Podcasts about What Goes Up

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What Goes Up

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Best podcasts about What Goes Up

Latest podcast episodes about What Goes Up

Sounds!
Sounds! Album der Woche: Mount Jacinto «Silver Lining»

Sounds!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 108:43


Überwältigende Natur, unendlicher Sternenhimmel und Freaks: Die Wüste steckt tief in Sonya Carmonas Projekt, benannt nach dem Mount San Jacinto in Kalifornien. Auf der Debüt-LP wird die Natur zur Partnerin, die hilft, innere Dämonen zu vertreiben. Ein warmer, wilder und kosmisch-romantischer Trip. +++ PLAYLIST +++ · 22:54 - ALONE von THE CURE · 22:46 - MYSTERY OF LOVE von SOAP & SKIN · 22:42 - WHAT GOES UP von WARHAUS · 22:38 - BODYS CHORUS von SKELETEN · 22:33 - SEXY CLOWN von MARIE DAVIDSON · 22:28 - PURE LOVE von DJ KOZE/DAMON ALBARN · 22:19 - TABLE DEATH SET von MORD FUZZTANG · 22:16 - MAGNETIC von TUNDE ADEBIMPE · 22:12 - JUST MY LUCK von OBONGJAYAR · 22:08 - DEFENSE von PANDA BEAR/CINDY LEE · · 21:54 - ALL I GOT von MOUNT JACINTO · 21:47 - NICE LIQOUR von MOUNT JACINTO · 21:43 - BIG TIME von ANGEL OLSEN · 21:39 - I AM A CHILD von BUFFALO SPRINGFIELD · 21:34 - FOREST von MOUNT JACINTO · 21:26 - MONTE JACINTO von MOUNT JACINTO · 21:22 - REMEMBER von MOUNT JACINTO · 21:14 - SILVER LINING von MOUNT JACINTO · 21:10 - SEEMS RIGHT von MOUNT JACINTO · 21:03 - THE REASON von MOUNT JACINTO

Sounds!
Warhaus «Karaoke Moon»: Nach dem Heartbreak kommt das Tinder-Date

Sounds!

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2024 106:46


Maarten Devoldere und sein Soloprojekt Warhaus klangen ja schon immer ziemlich sexy. So heissblütig wie auf seinem vierten Soloalbum klang Devoldere, sonst einer der beiden Sänger bei Balthazar, aber noch nie. Könnte daran liegen, dass es nach dem verarbeiteten Break-up auf dem letzten Album («Ha Ha Heartbreak», 2022) nun höchste Zeit ist, mindestens einen Fuss wieder Richtung Datingpool auszustrecken. Und – so viel sei verraten – da dürfte «Karaoke Moon» den weitaus besseren Effekt haben als jede funny Tinder-Bio. +++ PLAYLIST +++ · 22:55 – THE SEA BRINGS, WAVES OF CASTED SILVER SOFTLY CRAWLS, INTO MOSS WE SINK von BEN KACZOR & NICULIN BARANDUN · 22:51 – MÉLANCOLIE von Lescop · 22:43 – TABLE DEATH SET von MORD FUZZTANG · 22:39 – SEEN TOO MUCH von MORD FUZZTANG · 22:37 – GUESS IT'S WRECKED von MOIN FEAT. OLAN MONK · 22:32 – ADRIFT von ARTHUR HNATEK · 22:30 – DURAN DURAN von WESTSIDE GUNN & DJ DRAMA · 22:23 – TV OFF von KENDRICK LAMAR FEAT. LEFTY GUNPLAY · 22:19 – SEXY CLOWN von Marie Davidson · 22:14 – BODYS CHORUS von SKELETEN · 22:10 – LAY LOW von CASANORA · 21:55 – THE REASON von MOUNT JACINTO · 21:46 – MAHASHMASHANA von FATHER JOHN MISTY · 21:37 – SCREAMLAND von FATHER JOHN MISTY · 21:32 – WHAT GOES UP von WARHAUS · 21:28 – I'M THE GHOST YOU FORGOT von J. BERNARDT · 21:22 – ZERO ONE CODE von WARHAUS · 21:19 – MEMORY / LIVE @ SRF 3 von WARHAUS · 21:14 – HANDS OF A CLOCK von WARHAUS · 21:11 – SWEET LOVE von SYLVIE KREUSCH · 21:06 – NO SURPRISE von WARHAUS · 21:03 – SINKING SHIP von BALTHAZAR

The Real Brady Bros
What Goes Up - Pt 2

The Real Brady Bros

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 45:16


Climbing up into the treehouse for the first time, Bobby slips, falls, and sprains his ankle. Greg starts to suspect Bobby is deliberately feigning prolonged ankle pain to avoid any activity that involves heights, and Mike and Carol notice that when Bobby comes downstairs for dinner, he's not showing any signs of limping. Bobby's fear is finally overcome when Tiger scares his parakeet out the window, and he is forced to rescue it.   "What Goes Up..." The Brady Bunch S2 E11, originally aired December 11, 1970 Advertising Inquiries: https://www.advertisecast.com/

The Real Brady Bros
What Goes Up - Pt 1

The Real Brady Bros

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2024 35:55


Peter and some of his friends have started a club in a treehouse. Bobby wants to join, and Peter convinces them to let him join as a junior member. He pays dues and does menial jobs for them. Climbing up into the treehouse for the first time, Bobby slips, falls, and sprains his ankle.   "What Goes Up..." The Brady Bunch S2 E11, originally aired December 11, 1970 Advertising Inquiries: https://www.advertisecast.com/

Apostolic Revival Center
"What Goes Up, Must Not Come Down" | Pastor Evan Hood | 7.31.24

Apostolic Revival Center

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2024 70:44


"What Goes Up, Must Not Come Down" | Pastor Evan Hood | 7.31.24 by ARC of Carson City, NV

Keen On Democracy
Episode 2083: Andrew Lipstein on the $15 Trillion 401(k) Doomsday that might trigger a global economic catastrophe

Keen On Democracy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 36:45


What goes up, comes down. As the Dow continues to hover at 40,000, something is inevitably going to burst the Wall Street's current irrational exuberance. According to Andrew Lipstein, the biggest danger to today's stock market boom is the $15 trillion in global passive investing funds managed by companies like Vanguard. In this month's Harpers cover story, WHAT GOES UP, the Brooklyn based Lipstein talks to leading Cassandras warning us of the apocalyptic dangers of passive investing. Lipstein is the author of two wickedly entertaining novels and the writer brings a sparkling surrealism to the normally horribly boring business of identifying the next economic crash.Andrew Lipstein is a writer based in Brooklyn. His debut novel Last Resort was published in 2022 by Farrar, Straus & Giroux in the US, and Weidenfeld & Nicolson in the UK. His second novel The Vegan was published in July 2023, also by FSG and W&N. His third novel Something Rotten will be published in January 2025.Named as one of the "100 most connected men" by GQ magazine, Andrew Keen is amongst the world's best known broadcasters and commentators. In addition to presenting KEEN ON, he is the host of the long-running How To Fix Democracy show. He is also the author of four prescient books about digital technology: CULT OF THE AMATEUR, DIGITAL VERTIGO, THE INTERNET IS NOT THE ANSWER and HOW TO FIX THE FUTURE. Andrew lives in San Francisco, is married to Cassandra Knight, Google's VP of Litigation & Discovery, and has two grown children. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe

WBAP Morning News Podcast
WILL GROCERY PRICES EVER COME DOWN?

WBAP Morning News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 3:57


Bill Dendy, personal finance expert, joined The WBAP Morning News to talk about how the old saying “What Goes Up, Must Come Down,” may not apply to grocery prices. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Elon, Inc: Elon Musk Bingo on Tesla's Earnings Call

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2024 27:40 Transcription Available


From our friends over at the Elon, Inc. podcast from Businessweek, hosted by David Papadopoulos, is this special episode we're sharing to our What Goes Up listeners. Please enjoy this episode, subscribe to their feed, and leave a review!---- For years, Tesla fans and critics alike have produced mock bingo cards ahead of Tesla earnings calls. And so, in honor of Tesla's next call, which will be held Jan. 24 after markets close, the Elon Inc. crew produced our own bingo game. This week we preview Tesla's Q4 2023 earnings and introduce our picks for which Muskisms will carry the day. You can download a PDF of this quarter's bingo card here. In this episode we also recap the other major events from the week: A visit to Auschwitz, a farewell to a former political ally and a paltry attempt at feud of the week.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Wake Up Call
Wake Up Call

Wake Up Call

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2024 45:45 Transcription Available


Mike Dobuski. First major smartphone launch of 2024Jordana Miller. Israel/Hamas latestAmy's On It "Beef"Jim Ryan. What Goes Up...

The Morning Crew Radio Show
Episode 714: Tuesday, January 16, 2024 -- Episode #5494

The Morning Crew Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2024 84:34


Diets In The News...My Life Sucks...What Goes Up, Must Come DownPlus -- wintery weather, Jon's ramping car, 'avalanching', and much more

What Goes Up
Why China's Real Estate Crisis Is Different

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2023 36:52 Transcription Available


The troubles facing highly indebted property developers in China have dominated conversations about the Asian nation's economy and markets this year. Yet according to Rayliant Global Advisors' Jason Hsu, there's an important distinction between this housing crisis and previous ones elsewhere: The developers are the ones who are over-leveraged—not households. And that difference is guiding policymakers' response.Hsu, chief investment officer of Rayliant and a co-founder of Research Affiliates, joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss China and other emerging markets. “Chinese households are not levered when it comes to real estate,” he says. “They're not levered because they can buy their first home with money down—and they pay quite a bit money down—and they generally have to sort of have enough income to cover the payment. That bankruptcy you're seeing in the developer sector is very engineered. On the household side, there's not a balance-sheet crisis, because they're not buying real estate on leverage. So they really don't think there's a meaningful problem there.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Is the Fed Done Raising Rates? Ellen Zentner Thinks So

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2023 39:09 Transcription Available


When it comes to the US Federal Reserve's campaign to crush inflation by raising interest rates, Morgan Stanley Chief US Economist Ellen Zentner says this: “I have a strong view that they're done here—but they have left the door open.”Zentner joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss the Fed's decision this week to pause rate hikes, and what she expects of monetary policy and the US economy going forward. Cooling inflation should keep the central bank on hold until it's ready to cut rates next year, she says. In the near term, a potential government shutdown by Republicans would bolster the case for maintaining the status quo at the Fed's November meeting. A shutdown, she explains, would leave policymakers without all of the economic data they need to make a decision.“In monetary-policy making, uncertainty tends to lead to policy paralysis,” Zentner says. “If we're lacking data that the Fed can officially sink its teeth into, then that's going to lead to an inability to make a decision about the path for rates.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Human Trafficking in the Crypto Rabbit Hole

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2023 35:05 Transcription Available


A few years ago, an editor asked Bloomberg investigative reporter Zeke Faux to take a look at the cryptocurrency Tether, a so-called stablecoin meant to precisely track the US dollar by backing it with real-world reserves. What followed was a tour through some of the most-colorful corners of the crypto world, from Mighty Ducks actor Brock Pierce's yacht to FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried's digs in the Bahamas and, finally, a hotbed for human trafficking in Cambodia.Faux joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss his reporting, which is laid out in his new book Number Go Up: Inside Crypto's Wild Rise and Staggering Fall. “There's actually these whole office towers, floor after floor of people who've been lured from, say, like Vietnam, with the offer of a good job,” Faux says. “Then when they get there, they're trapped. They're told they can't leave. They're beaten. They get electric shocks, other forms of torture, and they're just given like 10 phones each and made to try to lure people into scams from around the world.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
A Dip Worth Buying?

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2023 26:44 Transcription Available


From artificial intelligence to electric vehicles and travel stocks, some of the previously hot equity-market themes have borne the brunt of the selling during the market's dip in August and September. Sylvia Jablonski, chief executive of Defiance ETFs LLC, joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss why that is. She also makes the case for buying the dip. “Everyone kind of panics, sells off tech, sells off growth and goes back into cash, cash equivalents, staples and kind of the defensive types of plays,” Jablonski explains. But “these are actually great opportunities, especially if you're a young person investing for the long term. These are amazing opportunities to dollar-cost average. That's how I would characterize this market this year.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

jablonski what goes up sylvia jablonski
What Goes Up
How to Avoid Getting Burned by the AI Hype

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2023 38:16 Transcription Available


There's a lot of excitement around AI-focused stocks right now, but market veteran Art Hogan urges caution when it comes to companies that are just trying to take advantage of the hype without having true ties to the industry.  The chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss how he views the artificial intelligence investment landscape, as well as other market trends. “If we start to see the capital markets open, and we start to have a flood of newly minted companies that are AI-specific or adjacent, I would avoid that at all costs because they likely don't have models,” he says.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Matt Levine on Why 'Everything Is Securities Fraud'

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 36:10 Transcription Available


Matt Levine, a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion who writes the Bloomberg newsletter Money Stuff, joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss some of the hot finance topics he's been covering and what he means when he says “everything is securities fraud.”“I have a genre of stories called ‘everything is securities fraud,' which is where public companies do random bad things and people sue them for securities fraud,” Levine says. “It's indicative of this really big, interesting trend in American securities laws where everything gets sort of reflected—all conduct gets reflected—through the notion of securities fraud because it's easy to bring cases and the damages can be really large. And so you can like litigate, you can fight over, all sorts of political and social issues by calling them securities fraud.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
BlackRock Shakes Up the Bitcoin ETF Race

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2023 46:58 Transcription Available


Crypto fanatics have been pining for a Bitcoin exchange-traded fund for a decade now. But as the applications piled up, US regulators repeatedly declined to approve one, citing the risk of fraud and market manipulation in cryptocurrency markets.But with the entrance of BlackRock Inc. into the race, many market watchers are hopeful that one or more spot-Bitcoin ETFs will finally get the go-ahead. After all, the world's largest asset manager has a strong track record of getting funds past regulatory roadblocks. On this week's episode of the What Goes Up podcast, Eric Balchunas and James Seyffart from Bloomberg Intelligence join to discuss how BlackRock's application dramatically changes the outlook for Bitcoin ETFs.“When they filed, it was a whole different ballgame in my opinion,” says Balchunas. “The fact is they generally like to bring a gun to a knife fight. This is a firm who doesn't like to lose, who knows what they're doing, and they must see something.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
The `Odd Lots' Crossover Episode

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2023 44:29 Transcription Available


From the renewed and growing power of American organized labor to the case for minting a $1 trillion coin to end debt-ceiling brinkmanship once and for all, Bloomberg's Odd Lots podcast has tried to tackle some of the most important topics related to the economy and financial markets. From Modern Monetary Theory to Bidenomics, the show hasn't found a topic it can't chew on.Now, the podcast's hosts get the chance to answer some questions instead of asking them. Tracy Alloway and Joe Weisenthal joined the What Goes Up podcast to give their takes on some of the hot-button issues of the day.   See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
What You Need to Know About Gold

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 44:51 Transcription Available


The price of gold tends to do well in times of elevated uncertainty about economies and financial systems—something the world has seen a lot of in the past few years. Yet each time the precious metal rallies above $2,000 an ounce, it quickly falls back below that threshold.Why is that? Joe Cavatoni, strategist at the World Gold Council, joined the What Goes Up podcast to explain what drives the price of gold, what buyers need to know and why that magic number has served as a ceiling. One main reason, he says, is that when prices go that high, they tend to reduce the real-world demand for gold—including from buyers of jewelry in China and India. “These are price-sensitive businesses and price-sensitive consumers,” Cavatoni says. “So when you start seeing those types of price levels develop, that's when you see those types of consumers back away from buying—and investors aren't ready to step back in in the long-term.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Vanguard's Hard Pass on a `Soft Landing'

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2023 38:37 Transcription Available


A rallying stock market and better-than-expected second-quarter economic growth are just the latest developments pointing Wall Street skeptics to the possibility of a US “soft landing.” That's where the Federal Reserve gets inflation back down to around 2% without triggering a downturn. For more than year, Fed Chair Jerome Powell has waged war on inflation while a chorus of adamant recession predictions has fallen flat. But even now, with inflation cooling and the economy looking to be on the glidepath, some big names remain uncertain that he can pull it off. Vanguard Group is one of them.Joseph Davis, the firm's global chief economist and head of its Investment Strategy Group, joined to What Goes Up podcast to explain why that is, as well as offer his reaction to the latest interest-rate increase and give his outlook for the bond market. “To get inflation down that last yard to 2%, you have to see a modest weakening in the labor market, which means the unemployment rate's going to rise—although hopefully not drastically, let's say four-and-a-half percent over the next year,” he says. “Well, that's a hundred basis-point rise. So by definition, that is a recession. Now, anyone who thinks that that's a soft landing is spitting in the face of 150 years of history.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
When Will Commercial Real Estate Market Hit Bottom?

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 39:20 Transcription Available


A slow-motion crisis is unfolding in the global commercial real-estate market, thanks to the double-whammy of higher interest rates and lower demand for office space following the Covid-19 pandemic.John Fish, who is head of the construction firm Suffolk, chair of the Real Estate Roundtable think tank and former chair of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss the problems facing the sector and what's being done to help.  “The biggest problem right now is the capital markets nationally have frozen,” he says of the US. “And the reason why they've frozen is because nobody understands value. We can't evaluate price discovery because very few assets have traded during this period of time. Nobody understands where bottom is.” One step in the right direction, he says, is recent guidance from federal regulators that allows lenders more flexibility when it comes to borrowers who need to refinance properties.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
There's No Magic to Fed's 2% Inflation Target

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2023 31:36 Transcription Available


US Federal Reserve officials have been adamant that they're looking to get inflation levels back down to 2%. But the path to that goal could bring pain to millions of workers, a possible trade-off that “doesn't make sense,” according to Rick Rieder, BlackRock Inc.'s chief investment officer of global fixed income. “This whole idea of there's a magic to 2% doesn't make any sense to me. You just had immense stimulus—let it play out,” he says on this week's episode of the What Goes Up podcast. “Interest rates—how much would you have to move them to get the unemployment rate to a level to slow wages? It's not worth it. Why would you take millions of people out of work because you need to go from 2.7% to 2%?” He called the Fed goal a search for “mystical perfection.” BlackRock manages about $2.7 trillion in fixed-income assets for its clients. Rieder adds that the segment of the population that gets hurt by higher inflation is the one that would bear the brunt of any potential layoffs. Meanwhile, raising rates creates an income benefit to wealthier people who tend to be savers, he says. “It's illogical to me.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
The World's Food Supply Needs to Change

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2023 42:46


Global shifts in incomes and populations, geopolitics and the climate crisis are combining to drastically alter the outlook for the world's food supply. Taimur Hyat, chief operating officer for asset manager PGIM, joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss his research into the changing world of food and what opportunities and risks it all presents to investors.   “We think food is where the energy sector and this whole talk about energy transition was about 10 years ago,” Hyat says. “We are like 10 years behind in the thinking. And it's going to catch up with us, because the current food system is simply not fit for purpose. It is not going to work for our planet, it's not going to work for our consumption needs for a variety of reasons.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
What If There Was a Recession and No One Noticed?

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2023 43:39


The disconnect between a roaring stock market and stubborn recession predictions has left many investors scratching their heads. The equity strategists at Bloomberg Intelligence however have an intriguing explanation: Maybe the part of the economic downdraft most likely to impact stocks started last year, and the worst could already be over. That's what an economic-regime model suggests, according to BI Chief Equity Strategist Gina Martin Adams and her team. She joined the What Goes Up podcast to explain how the model works, and offer her mid-year update on the market. The model uses month-over-month changes in capacity utilization, continuing jobless claims, ISM Manufacturing data and the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment level to define the economy's health. “This indicator started suggesting there were economic risks emerging for the equity market as early as June of last year,” Martin Adams says. “And then it hit just an outright low level, like a low that you never see outside of recession. We effectively had this big loss of momentum in the economy that impacted the equity market—extremely negatively—between June and December.” She says that, by the model's measure, the economy still isn't out of the woods. “It's still terrible. The reading is awful. It suggests we may actually still be in some form of an economic correction or recession, but it's off of the low,” Martin Adams says. “So this is what's really meaningful for price direction: As we know, equity prices are driven by shifts in momentum.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
How Covid Rewired Markets and the Economy

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2023 46:04


While in some places life has mostly gotten back to normal following the Covid-19 pandemic, there are aspects of economies and markets that may have been altered permanently. Jared Gross, the head of institutional portfolio strategy at J.P. Morgan Asset Management, joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss his team's research into the post-pandemic landscape.  According to Gross, some of the most-important legacies of the global health crisis will be disruptions to trade practices and the reaction of central banks to volatility in markets. Some highlights of the conversation:“It's a rewiring of trade. The big pipe between China and the developed markets is being split apart. There's a lot of reshoring, onshoring, friendshoring, nearshoring—all of that stuff is going on, and it's a real thing, and it's going to change the way trade happens,” Gross said.   Another big change is that investors can't expect the US Federal Reserve to come to the rescue when markets wobble, he says. “The central bank put, which everyone used to talk about, has probably been replaced with a fiscal put. If you're looking for a backstop for market volatility, you probably can't depend on the monetary authorities as much as you used to, because they now have to be very careful given the amount of fiscal stimulus in the economy. They can't just cut rates because stocks go down. They can't just cut rates because a bank is wobbling.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
AI's 'Big Bang' Moment

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2023 33:18


Enthusiasm for artificial intelligence has powered a breakneck rally in US equities this year, far overshadowing the US Federal Reserve's campaign to raise interest rates. So how should investors sort out the fundamentals from the hype?Mark Baribeau, the head of global equity at PGIM's Jennison Associates, joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss how he's viewing the opportunity. He's the lead manager of the PGIM Jennison Global Opportunities Fund, which is beating 99% of its peers with a more-than 30% gain so far in 2023. “The infrastructure layer that allows for this accelerated computing to go on is the way to play AI right now. Because we're in the R&D phase, the applications are just getting developed,” Baribeau says. “Nvidia is an easy example. We kind of refer to their earnings release on May 24 as the ‘Big Bang' because, in my history of doing growth equities since the ‘90s, I've never seen a company raise guidance for a quarter by $4 billion. That's unprecedented.”See omny.fm/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Seema Shah Makes the Case for a Short-Lived Recession

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2023 28:46


According to Seema Shah, the chief global strategist for Principal Asset Management, the US economy will enter a recession, likely at the end of this year. Though she says it could be mild and short-lived. Shah joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss why she thinks there will be a downturn, and why it could last just two quarters. Earnings have come down and could continue to do so, she says, which may “weigh on asset prices.” And while the labor market looks strong right now, she warns that it's a lagging indicator and could weaken fairly quickly.  “I know a lot of people out there who are expecting recession—they expect it to come in Q3. I look at the labor market, the strength of it, and I say that that's almost impossible,” Shah says. “By Q4, we would expect fairly mild negative growth, and then in Q1, a deeper downturn. But then by Q2, this is back to recovery. So this is historically a very short recession and historically a very, very mild recession.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Using AI to Explain Stock Moves

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2023 28:18


Artificial intelligence is all the rage on Wall Street. Some strategists see AI trends driving further gains for stocks as others point to how big banks are beginning to use it to automate some jobs. MarketReader, founded by Jens Nordvig, is leveraging AI to analyze US equity market trends and help predict why a stock might be moving a certain way. He joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss how he sees AI helping investors digest information at a faster pace. “What's happened this year is that actually applying AI has become so much easier than it was six months ago.” Nordvig says. “Our original plan was more focused on structural modeling, traditional fundamental modeling. But we've really seen how this actually allows us to do stuff that we just can't do with traditional models.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Betting (on) the Farm

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2023 30:31


Investing in farmland has historically offered an attractive and stable source of returns, yet it's not an easy asset class for most investors to access. Carter Malloy founded a platform called AcreTrader in an effort to make it easier to purchase fractional ownership of a farm. He joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss some of the benefits and risks of this type of farmland investing. “You don't have big, huge up years and huge down years that you do across so many other mainstream asset classes,” Malloy says. “So the consistency of the returns and that relative lack of volatility—in investor speak, the Sharpe ratio—of farmland can be very, very attractive.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
With Fed Pause Likely, Here Are Ideas for Your Cash

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2023 32:43


A lot of investors are sitting on piles of cash. In fact, J.P. Morgan Wealth Management estimates its clients are more overweight with cash now than they've been in a decade.  But attractive buying opportunities could be lurking, including in fixed income, US mid-cap stocks and European equities, according to Chief Investment Strategist Tom Kennedy.  He joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss corners of the market—in the US and abroad—that look enticing. He also talks about how Europe managed to avoid a recession, and why the US Federal Reserve is likely done with its hiking campaign, among other things.  “Cash very rarely outperforms, and it takes a long time for rates to go up, but they can come down really fast,” he said. “The last seven business cycles, when you have the last rate hike from the Fed, in the two years after that, cash tends to underperform duration assets.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
The Debt Ceiling Crisis Is an Opportunity

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2023 28:22


As the US government debt-ceiling standoff heats up and markets grow more volatile, veteran Loomis Sayles & Co. portfolio manager Elaine Stokes has some advice for investors in the corporate-bond market: Get ready to buy. Stokes joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss the opportunities the drama in Washington may create, the potential for a credit crunch stemming from regional-bank turmoil, and how high-yield bonds may not be as risky as they seem, given recession concerns.  “The volatility that I think we're going to have over the next couple weeks is going to be the opportunity. So take advantage of that opportunity to buy a little further out the curve, to buy low dollar-price bonds, to build in real return for a long time,” she said on the podcast. With regard to high-yield bonds, she added: “I don't believe that this time around it's going to be the traditional high-yield market that's going to see the big wave of defaults. That is going to happen in either the bank-loan market or the private market. That's where the weaker issuance has come, the lower-quality issuance. So the traditional high-yield market is actually setting up to look pretty attractive.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
The Fed Won't Ride to the Rescue

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2023 34:07


Brace for a US recession to start next quarter and worsen at the end of the year, and don't bet on the Federal Reserve to react immediately to prop up growth. That's according to Sarah House, senior economist at Wells Fargo & Co. She joined the What Goes Up podcast to give her appraisal of the economy, and discuss what to expect for the rest of 2023.“It's likely to be kind of more of a slow drag in terms of economic activity, just given that we also don't think the Fed's going to be riding to the rescue as soon as you do see that weakness,” she said on the podcast. “The nature of the inflation that we're seeing right now, we think that the Fed's actually going to be pretty reluctant to ease policy even as the economy is entering a recession.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
The Fed's Not Done Breaking Things

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2023 40:11


While the drama surrounding regional US banks has largely subsided following the failure of three lenders in March, that doesn't mean the ripple effects of Federal Reserve interest-rate hikes are over. This is according to Que Nguyen, chief investment officer of equities at Research Affiliates, who joined the What Goes Up podcast to give her outlook on markets and talk about why she doesn't foresee a soft landing for the economy.“When the Fed raises rates and it breaks something, it rarely happens that it's a very small break,” she says. “Usually it's a very big break. And so while I'd never thought that we would get to a great-financial-crisis level of breakdown, I do believe—and I did believe, and I still believe—that there would be more things that break. Whether that continued to be in the small regional banks or whether that bled over to something else such as real estate lending, private credit—definitely those dangers still remain out there.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Morgan Stanley Braces for a Soft Landing

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2023 30:51


Runaway inflation. Surging interest rates. Bank failures. For a while it seemed like all of these issues would combine to trigger a US recession. Not so fast, says Morgan Stanley's Seth Carpenter, the bank's global chief economist. He joined the What Goes Up podcast to explain why there are signs the US could experience a “soft landing” that averts a major economic downturn.  “It seems hard to avoid the fact that the US economy is going to slow down, and part of the reason why that's hard to avoid is because that is absolutely, categorically, by design the Fed's objective,” he said. “We think they're looking carefully at the data and asking, ‘Do we have enough evidence that things are slowing down a lot, but not yet crashing?' Because that's what they're looking for in order to stop the hiking cycle. So we think the last hike is in May, when there'll be more evidence of a slowdown, but not yet evidence that things have actually fallen off of a cliff.” See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
The Case for a 22% Drop in S&P 500

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2023 41:35


Troy Gayeski, chief market strategist at FS Investments, says don't wait until May to flee the stock market rally—get out now. He joined the What Goes Up podcast to explain why he's expecting the S&P 500 to bottom out at around 3,200, a roughly 22% drop from current levels.“First of all, the strongest rallies have always been in bear markets,” he says. “Usually they're driven by technical factors. And then there's a narrative that's put together to justify it: the more recent one was that inflation's going to slow enough that the Fed won't have to hike anymore, and then we're going to have a recession and somehow that's going to cause the Fed to cut rapidly. But recessions aren't bad for revenue or earnings? It really makes very little sense.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Man Group's Stock Skepticism

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2023 38:52


It's not just the prospect of deteriorating fundamentals that has Man Group's Mark Jones skeptical about stocks these days. It's also the risk of money flowing into fixed-income investments now that they're sporting attractive yields. Jones, who is the deputy chief executive of the world's largest publicly traded hedge-fund manager, joined the What Goes Up podcast to give his outlook on markets and explain what strategies have been working well at his firm.“I think the risk-reward in equities is very, very tough at the moment,” he says. The first reason is a potential further cut in earnings expectations. Second is the flow of money into alternatives to stocks such as government bonds and corporate credit. “Whether that's the consumer or whether that's big institutional clients starting to come back to an asset class that, frankly, had fallen relatively out of favor, some of that flow of funds is also an issue for equities as just people move money around.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
A Quant Takes on Microcaps

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2023 36:22


If there's one thing that keeps professional investors up at night, it's being involved in a “crowded trade.” In other words, a position that's become so popular that there are few investors left to get involved with it, so there's risk of painful losses for all if the crowd heads for the exits.That's part of the appeal of microcap stocks for Patrick McDonough, a portfolio manager at PGIM Quantitative Solutions. He joined the What Goes Up podcast to explain his approach to analyzing these smaller, younger companies whose values are often measured in millions, rather than billions, of dollars. Since many investors are more comfortable with bigger, more-established companies, microcaps offer a unique and overlooked source of growth.“It's something that people have historically avoided,” McDonough says. “Which means it's not crowded. So it's an area we can go in and get a lot of upside.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Flashbacks to 2008

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2023 38:49


When Steve Sosnick recalls 2008 and tries to make parallels to the current turmoil in the banking sector, one memory sticks out: riding the elevator with Thomas Peterffy, founder of Interactive Brokers, who offhandedly asked him “what's new?” “And I said, ‘what's really interesting to me is the story that I'm reading this morning about how Bear Stearns may have as much as $20 billion in losses at some of their hedge funds,” recalled Sosnick, who's currently chief strategist at Interactive. “And he said, ‘what's their market cap?' And I said, ‘I think about $20 billion.'” “‘Are you telling me Bear Stearns is broke?'” Peterffy asked. Sosnick recalls saying, “‘I guess I am, aren't I?'” Sosnick joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss what lessons from the 2008 financial crisis can be applied today. Though the current predicament isn't similar to that period—banks are in much stronger positions and the economic backdrop is vastly different—it's important to keep lessons learned in mind, he says.  “They say history doesn't repeat, but it often rhymes,” Sosnick says. “And I think there's a certain rhyme to it, but we're not there yet. And I certainly hope we don't get there.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
The Huge Significance of Small Banks

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2023 39:43


Torsten Slok had been firmly in the “no landing” camp of economists. More positive than a “soft landing,” its adherents say the Federal Reserve will tame inflation without triggering a recession at all. But for Slok, chief economist of Apollo Global Management, that all changed with the failure of Silicon Valley Bank. Now he's bracing for a “hard landing.” Slok joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss the sizeable role regional banks play in the US economy, and the reasons why SVB's collapse changed his outlook. A big reason is how regional banks may now change their behavior.“Regional banks make up 30% of assets and roughly 40% of all lending,” he explains. That big chunk of the US banking sector is now looking at what happened to SVB and worrying what comes next. With a slowdown potentially underway thanks to the central bank's rate hikes, Slok warns a reluctance to lend by SVB's mid-size brethren might mean it comes “faster simply because of this banking situation.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Jeremy Grantham's Market Meat-Grinder

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2023 47:17


Jeremy Grantham blames the US Federal Reserve for creating a bubble in asset prices—one he says has a long way to go before it's fully deflated. As a result, stock prices may not reach bottom until late next year, he warns. The 84-year-old co-founder of investment firm GMO joined the What Goes Up podcast to explain what he calls the current, “meat grinder” phase of the market, and why he believes the central bank has “hardly gotten anything right.”  “Since Alan Greenspan first arrived—Paul Volcker knew what he was doing—but since then it's been a long, continuous horror show,” Grantham says of US monetary policy. “They've engaged in policies that drive up the prices of assets, other things being even, and create spectacular overpriced bubbles. They then break because that's what bubbles have to do. They simply break of their own extreme overpricing, and we pay a very tough price.”Grantham also discusses broader market risks, including shortages of labor and natural resources, the climate crisis, de-globalization and a new version of the Cold War. “All of these long-term factors are beginning to bite,” he says. “This will make this particular down-leg more dangerous, and perhaps worse than we anticipated.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
A Soft Landing Is Getting Harder

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2023 43:35


Princeton University's Alan Blinder is one of the most prominent economists to have expressed optimism that the Federal Reserve can engineer a so-called “soft landing” for the US economy—taming inflation without triggering a recession. But Blinder, who served in the 1990s as a vice chair of the Fed and a member of the president's Council of Economic Advisers, explains on this episode of What Goes Up why he's toned down his assessment. A big reason is the change in the way the Bureau of Labor Statistics adjusts inflation data for seasonal factors, he says. The result is that, while inflation moderated in the second half of 2022, it didn't cool off as quickly as previous data indicated. Blinder says that means there's reason to expect more rate hikes from the Fed. “I think they still have a chance” at a soft landing, he concludes, “but it's a tougher chance than it was.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
BlackRock on 'Fixing' the 40 in 60/40

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2023 40:41


Exchange-traded fund managers have seen massive inflows into fixed-income ETFs in recent months. As the dust settles from the bond market's worst year on record, ETFs focused on safe and simple Treasuries have attracted the bulk of the money. Stephen Laipply, the US head of fixed income ETFs at BlackRock, explains this state of affairs on the latest episode of the What Goes Up podcast.Many investors who follow a standard strategy of investing 60% of their portfolio in stocks and 40% in bonds have found it to be the right time to “fix” that 40% segment, Laipply says. “Investors are looking at this market, the public fixed-income markets, and realizing that they can ‘fix' their 40 by de-risking it to varying degrees,” he says. “You don't have to have the majority in high yield to get a certain yield target. You can allocate to the front end of the Treasury curve and get yields that you were seeing at some point in the high-yield market. So it really is an opportunity to get back to what that 40 was supposed to do, which is diversify your risk assets.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Don't Feel Bullied by the Stock Rally

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 32:54


The stock market may be off to a great start in 2023, but investors should be “mindful about not being bullied” by the rally, says Wealth Enhancement Group's Nicole Webb. She warns that it won't last. The S&P 500 is up 7% so far this year, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 has surged roughly 15%. Webb, a senior vice president and financial adviser at the firm, joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss her views on the market and the speediness of the recovery. “To us fundamentally, does technology make sense from a valuation standpoint?” she said. “Much of this rally in mega-technology—or if you even want to just call it a Nasdaq rally year to date—it's a little bit of an unwinding of the selloff of last year, probably closely followed by a bit of a FOMO rally.” “We're not bullish on the stickiness of this as we don't see any type of Fed pivot” from rate hikes in the near term.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
How Wall Street Is Using AI to Build ETFs

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2023 40:01


ChatGPT has taken the internet by storm, spurring all manner of experiments and examination as to what extent the artificial-intelligence model can supplant humans and daily tasks. But it's also being used on Wall Street, where a number of exchange-traded fund issuers, including State Street, have grasped onto the concept to help put together innovative products.  Matt Bartolini, head of SPDR Americas Research at State Street Global Advisors, joined the What Goes Up podcast to talk about using AI in portfolio construction. His firm's SPDR S&P Kensho New Economies Composite ETF is up roughly 20% this year.  “The reason why we went down this path of using AI is that we wanted something forward looking—something dynamic—because back in 2018, we understood that, in the ETF world, there weren't a lot of strategies that were this forward-looking, innovative-type paradigm,” Bartolini said. “The AI process was able to deliver that for us.” See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
(Mis)interpreting the Fed

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2023 47:11


Morgan Stanley's Jim Caron joined the What Goes Up podcast to dissect this week's US Federal Reserve meeting and analyze how markets may have misinterpreted the message being sent by Chair Jerome Powell.“This is a guy who's worried about inflation; this is somebody who's not done tightening by any stretch of the imagination,” said Caron, the co-chief investment officer of Global Balanced Funds at Morgan Stanley Investment Management. But Powell's comments triggered rallies in stocks and bonds amid speculation that the central bank was getting more dovish. “This is one of the risks that I think that we have coming up over the next few weeks,” Caron said. “That if the intended market reaction doesn't match what the intended statement was supposed to convey, then, as is typical, there's going to be some walking back of this.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
AlphaSimplex on Embracing the 'Uncomfortable'

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2023 38:02


The rare bright spots for investing last year were those strategies that follow trends in markets rather than fundamentals. This successful approach included the AlphaSimplex Managed Futures Strategy Fund, which returned more than 32% for the year. Kathryn Kaminski, chief research strategist and portfolio manager at AlphaSimplex Group, joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss her firm's strategies, and what she's expecting in 2023.  “We do really well when there's massive trends, when there's dislocation, when things are uncomfortable,” she says. “And last year was definitely uncomfortable, particularly fixed income.” One development she expects may make investors uncomfortable this year is the likelihood that inflation bottoms out at around 4%, rather than the Federal Reserve's target of 2%. At that point, Kaminski says, “the Fed either has to say, ‘well, we're no longer going to try' or ‘we're going to have to keep trying.' And people are not going to like that either. So I think that that's the challenge.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Fading the New Year's Bounce

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 42:09


The stock market got off to a roaring start this year with the S&P 500 at one point clocking a year-to-date gain of more than 4%. Truist Wealth Co-Chief Investment Officer Keith Lerner, however, is skeptical of the New Year bounce. He says the possibility of a recession and dwindling liquidity make the rally unsustainable. Lerner joined the What Goes Up podcast to explain why he's advising clients to take a defensive posture with investments, and what he believes is the best way to execute that strategy. “Being defensive from a stock, bonds and cash perspective is being overweight fixed income relative to equities. And then—in the fixed-income component—keeping it simple: keeping it with high-quality fixed income and not really taking a lot of credit risk at this point.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Savita Subramanian's Earnings-Season Reality Check

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2023 39:24


Get ready for some bad earnings-season news. That's the call from Savita Subramanian, the head of equity and quantitative strategy at Bank of America, who is expecting a 10% drop in earnings that will likely keep a lid on the S&P 500 in 2023.She joined the What Goes Up podcast to give her outlook for the market and explain why she thinks analysts' earnings estimates are too high: “We are going to see those estimates come down, and it's likely to happen after companies guide more aggressively lower around 2023 earnings. I think where we're going to see pressures are in companies with more labor intensity, like services companies, companies where you're really seeing cost pressure remain high. Those are the areas where we think that we're going to see some downward guidance on margins.” See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
Fidelity Sees a Return to Bear-Market Lows

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 37:44


The US Federal Reserve's commitment to higher interest rates and the potential for a recession in 2023 will combine to damage corporate earnings—damage that likely will cause the stock market to revisit its bear-market lows, warns Jurrien Timmer, director of global macro at Fidelity Investments.  Timmer joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss his outlook for the year, and explain why he thinks bonds will resume their role as a source of protection for investors in balanced portfolios. His take on stocks? This year “is going be kind of a choppy, sideways market where we're going to revisit the lows maybe once or twice as the fear grows that there's an earnings wave coming.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

What Goes Up
SBF's Love of Risk

What Goes Up

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2022 41:26


Before his FTX cryptocurrency empire collapsed, many of Sam Bankman-Fried's public statements indicated that he made decisions “as though he had no risk aversion,” according to Victor Haghani, the founder and chief investment officer of Elm Partners Management and a co-founder of the Long-Term Capital Management hedge fund. Haghani joined the What Goes Up podcast to discuss how Bankman-Fried's tolerance for risk made him highly unusual under the “theory of choice under uncertainty,” and how the causes of FTX's implosion differ from what triggered the failure of LTCM. Haghani also discusses his own approach to assessing risk when investing client assets at Elm Partners. (Note: This episode was recorded in early December, before Bankman-Fried was indicted for his alleged role in FTX's failure.)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.