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Morning News: August 17, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 17th, 2023 at 7:06 amMilei Promises Argentina Can Be Saved With Libertarian Economics
China Told State Banks to Escalate Yuan Intervention
Some Fed Officials Are Turning Cautious about Raising Rates Too High
With Investors on Edge, Fed Minutes Take on New Urgency
Global Yields March to 15-Year Highs as Rate-Hike Worries Build
Goldman Sachs Blames Zero-Day Options for Fueling S&P 500 Selloff
The Legendary, Wildly Profitable QQQ Fund Makes No Money for Its Owner
‘Don’t You Remember Me?’ The Crypto Hell on the Other Side of a Spam Text
More Cyber Companies Announce Layoffs
How a Small Group of Firms Changed the Math for Insuring Against Natural Disasters
The Trillions of Dollars Forgotten When Tracking the Energy Transition
U.S. Plans New Tariffs on Food-Can Metal From China, Germany and Canada
How U.S. Steel Became an Acquisition Target
US Housing Affordability Hits Worst Point in Nearly Four Decades
The Golden Girls Approach: Buying Homes Together Amid High Prices
Almost Half of Americans See Automation Replacing Their Jobs
The Desperate Hunt for the A.I. Boom’s Most Indispensable Prize
BAE Systems Snaps Up Ball Corp’s Aerospace Arm for About $5.55 Billion
Walmart’s Sales and Profits Rise, Fueled by Consumers Looking for Deals
Already Time to Hit the Brakes on VinFast
Nike, Adidas Bet Big on World Cup Football Shirts and Merch
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Morning News: August 16, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 16th, 2023 at 7:04 amU.K. Inflation Eases to 6.8% as Energy Prices Fall
Argentina Vote Shock Leaves Investors Dreading the Next Default
Lebanon Freezes Accounts of Former Central Bank Governor
China Asks Some Funds to Avoid Selling Stocks as Markets Sink
Zhongrong Trust’s Missed Payments Trigger Fears Among Chinese Investors
China Scuttles a $5.4 Billion Microchip Deal Led by U.S. Giant Intel
The U.S. Is Turning Away From Its Biggest Scientific Partner at a Precarious Time
Vital Natural Gas Is Being Stashed in Caverns Beneath War-Torn Ukraine
Race to Control Electric-Vehicle Supply Chains Leads to Africa
I.R.S. Says Cash Influx Has Made Agency Bigger and More Digital
Coinbase Gets NFA Approval to Offer Crypto Futures
Goldman CEO’s Most Loyal Deputy Is Tested by Mutinous Partners
Brookfield Chases Rivals for Private Equity’s New Money-Spinner
Billionaire Charlie Ergen Conjures M&A Magic to Save His Empire
Dubai Leapfrogs Lisbon as Best Destination for Globetrotting Executives
A Vietnamese Electric Carmaker is Now Worth More Than Volkswagen and Ford
High-Potency Pot Market Worth Billions Draws Regulator Scrutiny
Estée Lauder’s Big Bet on China Is Looking Not So Pretty
Target Sales Are Punished by Pride Month Backlash
Forget the Office Gym. Welcome to the Gym Office
Be sure to follow me on Twitter.
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CWS Market Review – August 15, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 15th, 2023 at 6:33 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.”)
July Retail Sales Rose 0.7%
We had some good news this morning regarding consumer health. The Commerce Department said that retail sales rose by a seasonally-adjusted rate of 0.7% last month. Expectations were for an increase of 0.4%. The figure for June was revised higher by 0.3%, and May was revised upward by 0.1%.
It’s hard to have a recession when people are out there shopping!
If we exclude autos, then July’s sales were up by 1%. Bear in mind that these numbers are not adjusted for inflation. Here are some details.
July’s numbers were boosted by a 1.9% jump in spending at online retailers, while sporting goods and related stores increased 1.5% and food service and drinking places rose 1.4%.
On the downside, furniture sales slumped 1.8% and electronics and appliance stores reported a 1.3% drop. Gas station sales rose just 0.4% on the month despite rising prices at the pump.
The report adds to the narrative that the U.S. economy may be able to avoid a much-predicted recession brought on by a series of Federal Reserve interest rate hikes aimed at controlling inflation.
These numbers are important to watch because consumer spending accounts for roughly two-thirds of the U.S. economy which is now $27 trillion.
The Federal Reserve doesn’t meet again for another month, but the emerging conventional wisdom is that the Fed will pause again and hold interest rates at 5.25% to 5.50%. Short-term rates are at their highest level in more than 20 years.
The outlook for the economy has changed a great deal over the last few months. Not too long ago, markets were expecting the Fed to have started cutting rates by now. What a difference a few months can make.
After September, the futures market thinks there’s a one-in-three chance that the Fed will hike again at its November meeting. Frankly, I’m skeptical but if the data changes, then it’s a strong possibility.
Over the last 12 months, retail sales have increased by 3.2%. That sounds impressive until you realize that that’s the same rate of inflation. Another report today said that import prices increased by 0.4% last month. That was double expectations.
Earlier today, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast for Q3 GDP growth jumped to 5.0%. That’s up from 4.1% from last week. That’s a very strong number.
Obviously, this is just a model and we’re only halfway through Q3. Looking at the details, consumer spending added 3% to Q3 GDP growth, and the change in inventories added 1.17%.
That’s very impressive and it’s more evidence that the most widely-expected recession in decades is still taking its sweet time. A lot of well-paid economists were very, very wrong.
Argentina’s Fed Hikes Rates to 118%
In the United States, people are worried about high interest rates. Since March 2022, the Federal Reserve has increased interest rates 11 times to a range of 5.25% to 5.50%. That’s (finally) higher than the rate of inflation.
But that’s nothing compared with our friends in Argentina. Their central bank just hiked rates by 21% to 118%. The country is on the brink of its sixth recession in the last decade.
Here’s a look at the peso versus the dollar. Notice the jump at the end.
This is due to the fallout of Sunday’s stunning primary win by Javier Milei, a libertarian economist. Milei won 30% of the vote in the presidential primary which was far more than expected.
I should explain that Milei isn’t exactly your typical presidential candidate. Milei isn’t merely a small-government conservative; he’s a full-throated anarcho-capitalist. Two of his dogs are named Milton and Murray, in honor of Friedman and Rothbard.
I don’t want to give you the impression that Milei is somehow odd or unusual. For example, he wants to legalize the selling of organs and children. He also refuses to comb his hair. Additionally, he’s a tantric sex instructor. After that, things frankly start to get a little odd.
Still, none of this held back voters. Milei won by far the largest share of the vote. This is only the first round of voting. Any candidate who got more than 1.5% will be able to compete in the next round in October. There may also be a runoff in November. Still, it’s obvious that Milei is the leading contender.
The real story here is less Milei’s triumph, though that is important, and more that things are so bad that voters are willing to give politicians outside the mainstream, like Milei, a hearing. This is when you find out that outside the mainstream is now the mainstream. Of course, we’ve had similar outcomes in our elections.
For a land of such beauty and promise, Argentina seems to go from one self-induced crisis to the next. Yet it’s that frustration that’s driving Milei’s popularity. You think 9% inflation is bad in America? It’s projected to hit 140% in Argentina. In the last decade, Argentina has had five recessions and a sixth may soon be here.
I bring this up not to discuss politics, but I do want to focus on an important dynamic, and that’s how the reaction of financial markets impacts policy. The worry is that a Milei win will cause investors to flee Argentina. Argentina’s bond and currency markets are in freefall.
That happened in France after Mitterrand’s stunning socialist victory in 1981. A lot of French money quickly found a new home in New York.
Liz Truss faced a similar crisis last year, leading her to resign after just seven weeks as U.K. Prime Minister.
In the 1990s, James Carville famously said, “I used to think that if there was reincarnation, I wanted to come back as the president or the pope or as a .400 baseball hitter. But now I would like to come back as the bond market. You can intimidate everybody.” He’s right.
Argentina’s central bank responded to Milei’s showing by devaluing the peso by nearly 18%. The bank said it would hold the peso at 350 to the U.S. dollar until October. The central bank also hiked interest rates by 21% to 118%.
If he wins, Milei said he wants to cut taxes and implement large spending cuts. He also wants to ditch the central bank and “dollarize” the economy. Milei claims that replacing the peso with the dollar would help calm inflation.
A Milei presidency could have a major impact on global commodity markets. Of course, Argentina is famous for its beef, but it’s also the world’s fastest-growing lithium producer.
Milei won big in the country’s farm belt, and he’s promised to take the axe to farm taxes. That could make Argentina’s agricultural sector more competitive. The country also has major deposits of copper and shale oil.
There are 15 Argentina-based stocks that trade on the U.S. exchanges. Most of the companies are financial or energy stocks, with a few utilities. These stocks had a rough day on Monday. Banco Macro and Grupo Financiero Galicia were both down over 6%. Grupo Supervielle was down over 7%.
I’m far from an expert on Argentine politics, but I would take Milei’s showing as a sign of how fed up voters are with business as usual. I’m skeptical that he can get so much of his program passed. Still, it’s another indication that voters aren’t happy with high inflation and corruption.
If he wins, Milei will be able to go as far as the bond and currency markets let him. They can intimidate everybody.
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: August 15, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 15th, 2023 at 7:03 amRoaring Back From Pandemic, Japan’s Economy Grows at 6% Rate
Taiwan’s Election Is All About War
Argentine Shops Hit With 20% Overnight Price Hike After Election
Uganda Cuts Rate for First Time in Two Years on Easing Inflation
Russia’s Emergency Rate Hike Fails to Lift Ruble After Crash
China Slashes Rates, Suspends Youth Jobless Data as Economy Signals Sharper Downturn
The Fed’s Interest-Rate Debate Is Shifting
How (Many) Economists Missed the Big Disinflation
Binance Files for Protective Order Against SEC
FDIC to Propose Comprehensive Changes to Regional US Bank Living Wills
Fitch Warns It May Be Forced to Downgrade Multiple Banks, Including JPMorgan
Steve Schwarzman Is Pushing Blackstone Growth to Get its Act Together
Suncor Energy’s Quarterly Profit Halves on Lower Oil and Gas Prices
Home Depot Beats Earnings Estimates, But Sales Slide As Consumers Pull Back on Big-Ticket Buys
Target’s Struggles Are Only Getting Worse
Streaming Prices Are Up Nearly 25% in a Year. That’s Part of the Plan
Using a Credit Card? At These Restaurants It’ll Cost You.
More Americans Are Ending Up Homeless—at a Record Rate
Serve a Drink, Then Save a Life: This Is Restaurant Work During the Opioid Epidemic
The Airport Is an Increasingly Dangerous Place to Work
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Morning News: August 14, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 14th, 2023 at 7:07 amThe Economic Losers in the New World Order
Russia’s Ruble Hits a 17-Month Low to the Dollar as the Ukraine War Bites
Yen Breaches 145 Mark Against the Dollar, Prompting Expectations of BOJ Intervention
China Finance Giant’s Missed Payments Alarm Regulators, Markets
China’s Worsening Economy Is Hurting Corporate America
After Pulling Inflation Down, Gasoline and Food Threaten to Nudge It Up
The Fed Is Playing a Waiting Game to Try to Avoid a Recession
Binance Shows Why Your Fears of Fed ‘Tightness’ Are Unfounded
Yellen Warns of Risks of Over-Concentration of Clean Energy Supply Chains
US Steel Shares Soar After It Rejects $7.25 Billion Cliffs Bid
Texas Oil Executives Net $122 Million in Bankruptcy-to-Exxon Journey
Two Towns, Two Factories: How a $500 Billion Boom Exposes American Failures
San Francisco Prices Are Sinking, and Property Owners Want a Tax Cut
Can San Francisco Save Itself From the Doom Loop?
Private Equity Firms Are Slow to Sell Holdings Amid Higher Rates
Carl Icahn Should Be Sailing Into the Sunset. Instead, He’s Scrambling to Save His Empire
iPhone Maker Foxconn Beats Expectations. Apple Stock Edges Higher
The Dream Was Universal Access to Knowledge. The Result Was a Fiasco
Everyone Has An Idea For How to Fix Disney. Does Bob Iger?
Banned in Kuwait, ‘Barbie’ Sparks Delight, and Anger, in Saudi Arabia
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Morning News: August 11, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 11th, 2023 at 7:05 amTurkey Finally Stamps Out Credit Oddity as Hikes Lift Loan Rates
Meloni-Style Capitalism is Reshaping Corporate Italy
Adani Ports Auditor Deloitte to Resign After Flagging Concerns
Biden Calls China’s Economy a ‘Ticking Time Bomb’
Interest Rates on Loans Hit 790% in Latin America’s Big Fintech Shakeout
New U.K. Alcohol Taxes Cut Beer Costs In Pubs, But Other Drink Prices Will Rise
Hard Landing Is Here for Trade, Roiling World Export Champs
CFOs Are More Optimistic on Side-Stepping a Recession
UBS Ends Taxpayer Backstop Granted for Credit Suisse Rescue
Consulting Firms Are Paying Undergrads $25,000 to Do Nothing
Regulators Give Green Light to Driverless Taxis in San Francisco
UPS Pay Hikes for Package Handlers Raise Pressure on FedEx
Airline Passengers Will Be Forced to Pay for $5 Trillion Carbon Cleanup
Before Joining Federal Safety Program, Freight Railroads Push to Change It
Goldman’s C.E.O. Is Stuck, Without a Clear Lifeline
Outrage as Chinese Real Estate Giant Wobbles and Its Stock Dives
The Summer Women Flexed Their Spending Power
Diamonds Are on Sale. They Won’t Be Forever
Amazon Cuts Dozens of House Brands as It Battles Costs, Regulators
Colleges Spend Like There’s No Tomorrow. ‘These Places Are Just Devouring Money.’
Paul Krugman on AI, Superconductors, and Why Alien Invasions Are Inflationary
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Morning News: August 10, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 10th, 2023 at 7:04 amECB Is on Back Foot and For Once It’s Down to Germany
Turkey Inflation: Erdogan’s Policy U-Turn Tests Patience
US Set to Unveil Long-Awaited Crackdown on Real Estate Money Laundering
The US Is Pushing Guns on a Country It Labels Violent and Corrupt
Biden Orders Ban on New Investments in China’s Sensitive High-Tech Industries
Lessons From a Law Firm’s Decision to Leave China
China Relies on U.S., Allies for Hundreds of Products
Heat, War and Trade Protections Raise Uncertainty for Food Prices
How Long Will Companies Keep Raising Prices on Consumer Goods?
What to Watch in July’s CPI Report: Why an Uptick in Annual Inflation Might Not Worry the Fed
US Consumer Prices Data Set to Show ‘Wave of Disinflation’
Moody’s Warning on US Banks a Wake-Up Call for Sanguine Investors
In Wall Street’s Hottest CEO Race, Morgan Stanley Hopes for Drama-Free Handoff
For Disney, Streaming Losses and TV’s Decline are a One-Two Punch
Disney to Launch Cheaper Ad-Supported Service in UK
Studios Are Raking in Profits While Actors and Writers Are on Strike
Retailers Say Organized Theft Is Biting Into Profits, but Internal Issues May Really Be to Blame
The $1.4 Billion Corporate Sponsorship Hole in the Women’s World Cup
Lyft to Expand Its Ad Business as New CEO Eyes a Turnaround
Coach Owner Creates US Luxury Giant with $8.5 Billion Deal for Michael Kors Parent
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Morning News: August 9, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 9th, 2023 at 6:47 amChina Slides Into Deflation as Consumer, Factory Prices Drop
China Sprints Ahead in Race to Modernize Global Money Flows
U.S. to Ban Some Investments in China
Japanese Carmakers See Next Few Years as Fight for Survival in China
Another Chinese Property Giant Teeters, Raising Worries About the Economy
Why Germany’s Property Sector is in the Dumps
First Scorched, Then Soaked: Weather Whiplash Confounds Farmers
First American City to Tame Inflation Owes Its Success to Affordable Housing
Bond Traders Prepare to Brave ‘Painful’ Yield Curve Bets as Rate Hikes Slow
Moody’s Says US Banks Are Still Strong Despite Downgrades
The Reality of ESG Is Messier Than the Stark Politics Around It
Total Household Debt Reaches $17.06 Trillion in Q2 2023; Credit Card Debt Exceeds $1 Trillion
How to Catch Pandemic Fraud? Prosecutors Try Novel Methods
WeWork’s ‘Substantial Doubt’ About Its Future Marks a Stunning Fall
For Younger Workers, Job Hopping Has Lost Its Stigma. Should It?
Amazon Is in Talks to Become Anchor Investor in Arm IPO
At This Point, Zoom Could Use Another Pandemic
Ford Shuts Down in Brazil, and China’s Top EV Maker Comes to the Rescue
The Weight-Loss Drug Frenzy Is Outrunning the Company Behind It
ESPN Is Getting Into Sports Betting With Penn Entertainment
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CWS Market Review – August 8, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 8th, 2023 at 7:06 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 Age of Decoupling
One of the important changes impacting the U.S. economy is that American companies are altering their businesses so they’re not as dependent on China.
The buzzword is “decoupling,” and it’s been happening quickly. Through May, imports from China are down 24%. Some of it is politics, but a lot of it comes down to simple economics.
Thanks to decoupling, America’s top trading partner is now Mexico. Adjusted for inflation, the value of imports from China are down 12% over the last five years. Meanwhile, imports from Mexico are up about $10 billion compared with the same period last year.
Decoupling shows little sign of slowing down. On Tuesday, China said that exports fell by 14.5% in July from a year ago and imports dropped by 12.4%. That was much worse than expected. Exports to the U.S. fell by 23.1%. Exports from China have fallen for three months while imports are down for five months in a row.
After growing quickly for several years, the Chinese economy is in a bad state. Domestic demand has slowed to a crawl. Even after Covid restrictions were lifting, the economy didn’t see a rebound.
American companies have come to realize that it’s risky to have so much of their supply lines dependent on China. We’re also seeing that retailers like Target and Walmart are ordering fewer Chinese goods. For example, China’s share of personal computers fell from 61% in 2016 to 45% last year. For printers, China’s share fell from 48% to 23%.
For many years, China was incredibly important to global manufacturing, but that position is being challenged. It’s still important but countries like Mexico, Vietnam and Thailand are gaining market share. The interesting part of this change is that it’s happening not from governments but from businesses.
When Donald Trump was president, the U.S. government placed tariffs on several Chinese-made goods. Also, Chinese workers have been getting higher pay, and that cuts into the country’s former strength as being the low-cost producer.
It’s not just the U.S., but it’s been happening in Japan as well. Companies are opening fewer manufacturing facilities in China.
We’re also seeing Chinese firms trying to bypass the tariffs. For example, companies will build nearly everything in China and then send it to Mexico for final assembly. The products are really made in China but are stamped as being made somewhere else.
This is important because in the U.S., the Federal Reserve has been fighting inflation by hitting demand. In response, consumers are shifting their spending from goods to services. That leaves Chinese-made goods on the outs. This change may last a long time. We’re now living in the Age of Decoupling.
The July Jobs Report: OK But Not Great
Despite many predictions of its imminent demise, the U.S. labor market continues to churn out more jobs, albeit at a slower rate. On Friday, the government released the jobs report for July. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. economy created 187,000 net new jobs last month.
To be frank, that’s an okay number but not a great one. Wall Street had been expecting a gain of 200,000. July was the slowest month for job gains since December 2020 when the economy shed 268,000 jobs.
In this chart, you can really see the drop in job gains:
The year-over-year percentage of jobs gained has declined 16 times in the last 17 months. In other words, the economy is still creating new jobs but at a progressively slower rate.
Some of the details are encouraging. Private payrolls increased by 172,000. We’re also seeing better numbers for wages. Last month, average hourly earnings rose by 0.4%. That was 0.1% better than expected. Over the past year, average hourly earnings are up 4.4%. The problem is that inflation has taken a big bite out of workers’ paychecks.
Here are some more details:
Health care led job creation by industry, adding 63,000 jobs for the month. Other sectors contributing included social assistance (24,000), financial activities (19,000) and wholesale trade (18,000). The other services category contributed 20,000 to the total, which included 11,000 from personal and laundry services.
Leisure and hospitality, which has been a leading sector for most of the recovery in the Covid pandemic era, added just 17,000 jobs, consistent with a slowing trend after averaging gains of 67,000 a month in the first three months of 2023.
Previous months’ totals were revised lower — the June count dropped to185,000, a downward revision of 24,000, while May was cut to 281,000, down 25,000 from the previous estimate.
Economists like to look at the broader U-6 rate which is often referred to as the underemployment rate. For July, that was 6.7%. That’s not far from the cyclical low of 6.5%.
The unemployment rate ticked down to 3.5%. On Twitter (or X), I noted that “The unemployment rate is lower today than *at any point* in the 1970s, 80s, 90s, 00s and 10s.”
This prompted several responses telling me to look at the labor force participation rate. Here’s a sample:
Well, let’s go for it. The labor force participation rate (LFPR) measures the percentage of people who are employed or are actively looking for work.
There seems to be a widespread belief that the only reason that the unemployment rate is low is because the government doesn’t count the people who have stopped looking for work.
This is simply incorrect. For July, the LFPR rate held at 62.6% for the fourth month in a row. That’s the highest it’s been this cycle.
In an interview with the New York Times, John C. Williams, the president of the New York Fed, said “we’ve seen the labor force participation, labor force growth improve quite significantly.”
It’s true that during Covid, many folks left the work force, but they’ve come back. At its low, the labor force participation rate got to 60.1 in April 2020. The current LFPR is below its pre-Covid high, but it’s not that far from it. The fact is that the workforce has largely returned to normal.
Here’s the catch. That LFPR can be influenced by demographic factors such as the growing number of retirees. It’s not that bummed out young people have stopped looking for work. Instead, it’s that grandma and grandpa have retired and moved to Florida.
That’s why I prefer to watch the labor force participation rate for people from ages 25 to 54. That helps us skirt the age issue. For July, that was 83.4% which is close to its highest level of the last 20 years. June’s rate was 83.5% which is the highest since May 2002.
There are plenty of criticisms for the economy. The pace of jobs growth is rapidly slowing, and wages lagged inflation for several months, but we absolutely have not seen a mass exodus from the jobs market.
The next big econ report will be this Thursday when the CPI report for July is out. The inflation numbers have improved over the past year, but tackling the last bit may prove difficult.
For the 12 months through June, consumer prices increased by 3%. The core rate, which excludes food and energy, increased by 4.8%. For Thursday, Wall Street expects the 12-month headline rate to rise to 3.3% and the core rate to drop to 4.7%.
Currently, the futures market expects the Fed to pause again at its meeting on September 19-20. In fact, the futures don’t see the Fed making any changes until March 2024, and that first move is expected to be a rate cut. Until then, don’t let scary headlines make you flee the market.
The FTC Finally Gives In
One of our favorite Buy List stocks is Intercontinental Exchange (ICE). The company owns the New York Stock Exchange, plus a few other financial exchanges. Last week, the company released another solid earnings report ($1.43 vs $1.37 est.). What I like about the business is that ICE’s operating margin often runs around 60%. ICE has grown by using a series of aggressive but shrewd acquisitions.
More recently, ICE started moving into mortgage technology. In 2020, ICE bought Ellie Mae, a mortgage technology business, for $11 billion. This strategy took a very big leap last year when ICE said it was buying Black Knight (BKI), a mortgage data vendor, for $11.7 billion.
That got the attention of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. They didn’t like the deal at all. The government felt that an ICE/Black Knight deal would put too much power in too few hands. The key to understanding the deal is that it’s all about data.
The FTC contends that such a deal would stifle innovation and raise prices for consumers. Lina Khan, the head of the FTC, has gotten a lot of attention for her aggressive policies against corporate mergers. The problem for the FTC is that it hasn’t been doing well when its battles go to court. The FTC failed in its attempt to block Microsoft’s $70 billion acquisition of Activision. Leaving that aside, the FTC has been doing everything it can to scuttle the Black Knight deal.
ICE and Black Knight struck back by selling off different units to appease the FTC. For example, Black Knight said it would sell its Optimal Blue business for $700 million. The company also said it would sell its Empower loan origination system business.
The strategy finally worked, and the government threw in the towel. Yesterday, the FTC told a federal court that it will drop its lawsuit trying to stop the deal from going through. The trial had been set to start on Monday, August 14.
Not that long ago, the merger deal was viewed as hopeless. The deal price was for $75 per each share of BKI. Less than a month ago, shares of BKI were trading for around $58. That’s changed. Yesterday, BKI rallied 4% to close at $74.36 per share. This is a big victory for Intercontinental Exchange.
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: August 8, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 8th, 2023 at 7:06 amChina’s Trade Plunges More Than Forecast in Blow to Recovery
Don’t Be So Picky About a Job, China’s College Graduates Are Told
Argentina’s Next President Is on a Collision Course With Hyperinflation
Italy’s New Tax Wipes Out $10 Billion from Market Value of Banks
Moody’s Cuts US Banks on Mounting Funding Costs, Office Risk
The S.E.C.’s Chief Is Worried About A.I.
SoftBank Plans Fresh AI Bets After First Investment Gains in 18 Months
Stability AI’s Lead Threatened by Departures, CEO Concerns
Nobody Beats Wiz: Meet The Aggressive, $10 Billion Startup Shaking Up Cloud Security
How Yellow’s Downfall Is Rippling Through the Economy
UPS Says Its Profit Will Fall After It Reaches a Teamsters Deal. Its Stock is Sinking Sharply
Tesla’s New CFO Now Has Two Jobs and a Lot of Question Marks
Elon Musk Calls Cybertruck Tesla’s ‘Best Product Ever.’ Here Comes the Test
American Cars Are Developing a Serious Weight Problem
Saudi Aramco Reports $30 Billion in Profit for Latest Quarter
Rising Oil Prices Are Bad News for Drivers—and the Fed
Paramount Agrees to Sell Simon & Schuster to KKR, a Private Equity Firm
Eli Lilly Raises Full-Year Guidance as Drug Pipeline Drives Second-Quarter Profit Up 85%
The U.S. Has a Beef With Europe—Over Cheese
Bacardi’s Russia Business Grows as Other Booze Makers Leave Country
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