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Morning News: August 7, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 7th, 2023 at 7:50 amRising Money Flows, Fueled by Record Migration, Prop Up Autocrats
China or India? How to Invest in the Coming Asia Boom
‘Inflation’ Reality Can Be Found In Adam Smith, Not ‘Fiscal Theory’
How Long Will Interest Rates Stay High?
A Fed Official Wonders: ‘Do We Need to Do Another Rate Increase?’
The New York Fed President Sees Interest Rates Coming Down With Inflation
Government Shutdown Threat Builds After Downgrade, Imperiling Wall Street Bets
Short Seller Hindenburg Nabs Tiny Gains Off $173 Billion Carnage
Property Loans Are So Unappealing That Banks Want to Dump Them
Big Oil’s Talent Crisis: High Salaries Are No Longer Enough
Trucker Yellow Goes Bankrupt After Debt, Labor Woes Pile Up
America’s Truckers, Cargo Pilots and Package Carriers Are Fed Up
Siemens Energy CEO on $2.4 Billion Wind Turbine Hit: We Were ‘Going Too Fast’ with New Products
Pfizer’s Covid Boost Crashes to Earth
Boeing Aims to Get Starliner Spacecraft Ready to Fly Next March
A Zoom Call, Fake Names and an A.I. Presentation Gone Awry
Musk’s X to Pay Legal Bills of People ‘Unfairly Treated’ for Posting on Platform
Where to Find a $4-an-Hour Math Tutor With a Ph.D.? Overseas
The Era of Ultracheap Stuff Is Under Threat
‘Barbie’ Reaches $1 Billion at the Box Office, Studio Says
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Morning News: August 4, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 4th, 2023 at 7:05 amInflation Is Cooling. Food Inflation Could Get Worse
Hiring Has Stayed Strong. Here’s Where to Look for Signs of Cooling
Slowing US Wage Growth to Set Stage for End of Fed Tightening
Congress Ended a Tax Break. How That May Help Higher Earners
BofA Clients Turn Cautious, Flee From Stocks on Recession Risks
Credit Suisse Collapsed, And Switzerland Went Back to Making Money
‘You Have to Work Extra to Hire People’: What Companies Have Been Saying About Jobs
The Chip Titan Whose Life’s Work Is at the Center of a Tech Cold War
Superconductor Breakthrough Claims Traced to Seoul Basement Lab
Apple Set to Relinquish Historic $3 Trillion Value
Amazon Shines During Apple’s Off-Season
Disney’s ESPN Plots Its Streaming Future, Seeking Tie-Ups With Leagues and Rivals
The Women Behind Cadillac’s $300,000 EV Aimed at Rolls-Royce
The Brand Stories of Our Lives
Revolut to Stop Crypto Services for U.S. Customers
Teen Gamers Swiped $24 Million in Crypto, Then Turned on Each Other
‘Bitcoin Bonnie and Clyde’ Plead Guilty to Money Laundering
A Look Inside Sam Bankman-Fried’s Empire Before It Collapsed
Israeli AI Startup Vesttoo Sparks a Global Insurance Scandal
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Morning News: August 3, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 3rd, 2023 at 7:06 amBOE Raises Rates to 5.25% With Warning Policy Will Remain Tight
BOJ Makes Bold Shift as Yen Risks Grow Too Big to Ignore
A Sudden Jump in Volatility Spells Trouble for Stocks
Markets Still Weigh the Meaning of a U.S. Credit Rating Cut
Is Good News Finally Good News Again?
Bill Ackman Says He’s Short 30-Year Treasuries as Supply Ramps Up
Larry Fink’s Bet on Saudi Oil Money Is Also His Latest E.S.G. Woe
Apollo Posts Record $1 Billion Profit as Rate Hikes Fuel Athene
Winners and Losers Likely as Switzerland Absorbs Credit Suisse Layoffs
How an Ex-Goldman Banker Fought US Sanctions Over Russia — and Won
U.S. Steelmakers Are Still Expanding as Demand Slows
California Law Threatens to Help Drive Up Bacon Prices
Workers to Employers: We’re Just Not That Into You
Shrinking Minority of Americans Able to Cover $400 Surprise Bill
Apple and Amazon Results Pose Tech Rally’s Toughest Hurdle Yet
Meta’s Ray-Ban Smart Glasses Fail to Catch On
Yellow’s Downfall Throws $700 Million US Covid Loan in Jeopardy
Fall in Bud Light Sales Puts Dent in Beer Maker’s Earnings
How Primark Built a Thriving Fashion Business Without Selling Online
Hollywood Studios Signal New Strategy by Talking With Writers
Murder, Money and the Battle for a Pharmaceutical Empire
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Morning News: August 2, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 2nd, 2023 at 7:05 amThe West Attacked Russia’s Economy. The Result Is Another Stalemate
A Former Banker Investigates What Could Be the Biggest Tax Heist in France’s History
Wall Street Reaped Ruble Fortune on Clients Fleeing From Russia
A Run of Strong Data Buoys Biden on the Economy
Fitch’s US Credit Downgrade Sparks Criticism and Unease
BofA Joins Fed in Reversing Recession Call Amid Growing Optimism
Many Small US Banks Not Ready to Borrow from Fed in an Emergency
AI Study Says Stocks Already Pricing a Job-Replacement Premium
‘How Do I Do That?’ The New Hires of 2023 Are Unprepared for Work
Bulb Becomes a Flashpoint as the Sun Sets on Incandescent Lights
Divvy Wants to Make Rent-to-Own Deals Easy. Many Customers Find Them Hard
Miami Sees Its First Population Drop in Decades
Health Insurers Don’t Want You to Know Where Your Money Is Going
Amazon Unveils Biggest Grocery Overhaul Since Buying Whole Foods
Why Trucking Giant Yellow’s Shutdown Could Cost Taxpayers Money
How ESPN Went From Disney’s Financial Engine to Its Problem
Taco Bell Owner Yum Brands Misses Revenue Estimates Despite Soaring KFC Sales
Business Meals Are Back With a Vengeance, and Everyone Feels Awkward
Toyota’s Land Cruiser to Return to U.S.
Ferrari Hikes Targets Amid Strong Demand for Supercars
Overstock.com Is Revamping Using Bed Bath & Beyond’s Name
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CWS Market Review – August 1, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 1st, 2023 at 6:19 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.”)
On Monday, the S&P 500 closed out July with another nice gain. This was the index’s fifth monthly gain in a row which is the longest monthly winning streak in two years. This is also the S&P 500’s best YTD gain through July since 1997.
It’s been a calmer stock market as well. On Friday, the Volatility Index closed at 13.33. That was its lowest level since January 2020.
I’ve been pleased to see the rally becoming broader, meaning that more stocks are joining in on the fun. Until recently, the market had been very narrow. It was rightfully criticized for being overly focused on a few large-cap tech stocks.
That’s not so true anymore. For the last two months, the S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF (RSP) has outpaced the rest of the market. Ryan Detrick, a great stat resource, points out that at one point last week, more than 89% of the stocks in the S&P 500 were trading above their 50-day moving averages. In other words, the minnows are joining the rally.
The Resilient U.S. Economy
The U.S. economy continues to hold up as well. I can’t think of a recession that’s been so widely expected yet so stubborn in refusing to make its appearance. Most of the recent economic signs have been fairly positive.
Just look at the earnings reports this season. This will be the busiest week of earnings season with 160 stocks in the S&P 500 due to report. So far, 82% of companies that have reported have beaten expectations.
Last Thursday, the government reported that the U.S. economy grew at a real annualized rate of 2.4% during the second quarter. Wall Street had been expecting growth of 1.5%.
Some people thought this spring’s banking crisis would trip up the economy. Nope, that didn’t happen. Other folks thought all the tech layoffs would push us unto recession. Again, that didn’t happen.
The economy’s performance is especially impressive because not that long ago, many economists assumed that the economy would be well on its way to a recession by now.
In April, the Conference Board said the odds of a recession starting in the next 12 months were “near 99%.” Now, the Federal Reserve’s own staff no longer expects a recession to begin this year. In fact, consumers are pretty optimistic. The sentiment survey put out by the University of Michigan recently hit its highest level in nearly two years. That’s some recession!
If anything, economic growth appears to be accelerating. Growth for Q1 was 2.0%. In the Fed’s last policy statement, it described the economy’s growth as “moderate.” In June, the Fed said growth was “modest.” I realize this may sound weirdly technical, but such wording changes are a big deal on Planet Fed.
So what’s powering the economy? The answer is consumer spending. Last quarter, the economy was also helped by increases in nonresidential fixed investment, government spending and inventory growth.
During Q2, personal consumption expenditures rose by 1.6%. While that was lower than the rate from Q1, during Q2, the economy was running against higher interest rates. Since March 2022, the Federal Reserve has raised interest rates 11 times. Interest rates are now at a 22-year high.
Another good sign is that inflation has been cooling off. The personal consumption expenditure price increase rose by 2.6% during Q2. That’s down from 4.1% in Q1.
Investors got nervous last year when the economy had negative growth for two quarters in a row. Since then, the economy has rattled off four straight quarters of positive growth. We’ll learn more about the economy this Friday when the July jobs report will be out. The estimate is that the economy created 200,000 nonfarm jobs and that the unemployment rate will be unchanged at 3.6%.
More positive economic news came on Thursday when we got the durable goods report for June. That came in at 4.7% which was well above Wall Street’s forecast of 1.5%. On Friday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said that personal income increased by 0.3% in June while personal spending increased by 0.5%.
Earlier today, the ISM Manufacturing Index for July was reported at 46.4. That was a little below expectations. Any number below 50 means that the factory sector of the economy is contracting.
What’s the Fed’s next move? Probably nothing. In the last three recessions prior to the Covid-led recession in 2020, the Fed had started cutting rates before the time the recessions had arrived. This underscores an important problem: the Fed’s major policy tool, adjusting interest rates, is highly imperfect.
For one, it takes a long time after the Fed makes any changes in rates to witness the intended results. This is one of the reasons why the Fed so often seems to mistime events. Just recently, the Fed was well behind the curve regarding inflation.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell continues to sound stern. He recently said, “We think we need to stay on task. We think we’re going to need to hold policy at restrictive levels for some time. And we need to be prepared to raise further.” The market, however, isn’t so sure.
The Fed doesn’t meet again until September 19-20. For now, traders expect another pause from the Fed. In fact, the Fed might pause for a few meetings. Futures prices don’t see the Fed making a move until March, and that initial move is expected to be a rate cut.
The early evidence suggests that inflation continues to moderate. The issue is how quickly will the Fed finally recognize that inflation is under control. My view is that the rally is telling us the truth and that there are lots of reasons to be bullish.
Trex Rallies on Strong Earnings
Trex (TREX) is a valued member of our Buy List. The deck stock, like some people, has a habit of either running very hot or very cold. There’s not much in between.
Trex was our #1 performing stock in 2020 (+86%) and 2021 (+61%). Last year, it was our worst performer by far (-68%). This year, Trex is again our top performer (+79%).
If you’re not familiar with the company, Trex is a major maker of wood-alternative decking and railing. In my opinion, what they make looks a lot like wood, but it’s cheaper and involves a lot less maintenance.
Trex is also better for the environment. Pressure-treated wood still dominates which means there’s plenty of room for Trex to grow. It’s also nice to know that with Trex, you don’t have to take another tree out of the Amazon rainforest to make your backyard deck.
Trex is made from 95% recycled material. Every year, the company effectively takes 500 pounds of plastic out of landfills and uses it for alternative wood. It’s not just good for the planet, but it’s smart business.
Trex takes all those used bags and bottles, then combines them with recycled sawdust from cabinet and furniture manufacturers, and that’s what Trex is made of. By the way, this also saves a lot of water.
Some other key advantages are that Trex weighs less than wood and that it’s also more resistant to mold and insects. You don’t need expensive staining or sanding, and repairs are much less frequent. You’ll often hear people say that Trex looks fake. I think that used to be true, but it’s much less the case today.
The recent problem for Trex is that the Fed’s desire to crush inflation also crushed its business. That’s because higher interest rates squeezed the housing market. Last year, shares of Trex plunged by two-thirds.
The good news is that Trex is improving nicely. After the closing bell yesterday, Trex reported Q2 earnings of 71 cents per share. That topped Wall Street’s consensus of 53 cents per share.
Trex had quarterly net sales of $357 million. Although that’s down 5% from last year’s Q2, it was well above Trex’s own guidance range of $310 million to $320 million.
I’m also pleased to see that Trex isn’t reaching for sales by slashing prices. As investors, this is something we have to look out for. When some companies run into trouble, they’ll slash prices to goose sales at the expense of profit margins. Not so with Trex. The company’s Q2 gross margin increased by 220 basis points to 43.9%. Trex had an EBITDA margin of 32.8%.
Now let’s look at guidance. The company expects full-year sales to range between $1.04 and $1.06 billion. For Q3, Trex sees sales of $280 million to $290 million. Wall Street had been expecting $264.22 million.
Most impressively, Trex raised it guidance for full-year EBITDA margin to a range of 28% to 29%. That’s up from the previous guidance of 26% to 27%.
During Q2, Trex bought back 264,896 shares for $16 million. Trex’s board recently approved a massive buyback program of up to 10.8 million shares. That’s 10% of all the outstanding shares.
Shares of Trex jumped 10% today and reached a new 52-week high. We now have a 79% YTD gain with Trex. Thanks to our buy-and-hold philosophy, we have a three-and-a-half-year profit in Trex even after last year’s implosion, and we’ve beaten the overall market as well. Focus on good stocks and be patient.
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 1, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on August 1st, 2023 at 7:05 amWar, AI and Climate Change Shake Up $32 Trillion in Global Trade
Global Demand for Coal Is Bringing Mayhem to South African Towns
Solar Supply Chain Grows More Opaque Amid Human Rights Concerns
The U.S. Clean-Energy Company That Hit the Subsidies Jackpot
BP Says $6.8 Billion German Offshore Wind Bet Will Make Money
Occidental, Adnoc Agree to Team up on Carbon Capture Investments
Ratings Firms Struggle With Climate Risk in $133 Trillion Market
A New Worry for Mexicans in the U.S.: The Strong Peso
China Asks Some Banks to Reduce or Delay Dollar Buying
Goldilocks and the Bidenomics Bears
Wall Street Economists Are Looking at a September Rate Pause
In Marc Rowan Era, Apollo Is Working to Shed Its Ruthless Image
HSBC Rides Rising Rates to Double Its Income, Launches $2 Billion Share Buyback
BP Boosts Dividend Even as Profit Slumps 70% to $2.6 Billion
Merck Earnings Top Expectations. More M&A Could Be Next.
New Factories Are Coming to the US, Even as Existing Ones Struggle
Local Malls, Stuck in ‘Death Spiral,’ Plunge in Value
Disney Goes Back to the Future
Uber Delivers First-Ever Operating Profit in Drive to Curb Losses
Elon Musk Is Finally Cracking Tesla’s Invincibility Shield
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Morning News: July 31, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 31st, 2023 at 7:05 amChina Is Trying to Make Its Gloomy Consumers Spend More
Why China’s Miracle Growth Story May Be Coming to an End
Russia Takes Its Ukraine Information War Into Video Games
A Spending Boom Fuels Russia’s Wartime Economy, Raising Bubble Fears
Why One Country Is Struggling to Break Away From Russian Gas
Extreme Heat and Aging Power Grids Are a Deadly Combination
A Record $90 Billion in Ship Orders Loom Over Boom-Bust Industry
Asia’s Richest Families Fuel Race for Lucrative Finance Jobs
Traders Brace for $102 Billion Wave of Treasury Bond Sales
Why the Drivers of Lower Inflation Matter
Clock on the Fed’s ‘Soft Landing’ May Already Be Ticking
Why the FTC’s Lina Khan Is Taking on Big Tech, Even if It Means Losing
Lots of US Homeowners Want to Move. They Just Have Nowhere to Go
Has America’s Air Travel Boom Peaked?
Elon Musk’s Unmatched Power in the Stars
Walmart Buys Tiger Global’s Flipkart Stake for $1.4 Billion
After $700 Million U.S. Bailout, Trucking Firm Is Shutting Down
Ford Realizes Customers Can’t Quit Hybrids
Is It an E-Bike, or a Motorcycle for Children?
China-Founded Rivals Shein and Temu Ramp Up War for American Shoppers
That Cool New Bookstore? It’s a Barnes & Noble
The Psychedelics Stock Universe Is Shrinking, Despite the Hype
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Morning News: July 28, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 28th, 2023 at 7:03 amChina’s Push to Expand BRICS Membership Falters
Europe Avoids China’s Belt and Road Forum, Keeping a Distance From Xi and Putin
Europe Vowed to Make Russia Pay for the War. It’s Not That Easy
Global Bonds Slide on Surprise Bank of Japan Move
He Held Up a Bank to Get His Own Money
Social Security’s Next Cost-of-Living Raise Is Forecast Around 3%
Wall St. Pessimists Are Getting Used to Being Wrong
Why ‘Soft Landing’ Optimists Shouldn’t Celebrate Just Yet
$2 Billion Default Followed Warnings to Everyone but Investors
What Fed Hikes? Much of America’s Consumer Debt Is Still Riding Ultralow Interest Rates
The Extreme Solutions That Can Fix Climate Change
Exxon and Chevron Stalk More Shale Deals as Profits Dip
Volkswagen Seeks to Reclaim China Crown in Deal With EV-Maker XPeng
Ford Raises Profit Forecast Despite Steeper EV Losses
5 Ways That Buying a Car Has Drastically Changed
Biogen to Buy Reata for $7.3 Billion in Rare-Disease Expansion
Aided by A.I. Language Models, Google’s Robots Are Getting Smart
P&G Earnings Show Its Pricing Power Endures
The Former Banker Gambling on FanDuel’s American Dream
Adidas Plans Sale of Second Yeezy Batch to Eat Into Stockpile
Wanted: Turnaround Artist to Revive Tired Clothing Brand. Apparel Experience Optional
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Morning News: July 27, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 27th, 2023 at 7:05 amHow Bad Is China’s Economy? Millions of Young People Are Unemployed and Disillusioned
The Skyrocketing Toll of the Billion-Dollar Climate Disaster
Biden’s ‘Made in America’ Pledge Collides With His Climate Goals
An American Energy Giant Sees Israel as a Springboard to Europe
Shell and TotalEnergies Profits Cut in Half by Lower Oil Prices
Federal Reserve Raises Interest Rates to 22-Year High
GDP Data Set to Reinforce Fed View the US Will Avoid Recession
The Economy Has Defied Expectations. Here’s What to Focus On in the GDP Data
Stock Pickers Are Missing Out on Tech Boom Thanks to 80-Year-Old Rules
A Brexit Champion’s Feud With His Elite Bank Brings a C.E.O. Down
A Beach Club Dinner and Jamie Dimon’s Touch: How PacWest Was Rescued
European Commercial Property Deals Drop 58% to Lowest Since 2010
Hamptons Luxury Bidding Wars Hit Record High Even as Prices Sag
Florida’s Flood of New Wealth Boosts High-Speed Train Bonds
Warren and Graham Team Up to Take on Big Tech
Microsoft Faces European Antitrust Investigation Over Bundling of Teams Software
Netflix Reworks Microsoft Pact, Lowers Ad Prices in Bid for Growth
Researchers Poke Holes in Safety Controls of ChatGPT and Other Chatbots
AI in Hollywood Has Gone From Contract Sticking Point to Existential Crisis
Tesla Owners Have Soured on Elon Musk, But Still Love Their Model 3s
McDonald’s Sales, Profit Beat Estimates as Diners Flock to Chain
More Income for the Supreme Court: Million-Dollar Book Deals
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Morning News: July 26, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 26th, 2023 at 7:05 amSubsidy Wars Heat Up With US Allies Forced to Pay Up or Lose Out
How Financial Crises Shaped the Federal Reserve
Powell Has Stopped Handing Gifts to Wall Street on Fed Day
Private Equity Finally Gets a Piece of the Banking Crisis
Deutsche Bank’s Rising Costs Take Shine Off Debt Trading Beat
Elon Musk the Banker Wants to Take On Dimon Where Google Failed
Banc of California Agrees to Buy PacWest as Regional Lenders Seek Strength Together
Indiana and Midwest Take Top Slots in WSJ/Realtor.com Housing Index
Thirsty Data Centers Are Making Hot Summers Even Scarier
San Francisco’s Office Demand Surges, Largely Thanks to AI Companies
Microsoft, Alphabet Earnings Lay Bare the AI Hype. Why Patience Is Needed
The Luxury Home Market Confronts Its New Reality: Not Enough Buyers and Sellers
UPS Blinked, Teamsters Leader Says, Clearing Way for Labor Deal
AT&T Tops Profit, Cash Flow Estimate as Customer Growth Dips
Samsung to Launch New Galaxy Z Fold, Flip Phones Amid Slow Adoption So Far
Elon Musk’s Rebranded Twitter Cuts Ad Prices
How Jack Ma’s Ant Group Is Inching Toward IPO Reboot
Boeing’s Quarterly Results Top Expectations as Airplane Deliveries Pick Up Pace
Coca-Cola Earnings, Sales Beat Street Forecasts As Drinks Maker Follows PepsiCo With Price Hikes
Joe Lewis, Billionaire Owner of Tottenham Hotspur, Charged with Insider Trading
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