, driven largely by financial advisers pushing for their adoption and acceptance in portfolios.

10 de jul de 20261 h 3 min