Apologies :-{
I've been having major problems imputing into the system for my posts these past several days. Even just getting to do an update like this has taken about an hour.
I'm back when the bugs are worked out!
The on going thoughts & musings (sometimes random, sometimes not) of Lumen Capital Management,LLC.
I've been having major problems imputing into the system for my posts these past several days. Even just getting to do an update like this has taken about an hour.
I'm back when the bugs are worked out!
Bespoke Investment points out something that has been concerning me for some time which is how large a weighting Apple {AAPL} has developed in the Nasdaq 100 ETF {QQQQ}. A direct explanation of why this has happened is listed below. This explanation by extension also applies to the NASDAQ Ultra ETF-QLD {an index that attempts to mimic 2x the daily performance of the QQQQ}. I'm going to have to think about this on a strategic basis going forward as APPL becomes an even larger part of this index. Here's Bespokes look:
"With shares of Apple (AAPL) rallying even as the overall market remains weak, the stock's weighting in the NASDAQ 100 is beginning to make a mockery of the index. Believe it or not, AAPL now has a 20% weighting in the index. No, not even AAPL has rallied so much that its market cap actually accounts for 20% of the NASDAQ 100's market cap (although it does currently have the highest market cap in the index). The reason for the large weighting dates back to the creation of the index when the market cap of Microsoft (MSFT) dwarfed the rest of the stocks listed on the NASDAQ. Back then, in order to avoid making the NASDAQ 100 an index dominated by MSFT, they had to arbitrarily lower MSFT's weighting and raise the weighting of the rest of the stocks in the index.
Today, the NASDAQ 100 is increasingly becoming an index of Apple (AAPL). At current levels, AAPL's weight in the index equals the combined weight of MSFT, GOOG, QCOM, ORCL, CSCO, and INTC! Given that MSFT's weight was once adjusted so that it didn't dominate the entire index, some would say that it's time for the NASDAQ to adjust the weightings again so that AAPL doesn't dominate the index now. However, according to NASDAQ's methodology for the index, AAPL's weighting in the index won't be up for review until its weight reaches 24% of the index or more."
Be careful when you look at ETF quotes today and early next week. Many of them go ex-dividend. That is the dividend is declared as of a certain date prior to the close of the 2nd quarter. ETFs and stocks generally fall by the amount of the dividend on this date.
On a seperate note I will be out of the office the first part of next week. Posting will be light to non-existant until later in the week. I'll have more to say about the state of the market then and I'll give a road map as to where we might be going for the rest of the year then.
Guest editorial in this weeks Barrons. Excerpt with my highlights:
By JOSEPH QUINLAN
The U.S. is No. 1 for the foreseeable future.
While the market ended down a bit over 1% today. We're still holding in that range I highlighted on today's chart.