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Nervous markets await NvidiaThis summary was created by AI, based on 1 opinions in the last 12 months.
The Fidelity US Value ETF (FCUV-T) has seen a significant underperformance relative to growth stocks for nearly the past decade. Experts believe that while value investments, such as those in banks, energy, and industrial sectors, may outperform in the future, especially if market conditions soften, the current outlook is uncertain. There are indications that in the 2025-26 timeframe, we might witness a rotation from higher-priced tech stocks to value-oriented stocks. This potential shift is contingent on broader economic conditions and earnings performance within the tech sector. As of now, the prevailing sentiment is one of caution, where maintaining some exposure to value stocks makes sense, but not overcommitting to them appears prudent.
Fidelity US Value ETF is a Canadian stock, trading under the symbol FCUV-T on the Toronto Stock Exchange (FCUV-CT). It is usually referred to as TSX:FCUV or FCUV-T
In the last year, 3 stock analysts published opinions about FCUV-T. 1 analyst recommended to BUY the stock. 1 analyst recommended to SELL the stock. The latest stock analyst recommendation is . Read the latest stock experts' ratings for Fidelity US Value ETF.
Fidelity US Value ETF was never recommended as a Top Pick on Stockchase. Read the latest stock experts ratings for Fidelity US Value ETF.
Earnings reports or recent company news can cause the stock price to drop. Read stock experts’ recommendations for help on deciding if you should buy, sell or hold the stock.
In the last year, there was no coverage of Fidelity US Value ETF published on Stockchase.
On 2025-05-09, Fidelity US Value ETF (FCUV-T) stock closed at a price of $19.26.
Value has been underperforming growth in a big way for the better part of a decade. There will be periods, from time to time, when value beats growth. If the markets are going to be softer and weaker, and we are going to get a broadening out of earnings in the tech sector, then 2025-26 is likely to see $$ coming out of higher-priced tech names and into value stocks. At that time, value (banks, energy, industrials, lower PEs) will perform better than growth, no matter who the fund manager is.
So you have to make a market call. Right now, he's neutral on that strategy. He wouldn't be tremendously overweight value, but at the same time having some exposure would make a lot of sense.