Fund managers are tossing out their losers. Here are the bargains investors might not want to miss.
Thursday’s big three should keep investors busy, that is third-quarter U.S. growth data (just in and missed expectations), and Apple AAPL,
And the European Central Bank is holding its meeting (policy was left unchanged), with central banks in focus after that O Canada surprise.
On its face, the fast-fading and historically volatile month of October looks to have been sweet for lots of investors. The S&P 500 SPX,
Does October offer up more opportunity than we realize? Perhaps so, says our call of the day from MacroTourist newsletter editor Kevin Muir, who highlights seemingly little known selling of “losers” by mutual fund portfolio managers late in the month.
As Muir explains via some broker pals in the know, all U.S. mutual funds must have an October year-end, and a settlement lag made Wednesday the last day for any transactions to be included in that 2021 tax year.
He notes that biotechs are among the stocks that seemed to be getting the chop, with the Nasdaq Biotech Index NBI,
But Muir also thinks those managers may be throwing out decent opportunities for others to catch. Here’s what he found after crunching some numbers on the iShares Biotechnology ETF IBB,
What that kind of selling could do is help “create a seasonal tendency for this index to bottom into the end of the month when mutual funds flip their books to the next tax year,” he says, adding he’s going long on this under-the-radar trade that could be poised to rally next month.
Muir is on the lookout for other stocks tossed to the curb in the coming two months with other regular year-end shedding. VanEck Junior Gold Miners ETF GDXJ,
Weed MJ,
Check out his full blog post here.
The buzz
Weekly jobless claims fell to a pandemic low of 281,000, while third-quarter gross domestic product data decelerated to 2%, falling short of expectations. Pending-home sales due after the bell.
Caterpillar CAT,
Among the companies that reported late Wednesday, Ford F,
GlobalFoundries will make its Nasdaq debut Thursday, under the ticker GFS, after the silicon wafer foundry priced its shares at the high end of its expected range — $47.
Uber UBER,
A deal over President Joe Biden’s $1.75 trillion domestic bill is close, but tensions rose as a billionaires’ tax was scrapped, along with a paid family leave proposal.
Listen to the Best New Ideas In Money podcast.
The markets
Stocks DJIA,
Bitcoin BTCUSD,
Sign up for MarketWatch’s new crypto newsletter, Distributed Ledger, here.
The chart
More crypto in our chart of the day from the blogger behind The Market Ear, with this intro:
“Follow the money. Part of the ‘hottest’ money is to be found in bitcoin. Since the October melt up, SPX [S&P 500] and BTC have moved in tandem. The gap between SPX and BTC is becoming rather wide here. Watch this closely…”
Random reads
The latest in supply-chain worries: Spain may run out of booze by Christmas.
You’ll find actor B.J. Novak’s face on products worldwide. He has no idea why.
And a special good morning to the guy who did this:
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