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For the 27th straight year, some of the brightest minds from across the business world descended on Beverly Hills in early May to attend the Milken Institute Global Conference. But while speculation stole headlines, Milken speakers spent much of their time fixated on the state of the US economy. But despite continued concerns about stagflation, Milken speakers overwhelmingly expressed confidence about economic growth at a May 6 session called "Global Markets at Inflection." "The economy is still extremely strong, consumers are still doing really well, businesses are still doing really well," Scharf said. Though far from perfect, the US is still the best place to investDespite the $34.7 trillion anvil hanging over the economy, Milken speakers widely agreed that the US is still the best place to invest and operate a company.
Persons: Elon Musk, he's, Milken, Wells, Franklin Templeton, Gerard Baker, Andre Esteves, Jenny Johnson, Charlie Scharf, Scharf, we've, it's, you've, hasn't, Sam, Joshua Friedman, Anne Walsh, Friedman, Esteves, they've, Johnson, " Scharf, Wells Fargo Organizations: Milken Institute Global, SpaceX, Business, Milken, The, Consumers, Starbucks, Canyon Partners, Investors, Guggenheim Investments, Milken Institute Global Conference, US Locations: Beverly Hills, Wells Fargo, Brazil, McDonald's, Washington
But let's say you're 30 years old and haven't started stashing money away; you may have difficulty getting there. And as a result of this, if you're going to live during a 30 or 40 year retirement. In Edelman's opinion, you're late to the game if you're over 25 and haven't started saving and investing. When people do set money aside, it's often in the wrong places, such as bank savings, money market accounts, and government bonds, Edelman said. All of this might sound complicated for a beginner, but diversification can be achieved through exchange-traded funds (ETFs), Edelman noted.
Persons: haven't, Ric Edelman, Barron's, Edelman, it's, aren't, Franklin Templeton Organizations: Federal Reserve, Edelman, New York Times, Trust, Vanguard Locations: America
Interest in fixed income has increased over the past year after rising bond yields put them back on investors' radars. Related storiesCorporate bonds with high yields are the new darling as investors dig for returns that beat inflation, Klein said. The Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield Index, a measurement of non-investment grade bonds, has a yield to worst (a measure of the lowest possible yield) of 7.65% and a one-year total return of 12.9%. It's unusual for equities to be doing very well and high yield to be doing poorly, he added. But buyers beware: high-yield bonds are also called non-investment grade and junk bonds, and it's for good reason.
Persons: there's, Goldman Sachs, Patrick Klein, Franklin, Klein, Goldman, don't Organizations: Business, Franklin Templeton, Bloomberg
A bitcoin halving — when the number of tokens rewarded to miners gets cut by 50% — happens reliably every four years. This time, however, supply will slow within months of an unprecedented demand shock, fueled by the approval of 11 spot bitcoin ETFs from asset management titans including BlackRock and Fidelity. AdvertisementAnd what's new this year is the wave of demand from bitcoin ETFs. Recent weeks have seen single-day inflows into spot bitcoin ETFs topping $1 billion, BitMex data shows. "We've never had both a supply shock and a demand shock at the same time."
Persons: , Sandy Kaul, Franklin Templeton's, bitcoin, it's, Greg Magadini, Magadini, Kaul, We've, Samir Kerbage, doesn't, Kerbage, Brian Rudick, Rudick Organizations: Service, BlackRock, Fidelity, Business
Kent Nishimura | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesWest Palm Beach, Fla. — The U.S. Federal Reserve is likely to start cutting interest rates by the end of second quarter despite recent "hotter than expected" inflation data, according to Kristina Hooper, chief global market strategist at Invesco. The question has become, at what point — and how quickly — does the central bank start to cut rates in order to avoid plunging the economy into a downturn? Fed chair Jerome Powell said last week that the Fed may not be far off from throttling back. The Fed last raised interest rates in summer 2023; in prior interest-rate-hiking cycles, the Fed began cutting rates about 8½ months later, Hooper said. Jenny Johnson, president and CEO of Franklin Templeton, also expects the central bank to begin cutting rates this year, though in the second half of 2024 at Fed policy meetings in July or September.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Kent Nishimura, Kristina Hooper, it's, Hooper, Jenny Johnson, Franklin Templeton, Moira McLachlan Organizations: Banking, Housing, Urban Affairs Committee, Getty, U.S . Federal, Women, Fed Locations: Palm Beach, Fla, U.S, West Palm Beach , Florida
Nvidia's 76% gain this year underscores the concentrated stock market led by mega-cap tech. Despite concerns, the growth of AI stocks isn't a hype cycle, according to Defiance ETFs' CEO. The Defiance Quantum ETF holds leading AI players, spanning sectors like quantum and cloud computing. It's a concentrated stock market, with a handful of mega-cap technology names continuing to lead the gains as they profit off the development of AI. But investor concerns are mounting over whether it's getting shaky at the top.
Persons: it's, Franklin Templeton Organizations: Nvidia, Business
There are three main routes through which retailers like Walmart benefit from advertising, Tarlowe said. The focus in retail advertising once transitioned from in-store to retailer websites with the e-commerce boom, Gutman said. Walmart: The pack leader With the deal, Walmart appears ahead of the retail pack, Gutman said. Connected TV is also just one part of a broader tide-change that's bolstering optimism on the stock, analysts told CNBC Pro. Other retail ideas Beyond Walmart, analysts said retailers need size and scale to perform well within off-site advertising.
Persons: Jefferies, Corey Tarlowe, Tarlowe, Morgan Stanley, Matt, Simeon Gutman, Gutman, it's, Roku, FactSet, Warren Buffett, Franklin Templeton, Dan Niles Organizations: Walmart, Intelligence, Retailers, Albertsons, CNBC, P Retail, Costco, Target, FactSet, TGT, Nvidia, & & , & & () Locations: Arkansas, Vizio
Zehrid Osmani, a portfolio manager at Martin Currie, a Europe-based affiliate of Franklin Templeton, is one such investor. Osmani told CNBC that he sees "potential risk of froth" in the AI trade as a whole, but not for Nvidia. "Unlike the basket of AI [stocks] that has seen multiple expansion, Nvidia has actually seen multiple contraction. Nvidia's price-to-earnings ratio, using the projections for the next 12 months, is 32.4, according to FactSet. So there will be a critical element of needing to channel more spend toward AI for a corporate," Osmani said.
Persons: Zehrid, Martin Currie, Franklin Templeton, Osmani Organizations: Nvidia, CNBC, Microsoft Locations: Europe, Great Britain, OpenAI
Investors should move out of cash and into fixed income with some duration, said Franklin Templeton's chief market strategist, Stephen Dover. Franklin Templeton's inflation forecast is more conservative than the U.S. Federal Reserve's. The investment firm expects the core personal consumption expenditures price index to fall to 2.7% by the end of the year, versus the U.S. Federal Reserve's projections of 2.4%. The markets' "biggest screaming issue" is the $6 trillion sitting in money market funds right now, he said. "We would advise those investors to move out of that cash and take some duration move into fixed income," he added.
Persons: Franklin, Stephen Dover, Dover Organizations: U.S Locations: U.S . Federal
Despite dashed hopes of early rate cuts, growth stocks like Nvidia continue to make new highs. "And here we are today: we've got Apple at multi-trillion dollars, Microsoft at multi-trillion dollars, Nvidia at multi-trillion dollars, and Google at over a trillion dollars." Snowflake (SNOW) helps businesses wrangle their data and build models from that data for multiple purposes, including AI. GitLab (GTLB) is an open-code platform with over a million paid users and programmers who can use AI tools to help with coding. Still, they collect customer data, and they help companies talk to their customers in a relevant and direct manner.
Persons: Jonathan Curtis, Franklin Templeton, Curtis, hadn't, ChatGPT, there's Organizations: Nvidia, Franklin Templeton Institute Global Investment Management Survey, Business, Franklin Equity Group, Apple, Microsoft, Google, Cisco, Meta, Semiconductor, Power Systems, AMD, Arista Networks
Expect four rate cuts in 2024 that will bring the federal funds rate to 4.30% by year-end, according to the Franklin Templeton Institute Global Investment Management Survey, which compiles the views of the firm's 300 senior investment professionals who work across equities, fixed income, and alternatives. That's still more cuts than the Federal Open Market Committee projects in its dot plot: three reductions and a fed funds rate of 4.63% by year-end. Stephen Dover, chief market strategist and the head of the Franklin Templeton Institute, expects those rate cuts to begin closer to June or July and be 25 basis points each. For now, Dover pointed to a strong US economy, with solid jobs and GDP growth, as working against the possibility of earlier rate cuts. This will be another sticky point that the central bank will likely consider and could impact when cuts happen, he said.
Persons: Stephen Dover, Dover, there's Organizations: Franklin Templeton Institute Global Investment Management Survey, Federal, Franklin Templeton Institute
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFranklin Templeton's Sandy Kaul on the rate of flows into its EZBC bitcoin ETFCNBC Crypto World features the latest news and daily trading updates from the digital currency markets and provides viewers with a look at what's ahead with high-profile interviews, explainers, and unique stories from the ever-changing crypto industry. On today's show, Sandy Kaul, head of digital asset & investor advisory services, discusses the firm's EZBC spot bitcoin ETF.
Persons: Franklin, Sandy Kaul, explainers Organizations: CNBC
Investors are pricing in a best-case outcome where earnings rise and inflation returns to normal in a continued economic expansion. “It’s a tough needle to thread,” said Steve Sosnick, the chief strategist at Interactive Brokers. “And that pretty much pulls forward almost all the returns, in our minds, for 2024.”AdvertisementCrit Thomas, a global market strategist at Touchstone Investments, has the same concern. “And so at 21x earnings, there’s very little margin for error here.”AdvertisementFourth-quarter earnings mostly met measured expectations , as did forward guidance. Clark Bellin, the chief investment officer at Bellwether Wealth, said he’s less worried about valuations broadly and is more interested in seeing which sectors look cheap.
Persons: , , Solita Marcelli, , Sameer Samana, Steve Sosnick, It’s, Steven Wieting, “ We’ve, Crit Thomas, “ I’m, ” Thomas, We’re, Chris Galipeau, ” Galipeau, ” Sosnick, we’ve, Liz Ann Sonders, Schwab, ” Sonders, there’s, Clark Bellin, he’s, ” Bellin, you’re, Stocks, Samana, won’t, Thomas, Wieting, Bellin, “ They’ve, they’re Organizations: Service, Business, UBS Global Wealth Management, Federal Reserve, Wells, Wells Fargo Investment Institute, Interactive, Citi Global Wealth’s, Touchstone Investments, Franklin Templeton Institute, Citi Global Wealth, Bellwether Wealth Locations: Wells Fargo, Samana, ” Samana, Galipeau
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailInvestors should move money out of cash and into fixed income with some duration: StrategistStephen Dover from Franklin Templeton discusses his market view, saying there is a "high concentration" of earnings expectations in a few companies, namely the Magnificent Seven in the current market environment.
Persons: Stephen Dover, Franklin Templeton
Their Corporate Credit Fund, which trades under the ticker BCAAX for retail investors, largely focuses on high-yield bonds. The fund currently holds a little over 70% in high-yield bonds, 10% in cash and about 18% in investment-grade bonds. Another inefficiency the managers exploit is the area between low investment-grade bonds and the higher-rated high-yield market, Zox said. Investment-grade portfolio managers are shying away from the lower rated end of the investment-grade market, and high-yield managers are sticking with the higher rated end of the high-yield market, he explained. "We find better values in the lower rated part of the investment-grade market than the higher rated part of the high-yield market," Zox said.
Persons: John McClain, Bill Zox, aren't, Morningstar, McClain, BCAAX, Franklin Templeton, Zox, We're, they're, Wells, it's Organizations: Brandywine Global, Credit Fund, ICE, U.S, SEC, Morningstar, Brandywine, JPMorgan, Citi, Banco Popular, Investment, — Vector, Vector Group Locations: Brandywine, Diamond, Columbus , Ohio, Puerto Rican, Wells Fargo
The WisdomTree India Earnings ETF (EPI) has a total return of 6.6% through Feb. 8, according to FactSet, and is up 18.7% over the past three months. That makes it the best performing of the five biggest India ETFs, with the iShares MSCI India ETF (INDA) and the Franklin FTSE India ETF (FLIN) both up less than 4% year to date.The WisdomTree fund is also beating The S & P 500, which up less than 5% over the same period. The WisdomTree fund has been a long-term winner as well, with an average annualized return of roughly 12% over the past decade. And, notably, the second-best performing major India ETF this year is the iShares MSCI India Small-Cap ETF (SMIN) . That is above the 0.65% of the iShares INDA ETF and the 0.19% of Franklin Templeton's FLIN.
Persons: date.The, Jeremy Schwartz, it's, It's, Schwartz, Franklin Templeton's FLIN Organizations: Franklin FTSE, CNBC, India ETF Locations: India, Franklin FTSE India
ETF Action's Mike Akins sees challenges tied to the country's ability to generate stock market returns. Fool me twice, shame on me," the firm's founding partner told CNBC's ETF Edge this week. The stock market went nowhere. According to Atkins, emerging market ex-China products are among the largest inflows ETF Action is seeing. Or is it really a growth story in the economy alone and not in the actual return of the stock market?"
Persons: Mike Akins, You've, It's, Atkins, Franklin Templeton, David Mann, hesitancy, Mann Organizations: Edge, Franklin Templeton Investments, Investors Locations: China
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThere'll be investing opportunities in China's manufacturing, services sectors: Franklin TempletonJenny Johnson, CEO of Franklin Templeton, discusses the Chinese government's attempts to create a more consumer-driven economy and says "it's always better to swim with the current."
Persons: Franklin Templeton Jenny Johnson, Franklin Templeton, it's
Investors are increasingly looking to emerging market exchange-traded funds for growth at a reasonable price. David Mann, head of capital markets at Franklin Templeton, named India as one of the most popular countries with ETF investors in the past year. "[It] has been one of the emerging market standouts thus far, so India has been a great story." The firm's Franklin FTSE India ETF (FLIN) has risen 18.19% in the past year, as of Tuesday's close. As of Tuesday's close, the firm's Franklin FTSE Japan ETF (FLJP) gained 12.58% in the past year.
Persons: David Mann, Franklin Templeton, CNBC's, Mike Akins, Akins, Franklin Templeton's Mann, Action's Akins Organizations: Franklin, Franklin FTSE, Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank, Infosys, Toyota Motor, Sony Group, Mitsubishi UFJ Locations: India, Franklin, Franklin FTSE India, Japan, U.S, Franklin FTSE Japan
Indeed, investors get paid for taking a small step down in credit quality in the muni bond space. What's even sweeter is that municipal bond income is generally exempt from federal income tax. This also means high income investors would have to scoop up a higher yielding corporate bond to get the same tax-advantaged yield a muni bond would generate. A measured amount of risk Munis offer lower yields compared to their corporate counterparts, but they also carry significantly less risk. Lower risk, however, doesn't necessarily mean risk free.
Persons: Jennifer Johnston, Franklin Templeton, Lyle Fitterer, munis, corporates, Cooper Howard, Jonathan Mondillo, Franklin Templeton's Johnston Organizations: Federal Reserve, Franklin, AAA, muni, Strategic Municipal Bond Fund, York Life Investments, Moody's Investors Service, Charitable, Schwab Center, Financial Research Locations: muni, Abrdn
ETF Edge, January 22, 2024
  + stars: | 2024-01-22 | by ( Bob Pisani | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailETF Edge, January 22, 2024David Mann, Global Head of Product and Capital Markets at Franklin Templeton, and Mike Akins, ETF Action founding partner, join CNBC's Bob Pisani on 'ETF Edge' to discuss investing overseas and take a look at the flows in bitcoin ETFs.
Persons: David Mann, Franklin Templeton, Mike Akins, Bob Pisani Organizations: Global, Product, Markets, Franklin
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailETF Edge: India and Japan see big international investing inflows while investors flee ChinaDave Mann, global head of product and capital markets at Franklin Templeton, joins CNBC's Bob Pisani on 'Halftime Report' to discuss the opportunity investors should keep an eye on overseas.
Persons: China Dave Mann, Franklin Templeton, Bob Pisani Organizations: Franklin Locations: India, Japan, China
Perspective: spot bitcoin uptake
  + stars: | 2024-01-22 | by ( Bob Pisani | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPerspective: spot bitcoin uptakeDavid Mann, Global Head of Product and Capital Markets at Franklin Templeton, and Mike Akins, ETF Action founding partner, join CNBC's Bob Pisani on 'ETF Edge' to discuss Franklin Templeton's new spot bitcoin ETF and action the new ETFs are seeing.
Persons: David Mann, Franklin Templeton, Mike Akins, Bob Pisani, Franklin Organizations: Global, Product, Markets, Franklin
Up & Over-seas: India & Japan
  + stars: | 2024-01-22 | by ( Bob Pisani | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailUp & Over-seas: India & JapanDavid Mann, Global Head of Product and Capital Markets at Franklin Templeton, and Mike Akins, ETF Action founding partner, join CNBC's Bob Pisani on 'ETF Edge' to discuss why investors are flocking to Japanese and India investments.
Persons: David Mann, Franklin Templeton, Mike Akins, Bob Pisani Organizations: Global, Product, Markets, Franklin Locations: India
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFranklin Templeton CEO on bitcoin: Fueling the next real opportunity in the blockchain worldFranklin Templeton President and CEO Jenny Johnson joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the firm's spot bitcoin ETF offering, latest market trends, the Fed's rate path outlook, and more.
Persons: Franklin Templeton, Jenny Johnson
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