It’s one of the biggest rallies I’ve seen, and it’s coming from one of the most unlikely places: an income security. I first learned about master limited partnerships (MLPs) working with Carla Pasternak, the Chief Strategist for High-Yield Investing. Carla’s been… Read More
Tanner Callais is a writer and researcher at StreetAuthority. An avid student of the markets, he has seen his articles published on numerous financial websites, including Catablast, MarketAddicts, and Seeking Alpha. In addition, his research has taken him to distant nations like New Zealand to research the best investment opportunities around the world. Tanner began his career with StreetAuthority in 2006. Since that time, he has worked directly with editors Paul Tracy, Nathan Slaughter, Carla Pasternak, Andy Obermueller and Amy Calistri. His diverse role within the company has created a vast market knowledge that includes nearly every style of investing -- including growth, value and income.
Analyst Articles
Chart of the Day: What the Heck is the “Starbucks Indicator”?
If you read the headlines, Americans are still afraid to spend a dime. Today’s chart says that’s a bunch of bull. Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX) is one of the best gauges I’ve found for how the “man on the street” is feeling. No one needs to buy $4 coffee, but it is a nice little luxury if you can afford it. And with 11,000 stores in the United States, every American has easy access to the product. That gives the measure a nationwide scope. Not surprisingly, Starbucks’ business fell sharply during the recession. Read More
If you read the headlines, Americans are still afraid to spend a dime. Today’s chart says that’s a bunch of bull. Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX) is one of the best gauges I’ve found for how the “man on the street” is feeling. No one needs to buy $4 coffee, but it is a nice little luxury if you can afford it. And with 11,000 stores in the United States, every American has easy access to the product. That gives the measure a nationwide scope. Not surprisingly, Starbucks’ business fell sharply during the recession. Its share price followed suit. But what is our “Starbucks indicator” saying now? Evidently, the man on the street is feeling much better these days… Now Starbucks stores aren’t found just in the United States, but the lion’s share (75%) of sales and profit come from America. That means the move higher is based largely on its performance at home (sales hit a record-high last quarter). That’s great news for an economy built on consumer spending. Be sure to look for… Read More
Chart of the Day: The Worst Investment We’ve Ever Seen
If a CEO oversaw this sort of performance, they’d be ridden out on a rail. A fund manager? You better expect a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation and prison time. But there’s something different about this investment. It’s lost 99% in the past two years, yet it’s rarely in the news and it hasn’t been shut down. In fact, it still trades 30 million shares a day. Meet the Direxion Daily Financial Bear 3X Shares (NYSE: FAZ). It takes the crown as the worst investment we at StreetAuthority have… Read More
If a CEO oversaw this sort of performance, they’d be ridden out on a rail. A fund manager? You better expect a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation and prison time. But there’s something different about this investment. It’s lost 99% in the past two years, yet it’s rarely in the news and it hasn’t been shut down. In fact, it still trades 30 million shares a day. Meet the Direxion Daily Financial Bear 3X Shares (NYSE: FAZ). It takes the crown as the worst investment we at StreetAuthority have ever seen. The fund is built to triple the Russell 1000 Financial Services Index… in the opposite direction. So if the index is down 1 point, FAZ rises three points. During the financial crisis, buying a few shares would have actually been a nice hedge for your portfolio. But these highly leveraged short funds are time bombs if you hold them too long. Once the rebound took hold, owning FAZ meant disaster… FAZ has its place — if you’re a trader or if… Read More
Chart of the Day: China’s Warning Shot to Investors
For a decade, you’ve heard the glowing stories: enormous GDP growth, massive infrastructure building — even 15-story hotels being built in six days… China’s growth is unstoppable. It’s only a matter of time before it overtakes the United States as the largest economy in the world. Not so fast… China’s market is flashing a major warning sign. If you have money invested in Chinese stocks, keep a close eye. I use the iShares FTSE China 25 ETF (NYSE: FXI) as an easy way to keep tabs… Read More
For a decade, you’ve heard the glowing stories: enormous GDP growth, massive infrastructure building — even 15-story hotels being built in six days… China’s growth is unstoppable. It’s only a matter of time before it overtakes the United States as the largest economy in the world. Not so fast… China’s market is flashing a major warning sign. If you have money invested in Chinese stocks, keep a close eye. I use the iShares FTSE China 25 ETF (NYSE: FXI) as an easy way to keep tabs on China’s market. It holds 25 of the biggest companies in China, across all industries… banks, telecoms, oil companies. You can think of it as China’s Dow Jones Industrial Average. Well, China’s “Dow” is having problems: A period of consolidation after a big rebound would be expected if this were anywhere but “unstoppable” China. And when you compare that flat performance with our own Dow, which has gained about 30% in the same time frame, you really start to see the trouble brewing. If you’re invested in China,… Read More
For years, physical gold and gold miners traded in tandem. You’d expect the companies that make a living mining gold would move along with the price of the metal. And that’s what happened for a long time… until the market tanked in 2008. Since then, gold and gold miners have had a strange relationship. Investors love gold right now. They see a safe-haven; a tangible commodity you can hold, covet, even hoard. But people were scared away from equities during the crash, sending shares of gold miners… Read More
For years, physical gold and gold miners traded in tandem. You’d expect the companies that make a living mining gold would move along with the price of the metal. And that’s what happened for a long time… until the market tanked in 2008. Since then, gold and gold miners have had a strange relationship. Investors love gold right now. They see a safe-haven; a tangible commodity you can hold, covet, even hoard. But people were scared away from equities during the crash, sending shares of gold miners down much further than gold prices. And while many miners have rebounded nicely (even outperforming physical gold recently), it looks like investors have yet to completely warm back up to the companies that actually pull gold out of the ground. It’s one of the reasons you can actually buy the gold reserves held by miners for pennies on the dollar. [See: “How to Buy Gold for Only $159 an Ounce”] The chart below shows the performance of the SPDR Gold Shares ETF (NYSE: GLD) compared to the Market Vectors… Read More