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As of Wednesday's market close, though, the 10-year note fell to 4.408%, while the 100 largest taxable money market funds tracked by Crane Data have an average yield of 5.20%. In addition, nearly $1.2 trillion has flowed into money market funds this year through Nov. 15, compared to $264 billion into bond funds and $43 billion in U.S. equity funds, according to Goldman Sachs. In the meantime, Bartolini said clients willing to take on more risk should look to shorter-duration bond funds. The iShares 1-3 Year Treasury Bond ETF (SHY) that tracks shorter-duration notes has gained 0.22% this year as of Wednesday's close. The iShares U.S. Treasury Bond ETF (GOVT) , which has exposure to Treasurys ranging between 1 and 30 years in duration, was down 1.85% during the same period.
Persons: Dan Egan, CNBC's, Goldman Sachs, Matt Bartolini, Bartolini, Egan, it's Organizations: Federal Reserve, Behavioral Finance, Treasury, Crane Data, SPDR, SPDR Americas Research, Street Global Advisors, Treasury Bond ETF Locations: SPDR Americas, U.S
ETF Edge: Cash and bonds stay "sticky"
  + stars: | 2023-11-20 | by ( ) 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: Cash and bonds stay "sticky"Matt Bartolini, State Street Global Advisors; Dan Egan, Betterman; and CNBC's Kate Rooney join ‘Halftime Report’ to discuss confidence in the investing landscape, reinvestment risk, and more.
Persons: Matt Bartolini, Dan Egan, CNBC's Kate Rooney Organizations: Street Global Advisors,
How artificial intelligence could be used in ETFs
  + stars: | 2023-11-20 | 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 EmailHow artificial intelligence could be used in ETFsMatt Bartolini, SPDR Americas Research head, and Dan Egan, Betterment Behavioral Finance & Investing vice president, join CNBC's Kate Rooney on "ETF Edge" to discuss how artificial intelligence could be incorporated into investing and the ETF space.
Persons: Matt Bartolini, Dan Egan, CNBC's Kate Rooney Organizations: Americas Research, Finance Locations: Americas
Huge month for active management
  + stars: | 2023-11-20 | 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 EmailHuge month for active managementMatt Bartolini, SPDR Americas Research head, and Dan Egan, Betterment Behavioral Finance & Investing vice president, join CNBC's Kate Rooney on "ETF Edge" to discuss the growth in active funds and if there is still more opportunity in the passive investing strategy.
Persons: Matt Bartolini, Dan Egan, CNBC's Kate Rooney Organizations: Americas Research, Finance Locations: Americas
"Scared money" sticking in cash & bonds
  + stars: | 2023-11-20 | 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 Email"Scared money" sticking in cash & bondsMatt Bartolini, SPDR Americas Research head, and Dan Egan, Betterment Behavioral Finance & Investing vice president, join CNBC's Kate Rooney on "ETF Edge" to discuss if the growing appetite for bonds can continue and how investors can position themselves if they want to start taking money off the table.
Persons: Matt Bartolini, Dan Egan, CNBC's Kate Rooney Organizations: Americas Research, Finance Locations: Americas
The Arm IPO is here, but many ETFs will not be buyers
  + stars: | 2023-09-14 | by ( Bob Pisani | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +6 min
The Cupertino, Calif.-based company licenses its processorIPO and tech enthusiasts are excited about the Arm Holdings Plc initial pubic offering, and with good reason: it's the first big tech IPO in more than two years. However, some investors who would like to get immediate exposure to the Arm IPO through ETFs may be disappointed. However, this particular IPO highlights several difficulties that even large companies like Arm have in acquiring a broader ownership base through ETFs. The first problem is that Arm is not a U.S. company, it's British — which generally would exclude it from the S&P indexes. Potential ETF buyers: Nasdaq-100 ETF, IPO ETFsThere are some potential ETF buyers.
Persons: Matt Bartolini, Howard Silverblatt, Van Eck, Jan Van Eck, Todd Sohn, it's, Matt Kennedy, Nate Geraci, I'm Organizations: ARM Holdings, Arm Holdings, Nasdaq, Tech, ARM, P, SPDR Technology, SPDR, SPDR Americas Research, Street Global Advisors, Global, Renaissance, Van Eck Semiconductor, CNBC, Vanguard Total U.S, Renaissance Capital Locations: Cupertino, Calif, U.S, SPDR Americas
Last Thursday, the S&P 500 entered a bull market — up 20% from its recent lows. But the market’s strength has been mostly driven by a handful of mega-cap tech stocks, Alphabet (GOOGL), Meta (META), Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), and Nvidia (NVDA). Before the Bell: AI is causing a big market boom right now, but that boom also seems to be concentrated in mega-cap tech stocks. Everything you wanted to know about a bull market but were afraid to askThe US entered a bull market last Thursday, finally. A bear in bull’s clothes: A 20% lift from recent lows is generally accepted as the definition of the start of a bull market.
Persons: , Matt Bartolini, Bell, Pets.com, I’m, They’ve, Adam Turnquist, James Demmert, what’s, Jerome Powell’s Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Bank of America, Apple, Nvidia, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, SPDR, Street Global Advisors, Meta, US, LPL, Big Tech, Main, Research, Investors, Federal Reserve, P Global Market Intelligence, , European Central Bank, ECB Locations: New York, Europe, SPDR Americas, Big, Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong
That’s a strange place to find a bull market. After a horrible year for Big Tech in 2022, optimism has returned as ChatGPT has made AI the it-thing in Silicon Valley. That brought an end to the bear market that began in January 2022, since a 20% lift from recent lows is generally accepted as the definition of the start of a bull market. However, there is no exact definition — and the current market situation is a bit more nuanced than the typical bull market-bear market binary. The silver liningEntering a bull market lifts investor sentiment, which could propel upward momentum in markets.
Persons: , Sameer Samana, ChatGPT, Tesla, Matt Bartolini, It’s, Apple iPhones, Berkshire Hathaway, James Demmert, , don’t Organizations: New, New York CNN, Wells, Wells Fargo Investment Institute, Big Tech, Investors, Apple, Nvidia, SPDR, Street Global Advisors, Meta, Google, Berkshire, Main, Research, Bank of America Locations: New York, United States, Europe, Wells Fargo, Silicon Valley, SPDR Americas, Meta,
As luxury stocks make waves overseas, State Street Global Advisors believes investors should consider European ETFs if they want to capture the gains from their outperformance. Bartolini lists price momentum as a third driver of the investor shift. His SPDR Euro Stoxx 50 ETF (FEZ) is considered a broad European ETF. While the fund's top holding is LVMH at 7.29%, according to the company's website, Bartolini contends the shift applies beyond luxury stocks and to lower-end consumer stocks. His firm's website lists French cosmetics company L'Oreal — which is up almost 30% this year — as another one of his fund's major holdings.
Favorable climate conditions and a decrease in the cost of natural gas are fueling a European market rally, a stark contrast to energy crisis fears of last year. "Which could arguably be a tail wind for the European consumer to help spend on those luxury goods." European luxury stocks are among the breakout stars in 2023, with Rolls Royce up 58% and Hermes and LVMH jumping 34% and 33%, respectively. Bartolini said that the energy crisis concerns that were once weighing down on sentiment have come and gone, reinvigorating optimism into the European market. "Because there are more things pointing up than there are more things pointing down for the European markets."
Europe is the place to invest so far in 2023. Here's why
  + stars: | 2023-04-24 | by ( Bob Pisani | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
U.S. stocks are off to a good start in 2023, with the S & P 500 up 7%, but Europe is just killing it. All the major European ETFs are up 15%-20% for the year and were at new highs last week. From makeup to sneakers to steel to pharmaceuticals and software to cars for the masses, Europe is outperforming. European stocks this year L'Oreal up 38% Adidas up 33% Thyssenkrup up 32% Bayer up 30% SAP up 29% Stellantis up 25% There's are several other reasons Europe is outperforming. That is historically a very low P/E ratio for Europe, in the 4th percentile (low) relative to the STOXX Europe 600 over the last 15 years.
I'm at the ETF Exchange Conference in Miami Beach, where 2,000 registered investment advisors and ETF providers have descended on the city for the industry's largest gathering. Think active, dividend, foreign debt and alternative income ETFs," Tom Lydon, of VettaFi, the conference sponsor, told me. "I believe fixed income ETFs are setup to have a historic year," Nate Geraci from the ETF Store said in January. This year, they're back, but despite the surge in thematic ETF performance to start the year, investors have yet to throw significant sums of money into the game. "Despite the surge in thematic ETF performance to start the year, investors are yet to start allocating again.
According to BNY Mellon's Ben Slavin, it's a key time to sell losing investments in order to cut down on capital gains. "Mutual fund investors are in for quite a nasty surprise," the firm's global head of ETFs told CNBC's "ETF Edge" last week. State Street Global Advisors' Matt Bartolini also sees advantages for investors looking to offset tax losses and stay in the market. "You own a mutual fund that tracks the broad base of U.S. equities. Bartolini said investors can also sell broad-based ETFs and buy back into other ones covering a similar marketplace.
Global markets pulled back earlier this week after protests across China erupted over the country's zero-Covid policy. And with the SPDR S&P China ETF (GXC) down 30% this year, there's a growing debate on whether China makes a good investment now given the political risks. "Where value stocks are international stocks right now, value stocks are Chinese equities. On the flip side, China shares the U.S., like KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF (KWEB) and iShares MSCI China ETF (MCHI) , have started to move higher and Monday and continued to log gains. Adding context to the notion that China has underperformed, Ahern said that only 2% of the MSCI China Index was composed of tech decade ago.
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