This Stock Could Feed Profits Into Your Portfolio

Daniel Cross - INO.com Contributor - Equities


Long-term value investors understand that truly profitable trends can take time to build up. Stock market sectors wax and wane with the economy and flow along the curvature of the business cycle, but others don't necessarily obey the same rules.

There's an old saying by Mark Twain, “buy land – it's the one thing they’re not making any more of.” Value investors can take it one step further, though. Arable land is limited, and the global population is growing. That makes food production a critical industry that will continue to be relevant regardless of economic direction.

Low oil prices translate into higher consumer spending which benefits food production companies as well. As a defensive non-cyclical industry, demand stays relatively constant regardless of how the economy is performing.

A rising tide lifts all boats, and the food industry is getting quite a lift lately. Several companies have raised guidance for the next quarter, and a number of analysts have upgraded the industry's outlook going forward. Continue reading "This Stock Could Feed Profits Into Your Portfolio"

Are We or Are We Not in a New Gold Bull Market?

Technical analyst Jack Chan has examined the charts and says that if we are in a new bull market, prices in both gold and gold equities should begin to pull back and consolidate soon.

As suggested in our previous analysis, we need to see a couple of things happening in order to welcome a potential new bull market:

#1. COT data to return to bull market values.
#2. Gold price to exceed the 2015 high at $1,302.

Nobody can predict when this will happen, but we can prepare by looking at the past bull and bear markets so that we can recognize a new bull market if and when it materializes.

The Bear Market From 1981 to 2001

Gold Spot Price

After topping above $700 in 1981, gold lost more than half of its value in just over a year, followed by two sharp bear market rallies, and then died a slow death over the next 12 years. Continue reading "Are We or Are We Not in a New Gold Bull Market?"

One Thing You May Have Missed About Apple

Hello MarketClub members everywhere, Adam Hewison here coming here from the digital studios of MarketClub. I just got back from a short vacation break in Maui to see Apple once again slumped below $100 a share.

MarketClub's Mid-day Market Report

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL): One thing you may have missed is the fact that the Trade Triangles triggered a red weekly Trade Triangle on 4/22 at $104.22 signaling a move to the sidelines - that was 4 days ago!

As I have said before, perception is everything in the market; the perception now is that Apple is not the innovator it once was and that the smartphone business has peaked. On the brighter side, Apple still has almost $250 billion in cash, but like I said perception trumps everything. Continue reading "One Thing You May Have Missed About Apple"

Israeli Shekel Turning Japanese?

Lior Alkalay - INO.com Contributor - Forex


The Israeli Shekel has gained roughly 6% since mid-January. The Shekel has also been more resilient than other currencies when the dollar was gaining, and it has been performing well even when the dollar was weakening. All the while, Israel has been plagued with continual deflation, which is a classic case for unconventional measures. The Bank of Israel responded by slashing its benchmark interest rates to 0.1%. However, no “unconventional” measures were taken; no quantitative easing and no negative interest rates.

Investors, both local and foreign, reacted as they have in similar cases. That is by buying government bonds. Israeli government bonds yield 1.8% and in real terms, yield 2.5%, because Israel’s annual inflation rate is at a negative -0.7%. And with the demand for Israeli bonds high, the Israeli Shekel has strengthened as well, and so the cycle continues.

Demand for Israeli government bonds has been so high, in fact, that net foreign investment in Israeli government bonds over the past 3 months has been higher than it has been at any time in the past three years. Continue reading "Israeli Shekel Turning Japanese?"

This Fibonacci Timing Zone Is To Blame For The Market Volatility?

I was on CNBC's Squawk Box today and host Brian Sullivan asked where I thought the market was going. The truth is, we are in a pocket of high volatility with little net price change from 1 year ago. Why? We are caught in a Fibonacci Timing Zone that ended the massive bull market.

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