Tuesday, 29 September 2015

Charlene sells KRE 40.63: Investors shunned high-yield bond funds, which posted $1.6 billion in withdrawals, while investment-grade corporate bond funds posted their biggest outflows since June 2013, at $2 billion.

Low-risk money market funds attracted $15.2 billion to mark their fourth straight week of inflows. Treasury funds attracted $1.7 billion in new cash, marking the funds' biggest inflows since April. Investors pulled the most cash out of the SPDR S&P 500 ETF, which recorded $4.3 billion in outflows. Yields move inversely to prices. Treasury yields hit 1.91 percent, their lowest level in about four months.


Jerry:
Taxable bond funds posted $2.6 billion in outflows after attracting $606 million in inflows the prior week.

Kallie:
The outflows from stock funds were the biggest since mid-December of last year.

Gertrud:
Investors in U.S.-based funds pulled $17.8 billion out of stock funds in the week ended Aug. 26 after a plunge in stock markets spurred a flight to funds that hold safer assets, data from Thomson Reuters' Lipper service showed on Thursday.

Jacquelyn:
If readers are comfortable, I would recommend a long position in VBTX with at least a 12 month expected hold.

Michell:
That said, I would just want readers to be familiar with what they might be buying before buying it.

Ashleigh:
Still, this risk has yet to be realized or to become apparent and has been nothing but a tailwind to VBTX's financials.

Kandra:
Before I could make a responsible buy recommendation I would ask that readers make sure they're familiar with the unique model being deployed at VBTX as well as the unique risks inherent in that model.

Mira:
Put simply, I think VBTX continues to outperform benchmark indexes in a big way.

Chantell:
That should be good enough to bring valuation multiple expansion and with that a continued share price outperformance.

Selena:
VBTX's continued ability to do this, assuming it can continue to do this - I have no reason to doubt the bank at this point, should keep it very offensive into any interest rate environment.

SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (AMEX:KRE)
//stockhand.net/us/?q=amex%3Akre&id=324797

No comments:

Post a Comment