April 27, 2024

What You Need to Know Today:

Today’s PCE inflation numbers reinforce yesterday’s PCE inflation bad news

Yesterday we had a report of core Personal Consumption Expenditure for March that showed core inflation ticking up to an annual rate of 3.8% from 3.7%. Core inflation, if you remember, looks at prices after excluding more volatile food and energy prices, The reasonable conclusion was that inflation was remaining stubbornly higher than the Federal Reserves % target. And that the first cut to interior rates from the Fed wouldn’t come until December, instead of July or September. Today we got the report on all-items PCE inflation.

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Today’s PCE inflation numbers reinforce yesterday’s PCE inflation bad news

Today’s PCE inflation numbers reinforce yesterday’s PCE inflation bad news

Yesterday we had a report of core Personal Consumption Expenditure for March that showed core inflation ticking up to an annual rate of 3.8% from 3.7%. Core inflation, if you remember, looks at prices after excluding more volatile food and energy prices, The reasonable conclusion was that inflation was remaining stubbornly higher than the Federal Reserves % target. And that the first cut to interior rates from the Fed wouldn’t come until December, instead of July or September. Today we got the report on all-items PCE inflation.

read more
Today’s PCE inflation numbers reinforce yesterday’s PCE inflation bad news

Now it’s one interest rate cut and not until December

How views on interest rates have changed since the start of 2024. Then, in January, the consensus view called for as many as six interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve in 2024 for a total of 150 basis points in cuts to the Fed’s benchmark interest rate. Today, after a dip in first quarter GDP below a 2% annual rate and an uptick in core PCE inflation, the markets are pricing in just 33 basis points in rate cuts and quite possibly no cut until the Fed’s December 18 meeting.

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Good news from Google (Alphabet) today–no repeat of yesterday’s Meta problem

Good news from Google (Alphabet) today–no repeat of yesterday’s Meta problem

After the close today, Alphabet (GOOG) reported revenue of $80.5 billion, easily beating the consensus projection of $78.7 billion. Earning per share came in at $1.89 versus expectations for $1.50 a share. And none of the worries before the news turned out to be problems. Advertising revenue rose 13% to $61.7 billion. Ad revenue for YouTube–an area of worry rose 21% to $8.09 billion. Subscriptions, platforms and devices revenue jumped 18%.

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Please Watch My New YouTube Video: NOW I’m Worried About Stocks.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: NOW I’m Worried About Stocks.

Today’s video is NOW I’m Worried About Stocks. Investors and analysts have shown a willingness to pay for vapor in the last couple of days. The market reaction to two companies, Tesla (TSLA) and Apple (AAPL),  has made this clear me.. Tesla’s earnings were terrible at $0.45 a share, below the expectations of $0.52 and revenue was down 50% year over year. However, the stock was up the day after earnings thanks to expert spin from CEO Elon Musk. He announced that Tesla will move ahead with the Robotaxis and full self-driving cars but it will also advance plans to produce a $25,000 car to enter the lower end of the market and compete with China. Although the company previously waffled on offering a more affordable Tesla, Musk was now suggesting it may be available at the end of 2024 or early 2025. When asked for more specifics, Musk declined to offer a definitive date on any of these promises. Wall Street ate it up and jumped on the spin that Tesla will be selling a more affordable vehicle “soon.” At this point, these are totally imaginary revenues from a car that has no release date and a full self-driving technology that doesn’t fully exist yet, and investors are saying they’re willing to pay for it? What worries me here is that in the market paying for spin has become normal because stocks go up on spin. Even if the product is “vapor,” investors are willing to get in on the stock bump associated with the announcement of imagined prospects. Similarly, Bank of America recently predicted Apple (APPL) is going to go up 36% soon because the company will announce its plans for adding AI into the iPhone. This is speculation on an announcement, not of the product itself, but on the prospect of an announcement. Bank of America is likely right on this, but I’m not willing to pay up for this speculative announcement without a tangible product or date and it concerns me that the market IS willing to do that. I understand the spins and the anticipation but the reaction and willingness to buy on vapors isn’t a sign of a healthy market.

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PCE core inflation climbs even as U.S. GDP growth drops to 1.6% in the first quarter

PCE core inflation climbs even as U.S. GDP growth drops to 1.6% in the first quarter

U.S. economic growth slowed in the first three months of the year, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported today. Gross Domestic Product (GSP) grew at an annualized rate of just 1.6%. That’s a big retreat from the 3.4% annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2023. Just as important as the drop in the growth rate itself is the reason for the decline.

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Special Report: It’s a new world for dividend income investors: 3 trends (all now posted) and 10 picks (all first now posted PFE, BEPC, NKE, EQNR, V, HON, T, VZ, RTX, ABBV)

Special Report: It’s a new world for dividend income investors: 3 trends (all now posted) and 10 picks (all first now posted PFE, BEPC, NKE, EQNR, V, HON, T, VZ, RTX, ABBV)

Let’s say you’re a dividend income investor. You need cash income in retirement. Or you want your portfolio to generate cash now so you can invest in new opportunities. Or you just want the extra safety and lower risk that owning a stock with a substantial dividend can bring. Whatever your reasons–and I can think of a lot more–this is a particularly challenging financial market for dividend income investors.But I do think there are strategies dividend income investors can successfully pursue even in this challenging market. In the rest of this Special Report I’m going to explain the three ways I think you should be thinking about dividend income investing in this market. And then I’m going to give you 10 dividend stocks that I think are especially well-suited to producing income (and price appreciation, which is always nice even if you’re an income investor) in this market environment. First pick just posted–Pfizer

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Live Market Report (20 minute delay)

Today’s PCE inflation numbers reinforce yesterday’s PCE inflation bad news

Today’s PCE inflation numbers reinforce yesterday’s PCE inflation bad news

Yesterday we had a report of core Personal Consumption Expenditure for March that showed core inflation ticking up to an annual rate of 3.8% from 3.7%. Core inflation, if you remember, looks at prices after excluding more volatile food and energy prices, The reasonable conclusion was that inflation was remaining stubbornly higher than the Federal Reserves % target. And that the first cut to interior rates from the Fed wouldn’t come until December, instead of July or September. Today we got the report on all-items PCE inflation.

Today’s PCE inflation numbers reinforce yesterday’s PCE inflation bad news

Now it’s one interest rate cut and not until December

How views on interest rates have changed since the start of 2024. Then, in January, the consensus view called for as many as six interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve in 2024 for a total of 150 basis points in cuts to the Fed’s benchmark interest rate. Today, after a dip in first quarter GDP below a 2% annual rate and an uptick in core PCE inflation, the markets are pricing in just 33 basis points in rate cuts and quite possibly no cut until the Fed’s December 18 meeting.

Good news from Google (Alphabet) today–no repeat of yesterday’s Meta problem

Good news from Google (Alphabet) today–no repeat of yesterday’s Meta problem

After the close today, Alphabet (GOOG) reported revenue of $80.5 billion, easily beating the consensus projection of $78.7 billion. Earning per share came in at $1.89 versus expectations for $1.50 a share. And none of the worries before the news turned out to be problems. Advertising revenue rose 13% to $61.7 billion. Ad revenue for YouTube–an area of worry rose 21% to $8.09 billion. Subscriptions, platforms and devices revenue jumped 18%.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: NOW I’m Worried About Stocks.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: NOW I’m Worried About Stocks.

Today’s video is NOW I’m Worried About Stocks. Investors and analysts have shown a willingness to pay for vapor in the last couple of days. The market reaction to two companies, Tesla (TSLA) and Apple (AAPL),  has made this clear me.. Tesla’s earnings were terrible at $0.45 a share, below the expectations of $0.52 and revenue was down 50% year over year. However, the stock was up the day after earnings thanks to expert spin from CEO Elon Musk. He announced that Tesla will move ahead with the Robotaxis and full self-driving cars but it will also advance plans to produce a $25,000 car to enter the lower end of the market and compete with China. Although the company previously waffled on offering a more affordable Tesla, Musk was now suggesting it may be available at the end of 2024 or early 2025. When asked for more specifics, Musk declined to offer a definitive date on any of these promises. Wall Street ate it up and jumped on the spin that Tesla will be selling a more affordable vehicle “soon.” At this point, these are totally imaginary revenues from a car that has no release date and a full self-driving technology that doesn’t fully exist yet, and investors are saying they’re willing to pay for it? What worries me here is that in the market paying for spin has become normal because stocks go up on spin. Even if the product is “vapor,” investors are willing to get in on the stock bump associated with the announcement of imagined prospects. Similarly, Bank of America recently predicted Apple (APPL) is going to go up 36% soon because the company will announce its plans for adding AI into the iPhone. This is speculation on an announcement, not of the product itself, but on the prospect of an announcement. Bank of America is likely right on this, but I’m not willing to pay up for this speculative announcement without a tangible product or date and it concerns me that the market IS willing to do that. I understand the spins and the anticipation but the reaction and willingness to buy on vapors isn’t a sign of a healthy market.

PCE core inflation climbs even as U.S. GDP growth drops to 1.6% in the first quarter

PCE core inflation climbs even as U.S. GDP growth drops to 1.6% in the first quarter

U.S. economic growth slowed in the first three months of the year, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported today. Gross Domestic Product (GSP) grew at an annualized rate of just 1.6%. That’s a big retreat from the 3.4% annual rate in the fourth quarter of 2023. Just as important as the drop in the growth rate itself is the reason for the decline.

Today’s PCE inflation numbers reinforce yesterday’s PCE inflation bad news

Round #2 of big Treasury auction today

One down and billions more to go.

Yesterday’s big auction of 2-Year Treasury notes saw rock solid demand that let the day pass without a big, destabilizing drop in prices and a jump in yields. Today, in Round #2, the Treasury is set to auction off $70 billion in five-year notes. So far, at least, the sale looks like it will see solid demand again. Though, can I say, You ain’t seen nothing yet? Treasury is likely to increase its monthly issuance of the seven main notes and bonds (not including TIPS) by nearly 60% in 2024 to $354 billion in August 2024, from the $222 billon it issued in July 2023, according to “Neutral Issuance” scenario in the presentation by the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee.

AT&T beats on earnings as churn steadies and subscriber numbers rise

AT&T beats on earnings as churn steadies and subscriber numbers rise

Today, April 24, before the market open, AT&T reported first quarter earnings that beat the Wall Street consensus. The good news came from strong growth in its mobility and consumer wireline connectivity businesses, which make up about 80% of the company’s total revenues. AT&T (T) added 349K postpaid phone subscribers in the quarter, above a consensus estimate of 303,539, according to Bloomberg. Prepaid churn was 2.77% compared to 2.73% in the year-ago quarter. Remember that if you own AT&T, you own it for the dividend, currently 6.73%, and the possibility that the company will increase its payout.

Visa beats on earnings as worldwide payments volume climbs by 8%

Visa beats on earnings as worldwide payments volume climbs by 8%

Tuesday, April 23, after the market close Visa (V) reported adjusted net income of $2.51 a share. That ws 7 cent a share more than the consensus of estimates from Wall Street analysts. Earnings rose 7% year-over-year in the quarter. Revenue climbed 10% from a year prior to $8.8 billion, also exceeding Wall Street estimates

Lithium Americas–Buy on the plunge

Lithium Americas–Buy on the plunge

I certainly understand the sell off in shares of development stage lithium producer Lithium Americas (LAC). Today, April 23, the stock closed at $4.68 a share, down another 1.47%. On April 16 the stock closed at $6.49 after hitting $7.34 on April 11. The culprit? The company closed a previously announced stock offer to 55 million shares at a price of $5 a share to raise $275 million.
You can see the problem, right? Stock is trading at $7.34 or $6.49 and then a big public offer dumps 55 million shares on the market at $5 a share. Ouch!! So I understand the price plunge–36.2% from April 11 to the close on April 23. And as someone who owns shares in his personal portfolio, I can’t say I’m a happy camper. But I will be being more in my personal account three days after this is posted.

Gold retreats from its record high–What to do Part 1

Gold retreats from its record high–What to do Part 1

Gold futures for June delivery closed down 2.92% on the Comex today. The metal closed at $2343.40 an ounce. The drop came on a lessening of fears that the exchange of attacks between Israel and Iran would quickly lead to a wider Middle East war. And on growing sentiment that the Federal Reserve isn’t likely to cut interest rates soon. The drop in the gold contract for June delivery was the largest since February 3, 2023 when it fell 2.8%.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick ABT

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick ABT

Today’s Quick Pick is Abbott Laboratories (ABT). The medical device sector is very complicated with constant changes to technology and best practice therapeutics and it can be very hard to keep track of, but two things recently caught my eye about Abbott. The company is generally very conservative and rarely raises guidance, but it did exactly that in its first quarter earnings report. It wasn’t a huge raise but the company went from projecting earnings in a range of $3.20 a share to $3.40 a share to a range with a higher floor of $3.25 to $3.40 a share. The other announcement was a big boost in sales of its diabetes continuous glucose monitoring device, Freestyle Libre. Sales grew to $1.5 billion, up 22.4% year over year. Overall, at the company medical device sales grew 14% year over year, though their Covid test sales were down 18% year over year. I think this is a medical device company that is well-positioned for an aging population.  The stock pays a 2.08% dividend. Morningstar says this stock trades at fair value with the shares down about 7.8% in the last month. I think this is a good chance to buy this well-managed, conservative company.

Today’s PCE inflation numbers reinforce yesterday’s PCE inflation bad news

A big test of demand for Treasuries in this week’s huge auctions

It’s been a tough month for Treasuries with yields rising on a re-thinking of when the Federal Reserve might begin to cut interest rates. The yield on the 10-year Treasury closed at 4.62% on Friday. That’s an increase in yield of 35 basis points in a month. (When yields climb, bond prices fall.) And this week the Treasury will auction a combined $183 billion of two-, five- and seven-year Treasury notes. Ans that’s ahead of the latest update on the Personal Consumption Expenditures index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure.

Saturday Night Quarterback (on  a Sunday) says, For the week ahead expect…

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Sunday) says, For the week ahead expect…

I’m sure you’ve noticed. The technology sector, which led the stock market rally in 2023 and in the early days of 2024, is in a slump. The Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) tumbled 6.27% last week and is down 7.16% in the last month. For 2024 to date, as of the close on April 19, the sector is at break even with gain of 0.19%. Quite a turnabout for a sector that is still up 30% for the last 12 months. This week brings a raft of tech earnings that could turn the sector’s trend around. Or not.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Hot Button Moves Now Buy ASML

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Hot Button Moves Now Buy ASML

Today’s Hot Button Moves NOW video is Buy ASML Holding (ASML). ASML is the only global manufacturer of the most cutting-edge chip-making equipment, a technology called Extreme Ultra Violet Lithography (EUV). The equipment allows for a smaller chip, more transistors on the chip, and more power for less silicon. ASML’s earnings report on April 16 was disappointing, with fewer than expected orders, a situation that will likely continue into the next couple of quarters. This resulted in a big drop in earnings and the stock taking a big hit. But, this is the only game in town for this equipment, and anything chip that uses the new 2-nanometer, 3-nanometer, and 5-nanometer technologies will be made on ASML equipment. So orders will not stay down for long. I would use this weakness to buy ASML Holding. It’s not cheap, but it’s not likely not get much cheaper than this, and as geopolitical chip wars settle, orders for ASML will jump rebound. ASML Holding is a member of my long-term 50 Stocks Portolio.

Special Report: It’s a New World for Dividend Investors: Pick #10 ABBV

Special Report: It’s a New World for Dividend Investors: Pick #10 ABBV

Bookkeeping. I added AbbVie (ABBV) as Pick #10 for My New World for Dividend Investing Special Report (You can find it in the Special Report section of this site along with all the content on this market and its trends for Dividend Income investors. But I’m reposting it as a stand alone pick so no one misses it. AbbVie (ABBV) has been a long-time member of the Dividend Portfolio with a gain of 213% since my January 29, 2020 pick. The question right now is Should it be a top dividend pick going forward? After all, the appreciation in the stock has dropped the dividend yield to 3.67%. (Add in a modest yield from buybacks and the total yield goes to 4.18%.) The most pressing question has been What will replace the $20 billion in annual revenue from the company’s blockbuster arthritis drug Humira (adalimumab) now that it faces competition from biosimilar generics? Now we’ve got some numbers to answer that question and to me they add up to AbbVie remaining a top dividend pick.

Please Watch My New Youtube Video: Want to know when the Fed will cut rates? Look at the calendar

Please Watch My New Youtube Video: Want to know when the Fed will cut rates? Look at the calendar

Today’s video is Want to know when the Fed will cut rates? Look at the calendar. The Fed only has so many meetings left for 2024 and even fewer if you only coun those with Dot Plot updates of the Fed’s economic projections. The Fed is on the verge of a major shift in policy and the U.S. central bank almost never makes a big policty shift at a meeting without an update of its economic projections.. Early in the year, people were looking for up to five cuts, now, sentiment has shifted to one or fewer. If we get a rate cut at all, when will it be? Look at which upcoming Fed meetings include Dot Plots. The Fed doesn’t like to surprise investors and if they make a drastic change, like a shift to rate cuts, you can bet they want to do it while they’re also discussing projections for 2024 and 2025. The.CME Fedwatch Tool currently odds for the next meeting, May 1, at a 98% chance of no cut and the June meeting is now up to an 84.8% chance of no cut. The June meeting WILL have a Dot Plot and, up until recently, the finanial markets believed that meeting that would deliver the news. Because the Fed generally likes to give in-depth information during a big policy shift, it’s unlikely that the rate cut will be in July, since no dot Plot economic pdate is scheduled for that meeting. The next real chance of a rate cut, I think, is September 18, which has a Dot Plot. (There is no August Fed meeting.) The market thinks there will be a cut in September, and CME Fedwatch has the odds of no cut at that meeting at just 32.7%. A second rate cut in 2024 would have to be at the December 18 meeting, the final 2024 meeting with a Dot Plot. (The Fed doesn’t meet in Ocrober and the November meeting does include a Dot Plot update.) Without the September cut, it’s very unlikely there will be two cuts in 2024. Unless inflation data changes a lot, I doubt we’ll have two rate cuts, but we can look for one in September or December at this point.

Is China’s economy about to slow down again?

Is China’s economy about to slow down again?

China reported faster-than-expected economic growth in the first quarter–but… Although Gross Domestic Product climbed 5.3% in the quarter–a faster rate of growth than in the first quarter of 2023 and above economist estimates, most of the good news came from the first two months of the quarter. In March growth in retail sales slumped and industrial output fell short of forecasts. That doesn’t bode well for the rest of 2024.

Confusion on Tesla climbs ahead of April 23 earnings report

Confusion on Tesla climbs ahead of April 23 earnings report

Can’t figure Tesla (TSLA) out? Welcome to the club. The stock was down another 5.59% today, April 15, and is now down 31% for 2024. Maybe investors will get some clarity on the company’s identity and strategy when it announced earnings on April 23. Wall Street analysts expect earnings of 36 cents a share against earnings of 73 cents a share in 2023. I think that strategic clarity is actually more important than quarterly earnings at this point for Tesla.

AT&T beats on earnings as churn steadies and subscriber numbers rise

Apple’s smartphone market share slide continues

Apple has lost its spot as the world’s biggest mobile phone seller, IDC reported today, April 15. A steep drop in sales in China for Apple let South Korean rival Samsung retake the lead in global market share. Samsung had been the biggest seller of mobile phones for 12 years until the end of 2023, when sales of Apple’s iPhone models overtook it. Global smartphone shipments increased by 8% to 289.4m units during January-March, according to IDC. Samsung has a 20.8% market share. That beat Apple’s 17.3% share

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Sunday) asks, And now what in the Middle East and for global financial markets?

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Sunday) asks, And now what in the Middle East and for global financial markets?

After Israel and its allies (with the help of some Arab states that don’t want to see a wider Middle East war and who aren’t thrilled with the growing power of Iran and its proxies) succeeded in shooting down almost all of the drones (170), ballistic missiles (120), and cruise missiles (30) launched by Iran against the country, will the two sides both declare victory and claim that honor is satisfied or will one or the other escalate the war with another round of attacks? As of early Monday trading in Asia, the oil and gold markets have reacted with concern but not panic. Gold, up 13% already this year to a record above $2,400 an ounce, moved higher but the gains were relatively modest. Spot gold climbed 0.8% to $2,361.92 an ounce as of 6:20 a.m.in Singapore. The global oil market opened to the upside but by less than 1%. And prices have been steady to slightly weaker since then.

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