Tag Archives: ARK Innovation ETF

The summer rally has been very bullish, but strategists say a big sell-off next month is possible

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Cathie Wood has a simple response to Tesla getting booted out of an S&P 500 ESG index: ‘Ridiculous’

Cathie Wood isn’t pleased about one of her most popular investments, Tesla Inc., being excluded from a prominent index that tracks eco- and socially friendly companies.

“Ridiculous,” was essentially Wood’s terse response to news that the S&P 500 ESG Index has dropped Elon Musk’s electric-vehicle maker Tesla
TSLA,
-6.80%
 from its lineup, as a part of its annual rebalancing.

Read: Tesla dumped by S&P ESG index and Musk cries label is a ‘scam’

“While Tesla may be playing its part in taking fuel-powered cars off the road, it has fallen behind its peers when examined through a wider ESG lens,” wrote Margaret Dorn, senior director and head of ESG indices, North America, at S&P Dow Jones Indices, in a blog post dated Tuesday.

The announcement from S&P Dow Jones Indices might come as a shock to some, given that the vehicle manufacturer is seen as a pioneer of producing EVs for the masses, perhaps laying the groundwork for large manufacturers such as Ford Motor
F,
-5.54%
and General Motors Co.
GM,
-5.96%,
who are racing to compete with Tesla in EVs on a bigger scale after badly falling behind Musk & Co. in the low-carbon category.

Dorn makes the case that a couple of the factors contributing to Tesla’s exclusion were “a decline in criteria-level scores” related to its low-carbon strategy and its “codes of business conduct.”

Tesla has been one of the biggest and most successful investments for Wood, the CEO of ARK Investment Management, whose bullishness on disruptive companies like Tesla helped propel her to fame on Wall Street.

However, Wood’s flagship fund has been unhinged by the downturn, which has capsized much of the market in growth-oriented, technology and tech-related investments.

Wood’s flagship ARK Innovation ETF
ARKK,
-4.43%
has tumbled about 74% from its peak back in mid-February 2021, and is down more than 56% thus far in 2022.

Tesla’s stock has fallen more than 42% since its recent peak in early November. Shares of the EV maker are off 33% so far in 2022.

Meanwhile, Ford and GM’s stocks are both down by about 38% year to date, with the S&P 500
SPX,
-4.04%
down almost 18% so far this year, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-3.57%
off more than 13% and the technology-laden Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-4.73%
down 27%.

Musk also had thoughts on Tesla’s exclusion from the ESG index:

Worth a read: A ‘summer of pain’? The Nasdaq Composite could plunge 75% from peak, S&P 500 skid 45% from its top, warns Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd.

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How to buy stocks on the brink of a bear market

It seemed like everyone was in a buying mood on Friday, except Elon Musk. The Dow Jones Industrial Average broke a six-day losing streak, the Nasdaq Composite turned in its second positive session in a row, and the S&P 500 was up over 2%, a small step back from the brink of a bear market, ending the week 16.50% off its 52-week high. But any single-day stock gains in this market are tenuous. The Dow was down for its seventh-consecutive week for the first time since 2001.

“We saw the exact same thing in 2000 and 2001,” says Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research. “You knew asset prices were going down, but trading action always gave you just enough hope. … I’ve had so many flashbacks to 2000 in the past three months. … If you haven’t seen it before, it’s very hard to go through, and you don’t forget.”

For many investors who flooded into stocks since the pandemic as the bull market again seemed to have only one direction, this may be their first time dancing with the bear for an extended period. For Colas, who earlier in his career worked at the former hedge fund of Steve Cohen, SAC Capital, there are a few lessons he learned from those years which “saved a lot of heartache.”

People with umbrellas pass by bull and bear outside Frankfurt’s stock exchange during heavy rain in Frankfurt, Germany.

Kai Pfaffenbach | Reuters

To start, the standing philosophy at the trading firm was to never short a new high and never buy a new low. As investors who have only ever experienced a bull market are now learning, momentum is a powerful force in both directions. This doesn’t mean investors should take any particular stocks off their radar, but stabilization in stocks isn’t going to be measured in a day or two of trading. Investors should be monitoring stocks for signs of stabilization over one to three months. An exception: a stock that rallies on bad news may be one in which the market is signaling that all the bad news is already priced in.

But for the moment, Colas said, making a big bet on a single stock as a buy-in-the-dip opportunity isn’t the best way to proceed. “The No. 1 rule is lose as little as possible,” he said. “That’s the goal, because it’s not like you’re going to kill it, and investing to lose as little as possible … when we get the turn, you want to have as much money as possible.”

Here are a few more of the principles he has at the top of his stock-buying list right now and how they relate to the current market environment.

The importance of the VIX at 36

Volatility is the defining feature of the stock market right now, and the clearest signal that investors can look to as far as the selling being exhausted is the VIX volatility index. A VIX at 36 is two standards deviations away from its mean since 1990. “That’s a meaningful difference,” Colas said. “When the VIX gets to 36 we are well and truly oversold, we’ve had the hardcore panic mode,” he said. But the VIX hasn’t reached that level yet during the most recent bout of selling.

In fact, the stock market has only experienced one 36-plus VIX close this year. That was on March 7, and that was a viable entry point for traders because stocks ended up rallying by 11% — before the situation again deteriorated. “Even if you bought that close, you needed to be nimble,” Colas said. The VIX is saying that the washout in stocks isn’t over yet. “We’re dancing in between the rain drops of the storm,” he said.

Short-term bounces are often more a reflection of short squeezes than an all-clear signal. “Short squeezes in bear markets are vicious, and it’s easier trading than being short,” he said.

Look at some of the recent action in the pandemic “meme stocks” such as GameStop and AMC, as well as pandemic consumer winners such as Carvana, and Colas says that buying those rallies “is a tough way to make a living, a tough way to trade,” but back in 2002, traders did look to the heavily-shorted names, the stocks most sold into earnings.

Whether Apple, Tesla or any other, stocks won’t love you back

For investors who made a fortune in the recent bull market riding Apple or Tesla higher, it is a time to be “incredibly selective,” Colas says, and even with the stocks you’ve come to love the most, remember that they don’t love you back.

This is another way of reminding investors of the most important rule for investing amid volatility: take the emotion out of it. “Trade the market you have, not the one you want,” he said.

Many investors learned that lesson the hard way through Apple, which was down more than 6% in the past week alone. Year-to-date, Apple had dipped into its own bear market before Friday’s rebound.

“Apple had one job to do in this market, and that was not implode,” Colas said.

Everyone from mom-and-pop investors to Warren Buffett saw Apple as “the one great place to be” and watching it break down as quickly as it did shows that the stock market’s closest equivalent to a safe haven trade is over. “We’ve gone from mild risk-off to extreme risk-off and it doesn’t matter if Apple is a great company,” Colas said. “Liquidity is not great and there is a flight to safety across any asset class you can name … the financial assets people are looking for are the safest things out there and Apple is still a great company, but it’s a stock.”

And with valuations in the tech sector as high as they have been, it’s not a slam dunk to dive in.

“You can buy it at $140 [$147 after Friday] and it still has a $2.3 trillion market cap. It’s still worth more than the entire energy sector. That’s hard,” Colas said. “Tech still has some pretty crazy valuations.”

S&P 500 sectors in a better position to rally

On a sector basis, Colas is looking more to energy, because “it’s still working,” he says, and as far as growth trades, health care as the best “safety trade” even if that comes with a caveat. Based on its relative valuation and weight in the S&P 500, “It’s a good place to be if we get a rally and to not lose as much,” he said.

History says that during periods like this, health-care stocks will get larger bids because growth investors bailing out of tech need to cycle into another sector and over the years the options they have available to turn to have narrowed. For example, not too long ago there were “growthy” retail names that investors would turn to amid volatility, but the rise of online retail killed that trade.

Colas stressed that there isn’t any evidence yet that growth investors are cycling into anything. “We’re not seeing health care yet, but as growth investors sticks their heads up again, there are not many other sectors,” he said.

What Cathie Wood buying a blue-chip means

Even as Apple capitulated to the selling, Colas said there is always a case to make for blue-chip stocks in a bear market. Autos, which Colas covered on Wall Street for decade, are one example of how to think about blue-chips for long-term investors.

The first lesson from Ford in this market, though, may be its dumping of Rivian shares the first chance it got.

“Ford does one thing well, and that is stay alive, and right now it’s batten down hatches,” Colas said. “Hit the sell button and get some liquidity. They see what’s coming and they want to be prepared to keep investing in the EV and ICE business.”

Whatever happens to Rivian, Ford and GM are likely to be around for a while, and in fact, guess who just bought GM for the first time: Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood.

This doesn’t mean Wood has necessarily soured on her favorite stock of all, top holding Tesla, but it does suggest a portfolio manager who may be acknowledging that not all stocks rebound on a similar timeline. ARK, whose flagship fund Ark Innovation, is down as much as the Nasdaq was peak to trough between 2000 and 2002, has some ground to make up.

“I don’t have a point of view on whether Cathie is a good or bad stock picker, but it was smart of her to look at a GM, not because it is a great stock ….I wouldn’t touch it here, but regardless, we know it will be around in 10 years aside from some cataclysmic bankruptcy,” Colas said. “I don’t know if Teladoc or Square will,” he added about a few of Wood’s top stock picks.

One big disconnect between many in the market and Wood right now is her conviction that the multi-year disruptive themes she bet heavily on are still in place and will be proven correct in the end. But buying a blue-chip like GM can help to extend the duration of that disruptive vision. GM, in a sense, is a second order stock buy “without having to bet the farm on the ones that are not profitable,” Colas said.

Even in a market that doesn’t love any stock, longer-term there are names to trust. After the Nasdaq bottomed in 2002, Amazon, Microsoft and Apple ended up being among the great trades of the 2002-2021 period.

Bear markets don’t end in a “V,” but rather an exhausted flat line that can last a long time, and stocks that do end up working don’t all work at the same time. GM might benefit before Tesla even if Tesla is at a $1.5 trillion three years from now. “That’s the value of a portfolio at different stages and there will be stuff you just get wrong,” Colas said.

The GM buy could be a signal that Wood will make more trades to diversity the duration in her funds, but investors will need to watch where she takes the portfolio in the next few months. And if it remains a conviction bet on the most disruptive, money-losing companies, “I like the QQQs,” Colas said. “We don’t know what will be in ARK, but we know what will be QQQs,” he said. “I would much rather own the QQQs,” Colas said, referring to the Nasdaq 100 ETF.

Even that has to come with a caveat right now. “I don’t know if big tech will be the comeback kids the same way it was, because valuations are so much higher,” Colas said. Microsoft is worth more than several sectors with the S&P 500 (real estate and utilities), and Amazon valued at over two Walmarts, “but you don’t have to be betting on Teladoc and Square,” he said.

“We knew they were good companies, and who knows where the stocks go, but fundamentals are sound and if you have to trust you’ve picked the next Apple and Amazon, that’s a hard trade,” he added.

Where Wall Street will still get more bearish

There are plenty of reasons in the macroeconomic lens to remain skeptical of any rally, from the Federal Reserve’s ability to manage inflation to the growth outlook in Europe and China, which all have a range of outcomes so wide that the market has to incorporate the possibility of a global recession to a greater extent than it normally would. But one key market data point where this isn’t being incorporated yet is earnings estimates for the S&P 500. “They are just too high, ridiculously too high,” Colas said.

The fact that the forward price-to-earnings ratios aren’t getting cheaper is telling investors that the market still has work to do in bringing numbers down. Currently, Wall Street is forecasting 10% sequential growth in earnings from the S&P 500, which, Colas said, doesn’t happen in this environment. “Not with 7%-9% inflation and 1%-2% GDP growth. The street is wrong, the numbers are wrong, and they have to come down.”

 

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Cathie Wood says she still expects to see ‘spectacular returns’ over the next 5 years

Cathie Wood defended her firm’s innovation-focused portfolio, saying she sees “spectacular returns” for Ark Invest over the next five years.

“Given our expectations for growth in these new technologies, I think we’re going to see some spectacular returns,” the Ark Invest CEO told CNBC’s “Capital Connection.”

She said the firm has seen “significant inflows” since Jan. 17.

“I think a lot of our investor base is averaging down,” she said. Averaging down refers to the investment strategy of buying more units of an asset when its price drops.

“You’d be amazed if you average down over time, how quickly a strategy can come back above that average. And if we’re right, significantly above that average over the next five years,” Wood said.

Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

Her comments come after her firm’s flagship fund has been caught in the recent tech-led sell-off. The Ark Innovation ETF has nearly halved in the past 12 months.

“We’ve been in a terrible bear market for innovation,” she admitted. “However, if you look from the bottom of the coronavirus to that peak [of the Ark Innovation ETF] in February of ’21, we were up 358%.”

Wood said the world is currently facing “all kinds of problems” and innovation is set be the answer.

She pointed to the ongoing war in Ukraine, which has has triggered a surge in the prices for some commodities like oil. Wood said the conflict is set to lead to “a lot of demand destruction and substitution into innovation” such as a switch toward electric vehicles away from those that are gas-powered.

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

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Cathie Wood’s ARK Faces Loyalty Test After Tech-Stock Rout

Cathie Wood

says the high-risk stocks in the exchange-traded funds sold by ARK Investment Management LLC are so cheap that they will inevitably rise. A surprising number of investors are willing to give it a shot.

Over the past week, with prices in the

ARK Innovation ETF

back at mid-2020 levels, investors have put about $168 million into the fund, boosting its net assets to $11.8 billion, according to FactSet. It is a noteworthy vote of confidence for a fund that has dropped 27% this month and lost half its value over the past year, as its brand of investing in largely unprofitable, untested firms has fallen out of favor.

What happens next at the ARK Innovation fund, which goes by the ticker ARKK, and other risky investments like it will help tell the story of financial markets in 2022. The most speculative assets, ranging from ARK and many of its holdings to so-called meme stocks such as

GameStop Corp.

and

AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc.

to cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, soared during the pandemic thanks to the enormous sums governments and central banks poured into the economy to counter the impact of lockdowns. Now those gains are eroding as the Federal Reserve prepares to begin raising U.S. interest rates as soon as March.

That is prompting a shift of investor behavior, causing a rethink of the sky-high valuations markets had attached to growth stocks. The result is a pullback from the riskiest assets and a repricing of even big technology stocks.

Ms. Wood’s ETFs are at the epicenter of the selloff that has pushed the S&P 500 down 7% and the Nasdaq Composite off 12% just four weeks into 2022. Worst hit have been the shares of technology and biotech firms that generate little to no profit, yet carry high valuations—the kind of companies Ms. Wood’s ARK favors.

Some of the holdings of the ARK Innovation ETF are down more than 50% from their recent highs, including

Spotify Technology SA,

Block Inc.,

Zoom Video Communications Inc.

and

Roku Inc.

Ms. Wood insists the fund’s holdings are due to rebound. “After correcting for nearly 11 months, innovation stocks seem to have entered deep value territory, their valuations a fraction of peak levels,” she wrote in a blog post last month.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

Can the ARK Innovation fund rebound? Join the conversation below.

Larry Carroll,

a financial adviser at advisory firm Wealth Enhancement Group in Rock Hill, S.C., still has some $18 million of client money in ARK Innovation after first buying shares in 2018. The firm manages about $55 billion across portfolios of stocks and bonds, with Mr. Carroll using ARK Innovation as a way of offering some clients exposure to hot tech companies.

Thanks to ARK’s sharp run-up in the early stages of the pandemic, he says he has already pulled more money out of the fund than he originally put in, leaving him comfortable maintaining a significant position in expectation that depressed shares will bounce back.

“The real question has been should we be buying more,” said Mr. Carroll. “I’ve resisted the urge mainly because I don’t think you’ll see ARK and the disruption stocks do well in this environment.”

Funds that beat the market often go through periods in which they lag behind, though the scale of ARK’s ups and downs makes it stand out. Investors have pulled a net $1.4 billion from ARK funds over the past month, the most redemptions of any U.S. ETF issuer, according to data from FactSet. That has pushed net outflows over the past six months to more than $8 billion, more than all the net outflows experienced by other ETF managers over the same period.

Some $16 billion flowed into ARK Innovation from the second quarter of 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic took hold, through the first quarter of 2021, when the fund’s assets peaked at $28 billion. Investors who have bought in since then have been losing money, said

Vincent Deluard,

director of global macro strategy at

StoneX Group Inc.

Renato Leggi,

a client-portfolio manager at ARK, said some investors have started to agree with Ms. Wood’s assessment over the past week and are buying shares. She said the firm’s strategy requires that investors take a long-term view.

But

Klaus Derendorf,

a 50-year-old business-development executive from Los Angeles, said he sold his ARK Innovation fund shares in November and has boosted his cash holdings after losing about 20% in the fund in less than a year. “I gotta go back to real fundamentals,” he said.

Ms. Wood’s early returns gained her a large following on YouTube, Twitter and other social-media platforms.

Joe Seid,

a 58-year-old sales director from Chicago, bought ARK Innovation shares at the end of 2020, in part because he saw her on TV and his financial adviser flagged the fund as one of the hottest in the market. He sold last year after losing 10% of his investment and now thinks he might have gotten carried away.

“For me, these were way too speculative,” Mr. Seid said. “It didn’t really jibe with more core financial beliefs.”

Write to Michael Wursthorn at Michael.Wursthorn@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Get ready for the climb. Here’s what history says about stock-market returns during Fed rate-hike cycles.

Bond yields are rising again so far in 2022. The U.S. stock market seems vulnerable to a bona fide correction. But what can you really tell from a mere two weeks into a new year? Not much and quite a lot.

One thing feels assured: the days of making easy money are over in the pandemic era. Benchmark interest rates are headed higher and bond yields, which have been anchored at historically low levels, are destined to rise in tandem.

Read: Weekend reads: How to invest amid higher inflation and as interest rates rise

It seemed as if Federal Reserve members couldn’t make that point any clearer this past week, ahead of the traditional media blackout that precedes the central bank’s first policy meeting of the year on Jan. 25-26.

The U.S. consumer-price and producer-price index releases this week have only cemented the market’s expectations of a more aggressive or hawkish monetary policy from the Fed.

The only real question is how many interest-rate increases will the Federal Open Market Committee dole out in 2022. JPMorgan Chase & Co.
JPM,
-6.15%
CEO Jamie Dimon intimated that seven might be the number to beat, with market-based projections pointing to the potential for three increases to the federal funds rate in the coming months.

Check out: Here’s how the Federal Reserve may shrink its $8.77 trillion balance sheet to combat high inflation

Meanwhile, yields for the 10-year Treasury note yielded 1.771% Friday afternoon, which means that yields have climbed by about 26 basis points in the first 10 trading days to start a calendar year, which would be the briskest such rise since 1992, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Back 30 years ago, the 10-year rose 32 basis points to around 7% to start that year.

The 2-year note
TMUBMUSD02Y,
0.960%,
which tends to be more sensitive to the Fed’s interest rate moves, is knocking on the door of 1%, up 24 basis points so far this year, FactSet data show.

But do interest rate increases translate into a weaker stock market?

As it turns out, during so-called rate-hike cycles, which we seem set to enter into as early as March, the market tends to perform strongly, not poorly.

In fact, during a Fed rate-hike cycle the average return for the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-0.56%
is nearly 55%, that of the S&P 500
SPX,
+0.08%
is a gain of 62.9% and the Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+0.59%
has averaged a positive return of 102.7%, according to Dow Jones, using data going back to 1989 (see attached table). Fed interest rate cuts, perhaps unsurprisingly, also yield strong gains, with the Dow up 23%, the S&P 500 gaining 21% and the Nasdaq rising 32%, on average during a Fed rate hike cycle.

Dow Jones Market Data

Interest rate cuts tend to occur during periods when the economy is weak and rate hikes when the economy is viewed as too hot by some measure, which may account for the disparity in stock market performance during periods when interest-rate reductions occur.

To be sure, it is harder to see the market producing outperformance during a period in which the economy experiences 1970s-style inflation. Right now, it feels unlikely that bullish investors will get a whiff of double-digit returns based on the way stocks are shaping up so far in 2022. The Dow is down 1.2%, the S&P 500 is off 2.2%, while the Nasdaq Composite is down a whopping 4.8% thus far in January.

Read: Worried about a bubble? Why you should overweight U.S. equities this year, according to Goldman

What’s working?

So far this year, winning stock market trades have been in energy, with the S&P 500’s energy sector
SP500.10,
+2.44%

XLE,
+2.35%
looking at a 16.4% advance so far in 2022, while financials
SP500.40,
-1.01%

XLF,
-1.04%
are running a distant second, up 4.4%. The other nine sectors of the S&P 500 are either flat or lower.

Meanwhile, value themes are making a more pronounced comeback, eking out a 0.1% weekly gain last week, as measured by the iShares S&P 500 Value ETF
IVE,
-0.14%,
but month to date the return is 1.2%.

See: These 3 ETFs let you play the hot semiconductor sector, where Nvidia, Micron, AMD and others are growing sales rapidly

What’s not working?

Growth factors are getting hammered thus far as bond yields rise because a rapid rise in yields makes their future cash flows less valuable. Higher interest rates also hinder technology companies’ ability to fund stock buy backs. The popular iShares S&P 500 Growth ETF
IVW,
+0.28%
is down 0.6% on the week and down 5.1% in January so far.

What’s really not working?

Biotech stocks are getting shellacked, with the iShares Biotechnology ETF
IBB,
+0.65%
down 1.1% on the week and 9% on the month so far.

And a popular retail-oriented ETF, the SPDR S&P Retail ETF
XRT,
-2.10%
tumbled 4.1% last week, contributing to a 7.4% decline in the month to date.

And Cathie Wood’s flagship ARK Innovation ETF
ARKK,
+0.33%
finished the week down nearly 5% for a 15.2% decline in the first two weeks of January. Other funds in the complex, including ARK Genomic Revolution ETF
ARKG,
+1.04%
and ARK Fintech Innovation ETF
ARKF,
-0.99%
are similarly woebegone.

And popular meme names also are getting hammered, with GameStop Corp.
GME,
-4.76%
down 17% last week and off over 21% in January, while AMC Entertainment Holdings
AMC,
-0.44%
sank nearly 11% on the week and more than 24% in the month to date.

Gray swan?

MarketWatch’s Bill Watts writes that fears of a Russian invasion of Ukraine are on the rise, and prompting analysts and traders to weigh the potential financial-market shock waves. Here’s what his reporting says about geopolitical risk factors and their longer-term impact on markets.

Week ahead

U.S. markets are closed in observance of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday on Monday.

Read: Is the stock market open on Monday? Here are the trading hours on Martin Luther King Jr. Day

Notable U.S. corporate earnings

(Dow components in bold)
TUESDAY:

Goldman Sachs Group
GS,
-2.52%,
Truist Financial Corp.
TFC,
+0.96%,
Signature Bank
SBNY,
+0.07%,
PNC Financial
PNC,
-1.33%,
J.B. Hunt Transport Services
JBHT,
-1.04%,
Interactive Brokers Group Inc.
IBKR,
-1.22%

WEDNESDAY:

Morgan Stanley
MS,
-3.58%,
Bank of America
BAC,
-1.74%,
U.S. Bancorp.
USB,
+0.09%,
State Street Corp.
STT,
+0.32%,
UnitedHealth Group Inc.
UNH,
+0.27%,
Procter & Gamble
PG,
+0.96%,
Kinder Morgan
KMI,
+1.82%,
Fastenal Co.
FAST,
-2.55%

THURSDAY:

Netflix
NFLX,
+1.25%,
United Airlines Holdings
UAL,
-2.97%,
American Airlines
AAL,
-4.40%,
Baker Hughes
BKR,
+4.53%,
Discover Financial Services
DFS,
-1.44%,
CSX Corp.
CSX,
-0.82%,
Union Pacific Corp.
UNP,
-0.55%,
The Travelers Cos. Inc. TRV, Intuitive Surgical Inc. ISRG, KeyCorp.
KEY,
+1.16%

FRIDAY:

Schlumberger
SLB,
+4.53%,
Huntington Bancshares Inc.
HBAN,
+1.73%

U.S. economic reports

Tuesday

  • Empire State manufacturing index for January due at 8:30 a.m. ET
  • NAHB home builders index for January at 10 a.m.

Wednesday

  • Building permits and starts for December at 8:30 a.m.
  • Philly Fed Index for January at 8:30 a.m.

Thursday

  • Initial jobless claims for the week ended Jan. 15 (and continuing claims for Jan. 8) at 8:30 a.m.
  • Existing home sales for December at 10 a.m.

Friday

Leading economic indicators for December at 10 a.m.

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Cathie Wood says stocks have corrected into ‘deep value territory’ and won’t let benchmarks ‘hold our strategies hostage’

ARK Invest founder Cathie Wood offered the latest defense of the once-highflying, disruptive innovation strategies that had made her suite of exchange-traded funds among the most popular, and best-performing, on Wall Street in 2020.

In a Friday evening blog post, Wood said that despite a brutal stretch that has compelled the operators of the ARK Invest ETFs, including the flagship Ark Innovation
ARKK,
+5.80%
fund, to do some soul-searching, the fund manager is sticking to her game plan.

‘With a five-year investment time horizon, our forecasts for these platforms suggest that our strategies today could deliver a 30-40% compound annual rate of return during the next five years.’


— Cathie Wood, ARK Invest founder and CEO, in a Friday blog post

“We won’t let benchmarks and tracking errors hold our strategies hostage to the existing world order,” Wood wrote. She described the success of the ARK ETFs as one not solely bolstered by fervor for “stay at home” investment opportunities, amid the COVID pandemic, but rooted in identifying paradigm-shifting innovation, from blockchain and bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-1.06%
to electric vehicles.

“Critical to investment success will be moving to the right side of change, avoiding industries and companies caught in the crosshairs of ‘creative destruction’ and embracing those on the leading edge of ‘disruptive innovation,’” Wood wrote.

On Friday, ARK Innovation ended the session up nearly 6% and produced its second straight sharp weekly gain, up 1.1%, following a 1.8% advance in the prior week. The advance for ARK Innovation still leaves the actively managed fund down nearly 22% in the year to date, as the broader S&P 500
SPX,
-1.03%,
the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-1.48%
and the technology Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
-0.07%
have faced whipsawing volatility derived primarily from concerns about more transmissible strains of COVID, surging inflation and global monetary policy’s reaction to those pricing pressures. Year-to-date the S&P 500 index is up 864.57 points or 23.02%.

ARK’s seven ETFs returned an average of 141% in 2020, on the back of gains from companies such as Tesla Inc.
TSLA,
+0.61%,
 and Teladoc Health Inc.
TDOC,
+11.83%,
 making Wood the toast of Wall Street. But those funds, focused primarily on companies that aren’t yet profitable, have been limping lower since hitting a peak back in February, and their woeful performance has raised questions about the prospects for the ETFs in the months and years to come.

Wood urged investors to maintain their support of the ARK complex and said that maintaining a long-term, five-year time horizon would be the best way to judge the fund manager’s true performance.

“With a five-year investment time horizon, our forecasts for these platforms suggest that our strategies today could deliver a 30-40% compound annual rate of return during the next five years,” the ARK CEO wrote.

“In other words, if our research is correct—and I believe that our research on innovation is the best in the financial world—then our strategies will triple to quintuple in value over the next five years,” Wood added.

The ARK founder also made the case that the Nasdaq and S&P 500 could be the bigger disappointment to return-eager investors in the longer-term because they are more overvalued than the disruptive investments that comprise her funds.

“Unlike many innovation-related stocks, equity benchmarks are selling at record high prices and near record high valuations, 26x for the S&P 500 and 127x for the Nasdaq on a trailing twelve-month basis,” Wood wrote.

She said that the “five major innovation platforms which involve 14 technologies are likely to transform the existing world order and that so-called tried and true investment strategies “will disappoint during the next five to ten years as DNA sequencing, robotics, energy storage, artificial intelligence, and blockchain technology scale and converge.”

Wood also made the case that the so-called wall of worry, with inflation fears representing perhaps the biggest concern, provided an ideal backdrop for further advances in innovation stocks in the longer run because the dot-com markets of the late-1990s weren’t properly buffeted by investor concerns. The thinking is that “walls of worry” tend to limit market euphoria.

“In our view, the wall of worry built on the back of high multiple stocks bodes well for equities in the innovation space,” she wrote. “No wall of worry existed or tested the equity market in 1999. This time around, the wall of worry has scaled to enormous heights,” Wood said.

On the macroeconomic front, Wood said that deflation, rather than inflation, could be a bigger problem for markets in the coming months.

“That said, my conviction is growing that the bigger surprise to the markets will be price deflation – both cyclical and secular – and that, after collapsing this year, higher multiple stocks could turn around dramatically during the next year,” she wrote.

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American Airlines, Nucor, Goldman Sachs and more

Bundles of steel from Nucor Corp. sit for sale to at Thompson Building Materials in Lomita, California, U.S., on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012.

Patrick Fallon | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.

American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines — Shares of American Airlines the major airlines rose over 1% Monday after the White House said it would ease travel restrictions for international travelers who are vaccinated against Covid-19. Shares of Delta and United gained earlier but ticked down nearly 0.2% each.

China Evergrande Group — Shares of the embattled Chinese property giant dropped 10% on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. The company has been scrambling to pay its suppliers, and warned investors that it could default on its debts. Last week, the company said its property sales will likely continue to drop significantly in September several months of weakness.

Centerpoint Energy, Dominion Energy — Utility stocks rose on Monday as investors shifted toward defensive plays during the broader market slide. Shares of Centerpoint and Dominion rose roughly 1% each.

Nucor, Freeport-McMoRan, Ford, Caterpillar — Stocks linked to global growth declined Monday. Steel stock Nucor declined 8.4%, miner Freeport-McMoRan fell 6.6%, auto maker Ford dropped 6% and construction equipment manufacturer Caterpillar retreated 4.8%.

APA, Devon Energy — Energy stocks tumbled amid a drop in oil pries on concerns about the global economy. The S&P 500 energy sector fell 3.3%, becoming the worst-performing group among the 11 groups during Monday’s market sell-off. APA and Devon Energy both shed more than 6%. Occidental Petroleum dropped 6% and Hess slid over 5%.

Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase — Financials stocks declined as the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield dropped, with falling rates typically crimping bank profits. Goldman Sachs, Bank of America and Citigroup all shed more than 4%. JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley both declined more than 3%.

ARK Innovation, Coinbase, Tesla, Zoom, Square — Shares of Cathie Wood’s flagship fund dropped more than 4% as innovation names experienced harsh selling. Top holdings Coinbase and Teladoc both lost more than 5%. Unity Software shed over 5%, and Tesla dropped more than 3%. Square and Zoom Video dropped more than 3% each.

Pfizer — The drug maker stock ticked 0.3% higher after the company said its Covid vaccine is safe and appears to generate a robust immune response in kids ages 5 to 11. If the FDA spends as much time reviewing the data for that age group as it did for 12- to 15-year-olds, the shots could be available in time for Halloween.

AstraZeneca — Shares of the United Kingdom-based pharmaceutical company popped more than 4% in midday trading after announcing that its breast cancer drug Enhertu showed positive results in a phase-three trial.

Invesco — Invesco shares declined 9% Monday. The stock ran up on Friday following a Wall Street Journal report that the asset manager is in talks to merge with State Street’s asset management unit. The report, citing people familiar with the matter, said a deal is not imminent and might not happen at all.

— CNBC’s Maggie Fitzgerald, Yun Li and Jesse Pound contributed reporting

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Pfizer, Occidental Petroleum, Bank of America and more

A syringe is filled with a dose of Pfizer’s coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine at a pop-up community vaccination center at the Gateway World Christian Center in Valley Stream, New York, U.S., February 23, 2021.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

China Evergrande Group — Chinese property giant Evergrande tumbled more than 10% on Hong Kong Stock Exchange, spooking Asian markets. The company has been scrambling to pay its suppliers, and warned investors twice in as many weeks that it could default on its debts. Last week Evergrande said its property sales will likely continue to drop significantly in September after declining for months.

Pfizer — The pharmaceutical giant said Monday that trials showed its Covid vaccine was safe and effective when used in children ages 5 to 11. Pfizer and partner BioNTech said they would submit the results for approval “as soon as possible.” Shares of Pfizer were down about 1% in premarket trading.

Laredo Petroleum, Occidental Petroleum — Oil and energy stocks dipped in premarket trading on Monday. The SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration ETF is down more than 3% in early trading, on pace for its 3rd straight negative session. Laredo Petroleum is down more than 8%, Callon Petroleum is down roughly 6%, and Occidental Petroleum is down nearly 5%. The losses came as crude oil fell on fears of a global economic slowdown tied to the China property market.

Colgate-Palmolive — The consumer staples stock was upgraded to buy from hold by Deutsche Bank on Sunday. The investment firm said that Colgate’s difficulties with inflation and in some international markets was already priced in to its stock.

JPMorgan, Bank of America — Bank stocks slid in unison amid a decline in bond yields on slowdown fears. Investors flocked to Treasurys for safety as the stock market is set for its biggest sell-off in months. Big bank stocks took a hit as the falling rates may crimp profits. Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase were each down more than 2% in premarket trading. Citizens Financial Group dropped 3%, while Citigroup declined 2.5%.

AstraZeneca — The United Kingdom-based pharmaceutical company announced on Monday that its breast cancer drug Enhertu showed positive results in a phase-three trial. Shares of the company were up more than 1% in premarket trading.

ARK Innovation ETF — Cathie Wood’s ARK Innovation ETF is down 2.75% in the premarket, on pace to snap a 3-day winning streak. Compugen, DraftKings, Coinbase and Square are so of the ETF’s biggest losers this morning.

— with reporting from CNBC’s Jesse Pound and Yun Li.

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Michael Burry of ‘The Big Short’ Is Betting Against ARK’s Cathie Wood

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ARK Invest’s Cathie Wood.


Courtesy Photograph

Michael Burry, the gutsy hedge-fund manager whose life was told in the Oscar-winning biopic “The Big Short,” is taking aim at star stock picker Cathie Wood.   

In a filing on Monday, Burry disclosed that his firm, Scion Asset Management, held bearish put options against 235,500 shares of Woods’ actively managed

ARK Innovation exchange-traded fund

(ticker: ARKK) at the end of the second quarter. The new position was valued at almost $31 million, according to the quarterly filing, which is required for hedge funds above a certain size.

A put contract gives Scion the right to sell shares in the ETF at a previously agreed price before a certain date. If ARK Innovation’s shares drop below the threshold before the options expire, the hedge fund can sell the shares for a profit.

Burry isn’t the only investor betting that the price of ARK innovation will fall. The volume of put options traded on ETF is rising, while the short interest on the ETF recently reached a record high. There is even a Short ARKK ETF in the filing that, if approved by the Securities and Exchange Commission, would allow retail investors—those who can’t sell shorts or trade options directly—to make bearish bets against Woods. 

Wood’s company, ARK Invest, took in billions of new assets last year from spectacular performances by some of her active ETFs focused on high-growth innovation-driven stocks. Several were among 2020’s best-performing funds, with returns of more than 100%.

But the funds have struggled to maintain that momentum this year. Many of their stockholdings are trading at lofty valuations that are betting on huge expected growth in the future. As inflation flares up and interest rates rise, however, the current value of the growth companies’ future cash flow is being diminished. The ARK Innovation ETF is now 6% down for the year, with $500 million asset outflows in the past month.

Burry has been cautioning about the unsustainable valuations of some ARK holdings for months. He already holds big bearish positions against electric car maker

Tesla

(TSLA), one of the top investments in ARK ETFs. Monday’s filing shows that Burry increased his bearish puts on Tesla to nearly 1.1 million shares, up from 800,100 shares in the first quarter. Those bets are worth $731 million.

Tesla shares have declined 2.8% year to date, while ARK Innovation has lost 6% in value. Still, both are trading at much higher levels compared to the start of 2020, up by 675% and 134%, respectively.

Burry became famous for successfully betting against the housing bubble, which eventually touched off the financial crisis in 2008. His story is just one of several told by Michael Lewis in his book “The Big Short” and later made into a movie.

The financier was also one of the first big-name investors to bet on

GameStop

in 2020, which led to a buying frenzy in the videogame retailer’s stock earlier this year. But Burry sold his entire stake before GameStop became a meme stock on Reddit, missing out on the 2,000% surge.

Write to Evie Liu at evie.liu@barrons.com

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