: It's also left us with some exciting opportunities - if you know where to look for them [Power Trends] The Four-Letter Word That Sent Stocks on a Wild Ride
Debt. Almost everyone — from the richest in the world to new college grads — are already drowning it. And the deep end keeps getting deeper. As this wave of debt rolls across the U.S. economy… itâs making its mark in some surprising ways. Ways we can use to position our stock portfolio and stay on the right side of this trend. When we hear âdebt,â we mostly think of loans and lines of credit. But letâs not forget about margin debt — the money folks borrow for investing and trading. Because margin debt — Wall Streeters call it âleverageâ — is very much on the rise. As stock prices rebounded this year, so did fund managersâ use of leverage in their clientsâ accounts:
FINRA
Hedge funds are notorious leverage addicts. Trading on credit is a great way for them to play the catch-up game when their returns are lagging. And with stock indexes up 20%-30% off their bear-market lows, thatâs exactly the game hedge funds feel pressured to play lately. And that pressure shows up in that chart above as a nearly 13% increase in margin debt heading into second-quarter earnings season. Earnings season was when the game got interesting for the hedge funds. And by âinteresting,â I mean âforced to make big moves.â I believe this leverage wave is triggering the extreme reactions weâve been seeing in stocks of late when the underlying company surprises on earnings — to the upside and downside. Paycom Software (PAYC), Expedia (EXPE) and Fortinet (FTNT) all plunged on reports that werenât that bad. All three of them turned in earnings beats, actually. But the companies also committed that cardinal sin: Their forward guidance fell short. However, if you held the right stocks through earnings season — you were rewarded with market-beating gains, instead. Meta (META), for one, jumped on its earnings report after CEO Mark Zuckerberg reined in his spending and made his first $10 billion on Instagram Reels. Arista Networks (ANET) is another tech company whose shares rocketed higher on earnings. This was one of my picks for [Quantum Edge Trader]( a couple weeks prior to its own earnings report, when my system detected that bullish momentum was building in the stock — and spotted signals that ANETâs quarterly numbers would give investors a nice surprise. But, again, when a company doesnât have what it takes to save the hedge fundâs bacon, they'll dump the shares. If theyâre holding those shares on margin, theyâll have to. Those hedgies will get that unwelcome call from their broker: âLiquidate some positions today, or weâll do it for you.â And thatâs when things get dicey for the stock. Thatâs why you have to be especially careful to own only the select few, [highest quality stocks]( right now. In this market, weâve got the usual volatility that tends to happen in August and September — and itâs only amplified by all that hedge-fund margin debt. So, donât sit there holding anything less than the best. RECOMMENDED LINK [NVDA Stock is SURGING, But This $2 AI Gem Has Even More Upside Potential](
With Nvidiaâs dominance in AI, its trailblazing technology, and the escalating demand for AI applications it makes a robust candidate for continued growth. But if you feel like you missed out on Nvidiaâs meteoric rise, and you donât want to wait around for a pullback, there are smaller players out there ready to breakout... If you know where to look. Just recently, [this system helped us spot what we believe could be one of the biggest undercover AI opportunities of the decade](. But with AI tailwinds at its back, this $2 stock is only just getting started. [Go here now for the details]( And Thatâs Not the Only Way Debt is Impacting Stock Opportunities Now
Hedge funds arenât the only players binging on debt. Consumers have, too. Hereâs another fun fact for you. And I use the term âfunâ loosely, of course: Did you hear that credit card debt just topped $1 trillion for the first time? Sooner or later, this uptick in debt was inevitable â especially as the worst inflation in four decades caused the price of everything to just keep climbing. People can cut back on some wares and some services — but not on the âmust-haveâ items American households see as basic needs And so, this ânon-discretionary spending,â as an economist would call it, might wind up on the credit card, too. Where else are folks going to turn to make a purchase — instantly — no matter what? The catch, of course…for the customer, anyway…is that youâve got to pay for that convenience. Credit card companies can now nail consumers with interest rates of 20%, even 21%. Thatâs a steep climb from 15%â16%, which is what those issuers were averaging in 2018 and well into 2022, looking back at the consumer credit data from the Fed. This is quite a windfall for Visa (V), Mastercard (MA) and friends. Visa, for one, is pulling in a profit margin of 49.9%. Earnings are up 13.8% this year on 21.6% sales growth; not bad for a $490 billion company. And the party can (and probably will) last longer than you think. Sure, rates wonât stay high forever. I fully expect the Fed to quit raising rates soon — and to reverse course and start paring borrowing costs. But for Mastercard, Visa and their brethren, the real profit margin is made with balances. Letâs say the Fed dials it back, and credit-card companies start charging 18% instead of 20%. Even 18% on $1 trillion of consumer debt still gets them $180 billion gross, every year. Breathtaking. Until the day comes when a miraculous amount of consumer debt gets repaid, credit cards will remain a great business. And thatâs exactly what they are: great. Balances arenât the only source of revenue for these guys, after all. You canât forget about âprocessing fees.â Visa, Mastercard, Discover (DFS), American Express (AXP) and others … they all collect fees from the businesses that accept their cards. Think of it as a kind of âtollâ the card companies exact from stores, e-commerce sites and services that use their payment networks. The bottom line: While most folks will get dragged under by the debt wave, credit-card issuers surf on it. Itâs a great business model for what weâre watching. Right now, in my [Quantum Edge system]( Mastercard is the stock that scores the highest. Not only does it have solid stock momentum, with a Technical Score of 64.71, Mastercard definitely has the best Fundamental Score of the bunch, at 75.02. Credit-card stocks tend to have high institutional ownership, and MA has had six Big Money buy signals in the past six months, with zero Big Money sells:
MAPSignals.com
Overall, the stock is one point shy of my preferred buy range, with a combined Quantum Score of 69. However, just yesterday I did find a stock that lined it all up just the way I wanted. My new pick for [Quantum Edge Trader]( also falls into the finance category… Although itâs not always the first to come to mind. At least, not for most investors. But they donât have an algorithm out there combing through all 6,000 stocks, day after day, for the absolute best opportunities. To see the latest buy and get on the list for all future alerts, [click here to learn more and get started](. Talk soon, [Jason Bodner]Jason Bodner
Editor, Jason Bodnerâs Power Trends Disclosure: On the date of publication, Jason Bodner held a position in Expedia (EXPE), Fortinet (FTNT), Mastercard Inc. (MA), Paycom Software (PAYC) and Visa Inc. (V), mentioned in this article Get Instant Access
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