The Big Skinny

ETFs Gone Wild: How to Find the Few Worth Owning

52 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio ETFs Gone Wild: How to Find the Few Worth Owning

Descripción

Too many ETF tickers, too little time. There are officially more ETFs than publicly traded stocks in the U.S., and no normal investor has the time — or the stomach — to sort through thousands of products that all claim to be the answer. That’s the setup for this episode of The Big Skinny. Lou Basenese asks the question everyday investors should be asking: if there’s now an ETF for everything, how do you find the ones actually worth owning? He starts with the big picture — why the ETF boom has gone from useful to absurd, why so many funds are too small to matter, and how to separate real opportunity from ticker clutter. Then, he’s joined by longtime friends and market pros Keith Fitz-Gerald and David Nicholas to spotlight one fund Lou believes cuts through the chaos: the Fitz-Gerald Must Have Portfolio ETF (FITZ). From there, Lou shares insights from his latest interview with Matthew Tuttle of Tuttle Capital Management who says “99% of ETFs suck.” Then Lou and his trusted partner Dodd dish on GLP-1 momentum, Andrew Left’s fraud conviction, what Cushing oil inventories are really signaling, the longevity fundraising boom, and the kind of IPO price-to-sales math that should make investors squirm.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Big Skinny!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

39 episodios

episode ETFs Gone Wild: How to Find the Few Worth Owning artwork

ETFs Gone Wild: How to Find the Few Worth Owning

Too many ETF tickers, too little time. There are officially more ETFs than publicly traded stocks in the U.S., and no normal investor has the time — or the stomach — to sort through thousands of products that all claim to be the answer. That’s the setup for this episode of The Big Skinny. Lou Basenese asks the question everyday investors should be asking: if there’s now an ETF for everything, how do you find the ones actually worth owning? He starts with the big picture — why the ETF boom has gone from useful to absurd, why so many funds are too small to matter, and how to separate real opportunity from ticker clutter. Then, he’s joined by longtime friends and market pros Keith Fitz-Gerald and David Nicholas to spotlight one fund Lou believes cuts through the chaos: the Fitz-Gerald Must Have Portfolio ETF (FITZ). From there, Lou shares insights from his latest interview with Matthew Tuttle of Tuttle Capital Management who says “99% of ETFs suck.” Then Lou and his trusted partner Dodd dish on GLP-1 momentum, Andrew Left’s fraud conviction, what Cushing oil inventories are really signaling, the longevity fundraising boom, and the kind of IPO price-to-sales math that should make investors squirm.

Ayer52 min
episode Biotech Breakthroughs, GPUs & the Great SpaceX IPO Temptation artwork

Biotech Breakthroughs, GPUs & the Great SpaceX IPO Temptation

GLP-1s are the first line of biotech innovations that are remaking medicine, GPUs are still fueling the AI boom, and the coming SpaceX IPO is about to test investors’ impulse control. That (and more) is the focus of this episode of The Big Skinny. Lou Basenese makes the case that the next trillion-dollar growth trend after AI might be longevity — and that Eli Lilly (LLY) represents the smartest way to play the impending mega boom. Think chronic disease, cardiovascular care, and maybe even the road to living to 150 years. Then Barron's Josh Schafer joins to explain why interest rate volatility may matter less than people think, and why the real macro question is whether anything can stop the AI capex machine. Later, Gene Mack, CEO of Gain Therapeutics, adds a biotech operator’s perspective from the front lines of the longevity and neuroscience race. And yes, Lou also gets into the SpaceX IPO. Specifically why investors should think twice before falling for Musk Mania and chasing an IPO built on hype, premium pricing, and a whole lot of wishful thinking. No fluff. No fear-mongering. Just a sharper, funnier, and profitable look at where the real growth may be hiding.

28 de may de 20261 h 3 min
episode Sorry, Bubble Bears: Big Tech Just Proved the Bulls Right artwork

Sorry, Bubble Bears: Big Tech Just Proved the Bulls Right

This week on The Big Skinny, Lou Basenese cuts through the noise after a monster week of earnings from most of the Mag 7 and asks what investors should really take away. The answer: AI demand is real, cloud demand is compounding, and Big Tech is still buying the most valuable real estate of the next decade. Lou breaks down why Alphabet (GOOGL) stands out, why the capex skeptics are missing the plot, and what this quarter says about the next phase of the AI cycle. Alongside Bob Elliott and Mike Zaccardi, Lou also digs into the “boomcession,” the market’s strange comfort with high oil, why software has lagged semis so badly, and what might finally unwind that trade. Then in Headlines & Headscratchers, Lou and Dodd hit Google, Apple, crypto, prediction markets, the best movies ever, and the little market stories that may be telling a bigger truth.

30 de abr de 20261 h 1 min
episode Lies, Damn Lies & the Mag 7 artwork

Lies, Damn Lies & the Mag 7

This week on The Big Skinny, Lou Basenese cuts through the noise surrounding the Mag 7 and asks a simple question: is Big Tech really as dominant as the narrative suggests — or is the market already starting to broaden out? With Nvidia responsible for an outsized share of earnings revisions, Lou explains how one stock can distort the whole picture — and create opportunity elsewhere. Joining Lou live is Keith Fitz-Gerald, who weighs in on the future of the AI trade, what investors may be missing in Apple’s evolving AI and hardware strategy, and whether mega-cap tech still deserves its premium. Lou also shares key clips from Adam Johnson on where investors should be looking next. Plus, Lou and Dodd run through Tim Cook succession chatter, AI-powered startup creation, Harry Dent’s “everything bubble,” and the small-cap breakout that keeps forcing bears to rethink the story.

23 de abr de 20261 h 0 min