Housing market: Hard assets are ‘one of the great hedges for inflation,’ strategist says

In This Article:

Miller Tabak Managing Director and Equity Strategist Matt Maley joins Yahoo Finance Live’s Julie Hyman and Brian Sozzi to discuss bank earnings, the housing market, inflation hedges, and the outlook for the stock market.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: All right. Staying on the market, let's bring in Miller Tabak chief market strategist Matt Maley. Matt, good to see you. I know you are an astute watcher of market technicals. Now, within the course of a week, we've had disappointing profits out of JPMorgan, weakness on margins there. Seeing the same thing in Goldman Sachs, stock was getting-- is still getting slammed in the session. Is this a wake-up call to investors that we might see a bigger downdraft as earnings season starts?

MATT MALEY: Well, it certainly could be. I mean, one of the things we do have to remember, though, is that it's kind of weird what happens with the bank stocks. Even when the report good earnings, for whatever reason, the group seems to go down. I mean, it rallies into the earnings season. They always report at the very beginning of that earnings season. And then the stocks seem to sell-off a little bit. The thing is this time around is that people are being surprised by, as you mentioned, JPMorgan, also Citigroup, of course, last week on Friday, now Goldman Sachs. We have a number of-- those are the big names. But we have another-- quite a few names reporting later this week.

So if they continue to report some of these disappointing earnings, that's not going to bode well necessarily for the rest of the group-- I'm sorry, for the rest of the marketplace. And remember, the earnings were-- as good as they've been this year, we're still a very, very expensive stock market. So we need a really, really good earnings season if the market's going to rally further in a face of a Fed that's nowhere near as accommodative as it was last year.

JULIE HYMAN: Hey, Matt. It's Julie here. We got the monthly Bank of America fund manager survey this morning that showed that banks are the most held right now, tech is where people are selling. And so when you get selling like this in the financials, what are the sort of implications and ripple effect that we can see in the market?

MATT MALEY: Well, one of the things that we get is, of course, is that we've seen so much more weakness in the NASDAQ than we have in the S&P. And what you worry about, as the market starts to come down-- when the market first starts to come down, you have people going in and they buy, you know, they find certain groups with their flight-to-safety in the stock market. We saw that in December with two or three really big cap names like Apple computer. They stayed with those techniques. Then they were like, OK, that's not really working because rates are continuing higher. Let's go into the banks and the energy names.