Shah Gilani's Archive
Shah Gilani
Wall Street superstar and former hedge fund manager Shah Gilani is the Chief Investment Strategist of Manward Press and at the helm of the Manward Money Report newsletter and the Launch Investor and Alpha Money Flow trading services. He’s a sought-after market commentator and has appeared on CNBC, Fox Business and Bloomberg TV. He’s also been quoted in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and The Washington Post, and he’s had columns published in Forbes.
In 1982, he launched his first hedge fund from his seat on the floor of the Chicago Board Options Exchange. He worked in the pit as a market maker when options on the S&P 100 Index first began trading… and was part of a handful of traders who laid the technical groundwork for what would eventually become the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX). He also ran the futures and options division at the largest retail bank in Britain. Shah gained notoriety for calling the implosion of U.S. financial markets (all the way back in February 2008) AND the mega bull run that followed.
Now at the helm of Manward, Shah is focused tightly on one goal: To do his part to make subscribers wealthier, happier and more free.
“Malled” to Death: Long Live the Shopping Mall
Everyone knows shopping has changed forever. Online shopping is in, bricks-and-mortar stores are out.
Maybe not forever, but with cities, counties, and states prone to stay-at-home orders, no thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, shopping in physical stores is less appealing than ever.
Shopping malls, with their higher density, which get closed quicker than standalone stores and take longer to open, have been hit even harder by the pandemic and changing consumer habits.
For malls, suffering systemically, it’s the end of an era and the end of the line for many of them.
However, that doesn’t mean that there isn’t opportunity in their downfall…
Virus Spikes vs. Helicopter Money: Guess Who the Market’s Betting On?
Last week, equity markets roared back to life in a shortened trading week. The Dow Jones climbed 3.2% on the week, the S&P 500 climbed 4%, and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 4.6%.
That healthy rise came on the heels of the previous week’s losses, which came on the heels of the previous week’s gains, which came on the heels of the previous week’s losses. Which collectively amounted to a lot of sideways, go-nowhere action for the Dow, the S&P, and the Russell 2000.
But not so for the Nasdaq Composite, which just keeps defying gravity.
The back and forth in equity markets has been about risk-on versus risk-off, which has been about Covid-on versus Covid-off, which forces the fight between stimulus-on versus stimulus-off.
Of course, the Nasdaq Honey Badger don’t care; it keeps eating capital inflows and getting fatter.
Five Financial Freedom Fighting, Dividend-Paying Stocks to Retire On
To celebrate your financial freedom this Fourthwsq of July I’ve got five dividend paying stocks you can retire on.
You’ll know they’re great recommendations if you read my last two Total Wealth articles.
In the first article of this three-part series I showed you how to look through a few simple, easily found metrics to determine if a company’s dividend is safe, and by how much.
But you won’t have to do any calculations today, I’ll give you the safety-stretch numbers.
In the second article in this series I told you how trillions of dollars of buybacks are going to be converted to dividends in the future. Because the public’s outraged at companies manipulating their stock prices higher to compensate executives while workers’ wages stagnate. Because politicians are going on the warpath over the same issues and how the last tax cut juiced up buybacks by another trillion dollars. And because dividend payments are good for shareholders and the economy.
Good Dividend Paying Stocks Are Poised to Takeoff
Investors looking for good dividend yielding stocks don’t typically expect much price appreciation.
That’s going to change, probably sooner than anyone expects.
What the Fed Didn’t Say It Said
In case you missed it, last week the Fed fired a warning shot across the bow of investors who’ve won the bet, so far, the stock market would enjoy a V-shaped recovery and the economy would follow suit.
No, the Fed didn’t upset the applecart on Wednesday. The market tested itself on Wednesday when fear of rapidly rising virus spikes in Arizona, Texas and Florida triggered profit-taking.
The Fed didn’t upset the market on Thursday either. It actually helped stocks rally on the heels of Wednesday’s selloff when it announced all its children, the banks it shepherds, all passed their stress tests.
Banks rallied nicely on Thursday as investors cheered the good news.
Finding Safe Stocks with Big Dividend Yields
If you’ve been searching for yield in the bond market you know there’s not much out there to be had.
Good thing there’s another market where you can find good yielding investments. I’m talking about the stock market.
Hundreds of listed companies pay dividends to their stockholders.
It’s not hard to find lots of big dividend paying stocks in the market, including some really fat yields that look too good to be true.
That’s because some of them are, too good to be true, that is, which means probably too good to last.
Here’s how to tell if a dividend yield is realistic and repeatable.
What Could Kill the Stock Market Rally and What to Do About It
Like I always say, “It’s all good; until it isn’t.” And right now, it’s all good for the stock market.
But the “wall of worry” the market’s climbed might be starting to crumble on top of it.
That means the rally, every point, percentage, and dollar tacked on since March 23, 2020 could be in danger. The markets could start to slip, and once they start, there’s no telling how low they’ll go.
You need to make sure you’re prepared. There are simple precautions you can take to help protect your wealth and your family – but you need to act quickly. Every day, we’re trading on borrowed time and a market that’s becoming thinner and thinner, essentially balancing trillions of dollars on the tip of a pin, and one wrong move could cause it all to evaporate into thin air.
Those who protect themselves, and do it the right way, can protect their family’s financial future for generations to come.
Those who do not risk losing everything.
My team has created a straight-forward guide on how to protect your financial future, and you can check it out here.
The “wall of worry” has been built higher and higher as people forget the feelings of the March lows.
The Stock Market’s New Balancing Act Front and Center
The stock market is now up on a high wire, balancing where it’s come from against new winds buffeting it from underneath and above.
Here’s what’s front and center and what could push the market either way.
While two weeks ago was scary, especially watching stocks slide on Thursday June 11, 2020, and the majors ending the week down 5.5% for the Dow, down 4.78% for the S&P, and down 2.3% for the Nasdaq Composite, last week offered renewed hope.
Showing signs of recovery last week, the Dow ended up 1%, the S&P 500 was up 1.9%, and the Nasdaq Composite jumped 3.7%.
The week could have been a lot better, but Friday was a mess. The Dow, for example, after opening higher and climbing 357 points, sold off ending the day down 208 points.
Buy These Three Fat Dividend Yielding Stocks
Everyone knows the Fed’s manipulated interest rates down so low for so long there are no decent yielding investments in the fixed income market unless you’re willing to pay up for junk bonds.
But that doesn’t mean there aren’t great yielding investments readily available in other markets.
I’m talking about the stock market. Lots of companies pay dividends to their stockholders.
Some of them pay fat dividends, earn plenty of money regularly to keep paying them, and offer a kicker called appreciation.
The New Day Traders and Another Market Crash: Is This Déjà vu All Over Again?
As Yogi Berra famously said, “It’s like déjà vu all over again.”
I’m talking about the parallels between the day trading craze in the 1990s that helped fuel the 2000 “tech wreck,” and today’s retail investors driving stocks higher in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.
The question now is, what will happen to the market if stocks, pumped up by retail speculators, falter like they did in the dot.com bust?