CLIENT TALKING POINTS

EURO, CENTRAL PLANNERS

$1.35 is my long-term TAIL risk line for the EUR/USD. A dovish Fed meeting is next.

COMMODITIES

Down Euro move into the news = Up Dollar, Down Commodities (for a whopping 2.5% one-month correction in the CRB Index from its +12% year-to-date highs). EUR/USD holding $1.35 = buy more commodity. #InflationAccelerating.

UST 10YR

The yield had its dead cat bounce to 2.59%, but remains below all lines of Hedgeye resistance so I’d be buying A) more inflation protection (TIP) and B) moar slow-growth bonds (TLT) or C) anything that looks like a bond.

TOP LONG IDEAS

HOLX

HOLX

Hologic is emerging from an extremely tough period which has left investors wary of further missteps. In our view, Hologic and its new management are set to show solid growth over the next several years. We have built two survey tools to track and forecast the two critical elements that will drive this acceleration.  The first survey tool measures 3-D Mammography placements every month.  Recently we have detected acceleration in month over month placements.  When Hologic finally receives a reimbursement code from Medicare, placements will accelerate further, perhaps even sooner.  With our survey, we'll see it real time. In addition to our mammography survey. We've been running a monthly survey of OB/GYNs asking them questions to help us forecast the rest of Hologic's businesses, some of which have been faced with significant headwinds. Based on our survey, we think those headwinds are fading. If the Affordable Care Act actually manages to reduce the number of uninsured, Hologic is one of the best positioned companies.

OC

OC

Construction activity remains cyclically depressed, but has likely begun the long process of recovery.  A large multi-year rebound in construction should provide a tailwind to OC shares that the market appears to be underestimating.  Both residential and nonresidential construction in the U.S. would need to roughly double to reach post-war demographic norms.  As credit returns to the market and government funded construction begins to rebound, construction markets should make steady gains in coming years, quarterly weather aside, supporting OC’s revenue and capacity utilization.

LM

LM

Legg Mason reported its month ending asset-under-management for April at the beginning of the week with a very positive result in its fixed income segment. The firm cited “significant” bond inflows for the month which we calculated to be over $2.3 billion. To contextualize this inflow amount we note that the entire U.S. mutual fund industry had total bond fund inflows of just $8.4 billion in April according to the Investment Company Institute, which provides an indication of the strong win rate for Legg alone last month. We also point out on a forward looking basis that the emerging trends in the mutual fund marketplace are starting to favor fixed income which should translate into accelerating positive trends at leading bond fund managers. Fixed income inflow is outpacing equities thus far in the second quarter of 2014 for the first time in 9 months which reflects the emerging defensive nature of global markets which is a good environment for leading fixed income houses including Legg Mason.  

Asset Allocation

CASH 14% US EQUITIES 0%
INTL EQUITIES 12% COMMODITIES 26%
FIXED INCOME 26% INTL CURRENCIES 22%

THREE FOR THE ROAD

TWEET OF THE DAY

“The storytelling on why we need moarrr central-planning-cowbell is so absurd now that it’s funny.” @KeithMcCullough

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"What you lack in talent can be made up with desire, hustle and giving 110% all the time." – Don Zimmer, the legendary baseball great who passed away last night at the age of 83.

STAT OF THE DAY

4:36, the time in overtime that the LA Kings' Justin Williams flicked past goaltender Henrik Lundqvist to give the Kings a 3-2 victory over the New York Rangers in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final at Staples Center on Wednesday night. (Los Angeles Times)