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Top Beer Stocks to Buy in 2017

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:32:00 GMT

Thirsty for market-beating returns? Check out these three beer stocks.

Land Of The Free? Michigan Man Issued Parking Ticket In His Own Driveway

via by Tyler Durden on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:25:08 GMT

Submitted by Simon Black via SovereignMan.com,

The state of Michigan is not exactly known for its balmy weather this time of year.

And residents reasonably do what they have to do to cope with often extreme winter temperatures.

Last Thursday a man named Taylor Trupiano of Roseville, Michigan did what a lot of people do in cold climates.

He walked out of his house, started his car, turned on the heat, and went back inside for a few minutes while his engine and vehicle interior warmed up.

According to Mr. Trupiano, he was only inside for about 7 or 8 minutes.

But by the time he came back to his car, there was already a parking ticket on his windshield– with a fine totaling $128.

Some local police officer had apparently driven by, noticed the vehicle was unattended, written up this heinous infraction, and left.

There are so many things wrong with this picture it’s hard to know where to begin.

First off, the citation that Mr. Trupiano received was a parking ticket. Yet his car was parked on his own private property.

Let that sink in: this man received a parking ticket while his car was parked on his own property.

You can’t even park your car on your own property anymore without being in violation of some series of laws, rules, or local ordinances.

The city government’s reasoning is that, if you leave a vehicle unattended, it may encourage car thieves to steal it.

This is pretty flimsy logic.

Sure, maybe if a car thief is standing right there he/she may take the opportunity.

But it’s not like some lowlife felon is going to turn the other cheek and stop stealing cars just because there are no unattended vehicles with the keys in the ignition.

Criminals bent on theft are going to steal no matter what, just like some murderous thug in Chicago is going to find a gun and kill people regardless of local firearm regulations.

When the story broke on local news, Roseville’s Police Chief told reporters that his department is unapologetic about issuing the citation to Mr. Trupiano.

Sounding like a man who cares more about statistics than actually catching criminals, the Chief claimed that 5-10 unattended vehicles are stolen every winter, which “drives our crime rates up.”

I looked at Roseville’s crime rates. They’re high. This is not a safe place.

With a population of less than 50,000, there are nearly 2,000 property crime incidents per year.

That includes at least a few hundred car thefts– which means that 5-10 vehicles is statistically trivial.

Clearly this issue of unattended vehicles is NOT the root of the problem.

And even if all the citizens of Roseville never again left their vehicles unattended, even on a cold winter day for just a few minutes to let the car warm up, it still wouldn’t make a dent in the larger crime rate.

But that doesn’t matter.

Roseville’s city government deals with its crime problem by establishing obscure regulations to restrict what law-abiding people are allowed to do in their own homes with their private property.

It doesn’t matter whether you are aware that these ridiculous rules even exist: ignorance of the law is not an excuse.

You’re probably in violation of half a dozen rules and regulations right now without even knowing about them.

Naturally, they’re all for your own good… to protect you against all the terrible choices that you might make as a grown adult.

Thank goodness these people are here to save us from ourselves! Of course, there’s always more work to do.

Speaking of statistically trivial risks, I read recently that falling vending machines kill a handful of people each year. Let’s get rid of them.

Roller coaster malfunctions claim 4 lives each year. Maybe they should ban those too.

Sugary drinks are clearly bad for you. Perhaps they should outlaw those, at least above a certain size.

Oh wait, they’re already trying to do that.

This is what freedom means today in the United Nanny States of America.

Do you have a Plan B?

Why Did Pandora Media, Inc. Stock Climb 13% in December?

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:25:00 GMT

Sometimes even just a hint of big news coming can send shares rocketing up.

Iconix Brand Sells Off the Sharper Image

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:23:00 GMT

The purveyor of electronics and quirky gift ideas is changing hands. What does it mean for Iconix shareholders?

3 Surprises From Pfizer at the J. P. Morgan Healthcare Conference

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:22:00 GMT

Pfizer executives discuss acquisitions, taxes, and competition at the J. P. Morgan Healthcare Conference this week.

The Recovery in Chipotle's Stock Price Has Officially Begun

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:14:00 GMT

Shares of the fast-casual giant surged on Monday after the chain pre-reported fourth-quarter earnings.

Airlines' Revenue Recovery Is in Full Swing

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:10:00 GMT

In the past two days, three of the biggest airlines in the U.S. have raised their Q4 unit revenue guidance ranges.

Oracle Stock Split: Will the Tech Giant Ever Split Again?

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:09:00 GMT

It's been more than 16 years since Oracle last did a stock split. Find out if another move is coming.

Dollar Dumped, Stocks Trump'd, Gold Jumped

via by Tyler Durden on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:03:44 GMT

Today in the dollar...

 

It's not the economy, stupid...

 

It's Trump!

 

Biotechs/Pharma was slapped lower...ending the record win streak...

 

Algos desperately ripped The Dow to run yesterday's high stops in an effort to crack 20k... but failed.. then as the day ended VIX was monkey-hammered lower in desperation...

 

Stocks scrambled back to green after the Trumpnado struck... Nasdaq record high again, Trannies rallied over 1%! - NOTE the rally startd right after Europe closed... AGAIN!

 

7th day in a row of positive closes for Nasdaq, 4th day of record highs...

 

Utilities outperformed post-Trump, healthcare lagged...

 

Brazil cut rates by 75bps and sent Brazil ETF higher (filling the gap from the election)

 

Yields tumbled as Trump spoke and were pushed lower on a very strong 10Y auction but everything bounced back in the late afternoon...but bonds ended the day unchanged.

 

The Dollar was clubbed like a baby seal as Trump disappointed those looking for details... hit 2017 lows then bounced to unch for 2017 before fading...

 

All the majors surged against the greenback as Trump spoke (and said nothing) but we note USDJPY was really moving...

 

The Mexican Peso was the poster-child of Trumpian chaos as it crashed to record lows, ripped on Dollar's drop, then collapsed back down on trade comments, then rallied again... - still closed at record lows...

 

As the dollar plunged, crude ripped higher - totally ignoring the spike in production and inventories...

 

Gold spiked towards $1200 as the dollar faded...

Will Cisco Systems Raise Its Dividend in 2017?

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:03:00 GMT

The networking giant has the highest yield of any Dow tech stock. Will Cisco keep boosting its payout?

After a Terrific 2016, Titan Machinery Inc. Stock Looks Risky

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 21:00:00 GMT

You might want to pass up shares after reading this.

BlackRock's Robo-Quants Are On Pace To Post Record Losses

via by Tyler Durden on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 20:49:58 GMT

With active managers losing billions in assets under management weekly, in many cases regardless of performance, as the great tsunami sweep funds away from the "2 and 20" (or even 0.5% and nothing) crowd to passive management, funds have become increasingly desperate to figure out how to preserve this dying business model, with its high fees and generous margins, in a time when the asset management - whether passive or active  - industry can barely outperform the stock market. In the case of Blackrock, that has meant fusing active management with robotic quants, and the result has been... a debacle.

According to Bloomberg, BlackRock’s main quantitative hedge-fund strategies, which like RenTec but only with far less success, use computer models to sort through vast amounts of data to pick out patterns, were on track for losses in 2016, and of the strats, four were set for their worst returns on record, data through November showed. A separate investor presentation with a broader quant lineup showed that almost two-thirds underperformed.

Blackrock joined many other traditional hedge fund managers in the shift to quant investing last year in hopes of scooping up that elusive extra alpha; Fink combined the group, which previously had been one of the asset manager's top performers, with the stock-picking unit early last year to lift returns and lure clients to higher-fee products. Demand for low-cost exchange-traded funds helped BlackRock maintain its position as the world’s biggest asset manager, but also has led to record withdrawals from its U.S. active funds business and chipped away at revenue.

Kyle Sanders, an analyst at Edward Jones, told Bloomberg that "quant is key to salvaging BlackRock’s active business. This is one way to improve their performance and distinguish themselves from the pack. Unfortunately, they have yet to deliver.” The silver lining is that with much of the rest of Wall Street's quants also "failing to distinguish" themselves, at least Blackrock does not stand out.

As Bloomberg accurately notes, BlackRock’s quant push reflects the broader pressures convulsing the money management industry. High costs and middling returns (thanks central bankers) have caused investors to spurn active managers in favor of ETFs. To cope, many managers have turned to computer-driven strategies to gain an edge. That even includes some of the most storied names in the hedge-fund world, like Paul Tudor Jones and Ray Dalio, who have jumped on the quant bandwagon to bolster performance - and justify their hefty fees. The only problem is that many, if not all, of these quants systems use the same signals, which leads to not only massive crowding and a reduction in liquidity, it makes outperformance virtually impossible as everyone chases the same trades.

Putting the company's attempt to revive its active-quant business in context, at $282 billion, BlackRock’s active equity business constitutes just a small part of the $5.1 trillion behemoth. Still, it’s an important one for BlackRock because the funds carry much higher fees than its ETFs. For example, the $21.7 billion BlackRock Equity Dividend Fund has an expense ratio of 0.69 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s 17 times higher than its $92.1 billion iShares Core S&P 500 ETF, which has an expense ratio of just 0.04 percent. This means that in the first nine months of 2016, its active equity business alone accounted for 16 percent of BlackRock’s base fees, even though it made up 6 percent of AUM. Over the years, it has also been one of Fink’s biggest headaches.

And this is where the robotic rescue team arrives.

With returns for the group’s fundamental active equity funds consistently lagging behind many of its rivals, even after improving in 2016, it suffered broad redemptions, which contributed to a record $19.3 billion of outflows from its U.S.-based active fund business last year. The $78 billion quant team, which BlackRock dubbed Scientific Active Equity, or SAE, was supposed to help fix that. In addition to combining SAE with its stock pickers, BlackRock armed them with the team’s analytical tools.

“As people get the data and learn how to use the data, I think that there is going to be alpha generated and, therefore, will give active managers more opportunity than they’ve had in the past to actually create returns,” BlackRock President Rob Kapito said at a Barclays conference in September.

Unfortunately, as more have turned to the same strategies, it means the "robotic" returns have dwindled: BlackRock inherited the three-decade-old quant business with its purchase of Barclays Global Investors in 2009. Initially, the group was a big success under new management, delivering outsize returns. More recently, things haven’t panned out quite as well. According to BlackRock’s most recent publicly available figures contained in its third-quarter earnings report from October, the strategies beat 31 percent of its peers or a benchmark over a one-year period. That’s slightly worse than its traditional stock pickers, who exceeded their yardsticks half the time.

Worse, according to Bloomberg, at least three of the quant strategies used by BlackRock’s global hedge fund platform have suffered losses greater than 10 percent in the year through November. That compares with an average return of 3.6 percent for quant funds, One would think that massive size, in the case of the world's biggest asset manager Blackrock, would also mean scale.

It has not. Some examples:

The biggest decline was in BlackRock’s $768 million 32 Capital fund, a global long-short equity fund run by Raffaele Savi that has seen its assets decrease by 34 percent in the one-year period ended October. The fund lost 12.2 percent through November, the worst year-to-date performance in its 15-year history.

 

Some of the quant group’s deepest losses came in the first few months of the year, when markets plunged before bouncing back sharply in late February. Many quant shops stumbled, but a big reason SAE missed the rebound had to do with BlackRock’s own investment policy. It instructs the team to sell when losses become sizable, regardless of what its mathematical models say, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter.

Of course, Wall Street is notorious for never taking blame for bad investments, and so it was the "timing's" fault:

“They had the worst timing possible,” Morningstar’s Jason Kephart, who called into question BlackRock’s ability to shift factor weightings on the fly, said in an interview. Whatever the case, performance suffered. The fund class for institutional investors fell 6.9 percent in 2016 and beat only 9 percent of funds in its category, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

 

To make matters worse, SAE has lost some of its top talent. The departures included Bill MacCartney, a former Google scientist that BlackRock hired in 2015 to help build out machine-learning, and Ryan LaFond, a head researcher and one of the brains behind the firm’s socially responsible funds.

 

Of course, SAE could rebound from its lackluster performance and plenty of bold-faced quant names had a tough time in 2016. The main computer-driven fund at Leda Braga’s Systematica Investments lost 11 percent last year. Three such funds run by Man Group Plc’s AHL division had losses through September.

 

And regardless of the industry’s ups and downs, few firms anywhere can match BlackRock’s wherewithal. SAE is made up of more than 90 investment professionals, including 28 Ph.D.s and numerous data scientists. In September, Mark Wiseman, the former head of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, was brought in to run the group.

Meanwhile, the withdrawals continue: even as the promise of computer-driven investing helped quant funds amass almost $16 billion in new money in the first 11 months of 2016, BlackRock was largely left out. After getting $1.7 billion in fresh capital in 2015 (and snapping six straight years of multibillion-dollar outflows), SAE once again suffered investor withdrawals last year. Fink hasn’t been shy about his disappointment over the inability of SAE to bring in money in the past.

“The one area where we’ve done quite well is in the model-based equities and we’re still not seeing really any flows,” he said on a fourth-quarter earnings call in 2014. “I am very bullish on building this out as a component of our active equity area and I’m quite frustrated, to be frank, that we haven’t seen the momentum that I would thought we would.”

For now, however, this particular fusion of robots and humans is slowly turning out to be a disaster. While Blackrock has other options, such as its massive "passive" ETF platform to fall back on, other active managers, all of whom are suffering the same withdrawals as investors demand performance or yank their funds, are nowhere near so lucky, and absent big changes in 2017, extrapolating current trends would mean the extinction of the carbon-based asset managers sometime over the next 20 years.

For now, unfortunately, 2017 is ot starting off so well.

Trump Slams BuzzFeed As "Failing Pile Of Garbage", Tells CNN "You Are Fake News"

via by Tyler Durden on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 20:24:57 GMT

In an epic (mutual) trolling between president-elect Trump on one hand and BuzzFeed and CNN, on the other, the two media organizations which issued yesterday's unsubstantiated report about Russia having compromising information on the president-elect, Trump first addressed the question of why he referred to Nazi Germany, saying it is "disgraceful" that intelligence communities would allow the release of any information. "That's something Nazi Germany would have done and did do," he says.

He then unleashed on Buzzfeed which alone published the 35-page memo behind the Russian allegations, saying "Buzzfeed which is a failing pile of garbage... will suffer the consequences

And then, in an even more stunning episode, Trump slammed CNN reporter Jim Acosta, who he also called out during the presser over their report on a two-page synopsis they claim was presented to Trump.

With Trump looking to call on other reporters, Jim Acosta yelled out, “Since you are attacking us, can you give us a question?”

“Not you,” Trump said. “Your organization is terrible!”

Acosta pressed on, “You are attacking our news organization, can you give us a chance to ask a question, sir?” Trump countered by telling him “don’t be rude.” 

“I’m not going to give you a question,” Trump responded. “Don't be rude. I’m not going to give you a question. You are fake news!” Trump responded, before calling on a reporter from Breitbart.

 

A snubbed Jim Acosta then tweeted the following: "Fortunately ABC's Cecilia Vega asked my question about whether any Trump associates contacted Russians. Trump said no."

 

Trump also had some "kind words" for the BBC:

* * *

These exchanges followed an initial statement by Trump spokesman Sean Spicer who said that "for all the talk lately about 'fake news,' this political witch hunt by some in the media...is frankly shameful & disgraceful.... Highly irresponsible for a left-wing blog... to drop highly salacious and flat out false information on the Internet."

Following this, we expect the war between Trump and the media in general, or at least CNN in particular, to reach biblical proportions.

*  *  *

Chipotle Wants to Sweet-Talk You Back

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 20:45:00 GMT

The struggling burrito roller has picked the dessert that it will likely introduce later this year.

3 Little-Known Pharmaceutical Companies to Put on Your Radar

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 20:42:00 GMT

A team of contributors shares their picks for underappreciated pharmas that deserve more attention.

'Czexit' Looms As Traders Bet On Czech Republic Breaking Euro-Peg

via by Tyler Durden on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 20:20:00 GMT

Czech inflation spiked in the last two months, hitting the central bank’s target for the first time since 2012, heaping, as The FT reports, additional pressure on the country’s soon to be expired currency regime with the euro.

Along with on-target inflation, the Czech Republic also boasts the lowest rates of unemployment anywhere in the EU at 3.7 per cent.

Having kept an upper limit on the koruna in a bid to control inflation over the last three years, the central bank has been forced to buy up foreign currency at a faster pace to keep the regime steady. The koruna has been kept at around CZK27 against the euro since 2013, but policymakers have warned they are likely to scrap the regime at some point this year.

So Is a 'Czexit' on the cards?

Analysts at ING forecasting an end to the managed exchange rate system around April or May this year...

“It shows that the market is positioning against the CNB floor more intensively, as accelerating inflation is increasing the odds of the approaching exit”, said Jakub Seidler at the Dutch bank.

 

Mr Seidler now expects the currency regime to be scrapped around April or May, with annual inflation forecast to climb from 1.5 per cent to 1.9 per cent in December – close to the central bank’s 2 per cent target.

 

“If the intensity of interventions saw during the first days in January continues in the first quarter of 2017, total interventions in the quarter might easily overcome the whole 2016-levels”, he added.

And judging by the forward market, traders seem to agree...

 

As a reminder, during the summer of last year, the outspoken President Milos Zeman ("prepare for a Muslim super-holocaust") says his citizens must be able to "express themselves" on E.U. and NATO membership.

The Czech Republic’s President Milos Zeman has called for a referendum on the country’s membership of both the European Union and NATO, the latest example of fallout from Britain’s vote to leave the E.U.

Zeman says that he personally backs the country remaining in both organizations, but said on Czech Radio that he “will do everything for [Czechs] to have a referendum and be able to express themselves. And the same goes for a NATO exit too,” Reuters reports.

Why Texas Roadhouse Stock Jumped 35% Last Year

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 20:22:00 GMT

The steakhouse chain jumped on a solid performance, and on hopes that President-elect Donald Trump will reduce regulations on restaurants and hold down wage growth.

Didi Chuxing Eyes Brazil for Its Next Market

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 20:04:00 GMT

The ride-hailing company's latest investment gives it a stake in Latin America for the first time.

WTF Chart Of The Day: VIX At Pre-Crisis Lows, Uncertainty At All-Time Highs

via by Tyler Durden on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 20:00:00 GMT

Submitted by Jennifer Thomson via Gavekal Capital blog,

Recently, we have highlighted a number of divergent trends between ‘soft’ data and ‘hard’ data in both Europe and the US. For the most part, improving survey responses remain unconfirmed by the quantifiable information currently available. The surge in the economic policy uncertainty index is no exception.

In 2016, uncertainty rose around the world, led by the UK (unsurprisingly).

image

With that rise in policy uncertainty, we would have expected to see an increase in market volatility. After all, through 2015, major spikes in the simple average of the above policy uncertainty indexes coincided with a significant (above 30) rise in the VIX.

image

Last year, with the exception of a Brexit-related spike to 26 and an even smaller surge in reaction to the US election in November, the VIX averaged just under 16 (about 25% lower than its ten-year average of more than 21).

image

While the average level of economic policy uncertainty fell somewhat from November to December, it remains quite elevated versus the VIX at 11.49 today (about one point above its low near 10 back in early 2007).

In a reversal of the trends we have observed elsewhere in economic data (positive survey data, unconfirmed by the numbers themselves), the ‘hard’ data from markets here seems to be telling us everything is a-ok while the policy uncertainty data would indicate cause for concern.

TerraForm Power Might Still Be Overvalued

via Motley Fool Headlines by on Wed, 11 Jan 2017 19:57:00 GMT

If a new buyout offer is any indication, TerraForm Power's stock still has room to fall.

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