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Everyone here is amazed at how forgotten segments of the market have rebounded in 2023: international, growth, small cap and bonds. Advisors here are having a hard time wrapping their heads around the idea that there would be a recession ins 2023, and now maybe not. "With real wage growth, large payroll growth and earnings beating expectations it equals a soft landing at worst and maybe no recession near term." Most advisors here are coming to grips with Powell's insistence the Fed will not lower rates this year. Their Equal Weight S & P 500 ETF (RSP) has also attracted significant inflows from investors wary of market cap weighted indexes.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCNBC Pro talks with the VanEck CEO on what commodities to invest in right nowCNBC's Bob Pisani sat down with VanEck CEO, Jan van Eck, who he calls the 'king of commodities' at the Exchange ETF Conference in Miami Beach. VanEck Gold Miners (GDX), Oil Services (OIH), Agribusiness (MOO), and Rare Earth Metals (REMX) are among the top funds in the space and his VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) is also the largest in its sector. They discuss when we may see the next big gold rally, oil stocks, chipmakers, and more.
Liu Ranyang | China News Service | Getty ImagesTech investors say the worst is over as China reopens and exits its zero-Covid policy. The firm raised nearly $500 million for a new China tech fund set to close by early this year — more than earlier plans for $400 million. Tech companies see government supportInvestors are not worried of new challenges on the regulatory front. Gobi's Tang said, "I do think that they're going to do everything they can to try to spur the economic growth. "There's still a lot to catch up [in semiconductor tech] for China.
They're emphasizing growth right now," van Eck said at the Exchange ETF conference in Miami. The iShares MSCI China ETF (MCHI) had a total return of more than 10% this year, through Feb. 3. MCHI YTD mountain This popular China ETF is outperforming in 2023. Van Eck pointed to the outsized growth of major U.S. tech firms as a key reason for that outperformance, but said that era appears to be over. "We've got a decade where you're really taking a risk if you're under invested overseas," van Eck said.
Central to the deal: Tax credits and other benefits from both the state of Connecticut and from Washington, D.C., he says. Hurwitz's experience points up one benefit of the Inflation Reduction Act that passed in August: Its extension and expansion of tax credits to promote the spread of home-based solar power systems. California's solar energy net metering decision Certainty has been the thing that's hard to come by in solar, where frequent policy changes make the market a "solar coaster," as one industry executive put it. watch nowFor potential switchers, tax credits can quickly recover part of the up-front cost of going green. The bids for one suburban Chicago house ranged as low as $19,096 after the federal credit and as high as $30,676.
Even though WTI crude just saw its worst week in more than two months, the oil trade may have more juice left in the tank. Mirae Asset Securities' Chris Hempstead told CNBC's "ETF Edge" that he sees the Russia-Ukraine war fallout and OPEC+ oil cuts as key bullish catalysts for oil. Hempstead added that demand for oil and gas will increase when China — the world's second-biggest consumer of oil — exits its Covid-19 lockdowns. Jan van Eck, CEO of global investment manager VanEck, shares that bullish outlook. "No one wants nuclear, no one wants solar panels [and] no one wants windmills, but we need it to do this energy transformation," van Eck said.
In the exchange-traded fund space, the VanEck Oil Services ETF (OIH) has risen 36% this year. But the global energy sector remains unstable, fueled by a precarious position in Europe. "Arguably, natural gas ends up being the new oil, right?" "These so-called dirty energy sources really are unpalatable," she said, referring to coal and nuclear energy substitutes. "We've seen a shift back to some of those less desired energy sources," Boal said.
We think we're in a new era for oil, says VanEck CEO
  + stars: | 2022-10-10 | 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 EmailWe think we're in a new era for oil, says VanEck CEOJan Van Eck, VanEck CEO, joins 'Halftime Report' to discuss Van Eck's best guess for where oil prices and natural gas prices go.
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