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The Bahnsen Group
The Dividend Cafe is your portal for market perspective that is virtually conflict-free, rooted in deep philosophical commitments about how capital should be managed, and understandable for all sorts of investors. Host David L. Bahnsen is a frequent guest on CNBC, Bloomberg, and Fox Business. He is the author of the books, Crisis of Responsibility: Our Cultural Addiction to Blame and How You Can Cure It (Post Hill Press), The Case for Dividend Growth: Investing in a Post-Crisis World (Post Hill Press), and Full-Time: Work and the Meaning of Life (Post Hill Press).
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Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday July 2

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday July 2

The market closed the shortened holiday week up over 800 points for the week, with the market up almost 100 points today. Futures were really flat last night, and at 4:30am Eastern this morning were up over 200 points. The jobs report came at 8:30am ET and futures added on another 200 points. Markets were up 400 points at one point and moved up and down throughout the day before selling off substantially in the final 30-45 minutes of trading (not a surprise at all going into the long holiday weekend). Regarding that jobs report, the big bullish news was that 4.8 million jobs were added back in June, about 1.6 million more than the 3.2 million consensus expectation. I want to reiterate – the fact that the “experts” continue to get economic projected data so wrong is not so much that they are incompetent as that this is all very, very hard – and not based on solid historical precedents. That said, I would recommend the pundits moderate their predictions with greater humility, but again, this is uncharted territory. 2.1 million jobs in leisure and hospitality were brought back. This makes it all the more important that policymakers not capitulate to the panic mob and allow a safe and sensible re-opening to continue. More importantly, it does show a continued trend that job losses were initially classified as temporary, are indeed proving to be temporary. Now, permanent job losses were up 500,000, and that is a cause for concern. The percentage of the unemployment we have classified as “temporary” as gone from 78% to 59%, yet that is largely because a good portion of those temporarily unemployed people have been hired back. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
14:2302/07/2020
Replay - National Conference Call on Market Outlook June 29, 2020

Replay - National Conference Call on Market Outlook June 29, 2020

This is the audio replay of National Call Market Outlook from TBG CIO - David L. Bahnsen. With Host Scott Gamm of Strategy Voice and Associates. Discussed is the impact of increased COVID cases in certain states on markets, and will attempt to evaluate the latest economic and investment developments, and what we are anticipating as we officially enter the second half of the year. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
53:5129/06/2020
New York Tough

New York Tough

• Some clarification on COVID and the current media coverage • How the result of “financialization” is to ignore capital investment, and how starving the economy of capital spending deprives it of future productivity • The stress of the stress tests! • The lost decade of gold is a powerful antidote to the strange argument that central bank abuses are bullish for gold. If the last decade wasn’t the golden era of central bank libertinism, I don’t know what was. And yet gold is just now trying to get back within striking distance of where it was ten years ago?? • A refresher on our friend, Illiquidity, and why behavioral finance drives the return premium in private market assets – a section that should get its own dedicated Dividend Cafe! • How good/bad is the economic “recovery” going? • And the secret sauce on how politics works in conjunction with markets … what we expect out of the next few months as various political scenarios play themselves out • The Chart of the Week looks at the three stages of the COVID era … Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
21:1726/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 25

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 25

Futures last night really hugged around the flat line non-stop from 3pm pacific until 9pm or so when I stopped checking.  At 3am this morning they were still flat, and throughout the morning going into the market open they moved a tad lower.  The Dow got down as much as 200 points, gyrated around most of the day up and down, and then rallied the final hour of trading to close up 300 points. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
21:0325/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday June 24

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday June 24

Market futures were pretty much flat all of last evening, and I awoke at 3:15am to a down 250 level. By the open, futures were pointing to down ~700. It opened there, got as down as -850, and closed down 700 points on the day. COVID case growth and coverage of it is a fine explanation for market volatility today, but again the performance in structured credit today – mortgages, loans, etc. – paints a different picture. Threats of tariffs with Europe probably did not help, and neither did ongoing polls showing Biden’s lead over Trump continuing to grow. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
12:0724/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday June 23

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday June 23

Well this was one of the crazier 24 hours in quite some time, more so for what happened last night than today. Futures opened up about 100 points last night, and slowly inched higher for the first couple hours into the evening. Around 6:30pm pacific/9:30pm eastern, my devices starting blowing up that futures had collapsed 400 points (so a net swing of over 500 points) after “White House advisor, Pete Navarro, announced that the phase one China trade deal was over.” Well, it turns out, not for the first time, Navarro was speaking hyperbolically. Within 30 minutes futures came roaring back to even. President Trump took to the airwaves to say that the trade deal is “fully intact.” I decided to watch the replay of Navarro’s Fox interview, and it was rather obvious that it was a long-winded question and the answer was disconnected from that portion of the question. Regardless, by 3:30am this morning futures were up 300 points. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
18:1023/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Monday June 22

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Monday June 22

Futures were pointing down as much as ~300 points Sunday night (netted for fair value), though that number improved as the night went along. By 3:15am this morning they were pointing to a flat market open. The market traded down ~200 points early and closed up over 150 points, in a 400-point range today … Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
16:5122/06/2020
A Father's Day Dividend Cafe

A Father's Day Dividend Cafe

• There is a solution of the problem of always having a reason to sell, and always having a reason to buy: It is – always having a plan … • The nation’s debt is talked about as much any topic in the political/economic sphere, but rarely talked about with any real practical sense of what the eventual possible outcomes actually look like. Today we provide five crystalized options for what eventually comes of America’s national debt. This is crucially important for people who care about their kids and grandkids, and people who don’t. • The “financialization” of the American economy is happening right before our eyes, and it is a major consequence of the monetary regime in which we live. It needs to be understood – the good, bad, and ugly. • Why inflationary efforts are creating more deflation – an economic primer you will love, and your college professors never gave (or got themselves) • Proof that dividend growth requires active management, and that passively trying to get it will ensure you lose it • Small-cap investing is very promising coming out of recessions, and if you think dividend growth needs active management, you should see the data in small-cap! • The economy is picking back up – but wow does it have a lot of work to do. Check out the updated data from air travel, restaurant reservations, retail shopping, and more. And then, check out what really, really matters – business investment. Some investors are focusing on mall traffic in Q2 of 2020. We are focusing on industrial production in Q1 of 2021. • The Chart of the Week tells you why the market keeps embarrassing not just bears, but those who don’t understand how markets work • And in Politics & Money, look at worst news imaginable for President Trump, and the best news imaginable … all at once. It’s an action packed Dividend Cafe, so jump on in … There is no U.S. Open to watch, so you really have no excuse. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
38:1219/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 18

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 18

Futures overnight dipped 400 points by my bed time, were basically back to even at 3:15am, and then dipped a tad before the 5:30am release on jobless claims. That number came in at 1.5 million, and the market didn’t respond. We opened down and reached down -270 before reversing. It was a bouncy day but never was the range of movement very wide. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
18:4518/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 18, 2020

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 18, 2020

Futures overnight dipped 400 points by my bed time, were basically back to even at 3:15am, and then dipped a tad before the 5:30am release on jobless claims. That number came in at 1.5 million, and the market didn’t respond. We opened down and reached down -270 before reversing. It was a bouncy day but never was the range of movement very wide. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
18:4518/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday June 17

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday June 17

Market futures pointed down 100 last night, up 200 at 3:00 in the morning, and eventually opened dead flat. The market was quite boring most of the day, and closed down 170 points, dropping in the final hour of trading (just minutes after I told the Wall Street Journal how nice it was to be up or down less than 50 points). Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
16:4517/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday June 16

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday June 16

Market futures last night were up 400+ points and the Nikkei in Japan soared over 1,000 points (+5%) overnight. I woke up this morning to a +520 in the Dow futures, and an hour later a report popped that futures were up “amid reports that Trump is preparing a $1 trillion infrastructure proposal.” There is one little problem with the reports that the market futures were up on reports of this infrastructure proposal … they had been up for 13 hours before that “story” broke. And of course, it is no story at all, as we shall see in our public policy section below. On the day markets closed up 527 points. The VIX dropped a bit over 2% – not a lot – but is down 23%+ from the high level of Thursday. Markets were up 800 points, and at one point were back to even, but again, closed up over 500. Intra-day volatility is alive and well. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
19:0116/06/2020
Replay - National Conference Call on Market Outlook June 15, 2020

Replay - National Conference Call on Market Outlook June 15, 2020

Replay of National Call Market Outlook with TBG CIO and Founder, David L. Bahnsen and Scott Gamm of Strategy Voice Associates. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
57:0515/06/2020
A Bull and Bear Fight, and I Feel Fine

A Bull and Bear Fight, and I Feel Fine

1,800 points came off the Dow in one day, the fourth worst day of the year by the way, and while I spent significant time unpacking it, studying it, and understanding it, I did not spend any time "sweating" it.  As you will see in the content of this week's Dividend Cafe, I believe there is very little evidence of health-related issues at this time to drive markets lower (i.e. so-called "second wave" rhetoric) Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
22:0012/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 11

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 11

The market declined 1,800 points today behind a conflation of factors we will unpack below. Futures were pointing to down 200 at bed time last night, were down over 500 at 3:15am, and dropped more than 850 points from then until the market open. We opened down that much, and then throughout the day saw new intra-day lows hit, as the yield curve flattened and some of the recent high flyers sold off a great deal Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
14:3811/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday June 10

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday June 10

The market was all over the map today, with futures up last night at bed time, flat this morning, then up, then down, etc. This is today’s intra-day chart for the Dow – a snooze fest compared to March volatility, of course, but rather substantial up/down movements as far as normal market days go, closing near low levels of the day. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
14:0310/06/2020
TBG INVESTMENT COMMITTEE REUNION EDITION – June 9, 2020

TBG INVESTMENT COMMITTEE REUNION EDITION – June 9, 2020

Is the market about to go through a period of “rotation?” Growth vs. Value, Large Cap vs. Small-Cap, Cyclicals vs. Defensives - does it even matter? Our investment committee is back together, sheltering in place at our own studio, bringing you our perspective on all these subjects and more. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
48:1309/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Monday June 8

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Monday June 8

The market rallied another 460+ points today, and the S&P closed back where it started the year (so not quite back to its all-time high, but back to its New Years Eve level). The Dow has a little more work to do still. The entire thing is surreal. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
14:5708/06/2020
New Highs Amidst New Lows

New Highs Amidst New Lows

I find it inconceivable that we will not have up and down volatility at some point in the near future. But I am not surprised by this market's resilience. The forward-looking capabilities of the market are powerful, even though they are more often subject to excess. On the downside and the upside - no perfect equilibrium can ever be found. This is why market timing is the errand of a fool. I hope and pray our society will find a forward-looking optimism, as well. That what is wrong in our country can be fixed by that which is right in our country. Believe it or not, even apart from all I care about on these pages regarding the markets and investment capital, it is to those greater ends that I work. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
26:2805/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 4

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday June 4

The weekly jobless claims came in at 1.87 million, and continuing claims totaled 21.5 million. We will get the official unemployment number for the month of May from the Bureau of Labor Statistics tomorrow morning. The numbers today were about as bad as expected if not a bit worse, whereas yesterday’s number was exponentially better than expected. More on all of that in tomorrow’s Dividend Cafe! Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
17:4605/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday June 3

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday June 3

The market exploded 527 points higher today, now well past 26,000 on the Dow, and in the high range of our general short term target. REIT’s, financials, and energy names led the way today. And while the question of, “how can markets be going higher when ___” are completely understandable and reasonable, the answer(s) remain no different regardless of how you fill in that blank. First, markets need no reason to do what they do in either direction, ever. Second, they are forward-looking and have incredible knack for shaking off what they know will be out of the news in days if not hours. Third, the Fed. Fourth, the economic re-opening is going very well. And finally, fifth, the Fed. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
22:1403/06/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday June 2

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday June 2

Early on in the COVID affair my general feeling was that the most ignored yet needed data point was the recovery rate, as first three people I knew tested positive and quickly recovered, then eight, then twenty, then ~thirty, etc. The key timing issue was that a significant portion of the people I knew early on that tested positive were already recovered by the time they got their test results, as back then getting the test, and getting the results, had a nearly ten day lag from the time one initially had symptoms bad enough to warrant getting tested. Here we are nearly three months later and I am sure we have less of a percentage who already recovered by the time they get test results (because of improved testing), but I still strongly suspect “recoveries” are rampant (we intuitively know this, and empirically know it), yet the data has either no way to capture it, or a big lag in capturing it. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
19:3502/06/2020
Replay - National Conference Call on Covid 19 and Markets June 1, 2020

Replay - National Conference Call on Covid 19 and Markets June 1, 2020

This is the Replay of the National Video Call hosted by David L. Bahnsen- Markets are continuing to shock investors and a wide array of interpretations of health data and economic data are circulating. We will delve into all of this and more. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
50:4801/06/2020
First Things and Humility

First Things and Humility

I am constantly challenging myself to get my applications of “first things” right in the investment world, but my principles themselves are not constantly changing. I say that with pride. The challenge that exists for the investment professional who has done the work of developing operative principles is to constantly evaluate their application of said principles, to alter, change, adjust, or modify as needed. And here is the other piece to that: To thoughtfully consider what it would mean to their client’s capital if they were wrong. Investing client funds as if one can not be wrong in investment application/execution/implementation is the height of arrogance. The humility to constantly check one’s work and one’s strategic thinking is a money-saving character trait. Sometimes it gets forced upon you in my business. So this week’s Dividend Cafe focuses on many first principles in investing, and many beliefs we have about executing on our principles. But it also hopefully reflects the humility that is needed in risk management. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
36:2829/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday May 28

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday May 28

The market pointed to a modest up opening this morning in the overnight futures, and it did just that. And the market stayed up ~100-200 points throughout the day, until the final hour of trading where it went from +150 to -150. The media has reported it as a combination of news that POTUS was signing an executive order trying to reign in social media companies as well as news that the White House would hold a press conference Friday to discuss some aspect of the China relationship. I believe it was entirely the latter and not at all the former (the social media flexing was known to be coming all day, and surely the market does not see it as having a lot of teeth). The uncertainty around the China announcement was surely worth a couple hundred points … The weekly jobless claims came in at 2.1 million, down from the 2.5 million level of last week, and way down from the 6.9 million high level in late March, but still extremely high, and extremely sad. The number had been just 212,000 per week on average in January and February before the economic shutdown. Continuing claims, though, tallying the unemployment benefits of state programs, fell last week for the first time since the COVID moment began. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
17:0128/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday May 27

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday May 27

First of all, please note our bi-weekly national video call this coming Monday, June 1, at 11:00am pacific time. I plan to address some things Monday I have not yet addressed through this COVID period, and invite your presence on the call. The market exploded 550 points higher today and is now up over 1,100 points in the last two days and ~2,500 points in less than two weeks. Without any direct news or events to explain the increase, broad-based optimism about the economic re-opening is certainly the most logical explanation. I would definitely read today’s Market Technicals for more color here. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
23:3727/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday May 26

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday May 26

The market was up 530 points today behind extraordinary optimism in economic re-opening and directional good news on a vaccine development (more on both below – a lot on the health side). Futures had pointed to a ~300 point move higher throughout Memorial Day,and the Nikkei in Japan surged over 500 points last night (now back above 21,000). Futures in the U.S. were +500 when I woke up this morning, and the Dow was at one point +700 on the day. We closed just a pinch below the 25,000 level on the Dow Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
22:1226/05/2020
The Sobering, Thrilling Reality of ‘Back to Normal’

The Sobering, Thrilling Reality of ‘Back to Normal’

And in this week's Dividend Cafe we are going to dive into a bunch of these subjects - not because they are abnormal or extraordinary, but because they are normal. The normal reality of financial markets and of being engaged in the management of such continues its beat. And though I far prefer to do my analysis and work from my office with my team versus the sub-optimal conditions of quarantine, I embrace this normalcy, and welcome the challenge of both this moment, but all future challenges and opportunities as well. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
22:4922/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday May 21

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday May 21

The market was down a hundred points today, and basically stayed between flat and down one hundred all day. Oil remains around $34/barrel. Muni bonds continued about ten consecutive days of trading well. Corporates were off a tad. And syndicated loans seemed to be up a tad despite equity markets being off a tad. Weekly initial jobless claims came in at 2.4 million, bringing the total number to 38 million since the COVID pandemic began (~8 million of those 38 million, though, are no longer on unemployment, presumably having found new jobs or re-secured their old job). Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
20:0121/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday May 20

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday May 20

The market rallied +370 points today, making back the points it was down yesterday, leaving the Dow through Wednesday with the nearly +1,000 point gain from Monday. Oil is approaching $34 after a +5% move today. It was a healthy day for risk assets across the board. And speaking of health, there is some truly good news to report on that front as well … Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
18:4920/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday, May 19

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday, May 19

The market was down 100 points or so in pre-market at 3:15am today, and stayed close to flat or modestly down until the open. It bounced a round a bit, then found the flat line and stayed there most of the day, before then seeing a substantial sell-off in the last 45 minutes of trading (see chart below). A report circulated just before the market sell-off that yesterday’s positive report on early phase vaccine trials may have been incomplete in some of its data. If that was indeed the reason for the sell-off, then these markets are a lot more susceptible to pops and drops around [silly?] vaccine headlines than I would have thought. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
21:4519/05/2020
Replay - National Conference Call on Covid 19 and Markets  May 18, 2020

Replay - National Conference Call on Covid 19 and Markets May 18, 2020

Chief Investment Officer David L. Bahnsen answers questions from investors on markets and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
57:0218/05/2020
A Solution Means Knowing What You Are Solving

A Solution Means Knowing What You Are Solving

What I want to do, starting in this week’s Dividend Cafe, but really in the weeks and months to come, is to examine the truly significant macroeconomic forces that are relevant to investors, and to explore investment solutions that match the moment. I do not believe advisors and investors can consider solutions intelligently if they have not considered what they are trying to solve intelligently. So to that end, we work. Join us, in this week’s Dividend Cafe. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
19:3316/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday, May 14

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday, May 14

The market closed up almost 400 points today after an intra-day session that was surely one of the weirdest I have seen in a couple weeks. Futures were down 100-200 all morning pre-market, and went down further after the initial jobless claims number came in at 2.98 million (the number had been expected to be closer to 2.7 million). The market went down as much as 450 points before rallying back and really zigging and zagging (with no apparent news) throughout the day, closing at the highs into a rally. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
21:1314/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday, May 13

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday, May 13

Futures were down last night, then up this morning, then went flat just as the market opened this morning. By the time the market open was catching steam downward pressure was on stocks, and that downward pressure accelerated a few hours after the open, and then stayed down but level the rest of the day. Stocks actually closed 180 points off their low of the day, but still down 500 points on the day. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
25:1513/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday, May 12

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday, May 12

In the height of market violence throughout March and April it was routine that the overnight futures would do one thing, the opening the next morning something totally different, and the action throughout the day something different still. Sometimes even then there was no clarity as to how things would end up as 400+ point moves down or up even in the final hour of trading were extremely common (either as reversals or pile-ons). Lately the futures I have seen before bed time, the futures I wake up to around 3:00am, and the market opening levels have all been pretty in line with one another. There have been late day trading reversals (as I highlighted most days last week), but the futures and the opening levels have been pretty consistent. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
20:1112/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Monday, May 11

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Monday, May 11

The S&P was flat today, the Nasdaq was up, and the Dow was down 100 points, so let’s call it a flat day overall. We will cover our normal categories and take a few detours as well as we launch another market week in the midst of this COVID pandemic … As for health data, the 1.5% case growth over the weekend is what we have been waiting for – the smallest case growth in the U.S. since all of this began. And all analysis indicates we will see new cases and case growth % really decline from here. If the new cases had declined with a substantially lower weekend testing number that would be less noteworthy, but the testing stayed quite elevated all weekend. The positive ratio to total tests was just 7.8% yesterday, and our trend level for total tests is right around 300,000 per day now. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
13:5011/05/2020
Sowing the Seeds of Human Flourishing

Sowing the Seeds of Human Flourishing

This week’s Dividend Cafe will do all it generally sets out to do.  We will look at the overall economy, and I even close with something I don’t often do: A summary of our short term, medium term, and long term outlooks.  There is quite a deep dive into the jobs data, the economic picture, the state of the U.S. energy industry, some post-COVID economic realities, and much, much more.  But there also is a sober assessment of something else – the human toll of non-productivity – the impact to joy and fulfillment when people are cut off from productive activity.  It is the heart of our tragic moment. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
28:2608/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday, May 6

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday, May 6

Happy “Flash Crash” anniversary, to those who remember that fateful day (ten years ago today). I remember it like it was yesterday, ending a meeting with clients early (who were sitting in my office facing me at the time, as I faced the television over their shoulders that was informing me of the collapsing market). I began trading in client accounts heavily after the prematurely-ended meeting, and for the first time in my life saw ETF’s broken, bid-ask spreads broken, and wild mistakes in trading execution. It was simply crazy, and only in the weeks (and to some degree, years) ahead did we really understand what had happened, how, and why. Today we don’t have a Flash Crash, and have not exactly had one since May 6, 2010. But we do have incredible risk around liquid ETF’s made up of illiquid assets. I need to attention this issue more diligently in the post-COVID months ahead. I am trying to “tighten up” the daily missive, and better organize/structure it each day around: • Health Data • Market Technicals • Public Policy • Oil & Energy • Housing • Fed News I am hoping this predictable, consistent sequence will both reflect the general priorities readers have in some way, and make for a more succinct and digestible read. And of course, I do welcome your feedback and suggestions … Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
17:3606/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday, May 5

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday, May 5

The market was up 300+ points most of the day today, and just as the sell-off faded yesterday, the rally faded today, with the market closing up 133 points (though the S&P was up 34 bps more than the Dow). Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
15:5806/05/2020
Replay: National Conference Call on Covid 19 and Markets May 4, 2020

Replay: National Conference Call on Covid 19 and Markets May 4, 2020

Chief Investment Officer David L. Bahnsen answers questions from investors on markets and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
43:4204/05/2020
April Showers and May Flowers

April Showers and May Flowers

I learned a lot in the month of April as well, and I want to share it with you today.  I am either excited to tell you or sorry to tell you that this week's Dividend Cafe is the longest one I have ever written, but also the most important one I have ever written.  The length of it is just simply because of the sheer ambition of all I am trying to cover this week.  There are some investment opportunities that have been created out of these last two months that warrant the attention I have given them this week.  But there also are lessons learned and principles reinforced that I am excited to share. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
30:0701/05/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday, April 30

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday, April 30

After the big move up the last two days, we closed the extraordinary month of April with a down-300 point day. Weekly jobless claims came in at 3.8 million, bringing the aggregate new unemployment claims since the COVID crisis began to ~30 million. Oil prices for the June contract were up ~$4 today (+25%), and are up ~$8 since Monday. April ends up being the biggest month up in the stock market since January 1987 (+11.1% for the Dow and +12.7% for the S&P). Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
12:1130/04/2020
TBG INVESTMENT COMMITTEE MARKET UPDATE – April 29, 2020

TBG INVESTMENT COMMITTEE MARKET UPDATE – April 29, 2020

The Bahnsen Group Investment Committee is back together for the first time in weeks to discuss all matters of the market, Covid, and investing. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
57:5529/04/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday, April 28

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Tuesday, April 28

The futures were pointing down 80-100 points without a lot of activity last night, yet by the early morning were pointing to a +300 point move higher. The market opened up ~400, bounced around throughout the day, and closed today down a tad. But the big tech companies were down 2-4% all day. But on the other hand, some key REIT’s, materials companies, energy names, and industrials were all up today. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
00:0028/04/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Monday, April 27

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Monday, April 27

The futures opened yesterday down a pinch and reflected a down 80 or so opening for a couple hours.  By the time I went to bed U.S. futures were pointing up 100, and more interestingly, the Nikkei was up over 400 points (see why below).  I woke up to the futures pointing up 200 points at 3:30am, and the June delivery contract on WTI oil down 17% to just over $14/barrel.  (The disconnect between short term oil futures and equities is a sight to behold). The market opened up ~100 points, and throughout the day traded up about +250 (most of the day).  Oil was down ~20% most of the day even as, once again, most energy stocks were higher.  Financial stocks were the huge leadership names today.  The Dow ended up closing +360 points, just off the highs of the day. Links mentioned in this episode: CovidAndMarkets.com DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
11:2427/04/2020
Replay: National Call on Covid 19 and Markets

Replay: National Call on Covid 19 and Markets

Last week’s national video call brought to you podcast listeners in audio form - COVID, two market phases, and what to do from here. Watch the call and follow along with the slides here - https://youtu.be/pt-wO73Y8to Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
01:00:4927/04/2020
Even More Ridiculous than Negative Oil Prices

Even More Ridiculous than Negative Oil Prices

It has been a fascinating week in the markets, with oil tanking, but the energy sector way up; with the markets up and down every day; with some bond sectors rallying, and others selling off.  Some degree of non-correlation between asset classes seems to be sneaking back into play, and non-correlation is the hallmark of normalcy.  Now, we have a long, long way to go ...  but there were interesting green shoots this week in each But the various developments in the markets this week are not the full heart of Dividend Cafe this week.  The heart of this weekly commentary is how to think about portfolio balance right now, what diversification really means, and what government stimulus and Fed interventions do and do not mean for your portfolio. So shut down your Zoom, turn off your Netflix, and do your third walk of the dog for the day later.  And jump on in to the Dividend Cafe ... Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
13:3724/04/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday, April 23

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Thursday, April 23

The week of April 6 was the biggest “up” week in markets on a percentage basis since 1974. Last week (with up and down volatility) was another solid up week, whereas some tempering of the prior week’s rally had been expected. Coming into this week, I certainly figured some tempering of the prior two weeks rally would not be surprising, and we dropped 500-600 points Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday’s 450 point increase cut into that, and now today the Dow ended up a tad, but had been up 300 points before seeing that fade. Futures were basically flat all night last night and stayed as such this morning from 3:15am until 5:30am when the weekly jobless claims number came. The number came in at 4.4 million, down from last week’s 5.5 million but in line with expectations, and futures went from down a bit to up 100. The market hit its high levels in the first couple hours of the day, and just slowly faded throughout the day. Energy and Alternative Asset Managers were the standouts today. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
11:1123/04/2020
Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday, April 22

Daily Covid and Markets Podcast - Wednesday, April 22

The market rallied quite a bit today, coming off of the two ~600 point down days that started the week. Oil prices were up 22% (from their very low level, mind you) and they are at least now only showing the June contract vs. the delivery/storage fiasco in the May contract that was taking place Monday and Tuesday. Futures were pointing to a 250-point increase when I woke up this morning, and throughout the day markets traded roughly between +250 and +500. The +450 close was off of the high of the day that came ten minutes before the close. Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com
13:4122/04/2020