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Interesting Engineering: New Magnet-Free Electric Motor Needs No Maintenance

Genesis Wealth Advisors
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German automotive parts manufacturer MAHLE developed a new highly efficient magnet-free induction motor that is more environmentally friendly to produce, is cheaper to manufacture than comparable motors, and is maintenance-free, a press statement from the Stuttgart-based firm explains.

The company says it has combined the strengths of various electric motor concepts in one product, allowing for an efficiency “above 95 percent at almost all operating points” — a level only achieved in Formula E racing cars thus far.

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CNBC: Inflation drives up the cost of long-term care

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Inflation has now topped staffing as the main concern about the rise in the cost of long-term care, according to a new study. CNBC’s Sharon Epperson reports on what you should consider when paying for long-term care.

 

Watch the interview here

CNBC: Do not let market emotions knock you off long-term plan, says Merrill Wealth Management president

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Andy Sieg, president of Merrill Wealth Management, joins CNBC’s ‘Squawk Box’ to discuss markets ahead of the open on Wednesday. “We’re very balanced in our view right now,” Sieg tells CNBC.

 

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CNBC: Are your student loans eligible for the White House forgiveness plan?

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It’s something more than 40 million Americans have in common: They hold federal student loans. But the lending system is famously complicated, and these loans come with various names and terms depending on when they were taken out and for what purpose.

What are usually just technical differences could now determine whether or not a borrower qualifies for President Joe Biden’s new and unprecedented plan to forgive hundreds of billions of dollars in federal student debt.

Biden announced on Wednesday that most federal student loan borrowers will be eligible for some forgiveness: up to $10,000 if you didn’t receive a Pell Grant, which is a type of aid available to low-income undergraduate students, and up to $20,000 if you did. The relief is limited to individuals who make less than $125,000 per year, or married couples or heads of households earning less than $250,000.

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Quarterly Update – August 2022

Genesis Wealth Advisors
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Commentary

Current Investment Strategy and Themes

  • After the 20% equity decline, July’s upward bounce does NOT indicate its all-clear to re-risk portfolios. Whether an equity or bond position, the portfolio guideline is lower volatility, higher quality characteristics.

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The Fixed Income Conundrum

Genesis Wealth Advisors
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Fixed Income, News

Generating Sustainable Income in a Highly Challenging Environment

By David Feldman, President and Co-CIO of Palladiem, LLC and a member of Genesis Wealth Advisors’ investment committee.

To view this in PDF format, Click Here.

There was a time when fixed income was the sleepy asset class where portfolio managers were put out to pasture. Bond portfolio management was predictable, safe, and boring, while the idea of a ‘rock star’ PM like Bill Gross or Jeff Gundlach would have been viewed as laughable.  Times have changed.

Bonds have traditionally been used in portfolios in three (related) ways:

  1. To hedge equity risk in a total portfolio context,
  2. To act as the safe-haven capital preserver and liability match, and
  3. To generate income, often to be withdrawn for expenses of the portfolio owner.

Bonds, and bond funds, have fulfilled these roles admirably over the past 30 years.  But now bonds, and bond funds, face significant challenges across all three fronts.  Advisors and their clients are squarely facing the biggest challenge since the Great Recession and the deep market correction of 2008 – 2009: generating sufficient, sustainable income in a repressed rate environment.

Most investors have historically relied upon the fixed income portion of their portfolios to provide a smooth ride, but this may well change in the future. The results from the classic approach to using fixed income – buying a ‘core’ fund of intermediate duration comprised of investment grade issuers – will likely be anything but smooth, with higher rates (i.e., price declines) potentially more than offsetting coupon income, heightened duration risk, and higher risks of default, even among high quality issuers such as sovereigns that were once thought essentially ‘risk-free’.

We believe three key factors are significantly influencing credit markets:

  1. The low absolute level of interest rates at the tail end of a 30 year bull market in bonds,
  2. Artificial suppression of rates globally due to central bank activity, and
  3. Massive dollar flows from individual investors out of stocks and into bonds since the ’08 decline.

 

Each of these elements contributes to the challenges facing advisors and investors.  We are likely toward the latter stages of a 30-year bull market in bonds, and may already have seen secular lows in interest rates. The yield on the bellwether 10-year U.S. Treasury, for example, peaked at nearly 14% in 1982, and (potentially) reached its nadir in July of 2012 at 1.39%.  (Source: Bloomberg. The rate currently stands at about 2.60%.)

Central bank activity in the U.S., U.K., Euro zone and Japan – setting short-term rates near zero and purchasing enormous amounts of government and agency issued bonds – has had the effect of artificially suppressing intermediate and longer-term Treasury rates and, indirectly, most other rates as well.  Any return to a more normal interest rate environment, whatever the cause – tapering of central bank security purchases, stronger growth, or higher inflation – will necessarily involve higher rates and lower bond prices.

In the near term, with rates so low, savers and conservative investors have effectively been penalized, and in some cases compelled to seek higher ‘yields’ by moving into riskier asset classes such as real estate, Master Limited Partnerships (MLPs) and dividend paying equities.  The potential for capital losses from rising rates and low coupons, and the addition of new, and perhaps less well understood risks, combine to make income generation and principal growth in real terms, i.e. after inflation, a steep hill to climb.

What’s next for fixed income?

Not for the first time do I regret my missing crystal ball, but with a high degree of confidence we can say that:

  • interest rates, broadly speaking,  are artificially low, particularly at the shorter end of the curve;
  • credit spreads are compressed, suggesting potential overvaluation of spread securities; and,
  • developed market governments are generally facing significant long-term fiscal and entitlement funding issues, compounded by demographic and slow economic growth challenges.

 

These three aspects combine to suggest that rates will rise and/or spreads will widen at some point: a clear negative for bondholders.  The options for sovereign bond issuers, such as the United States, are not appealing to either borrowers or lenders.  The typical response to massive debt overhang from sovereign issuers like the U.S. Treasury is some combination of default (bad for credit rating and borrowing costs), create or allow high inflation (think of the 1970s in the U.S. – hard on taxpayers, savers and the economy), renege on entitlement commitments (see item 1, plus aggravated seniors who vote in large numbers) and raise taxes (diminished growth).

There are no magic bullets or easy solutions.  To earn a positive real return, investors are compelled to take some combination of rate, credit or currency risk.  Compounding matters, new and different risks have emerged.  Because of the typical index construction methodology predicated on the amount of debt issued, most commonly used bond market benchmarks have significantly increased concentration risks.  For example, the Barclays Capital Aggregate Index is currently comprised of 77% US Treasury and Agency issues.  Further, because of the prolonged drop in interest rates, benchmark tracking portfolios, such as indexed bond funds and many ETFs, have lengthened durations, i.e., heightened sensitivity to rising rates.  Prior rising rate environments have had coupon levels sufficient to offset fairly moderate interim price declines.  Current levels make that much more difficult.

What can be done for client portfolios?

Despite the challenging circumstances, advisors and portfolio managers still have a number of options:

  • Diversify, but be selective in doing so.  Expand the opportunity set from domestic high quality bonds. Widen the geographic horizons surveyed, and the currency and interest rate cycle exposure beyond the U.S.
  • Broaden thinking about implementation beyond bond funds and ETFs to consider holding individual issues to maturity if portfolio size permits sufficient diversification, or consider the new generation of ‘bullet’ ETFs, which diversify across issuers but also have the return of principal benefits of a known maturity date.
  • Revisit the benefits of a laddered bond portfolio: hold individual issues and bullet ETFs to maturity, and counsel investors to ignore interim price volatility.
  • Look to modest allocations to dividend paying equities, especially those with sustained track records of increasing dividends, sound balance sheets, capable management and strong industry positions.
  • Keep a close eye on expenses, striving for low cost implementation; in a low yield environment, basis points matter.
  • Mitigate taxes by using tax advantaged issuers, and smartly employ the benefits of asset location.
  • Consider covered call option writing on those dividend paying equities.

 

It’s our view that a well-diversified portfolio can be constructed for clients to deal with current market risks and generate reasonable levels of income.  The correlation table below (Chart 1) shows the relationships among various less traditional asset classes that we believe can be utilized in today’s environment to construct an attractive, well-diversified income generation portfolio.  The tradeoff, of course, is that until we return to a more ordinary interest rate environment, that portfolio will necessarily involve exposure to riskier asset classes including high yield, emerging market corporate and sovereign debt, bank and floating rate loans, and dividend paying equities.

In addition, it’s our belief that the shifting nature of the market landscape requires more than a naïve or static allocation to a variety of strategies.  The risk, as shown in Chart 2 is clear: incorporating higher yielding asset classes increases portfolio exposure to greater drawdown.  We believe this challenging environment requires ongoing, dynamic risk assessment, recognition of market and risk changes, and timely response via active allocation among those strategies.

Balancing Risk of Capital with Need for Income

We believe an actively managed, multi-strategy, flexible approach to managing fixed income can help improve the durability, sustainability and overall success for investors in a much changed, highly challenging environment.

More specifically, we believe this approach can offer investors:

  • Increased income,
  • Increased diversification across issuers, currencies and interest rates,
  • Access to a broader set of return sources, and a
  • Better potential ‘shield’ against rising rates, inflation and benchmark concentration risks.

If all this seems overwhelming, Genesis would be glad to help.  Our Sustainable Income strategy has been developed with these challenges in mind, and managed since inception utilizing the principles and approach outlined in this paper.

Please contact Paul Duval (paul@genesisadvisors.com, (781) 344-1023, ext. 117) or Ron Aines (ron@genesisadvisors.com, (781) 344-1023, ext. 115) to learn more about Genesis, our solutions, and services.

And please visit our website at www.genesisadvisors.com.

Disclosures

Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.  All investments are subject to risk, including the loss of principal.  This communication does not constitute investment advice and is for informational purposes only, is not intended to meet the objectives or suitability requirements of any specific individual or account, and does not provide a guarantee that the investment objective of any model will be met.  The statements contained herein are based upon the opinions of the author and the data available at the time of publication and are subject to change without notice.  Neither the information nor any opinions expressed herein should be construed as a solicitation or a recommendation by Palladiem, LLC, Genesis Wealth Advisors, LLC, or any of their affiliates to buy or sell any securities or investments or hire any specific manager.

Palladiem, LLC and Genesis Wealth Advisors, LLC are unaffiliated firms.  Both are registered investment advisers under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940

Quarterly Update – July 2022

Genesis Wealth Advisors
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Commentary

Current Investment Strategy and Themes

  • Sharp drops in bond and stocks prices do not signal its time to begin to take risk for the next growth cycle. Instead, the economic and interest rate cycle signals a
    further need to reduce to levels of total portfolio risk.

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Quarterly Update – June 2022

Genesis Wealth Advisors
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Commentary

Current Investment Strategy and Themes

  • Traditional stocks and bond asset classes remain in a low return expectation environment.
  • Strategies within stocks and bonds need to focus on protection and diversification.

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Quarterly Update – May 2022

Genesis Wealth Advisors
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Commentary

Current Investment Strategy and Themes

  • All asset classes are acting like high-risk assets, safety is hard to find.
  • The transition to a monetary tightening policy and higher rates hurts stocks AND bonds.

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