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  • Morning News: July 1, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 1st, 2026 at 7:02 am

    Iran War Delivers Massive Swings in Chinese Petrochemicals Trade

    Trump’s White House Takes Aim at EU Emissions Law

    Stephen Miran Makes a Case for Tariffs That Is Flat Out Wrong

    What to Know About the State of North American Trade Talks

    Why the US-Mexico-Canada Trade Deal Is in Jeopardy

    Trump Souring on USMCA Triggers Review of $2 Trillion Trade Deal

    Trump Reports at Least $1.4 Billion in 2025 Crypto Earnings

    In a Warning Sign, Analysis Shows Publicly Traded Credit Funds Are Unprofitable

    Where to Invest $100,000 Right Now

    In Elon Musk’s Success We Can See the Absurdity of the Attacks On Alan Greenspan

    Citi CEO Brings Long-Troubled Bank Into Trump’s Good Graces

    Judges Strike Down Trump Rule on Loan Forgiveness for Public Servants

    The Wall Street Women Who Traded Finance Careers for Influencer Success

    2026 Layoffs Tracker: Job Cuts Dropped 53% in June

    Inside the Egg Price-Fixing Scandal That Spiked American Grocery Bills

    USDA Plans to Pay Smaller Meatpackers to Keep Slaughtering Cattle

    Mega-Deals Fuel Record M&A as Boards Dream Big on Takeovers

    The End of SpaceX’s FOMO Trade Exposes a Deeper Problem

    US Lifts Export Restrictions on Anthropic’s Fable 5 AI Model

    Anthropic Won a Reprieve From Washington. Is It Enough?

    As Companies Race for Cheaper A.I. Options, This Start-Up Pitches a Solution

    A School Where AI Is an Asset to Education, Not a Threat

    ByteDance Picks Brazil for Its Largest Data Center Outside China

    Small-Engine Makers Gain Big Momentum in Data Centers

    Taiwan Detains Super Micro Workers in China Chip Smuggling Probe

    More Americans Are Installing Home Batteries. Here’s Why

    The South Korean Mine at the Center of America’s Tungsten Push

    Bezos Backed $25,000 EV That Should Worry Detroit

    How Western Automakers Are Losing Their Grip on the Chinese Market

    Google Told to Pay Klarna Nearly $2 Billion in Shopping Spat

    Kroger to Buy Food & Pharmacy Retailer Giant Eagle for $1.65 Billion

    General Mills Swings to Loss, Works to Win Back ‘Challenging’ Consumers

    Failed World Cup Bet Sinks Korean Media Giant’s Disney Dream

    Be sure to follow me on X.

  • CWS Market Review – June 30, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 30th, 2026 at 6:11 pm

    (This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)

    The first half of 2026 is officially on the books! So far, this has been a good year for Wall Street and the S&P 500. Even after a few dips recently, the index is up more than 9% on the year. The Dow just had its best first half in five years.

    Here’s a breakdown of some YTD performance figures:

    S&P 500 +9.55%
    Dow Jones +8.85%
    Russell 2000 +21.86
    Nasdaq +12.79%
    Nasdaq 100 +19.91%
    Gold -7.03
    Silver -16.18%
    Oil 22.01%
    Bitcoin -32.95%

    The stock market could have more room to run. FactSet sees the S&P 500 rallying by 18.9% over the coming 12 months. Their target for the S&P 500 is 8,918.27. Personally, I admire that level of precision. They see all 11 sectors rising by double digits.

    Frankly, the stock market had a little rougher time in June. At one point, the S&P 500 fell for five days in a row, and seven out of eight, but the losing streak was snapped on Monday, and the Nasdaq powered up again for a gain on Tuesday. The S&P 500 is back above its 50-day moving average.

    What’s truly striking is that the Mag 7 has had a rough year so far. The group has lost a combined $2.3 trillion. All seven members are down for the year. In fact, all are down more than 10%. Tesla and Microsoft are both off more than 30% this year. Outside of the big boys, tech mostly did well during Q2. Micron is close to a double for 2026.

    The story here is that Wall Street has gradually changed its outlook. It used to be focused on the level of cash flow from the Mag 7, especially free cash flow. Lately, it’s been more focused on the balance sheets as more of these companies are going to the bond market to raise cash.

    What concerns me is that these companies are using these new funds to buy up companies at a frenetic pace. But are they buying companies because they complement their businesses? Or do they believe that if they don’t buy it now, someone else will soon?

    How about small-cap stocks? The little guys are off to their best start in 35 years. The Russell 2000 is up more than 21% this year. Even there, AI is still part of the story. CNBC noted that chip-related companies make up 16 of the Russell 50 best performing stocks this year.

    At the start of this year, Wall Street had been expecting earnings growth from the Russell 2000 of 23%. Now the forecast is up to 38%. Bank of America says that for every 0.25% hike from the Fed, that will knock 2% off this year’s earnings growth for the Russell.

    If all 2,000 stocks in the Russell were merged and constituted in one stock, its market value would be in the low $3 trillions. That’s roughly in line with some of the Mag 7 names. (Of course, if all 2,000 stocks were bought out, the prices would radically change, but I meant this as a thought exercise.)

    The hostilities in the Middle East continue to dominate the headline. There has been a softening in the oil market. For June, the price of oil is down about 20%. That’s good news on the inflation front, and it’s also a boost for consumer spending. Less money spent at the pump means more money spent elsewhere.

    In the currency market, the Japanese yen traded at 162 to the dollar. That’s the weakest against the dollar in 40 years. That’s great for tourists, but it’s troubling to the government. In fact, the government will probably step in and start buying yen to help the currency.

    Japan is starting to feel the effect of inflation. That’s something the country hasn’t had to deal with in decades. In fact, Japan has mostly dealt with falling prices.

    There’s a long, sad history of finance ministers from every corner of the globe who have wasted tons of money to try prop up currencies that dearly want to go down. Reality has an odd habit of prevailing in these battles.

    The yen has also been hurt by a surging dollar. That, in turn, has been aided by an increasingly hawkish tone from the Fed. There’s a decent chance we’ll get two Fed rate hikes during the second half of this year.

    Frankly, there’s not a lot going on right now on Wall Street. Most of the fat cats are relaxing at their vacation homes in the Hamptons or on Martha’s Vineyard.

    Earnings season isn’t far away. The unofficial kickoff for Q2 earnings season will be on Tuesday, July 14. (That’s Bastille Day. If you miss earnings, off with your head!) That’s when several of the big banks like JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Goldman Sachs (GS) are due to report earnings. This will probably be another good earnings season, but I want to hear more guidance for the rest of this year.

    This week is jobs week, but it’s a holiday-shortened week as well. We’ll get the ADP report on private payrolls tomorrow. Then on Thursday, we’ll get the June jobs report. Along with nonfarm payrolls, we’ll get the numbers for the unemployment rates and average hourly earnings.

    Earnings Preview for FactSet

    FactSet (FDS) is our lone Buy List earnings report between now and the start of Q2 earnings season. The fiscal Q3 results are due out tomorrow morning.

    The shares have had an impressive recovery from February to early June. At one point, FDS gained 44% in a little over three months.

    FactSet is a member of that group of stocks that’s assumed to be done in by AI, yet it continues to be very profitable. Three months ago, it happened again. Fact Set reported very good earnings, raised guidance and the stock rallied 6% the next day.

    Let’s dig into the details. For its fiscal Q2, FactSet made $4.46 per share. That was eight cents better than Wall Street’s consensus, and it was up 4.2% over last year’s Q2. FactSet’s quarterly revenue rose 7.1% to $611 million.

    The big stat for FactSet is Annual Subscription Value, or ASV. This is an important measure of forward-looking annualized revenue. For Q2, the company’s organic ASV was up 6.7% to $2.449 billion.

    FactSet’s net cash from operations rose 21.7% to $211.7 million, and its free-cash flow was up 23.6% to $185.7 million. One weak spot is that its operating margin fell by 230 basis points to 35.0%.

    For 2026, FactSet expects organic ASV growth of 5.4% to 6.7%. The company sees annual revenues ranging between $2.45 and $2.47 billion. For earnings, FactSet expects to be between $17.25 and $17.75 per share. That’s up from its previous guidance of $16.90 to $17.60 per share.

    At the end of Q2, FactSet’s client count stood at 9,101, and its user count reached 241,352. Annual ASV retention was greater than 95%. When expressed as a percentage of clients, annual retention was 91%. Employee headcount was 1.9% to 12,840.

    In May, the company increased its quarterly dividend from $1.10 to $1.16 per share. This is the 27th year in a row that FactSet has increased its dividend.

    Three months ago, FactSet increased its growth forecast for organic ASV and annual revenue. The company expects operating margin of 34% to 35%. As I mentioned before, FactSet increased its earnings range for this fiscal year from $16.90 to $17.60, to $17.25 to $17.75 per share. For tomorrow, Wall Street expects FactSet to report Q3 earnings of $4.45 per share. Look for an earnings beat.

    That’s all for now. The stock market will be closed on Friday. The jobs report will be on Thursday morning. Have a happy and safe Fourth of July weekend. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.

    – Eddy

  • Morning News: June 30, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 30th, 2026 at 7:10 am

    Oil Prices Hold Steady as Iran and U.S. Prepare for Talks

    Iran Ratchets Up Talk of Controlling Hormuz Before New Talks

    Yen’s Slide Puts Market on Lookout for Japan’s Next Red Line

    Japan Has Spent Billions to Prop Up the Yen. Why Isn’t It Working?

    Why the US-Mexico-Canada Trade Deal Is in Jeopardy

    Copper Traders Gear Up for Another Round of Tariff Turmoil

    HSBC Says ‘Explosive’ Dollar Rally Is Among Biggest Pain Trades

    Krugman: The Humbling of the Once Almighty Dollar

    For First Time, More Central Banks Are Set to Shrink Dollar Holdings

    The $39 Trillion National Debt Is a Loud Tell That the U.S. Isn’t “Printing”

    Sahm: Where Is the Fed Headed?

    Supreme Court Victory for Fed Still Leaves It Vulnerable to Trump

    Supreme Court Expands Trump’s Power to Fire Top Regulators

    AI Might Be a Great Investment, But Not for the Government

    Strategy Abandons ‘Never Sell Bitcoin’ Mantra in Bid to Outlast Crypto Winter

    It’s JPMorgan Versus Goldman Sachs in Capital Changes

    How Trump’s Crackdown on H-1B Visas Imperils the American Dream

    America Is About to Hand Its Best Founders to Its Rivals

    American Democracy’s Biggest Losers: Voters in Closed-Primary States

    Argentina’s Beef Export Boom to US Leaves Locals Paying More for Steak

    The US Could Eliminate Cervical Cancer. What’s the Holdup?

    Jon and Mindy Gray Bet on AI Science Research to Prevent Cancer

    AI Leverage Is More Worrying Than Valuations, IMF’s Adrian Says

    What the Saga Over Anthropic’s Mythos Tells Us About the Cyber Risks From AI

    Chip Stocks’ Best Quarter Ever Is Ending With Some Wild Swings

    SpaceX IPO Left Korea Broker With No Shares on Misunderstanding

    The Expansive Meaning of Creating Jet Engines More Rapidly

    Martin Marietta Strikes $13.5 Billion Deal for Limestone Supplier

    Comcast’s Breakup Is Overdue. It Shouldn’t Rush Into a New Marriage.

    The Unflappable Dealmaker Tasked With Crafting Comcast’s Next Act

    Comcast’s NBCUniversal Spinoff Gives Hollywood Its Next Major Deal Target

    Call Center Stocks Fall on Worry AI Makes Them ‘Uninvestible’

    Vuori CEO’s First Two Startups Failed. This One Became a $5.5 Billion Brand

    Be sure to follow me on X.

  • Morning News: June 29, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 29th, 2026 at 7:07 am

    Ships Pull Back Amid Heightened Risk From Iran-U.S. Strikes

    Oil Prices Rise as U.S. and Iran Discuss Deal to Suspend Attacks in Gulf

    China Emerges as a Relative Winner From Strait of Hormuz Crisis

    The Fed Needs to Follow the Rules. But Which One?

    How Warsh Has Begun to Change the Fed

    Sorry, But There’s Nothing Stable About Bitcoins OR Stablecoins

    Borrowed Money Fueling US Stock Rally Is Getting More Expensive

    Banks Get Creative and Look Further Afield As AI-Fueled Debt Soars

    As JPMorgan Succession Takes Shape, Insiders Say This Time It Is for Real

    Washington’s Retirement Rules Are Stuck In the Carter Era

    What’s Left of the Education Department After Trump Dismantling

    Private Credit Is Making Bets on Consumer Debt at a Precarious Time

    The Donk-ing of a Truth Machine

    We Crunched the Data: There’s a Grocery Price Emergency in America

    Only the Richest High Rollers Can Win in Las Vegas

    ‘Southern Squeeze’ Grips US Cities Once Known for Affordability

    The Electricity Grid’s Price Is a Messenger: Don’t Shoot It

    Spain Built Too Much Solar. Investors Want Out

    After False Starts, Weather Trading Gains Traction as Renewables Grow

    Martin Marietta Strikes $13.5 Billion Deal for Limestone Supplier

    Washington Shouldn’t Make a Habit of Refereeing Transportation

    Venezuelans Rely on WhatsApp to Find Quake Victims in Information Void

    Rocket Lab to Buy Iridium for $8 Billion in Challenge to SpaceX

    Microsoft’s $570 Billion Rout Sets Up Its Worst Month Since 2000

    AI Is Power-Hungry in That Other Way, Too

    Samsung, SK to Spend $880 Billion to Drive Korea’s AI Lead

    China Pushes All School Levels to Teach AI in Xi’s Tech Drive

    We’re Only Starting to Grasp the Pitfalls of Using A.I. at Work

    The Uninvited Meeting Guest Is an AI Notetaker

    Comcast to Spin Off NBCUniversal and Sky, Sending Shares Soaring

    Verizon, BT Merge International Units in Pivot to Home Markets

    Verizon Sees Quarterly Loss of Up to $800 Million Due to BT Deal

    Zepbound Craze Fuels $1.3 Billion Windfall for Religious Causes

    Japan World Cup Jersey Sales Soar 29-Fold Ahead of Brazil Clash

    No Doilies Here: In the Age of Airbnb, Bed-and-Breakfasts Are Coming Into Their Own

    Be sure to follow me on X.

  • Morning News: June 26, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 26th, 2026 at 7:03 am

    Traffic Flows Through Hormuz Despite Shock Ship Attack

    Oil Prices Resume Decline After Ship Attack Briefly Rattles Markets

    How a Jet Fuel Refinery Is Scrambling After the Iran War Oil Shock

    If Politicians Care About Affordability, They Should Revisit Renewable Fuel Standard

    A Landmark Trial Has Oil Bosses Accused of Complicity in War Crimes

    China Gives Coal Room to Grow in New Five-Year Energy Plan

    Germany Joins Push to Change EU Methane Rules on Supply Concerns

    U.S. Army Will Lease Land on Bases for Critical Mineral Production

    How to Solve the Housing Crisis? Everyone Has an Idea

    Warsh Taps Two Veteran Fed Economists as Advisers

    BOE Sees Weather as New Inflation Risk While London Sizzles

    Trump’s Negotiation Style? The Art of the Non-Deal

    Newsom, Billionaires Face Costly Battle as California Wealth Tax Advances

    This Demographic Cliff Is Reshaping Universities. Cities Are Next

    Mamdani Delivers Rent Freeze in Milestone for NYC Tenants

    How Small Businesses Can Use Debt To Their Advantage

    The Cult of the C-Suite Is Officially Over

    The Race to Replace Jamie Dimon Is On. There’s One Big Loss

    At House of Dimon, Troy Rohrbaugh Makes His Play for the Top Job

    Novak Djokovic Joins General Atlantic in His Wall Street Debut

    Kalshi’s Next Bet: A World Cup Deal as It Seeks More Growth

    Bond Traders Stunned as Losses on SpaceX’s New Debt Keep Growing

    Investors Pile On as A.I.’s Rough Summer Continues

    OpenAI Leans Toward Waiting Until Next Year for I.P.O.

    OpenAI Makes Its Advertising Pitch at Cannes Festival

    Apple Raises Prices on Macs and iPads Amid the A.I. Boom

    There’s One Clear Reason Americans Are Gloomy About A.I.

    Micron Has Suddenly Become One of the World’s Most Important Stocks

    Intel’s Chip Business Shows Signs of Life After Years of Struggle

    The High School Pipeline to South Korea’s Chip-Making Fortunes

    Polestar Barred From Future US Sales Under Chinese Tech Rules

    World Cup Pits Adidas Against Nike in Fight for Football Street Cred

    Be sure to follow me on X.

  • Morning News: June 25, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 25th, 2026 at 7:04 am

    New Leadership Can Move the UK Past Brexit

    Europe’s Heat Wave Is a Power-Market Pressure Test

    World Trade Rose in April, a Fresh Sign of Resilience

    Lesson Learned From Iran War: Reduce Reliance on Strait of Hormuz

    Brent Oil Erases Wartime Gains as Hormuz Reopening Boosts Supply

    Trump, Frustrated With High Gas Prices, Channels Biden’s Criticism of Big Oil

    U.S. Inflation Problems Are Far From Over

    US Bond Market Expects Rate Hikes the Fed May Never Deliver

    Kevin Warsh Is Missing Alan Greenspan’s Point

    Simpler Bank Rules Risk Creating Loopholes

    Fannie, Freddie Boost Risk to Levels That Once Shook Wall Street

    JPMorgan’s Lake Exits, Setting Up Fresh Race to Succeed Dimon

    Will Gen Z’s Financial Trauma Make It More Cautious?

    America’s Friendship Recession Has Become a Startup Opportunity

    The Collateral Damage of the White House’s War on Fraud

    How a Conservative Georgia Town Defeated an ICE Mega-Prison

    If the Aim Is Tax Fairness, a Wealth Tax Won’t Achieve It

    The Actuarial Fiction Hiding $5 Trillion In Pension Debt

    The Data-Center Boom Is Sparking a Third Wave of Inflation

    M.B.A. Pay Is Drifting Down—and So Is Demand for the Degree

    The New Push to Ready Millions for AI Career Upheaval

    Forget Work. Passive Income Is the New American Dream.

    Who Will Need the State When AI Provides Universal Basic Income?

    It’s Not Fair to Peggy Noonan’s People to Slow AI’s Arrival

    AI Is Now Drilling for Oil, and the Profits Are Enormous

    Micron’s Huge AI Windfall Is Bad News for Most of Us

    Alibaba Slides to 16-Month Low After Anthropic’s AI Accusations

    A $30 Billion Cancer Breakthrough Is Under Threat From Global Conflicts

    Germany’s Merck to Buy Bio-Techne for $11 Billion

    How Honda’s Pledge to Go All-Electric Unraveled

    Winnebago Cuts Outlook Amid Declining Sales

    Pizza Has Gone Cold. Domino’s Is Still Worth a Look.

    LVMH Fires Back at Hermès Heir Over His Missing Fortune

    Be sure to follow me on X.

  • Morning News: June 24, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 24th, 2026 at 7:05 am

    China Boosts Whistleblower Tools to Police Mineral Exports

    Latin America’s Two Oil Giants Team Up in Search for Their Next Boost

    Canada’s Lobster Capital Is Trying to Become an Oil and Gas Giant Too

    Europeans Are Terrified of Spending Money, and It’s Hurting the Economy

    Investor Who Scored 900% Win in 2008 Crisis Has New Big Short Bet

    Market Power Is Overwhelming Governments

    Tech Stocks Drive ‘Unnerving’ Sell-Off in Global Markets

    Why the Fed Could Loom Large Over the Midterms

    The Debasement Trade Is Unraveling and Kevin Warsh Is One Big Reason

    Dudley: Warsh’s Pivot Risks Confusing the Market and the Fed

    Alan Greenspan Was Wrong About One Thing. It Was a Big One.

    US Banks Look for New Bill of Health from Fed Stress Tests

    US SEC Probes Popular Type of Private Equity Fund as It Steps Up Industry Scrutiny

    U.S. World Cup Cities Are on a Counterdrone Spending Spree

    Taylor Swift’s Eras Didn’t Boost Growth. World Cup Won’t Either

    A Landmark Housing Bill Passed Congress. Home Builders Fear It Will Fizzle.

    How to Solve the Housing Crisis? Everyone Has an Idea

    A Solution to A.I.’s Growing Power Demand: Homes

    As AI Companies Race for Power, Amazon and Google Have the Lead

    The Anthropic Saga Shows the Worst Way to Regulate AI

    Anthropic and OpenAI’s No. 1 User Might Not Be Enough

    AI Debates Ignore One of Its Great Plusses: Worker Mobility

    A.I. Riches Fuel Economic Divide in Asia’s Chip Powerhouses

    Welcome to the Luxury City Built by Taiwan’s A.I. Boom

    SK Hynix Seeks $29 Billion With US Listing to Fund AI Boom

    Biotech Visionary Is Skeptical About AI’s Impact on Medical Innovation

    Alibaba Sues Pentagon Over China Military Label

    Agility, Maker of Humanlike Robots, to Go Public in $2.5 Billion SPAC Deal

    Prologis Rebuffed in $16.6 Billion Takeover Approach for U.K.’s Segro

    Rheinmetall Shares Slump After Reports That Germany Is Dropping Frigate Project

    Stop the Madness, and Let Union Pacific Merge With Norfolk Southern

    Will Anyone Buy This Cheap EV Truck With Hand-Crank Windows and No Radio?

    Can America’s Obsession With Mahjong Save This Dying Craft?

    The Money and Influence Behind America’s Very MAGA 250th Birthday Party

    Another Spirit of ’76: George Washington’s Whiskey

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  • CWS Market Review – June 23, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 23rd, 2026 at 7:47 pm

    (This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)

    In recent days, it seems as if geo-political news has completely fused with financial market news. When there’s optimism for less fighting in the Middle East, the market rallies, and (importantly), oil falls. Yet when the tensions rise, the markets fall and oil rises.

    Each morning, I look at the news to see which kind of day it will be. Somehow, the fate of the Strait of Hormuz has become a key trading metric.

    Lately, the bears have gotten the upper hand. The market has fallen in four of the last five days, although outside some tech areas, the damage hasn’t been that bad. The S&P 500 isn’t far from a new all-time high. The index is also (for now) above its 50- and 200-day moving averages.

    Tech stocks did especially poorly on Tuesday. The Nasdaq lost 2.21% today which was 0.77% worse than the S&P 500. The whole AI sector seems like it’s getting tired. More than 380 stocks in the S&P 500 beat the market today. That tells you how poorly the big boys fared.

    The market had a similar run at the start of June where tech lagged, but that trend was quickly turned around. In Tuesday’s trading, many defensive stocks gained ground. Healthcare and Consumer Staples were the two best-performing sectors today. Those sectors have not done very well in recent months.

    Micron (MU) is due to report after tomorrow’s closing bell. The earnings report will be a big deal. Micron has become one of the few stocks that nearly everyone watches. The company has experienced explosive demand for its high-bandwidth memory. The stock has become a favorite of traders. Over the last month, MU has had an average daily swing of more than 6%. The stock has had five days of more than 10%. Today, it was down over 13%.

    The consensus on Wall Street is that Micron will report earnings of $20.05 per share. MU will almost certainly top that forecast, but will they do it by enough? That’s a difficult question. Three months ago, Micron beat earnings by more than 30%. Its revenues tripled last year’s Q2. The problem for Micron is that expectations are so high that it will almost be impossible to impress traders.

    The Mag 7 have also lagged the market. Here’s a chart of the MAGS ETF, which is a decent proxy for the Mag 7, divided by the S&P 500 ETF. The Mag 7 have underperformed the market starting at any point over the last year.

    On Monday, SpaceX (SPCX) lost one-sixth of its total value. Earlier today, SpaceX fell below $148 per share. That’s below the opening trade of $150 per share and not far from its IPO price of $135 per share.

    SpaceX actually closed higher today. Given SpaceX’s volatility, I wouldn’t be surprised to see it fall below its IPO price sometime soon. The all-time high came one week ago when it got to $225 per share. From high to low, the stock lost nearly $700 billion in market value. Elon Musk lost $350 billion. He’s down to only $1.1 trillion

    SpaceX is turning to the bond market to raise money. The company is looking to raise at least $20 billion. According to the WSJ, the bankers say a 10-year bond would cost SpaceX 165 basis points over a similarly dated Treasury.

    Tomorrow we’ll get the report on new home sales. On Thursday, we’ll get the latest revision to Q1 GDP growth. The last report said that the U.S. economy grew in real annualized terms of 1.6% for the first three months of the year.

    The first quarter is already some distance behind us. In late July, we’ll get our first look at Q2 GDP growth. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model currently expects Q2 GDP growth of 3%. That’s quite good.

    Along with the GDP numbers, we’ll also get the latest PCE price data. This is important because it’s the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation. I’m especially curious to see if any of the energy inflation has found its way into core inflation. Nearly everything you buy uses energy. At some point, that inflation will make itself known.

    The two-year yield has broken out above 4.2% to its highest point in 16 months. This tells me that the market expects a rate hike from the Fed before the end of this year. However, the market isn’t expecting much else, for now—maybe one or two 0.25% hikes and that’s it.

    The next big report will be the June jobs report which will be out on Thursday, July 2. The market will be closed on July 3.

    Stock Focus: Mercury General (MCY)

    I always get positive feedback whenever I highlight a stock that gets little institutional coverage from Wall Street. There are tons of wonderful companies out there that no one knows about. Some are too small, but many others are simply dull.

    Last week, I told you about Gorman-Rupp (GRC), a little stock that has increased its dividend every year for the last 53 years in a row. Despite that, almost no analysts follow it.

    This week, I want to tell you about Mercury General (MCY). Never heard of it? Don’t worry, you’re not alone.

    Mercury General is an insurance company founded in 1961 by George Joseph. Until Covid, the company had a long history of steady dividend hikes. It currently had about 4,400 employees.

    The stock IPO’d in 1985. In 1990, you could have picked up one share of MCY for less than $1. Today, the stock is going for $106 per share. Since October 2023, it’s up over 300%. Despite that impressive track record, only one analyst currently follows MCY. The company has a market value of $5.9 billion. It reached another new all-time high today.

    George Joseph has led a truly remarkable life. He’s a perfect example of the great American success story. He’s the son of Lebanese immigrants. Joseph grew up in West Virginia where his father worked as a coalminer.

    During World War II, Joseph served as a navigator on a B-17, and he flew 50 missions. After the war, he went to Harvard on the GI Bill. He finished in three years. After that, he founded Mercury General and today he’s a billionaire. I’m happy to say that George Joseph is still with us at the age of 104. Forbes says he has a net worth of $3.5 billion.

    Mercury’s next earnings report is due out in early August. The stock is currently going for less than 10 times earnings. How is no one covering this?

    That’s all for now. On Thursday, the government will release the latest revision for Q1 GDP growth. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.

    – Eddy

  • Morning News: June 23, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 23rd, 2026 at 7:06 am

    Trump Must Condition Iran Aid to Economic Freedom

    U.S. Oil Is Skipping the Chance to Grab Market Share From the Gulf

    America’s Thirst for Gasoline May Not Recover After Iran War

    Iran’s Race to Secure New Oil Buyers Won’t Be Easy

    JPMorgan Says Extreme Heat Is Altering Energy Demand Patterns

    China Links Offshore, Onshore Yuan in Tweak Toward Broader Use

    The U.K. Is Still Counting the Cost of Brexit, 10 Years After the Vote

    British Retailers Brace for Fallout From EU’s New E-commerce Customs Fees

    National Debt Hawks Write Like 1981-Present Didn’t Happen

    Greenspan Left a Lasting Mark on America—and Me

    Greenspan’s Legacy Is as Convoluted as His Words

    Can the Market Still Bet on the ‘Greenspan Put’?

    Will the Shadow Fed Chair Please Stand Up?

    The Tech Sell-off Goes Global

    ‘It’s Unnerving’: Markets Recoil in Global Sell-Off Driven by Tech Stocks

    Apollo Caps Private Credit Fund Again After 17% Request to Exit

    KPMG Australia’s Chairman and Two Partners Resign as Audit Scandal Widens

    Top-Paid CEOs Smash the $200 Million Payday

    Elon Musk Confirms Ancient Concerns About the Superrich

    Evolving Markets Drove the Remote Work Revolution

    Beware the Hidden Risks Lurking in Property Tax Cuts

    China Takes Supercomputer Crown From U.S. for First Time Since 2017

    This Megafactory Is a Test Case for the U.S.-China Tech Race

    What Companies Adapting to AI Can Learn From the Plague

    The Insurmountable AI Flood: The Growing Crisis for America’s Child Abuse Investigators

    Vedanta’s CopperTech Metals targets $3.6 billion valuation in US IPO

    Porsche and Mercedes Are Feeling the Pull of the American Highway

    REO Says It Will Build A $21,500 Truck For The Masses, I Spoke To The CEO To See If They’re Legit

    A Credit Loophole So Big You Can Drive an SUV Through It

    How Eli Lilly Got Huge By Making Us Thin

    Domino’s Picks Veteran Executive to Steer It Through Tough Patch for Pizza

    Games Industry Faces More Painful Months Ahead

    How Pokémon Cards Became Scarce, Valuable and Surprisingly Dangerous

    Amazon Prime Day Shoppers Plan to Hold Out for Steep Discounts

    Athleisure Brand Vuori Targets China in Global Retail Push

    Tennis Has a New Problem: Sinner and Alcaraz Are Too Good

    Be sure to follow me on X.

  • Morning News: June 22, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 22nd, 2026 at 7:08 am

    While the World Scrambles for Oil, China Sits on Full Tanks

    Oil Prices Fall as U.S.-Iran Talks Show Signs of Progress

    How Do You Solve a Global Energy Crisis? Diversify

    China Warns of Trade Fractures If Protectionism Persists

    Trump’s New US Tariff Wall Shakes Up Winners, Losers Lineup

    Starmer Resigns as UK Prime Minister, Paving Way for Burnham

    Good Luck, Andy Burnham. You’ll Need It

    After the Fracture: How Britain’s Financial Industry Recovered from Brexit

    Alan Greenspan, Influential Fed Chairman Whose Legacy Was Dimmed by the Financial Crisis, Dies at 100

    Kevin Warsh, The Fed, And The Soft Bigotry Of Low Expectations

    A $2.8 Trillion Asset Management Star Is a Deal Away From Losing Its Crown

    Peer-Beating Tech Fund Doubles China Exposure in Contrarian Bet

    We Investigated Polymarket’s Deceptive Marketing Campaign. Here’s What We Found

    The Latest in College Pricing: Tuition at 10% of Your Income

    Loan Forgiveness Made Students Worse Off, Then and Now

    The Playbook for Getting a Mortgage Below 6% in 2026

    The ‘Magic Number’ for a Comfortable Retirement Just Got Bigger

    Rearranging the Deck Chairs on CalPERS $500 Billion Ship

    How to Solve the Housing Crisis? Everyone Has an Idea

    Building-Materials Supplier CRH to Buy Rival Arcosa for $8.5 Billion

    Babcock International Launches $265 Million Buyback Program; Pretax Profit Falls

    China Tightens Rare Earth Grip on U.S. Firms, Threatening Trade Clash

    Is China Closing the A.I. Gap Faster Than Expected?

    Chevron Strikes Power Deal With Microsoft for West Texas AI Data Center

    AI Is the Engine, Not the Bicycle at the Technology Frontier

    Elon Musk’s Right-Wing Cheerleaders Are Deeply Offended by Criticism of His Trillionaire Status

    SpaceX Is the Opening Chapter In a Powerful Industrial Revolution

    How Bosses Pysch Themselves Up for Their Biggest Moments

    Is Your Vibe ‘High-Signal’ or ‘Anti-Signal’?

    Getty Images Soars 200% in Early Trading After OpenAI Deal

    ‘Uber-Backed Electric Bike Firm Lime Seeks $180.9 Million in IPO

    AbbVie to Buy Apogee Therapeutics for $10.9 Billion in Cash

    Amazon Prime Day Pizza Promotion Offers Clue to Meal-Delivery Task

    Amazon Should Share the Wealth of Its Prime Day Data

    A Hoarder’s Redemption: Bed Bath & Beyond Will Take Your Decades-Old Coupons

    What Climate Change Costs You at the Checkout

    Gen Z Would Rather Not Date at All Than Pay $250 for Dinner and Drinks

    Tide Already Dominates Detergent. Why Is P&G Pushing a New Version?

    ‘Toy Story 5’ Fuels Hollywood’s Hottest Summer Since 2019

    Be sure to follow me on X.

  • | Older Entries »
  • Eddy ElfenbeinEddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His Buy List has beaten the S&P 500 over the last 20 years. (more)

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