Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Jeremiah Buckley"


3 mentions found


Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailEmployment reports will be the biggest equity driver in the short-term: Janus Henderson's BuckleyJeremiah Buckley, Janus Henderson Investors equities portfolio manager, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss what to expect from equities in October, the portfolio manager's earnings estimates for next year, and how much hinges on Friday's jobs report.
Persons: Janus Henderson's Buckley Jeremiah Buckley, Janus Henderson
Oil prices keep pushing higher as tensions build in the Middle East, and the moves in crude appear to be weighing on the stock market. Overlaying the charts of the United States Oil Fund LP (USO) and the S & P 500 in recent days shows that the fund and the index appear to be inversely correlated. In other words, when the oil fund climbs during the day, the stock market tends to dip, and vice versa. This is a change from rest of the year, when there appeared to be little relationship between the price of oil and the broad stock market. In midday trading Thursday, U.S. crude oil prices were up 4% , and the USO had jumped roughly 3%.
Persons: Jeremiah Buckley, Janus Henderson, Buckley Organizations: United States Oil Fund, CNBC, USO Locations: Iran, Israel
But the Janus Henderson Investors' Balanced Fund has been able to shield itself from at least part of the year's volatility by reducing exposure to equities and leaning more on fixed income. Fixed income accounted for about 44%. "This year has been tricky, obviously, because there's been such a high correlation between fixed income and equity returns," he said. Within fixed income, Buckley said the fund has been more conservative by reducing exposure to corporate credit. Despite the challenges of 2022, Buckley is optimistic about 2023.
Total: 3