Archive for January, 2024
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Morning News: January 31, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 31st, 2024 at 7:04 amChina’s Censorship Dragnet Targets Critics of the Economy
Pro Take: Foreign Creditors Face Challenge in Reaching China Evergrande’s Assets
Saudi Arabia Eyes Reviving Multibillion Dollar Aramco Share Sale
Oil Traders Won Ecuador Deals With $70,000 Watch and Bags of Cash
A New Solution for CO2 Emissions: Bury Them at Sea
Europe Regulates Its Way to Last Place
Unlikely Allies Want to Bar a Brazilian Beef Giant From U.S. Stock Markets
Will a Hiring Slowdown Push the Fed to Cut Rates Soon?
Fed to Hold Interest Rates Steady But Start Considering Cuts
There Are No ‘Price Controls,’ There’s Just Scarcity
Pimco Squares Up for a Bareknuckle Fight in Private Credit
A Pre-I.P.O. Gift to Company Executives: ‘11th-Hour Options Discounting’
Wall Street Punishes Alphabet and Microsoft Despite Earnings Beats After Stocks Hit Record
Microsoft Has Three Trillion Reasons to Keep the Heat on Google
Boeing Pulls Guidance to Show Investors That Safety Comes First
Novo Nordisk Smashes Past $500 Billion Value on Wegovy Frenzy
Novartis Shares Fall After Earnings Miss Hopes, Outlook Disappoints
GSK Bets on Further Growth After Shingles and RSV Vaccines Boost Sales
Byron Allen Makes $14 Billion Offer for Paramount Global
Musk’s $55 Billion Pay Package Voided, Threatening World’s Biggest Fortune
Who Is Most Likely to Get Fired? Remote Workers, Middle Managers
H&M Replaces CEO After Another Lackluster Year
PGA Said to Approve $3 Billion Investment From Fenway-Led Group
N.C.A.A. Inquiry Takes On Growing Role of Booster Groups
Universal Music Group Poised to Stop Licensing Music to TikTok
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Morning News: January 30, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 30th, 2024 at 7:02 amIMF Lifts World GDP Outlook on US Strength, China Fiscal Support
Evergrande Liquidation to Leave Little for Creditors to Claim
China’s Real Estate Crisis ‘Has Not Touched Bottom’
Global Clean Energy Spending Surges to $1.8 Trillion. It’s Not Enough
Saudi Aramco Drops Expansion Plan, Raising Demand Questions
The Billionaire Sultan Set to Gain Even More Power in Malaysia
Eurozone Economy Flatlines, Raising Concerns About Falling Behind
Germany’s Economy Shrank at End of 2023 as Gloomy Sentiment Persists
Global Deal Activity on Course to Rebound This Year
Fewer Workers Are Quitting. Here’s What That Means for the Economy
Why Cut Rates in an Economy This Strong? A Big Question Confronts the Fed.
Banks Are Hawking US Recession Hedges Tied to Both Stocks, Bonds
JPMorgan Quants Warn of Dot-Com Style Concentration in US Stocks
Scandal-Hit Trading Desk Turns Into Money Spinner at Wells Fargo
Toyota Remains World’s Top-Selling Automaker; Chairman Apologises Over Scandals
GM Sees Higher Profits Ahead as 2023’s Problems Recede
BYD Shares Fall as China’s Auto Price War Weighs on Bottom Line
As Demand for Fast Deliveries Surges, the Industry Struggles on EV Transition
Truck Makers Team Up to Push for Electric Vehicle Chargers
Companies Hire ‘Robot Wranglers’ to Corral Lost and Confused Cyborgs
Walmart Hopes New Flashing Lights Will Help Shoppers Find Stuff
The World’s Biggest Jeweler Now Only Sources Recycled Metals
How Do You Make a Weed Empire? Sell It Like Streetwear
Joel Embiid Wants the African Diaspora to Flourish Onscreen
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CWS Market Review – January 29, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 29th, 2024 at 1:15 pmExciting news today! One of our Buy List stocks, McGrath RentCorp (MGRC), is being bought out for $123 per share. That’s a 10% premium to Friday’s closing price.
I wanted to send you this special alert to let you know what’s happening.
McGrath RentCorp has reached a deal with WillScot Mobile Mini Holdings (WSC) to be bought for $123 per share in cash and stock. WillScott describes itself as “a leader in innovative temporary space solutions.” McGrath is one of our new buys this year.
The deal is expected to close in the second quarter of this year. WillScot merged with Mobile Mini a few years ago.
I’ll be honest – I’m not wild about this deal price. I think McGrath may be selling itself short. The stock was close to $123 just a few weeks ago. Still, I understand there was probably a lot of negotiating behind the scenes, and that could be why a large amount of the deal is in cash.
Both boards have approved the deal, but it’s not done just yet. The deal still needs regulatory approval and the approval of shareholders. I don’t think that will be a problem, and the stock market apparently agrees. You can tell that by how closely MGRC has been trading to $123 per share.
Here are the details. McGrath shareholders have a choice. For each share of MGRC they own, they can either get $123.00 in cash or 2.8211 shares of WillScot Mobile Mini. However, shareholders may run up against limitations since the entire deal is to be 60% cash and 40% stock. I don’t know the details just yet. Personally, I favor getting as many shares of WSC as possible.
In the press release, the companies spell out the benefits of the deal:
• Highly complementary businesses with diversified customer segments: The acquisition brings together two complementary businesses, enhancing diversity across customer segments. The combined company’s broad offering, attractive unit economics and long rental durations underpin its uniquely predictable recurring cash flow profile. On a pro forma basis, approximately 90% of combined total revenue is derived from leasing and related services, while the addition of Enviroplex expands WillScot Mobile Mini’s permanent modular capabilities.
• Operating synergies with a high confidence of realization: $50 million of run-rate operating synergies expected to be achieved within 24 months of closing. Confidence in targets reinforced by WillScot Mobile Mini’s long history of successful M&A integrations.
• Increased scale allowing accelerated rollout of growth initiatives: The combined customer base and rental fleet represent an expanded platform for the rollout of WillScot Mobile Mini’s strategic levers, such as Value-Added Products and Services, cross-selling and commercial best practices, and operations excellence. Together, these provide a clear path to multiple years of sustained growth and margin expansion.
• Strong financial position underpins reinvestment in growth: The combined company’s strengthened financial profile, enhanced cash generation and de-leveraging capability, and disciplined capital allocation amplify WillScot Mobile Mini’s ability to reinvest in growth and compound returns.McGrath shareholders will ultimately own 12.6% of WSC. Putting aside my concerns about the sale price, this is a very good day for us and for CWS.
That’s all for now. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.
– Eddy
P.S. If you want more info on our ETF, you can check out the ETF’s website.
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Morning News: January 29, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 29th, 2024 at 7:04 amEvergrande Set for Liquidation as China Property Crisis Drags On
EU Reinforces Tight Limits on Crypto Firms from Outside Bloc
A Little Dual Easing Soon Could Help the Fed Avoid Major Easing Later
Xi Jinping Can’t Prop Up Chinese Shares Much As Fed Can’t U.S. Shares
Treasury Seen Boosting Long-Term Debt Sales One Last Time
Mortgage Rates in US to Snap Three-Year Streak of Gains, Survey Shows
Traders Line Up for ‘Once-in-a-Generation’ Emerging Markets Bet
Biden Power Plant and EV Plans Hit a New Obstacle: Vulnerable Democrats
US Chicken Prices to Fall at Last Thanks to Green Fuel Boom
Activist Investors Fret Over Exxon Mobil’s Lawsuit Bypassing US Regulator
There’s So Much Data Even Spies Are Struggling to Find Secrets
Hottest Job in Corporate America? The Executive in Charge of A.I.
US Wants Cloud Firms to Reveal Foreign Clients in China AI Race
U.S. Oil Drillers Are Going Electric—and Hitting Speed Bumps
Logistics-Tech Startups Face Uncertain Future as Freight Slump Continues
Blackstone Is Building a $25 Billion Empire of Power-Hungry Data Centers
BYD Preliminary Net Income Rises Up to 87% But Misses Estimates
Toyota Halts Shipments of 10 Models Over Mishandling of Engine Tests
Ring to Stop Allowing Police to Request Videos From Security Cameras
Amazon Is Now Charging Prime Members Extra for Ad-Free Streaming. For Some, That’s a Deal Breaker
Basketball, Basketball, Basketball: Inside Steve Ballmer’s New $2 Billion Arena
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Morning News: January 26, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 26th, 2024 at 7:02 amChina Signals More Targeted Stimulus to Come
China Evergrande Unit Starts Legal Proceedings Against Parent
As China’s Markets Stumble, Japan Rises Toward Record
German Consumers Feel the Chill as Inflation Keeps Biting
Biden Freezes Approvals to Export Gas, Imperiling Major Projects
Reforms to US Disaster Aid Expose Growing Home Insurance Gap
American Workers Come Out Winners in a Clash Between Economists Over a Curve
The Fed Tells Banks Not to Be Shy About Asking It for Money
Wall Street Unleashes Quants in Race for Private-Market Billions
Us Equity Fund Withdrawals Ebb To Four-Week Low Amid Tech-Led Wall Street Rally
Is Cryptocurrency Like Stocks and Bonds? Courts Move Closer to an Answer
JPMorgan Shuffles Top Managers as Jamie Dimon Prepares Successors
The F.T.C. Takes on A.I. Deals
The Sleepy Copyright Office in the Middle of a High-Stakes Clash Over A.I.
Companies Turn to Earnouts to Find Common Ground on M&A Valuations
KKR-Backed BrightSpring Prices Its $693 Million IPO Below Range
Microsoft’s Rise to $3 Trillion Took Much More Than Windows
Intel Poised for Biggest Plunge Since 2021 on Weak Forecast
Starbucks, Coke Boycotts Over Gaza War Are Boosting Middle East Rivals
Americans Keep Signing Up for New Phone Plans. Who’s Driving the Growth?
How a Lucky Break Fueled Eli Lilly’s $600 Billion Weight-Loss Empire
These Gyms Survived the Pandemic. They’re Still Sweating
Will Fanatics Upend the World of Sports Collectibles?
Nascar Targets Diverse Audiences to Expand Viewership, Despite Anti-DEI Backlash
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Morning News: January 25, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 25th, 2024 at 7:06 amTurkey Ends Rate-Hike Cycle With Final Move to 45% But Keeps Hawkish Bias in Place
China’s $6 Trillion Stock Wipeout Exposes Deeper Problems for Xi
Most of Russia’s War Chips Are Made by US and European Companies
Germany Drafts Plan With UK and France on Missiles for Ukraine
Red Sea Attacks Push BHP to Divert Shipping
EU Official Says Bloc Will Copy Wall Street Move to Shorten Stocks Settlement
The Fed Risks Getting Caught Up in Politics, Whatever It Does
What to Watch in the GDP Report: How 2023 Defied Recession Fear
US GDP Data Will Feature Consumer Set to Power Growth in ’24
Meet the Swiss Billionaire Cast by US Conservatives as the ‘New Soros’
ASML’s China Sales Surged Despite Secret Dutch Deal With US
Dell, Micron Backed a Group Raising Alarms on Rivals’ China Ties
The Samsung Rival Taking an Early Lead in the Race for AI Memory Chips
How One Company Hoovered Up $3 Billion in Broadband Subsidies
Comcast Tops Revenue And Profit Estimates Despite Broadband Subscriber Losses, Raises Dividend By 7%
Alaska Cites ‘Challenging’ Start to 2024 Amid Max Grounding
Tesla Tumbles as Growth Stalls
Musk Fails to Convince Tesla Investors to Overlook Slowdown
Porsche’s Second EV Is Two Years Late — and Key to Its Future
Why Did Car Insurance Get So Expensive?
Atlanta’s Squatter Problem Is Vexing Wall Street Landlords
In a New Cannabis Landscape, a Navy Veteran Battles for Racial Equity
Bud Light’s Comeback Tour Will Hit the Super Bowl, Its Biggest Stage Yet
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Morning News: January 24, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 24th, 2024 at 7:07 amJapan Export Beat Lifts Odds Economy Resumed Growth Last Quarter
China Moves to Boost Bank Lending in Broad Effort to Prop Up Growth
China Boosts Stimulus by Allowing Banks to Keep Smaller Reserves
What Makes Italy’s Capital Markets Bill Controversial?
US GDP Data Will Showcase Consumer Set to Power Economy in 2024
Ackman Ramps Up Israel Support With 5% Stake in Tel Aviv Bourse
Trade Turmoil Sparks Supply Snarls in Europe’s Biggest Economies
How Yemen’s Houthi Attacks Are Hurting the Global Supply Chain
Goldman, Lazard Look to Ex-Spies to Gain an Edge in Volatile World
Biden Aims to Impose Tightest Gun-Export Restrictions in Decades
Shawn Fain Takes On Musk, Trump Over Labor’s Green Future
Amid a Housing Crunch, Religious Groups Unlock Land to Build Homes
Stuck in a Downturn, Startups Ghost Investors
ASML Orders Triple in Sign of Semiconductor Industry Revival
SAP to Launch Restructuring Program Affecting 8,000 Jobs in AI Push
Ebay to Lay Off 9% of Full-Time Workforce
Jack Ma Doubles Down on Alibaba
Netflix Posts Best Customer Gain Since Surge During Pandemic
Streaming Pirates Are Hollywood’s New Villains
The Sports Illustrated Cover, a Faded Canvas That Once Defined Sports
Retailers Return to Bringing in Inventory ‘Just in Time’
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CWS Market Review – January 23, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 23rd, 2024 at 6:29 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.”)
A New All-Time High
On Friday, the stock market closed at a new all-time high. The S&P 500 had gone slightly more than two years, or 512 trading days to be precise, without making a new high.
From high to low, the market had lost more than 25%. It takes a 33% gain to wipe out a 25% loss, but we did it. The drop took nine months while the rally took 15 months.
I don’t want you to think I’m an uncritical cheerleader for the bulls. Of course, if we were to include inflation, then we’re still well short of a new high. Still, in nominal terms, we’ve never been higher.
Take it away, Rita.
The stock market closed even higher on Monday and again on Tuesday. This brings up an interesting subject which is, how well does the market do when it’s at an all-time high?
You might think the market hasn’t done well since, by definition, the market’s never been higher than it is at an all-time high. Also, every bear market starts at a new high. Of course, that’s not a coincidence. Axiomatically, shouldn’t an all-time high be a bad time to invest?
The answer is no. In fact, the market has performed quite well at its all-time high. This gets to an important fact about the stock market and investing: the real money is made during relatively uninteresting markets.
I recently ran the numbers. Since 1957, the S&P 500 has made a new all-time high more than 1,100 times. (I could even be sneaky with the data because the market didn’t pass its 1929 high for 25 years, but I purposely started after that.)
If we were to invest in only those days following a new high, then the market has risen at an average annualized rate of just over 15%. When the market hasn’t been at an all-time high, it’s gained an average of just 6.7%. The market has performed more than twice as well when it’s been at a new all-time high compared to when it hasn’t been. Buy high and sell even higher.
To me the arresting fact isn’t how well the market has done at its high but rather how calm it’s been. The volatility is about 36% less than normal. You rarely see a big day after a new high. Most of the big drops don’t come right at the new high. Instead, the big drops come after a slide.
Since 1957, the S&P 500 has risen by more than 2% following a new high just three times. The normal market sees 2% up days more than four times more frequently. Generally speaking, when the market goes down, volatility goes up. The largest rally off a new high came on January 6, 1999 when the S&P 500 gained 2.21%. That’s a nice gain but compared with other big days, it’s barely a bump.
I’ll give you another example of how boring is good. Low volatility days are much better for the market. If we take all of the daily returns for the last 60 years and divide them into two buckets, the first bucket is days when the market moved up or down by more than 1.2%, and the other bucket is when the market moved up or down by less than 1.2%.
The combined daily returns of the greater than 1.2% days comes to nothing (actually, a small loss). The stock market’s entire gain for the last several decades has come on low volatility days. The simple fact is that most of the big days have been bad days, or they’ve been good days during lousy markets. As the great Jesse Livermore said, “It never was my thinking that made the big money for me. It always was my sitting.”
Don’t Look Past Boring Stocks
Not only are boring markets good, but so are many boring stocks. For some reason, many investors think that a company has to be reinventing the world to be a good investment. That’s not the case. There are many completely boring companies that have been wonderful investments. Many of the worst investments have been in fast-growing sectors.
Here are a few charts you might enjoy:
The red line (Disney) is perhaps the most important name in entertainment with unparalleled intellectual property. The blue line is a hot dog stand.
Goldman Sachs (red line) is one of the largest and most powerful financial institutions in the world. The blue line makes condoms and baking soda.
Intel (black line) is one of the world’s largest semiconductor chip manufacturers. The blue line makes croutons.
Of course, I’m exaggerating, but the underlying point still stands. There’s a lot of money to be made from a dull or uninteresting company. Two boring stocks that I like at the moment are Amphenol (APH) and Miller Industries (MLR)
Q4 Earnings Season so Far
We’re still early in the Q4 earnings season, but I wanted to see how it looks so far. Right now, earnings for the S&P 500 are tracking for an increase of 0.71% compared with last year. That’s a little lower than where it had been. One month ago, we had been expecting growth of 2.24%.
So far, 76.5% of companies have beaten their earnings estimates while 59.6% have beaten on sales. Just under half, or 47.1%, have beaten on both sales and earnings.
For all of 2023, the S&P 500 is on pace to post earnings of $216.85. That means the market is going for about 22 times trailing earnings. That’s elevated but not worrying.
Generally, lower interest rates lead to higher earnings multiples. It looks like rates will be going down this year but not as quickly as previously assumed.
The Federal Reserve starts its first meeting of the year one week from today. The Fed’s policy statement will be due out next Wednesday. It’s widely believed that the Fed won’t make any changes to interest rates at this meeting, but that may change very soon.
For its March meeting, futures traders are nearly evenly divided on the need for a rate cut. For now, the markets are leaning towards the Fed keeping rates unchanged in March. For the May meeting, however, the market places the odds of a rate cut at close to 90%. The Fed hasn’t lowered interest rates in nearly four years.
The market was shaken by the recent comments from Fed Governor Christopher Waller. He said that rate cuts are coming this year, but the market should be cautious in its expectations. The futures market expects the Fed to cut rates by 1.5% this year. That could be too high.
Not that long ago, many folks on Wall Street believed the economy would be in recession by now, but the recent economic news has been somewhat good. Last week’s report on initial jobless claims was quite good. The retail sales report came in above expectations. Homebuilder confidence surged and consumer confidence is at its highest level since July 2021.
By no means do I intend to gloss over the weaknesses in the economy. The housing market is in rough shape and credit-card delinquencies are at some of their worst levels in years. Of course, the economic outlook can change very quickly. Rates will probably come down this year, but the market needs to temper its expectations.
That’s all for now. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.
– Eddy
P.S. If you want more info on our ETF, you can check out the ETF’s website.
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Morning News: January 23, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 23rd, 2024 at 7:05 amOil Down as Traders Mull Mixed Supply Cues
World’s Most Ambitious Trade Route Stalls in Middle East Turmoil
BOJ Edges Closer to Rate Hike While Keeping Timing Options Open
India Tops Hong Kong as World’s Fourth-Largest Stock Market
China Weighs Stock Market Rescue Package Backed by $278 Billion
‘Snowball’ Derivatives Feed China’s Stock Market Avalanche
SEC X Account Hacker Hijacked Staffer Phone Number, Agency Says
FTC Bans TurboTax from Advertising ‘Free’ Services, Calls It Deceptive
Fed Review Clears Central Bank Officials of Violating Rules
Top Economic Aide to Biden Pitches ‘Comeback’ in Hard-Hit America
P&G Earnings Show Some Consumers Are Getting Used to Higher Prices
The Labor Union That Defeated Amazon Is Fighting for Survival
Tech Execs Say A Type of AI That Can Outdo Humans Is Coming, but Have No Idea What It Looks Like
Netflix Buys Rights to WWE’s ‘Raw,’ Its First Big Live Event
Netflix’s Head of Film to Depart
China Appears to Backpedal From Video Game Crackdown
China’s Travel Economy Is Slowly Coming Back. Here’s Where It Stands
Why It Makes Sense for New EV Drivers to Look Beyond Tesla
Vroom Exiting Car Sales, Focusing on Finance and AI Services
Sanofi to Buy Assets From Inhibrx in Deal Valued at Up to $2.2 Billion
Johnson & Johnson to Pay $700 Million to Settle Baby Powder Probe
Zara Owner Ortega Becomes Amazon’s Landlord in Vancouver
Blackstone Agrees to Sell Luxury Arizona Hotel for $705 Million
‘It’s a Money Day’: Detroit Businesses Are Loving the Lions’ Playoff Run
Amazon Fined for ‘Excessive’ Surveillance of Workers
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Morning News: January 22, 2024
Eddy Elfenbein, January 22nd, 2024 at 7:06 amWar Has Already Hurt the Economies of Israel’s Nearest Neighbors
China Is Outpacing the EU in Clean-Energy Research, Study Finds
China Buys Near-Record $40 Billion of Chip Gear to Beat US Curbs
Hong Kong Stocks at 36% Discount Show True Depth of China Gloom
Japan Leaders Meet to Amplify Call for Wage Gains at Small Firms
Kenya Shilling at Record Low, Faces Further Pressure Ahead of Eurobond Deadline
Interest Jumps in US Auction of Shares in Parent of Venezuela-Owned Citgo
“Inflation” Is a Full Employment Act For Economists
Repo Market May Throw a Fit, Spur Fed to Action
These Seven Tech Stocks Are Driving the Market
A Rewiring of the World’s Biggest Bond Market Will Transform Trading
Hedge Funds Rake in Huge Profits Betting on Catastrophe Risk
SEC Probes B. Riley Deals With Client Tied to Failed Fund
Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Say Buy the Dip After Treasury Rout
Wall Street Banks Want to Lure Back Loan Deals Lost to Private Credit
Terraform Labs Files for Bankruptcy Protection in the U.S.
Facing Backlash, Some Corporate Leaders Go ‘Under the Radar’ With D.E.I.
Palantir’s Momentum Hurt by Slowing Growth in Government Deals
Exxon Files Lawsuit Against Investors’ Climate Proposal
A Lamborghini-Style EV: BYD Goes Upmarket to Outmaneuver Tesla
Red Sea Disruption Won’t Sink Apparel Companies—for Now
Macy’s Rejects $5.8 Billion Takeover Offer From Investors
Choice Hotels Nominates Board Directors in Hostile Wyndham Bid
Gambling Deal to Create One of European Industry’s Biggest Firms
Sony Group Calls Off Merger Between India Unit and Zee Entertainment
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