Virtus

How Did Asset Managers Respond to QE3?

It’s almost old news by now. Yesterday, the Fed announced QE3 and ongoing purchases of mortgage-backed securities at the rate of $40B per month. So, how did asset managers respond?

Using Twitter as an (incomplete) proxy for firms’ responses, here’s the short, chronological list of activity as of 5pm on the day of the news:

That is six responses within about six hours. As a sidebar, it’s interesting that none of the content referenced any of trending conversations on Twitter (#QE3, #Fed, etc.). Per the screen capture below, a search showed Oppenheimer and Russell taking advantage of Twitter’s social features. But these were from before the Fed’s announcement.

I don’t know exactly what I expected when I started to look, but overall I’d characterize the volume as a bit disappointing. The biggest financial news of the week warranted a bigger, faster response. Firms know that; it’s still a matter of getting the process ironed out.

Best Blogs of the Week

For the first time, we didn’t find three blogs to present.  We did read two posts that presented important insights.  Insights an FA could pick-up and use immediately.

Virtus – Joe Terranova presents a rational case for his current concerns in US equities.  It’s digestible and probably worth consideration as skittish investors continue to press their FAs for ways to understand if the market will swing upwards.

BlackRock – We are proponents of the dueling opinions format.  Matt Tucker and Russ Koesterich sound off on the Federal Reserves “twist” strategy.  It’s succinct, compelling and shows BlackRock isn’t afraid to showcase different opinions.

Best Blogs of the Week

This week’s list begins with a topic on everyone’s mind: the national debt.  Additionally, we found two interesting blog posts that comment on the S&P (very differently).

  1. Wells Fargo – This post covers the concept of sustainability – who much debt can the US manage?
  2. BlackRock – The author makes a compelling case to consider Mega Caps (larges 100 of the S&P) and why they may be set for higher returns than the broader index.
  3. Virtus – Unlike the prior case, this post uses technical data to show how “directionless” the S&P is this month.

 

Best Blogs of the Week

This week’s best blogs includes one slightly older post.  It just didn’t make the cut last week but still remained interesting.

  1. Virtus – Great blog title – Six Charts that Matter – who doesn’t have time for six charts?  Further who’s not curious to see if you agree/disagree with Joe here.
  2. Franklin Templeton – This post provides a brief and digestible synopsis of Abu Dhabi; way better than wikipedia.
  3. Vanguard – While it seems strange to a 529 dayh (is April 1st, “401k day”) last week, this is a great post on how and why 529 accounts matter.

Best Blogs of the Week

Last week presented a few interesting topics we thought to share.

  1. Vanguard – In celebrating the index investing’s 35 birthday (and their own success therein), Craig Stock posts a compact history for indexing.
  2. Virtus – Joe Terranova provides an easily digestible summary of major currencies in one post.  He uses a few charts, but doesn’t become bogged down in statistics or data points.
  3. Russell – The post describes the difficulty in selecting high-performing assets.  Additionally, there’s a 1-question poll that captures readers’ opinions