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Walmart says the D (deflation) word

Walmart says the D (deflation) word

In the company's Thursday earnings outlook Walmart CEO Doug McMillon uttered the D word. McMillon told investors that the world's biggest retailer is ready for a period of deflation in the United States over the coming months. The company plans to reduce prices on...

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If this is such a great economy, why did Cisco and Palo Alto just cut cut guidance for 2024?

If this is such a great economy, why did Cisco and Palo Alto just cut cut guidance for 2024?

More real world dissent to Wall Street’s view that everything looks great for 2024. On Thursday Cisco Systems (CSCO) shares closed down 9.83% after the networking giant offered up significantly weaker-than-expected guidance for 2024. Wall Street analysts called the guidance “disappointing.” And the same day cybersecurity favorite Palo Alto Networks (PANW) dropped 5.42% after the company lowered its billings forecast for the fiscal 2024 year.

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New claims for unemployment climb to three-month high

New claims for unemployment climb to three-month high

More news this morning pointing to a slowing economy. Initial claims for unemployment for the past week rose 13,000 to 231,000, the Labor Department Reported this morning. That’s the highest weekly figure in three months. And is yet another sign that the economy is cooling. Which would encourage the Federal Reserve to call an end to it interest rate increases and, maybe even, start to cut rates relatively soon. At least that’s how the bond market read the numbers.

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Congress averts shutdown–kicks the can down the road to January

Congress averts shutdown–kicks the can down the road to January

Well, you could knock me over with a feather! The House of Representatives passed a clean Continuing Resolution to continue funding the federal government after Friday at midnight. Don’t get all dewy-eyed and start talking about a return of functional government. The House bill, which is expected to pass and Senate in the next day or two and be signed by the White House with well over 10 hours to spare before the government shut down, only extends funding until January 19 (for 20% of the government) and February 2 (for the other 80%.)

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Will Tuesday’s rally continue? 3 things I’m watching

Will Tuesday’s rally continue? 3 things I’m watching

One day fluke? The next step in an end of year Santa Claus rally? Huge bear market trap? The beginning of the next big Bull market?Tough questions to answer but important for figuring out an investment strategy for NOW. So here are three things that I’ll be watching in the next few days.

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Bond market pauses: Are bond prices ahead of themselves? Have yields dropped too far?

Moody’s cuts outlook for U.S. credit rating to negative

Moody’s Investors Service turned negative on the United State’s credit rating outlook Friday after the market close, citing risks to the nation’s fiscal strength and political polarization. The credit rating company lowered the outlook to negative from stable, even as it affirmed the nation’s rating at Aaa, the highest investment-grade notch.

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Don’t give up on your volatility hedges yet–look what’s on the horizon

Don’t give up on your volatility hedges yet–look what’s on the horizon

My bets on rising volatility have been hammered in the last few days. The December 20 Call Options on the CBOE S&P 500 Volatility Index (VIX) at $280 a contact dropped another 21% today to $121 a contract. The January 17 Call Options at 17 that I bought for $268 closed at $211, down another 16%.The VIX itself ended the day at 14.23, down 7% for the session. It’s sure hard looking at losses like this. But I would remind you that the VIX is very volatile. The volatility index was at 21.71 on October 20. And that the calendar is marked with two big events that could reunite financial market volatility, one courtesy of the House of Representatives and the other courtesy of the Federal Reserve.

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What the Fed giveth, the Fed taketh away

What the Fed giveth, the Fed taketh away

Eight days ago Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell set off a financial market rally when the markets thought they heard him signal that the Fed was done with interest rate increases. Today, November 9, Powell very clearly said (at an International Monetary Fund conference in Washington) that the Fed won’t hesitate to raise rates if a hike is needed. Other Fed officials have recently said the same thing.

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The big pay off for Eli Lilly is still ahead

The big pay off for Eli Lilly is still ahead

On Wednesday the Food and Drug Administration approved Mounjaro from Lilly, as an obesity drug, after clinical trials showed that patients lost an average of 18% of their body weight. The drug will be marketed as Zepbound in the obesity market. This puts Lilly into direct competition with the wildly popular Wegovy weight-loss drug from Novo Nordisk (NVO)

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Is the job market weakening? Look for a hint in tomorrow’s initial claims report

Is the job market weakening? Look for a hint in tomorrow’s initial claims report

It’s not a big shift, but it may be a trend. The weekly initial claims for unemployment report–a new one comes out on November 9–has recently shown a very gradual weakening of the U.S. jobs market. Last week in the November 2 report for the week ended October 28, the number of new claims for unemployment rose to 217,000, an increase of 5,000 from the previous week. The four-week moving average, which smooths week to week noise–climbed 2,000 from the four-week moving average the prior week. Will tomorrow’s November 9 report show a continuation of this very subtle trend?

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A good auction for Treasuries sends 10-year yield to 4.51% today

A good auction for Treasuries sends 10-year yield to 4.51% today

Stocks had a mixed close today, November 8. The Standard & Poor’s 500 was up just 0.03% and the NASDAQ Composite actually fell by 0.05%. The small-cap Russell 200 lost 1.17% as small company stocks continue to send a warning sign about the economy and bond yields. I think it would have been much worse without a strong action for 10-year Treasuries today A successful auction–lots of demand at lower yields–of $40 billion in 10-year notes took the yield on the 10-year Treasury down 6 basis points to 4.51%.

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