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With banks still in crisis, are tech sector stocks a beneficiary?

With banks still in crisis, are tech sector stocks a beneficiary?

Ok, so Dan Ives is talking his book (or sector at least) but he still raises an interesting point. (Dan Ives is a Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst covering the Technology sector at Wedbush Securities since 2018.) With bank stocks in particular and the financial sector in general in turmoil, will investors looking for steady earnings turn to tech stocks? (Well maybe not all tech stocks but how about Apple (AAPL) and Microsoft (MSFT)?

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Credit Suisse takeover by UBS raises new issues in debt market

Credit Suisse takeover by UBS raises new issues in debt market

Solve one problem; create another one. While the news of UBS Group AG’s takeover of Credit Suisse brought an end to some worries that financial markets would go into Monday without some deal to rescue a bank regulators had called systemically important to the global financial system, the terms of the deal have already started to send shock waves through the bond and derivative markets.

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Market consensus converges on 25 basis point interest rate increase from the Federal Reserve tomorrow

Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…

The Federal Reserve will meet on Wednesday, March 22 to set interest rates. There are three things to watch from that meeting. First, whether the Fed will raise interest rates or not and by 25 basis points, 50 basis points, or not at all. Second, we will get the first update of the Dot Plot since the December 14 meeting that projects what Fed officials think interest rates, inflation, unemployment, and GDP growth will be at the end of 2023 and 2024. Third, the financial market reaction to the news out of the meeting will tell us if the Fed (as I’d argue) has lost control of the interest rate narrative and that the bond market is now calling the direction and pace of changes in interest rates.

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So how scared were banks this week? A record $164.8 billion scared; fear like this doesn’t vanish quickly

So how scared were banks this week? A record $164.8 billion scared; fear like this doesn’t vanish quickly

Banks borrowed a combined $164.8 billion from two Federal Reserve backstop facilities in the most recent week. Data published by the Fed showed banks borrowed $152.85 billion from the discount window-—the traditional liquidity backstop for banks—-in the week ended March 15. That was a record high for a week. And it was up a staggering $160 billion from the $4.58 billion borrowed the previous week. And the week’s borrowing was an all-time high, easily surprising the prior all-time high of $111 billion. That high was set during the 2008 financial crisis. By this measure, at least, banks see the current threat as equal to a global financial crisis.

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Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick Barrick Gold

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick Barrick Gold

Today’s Quick Pick is Barrick Gold (NYSE: GOLD). There are three big arguments for owning gold, and Barrick Gold specifically, right now. Number one is that gold always does well when the markets are volatile and people are unsure where else to put their money. Gold is the safe haven. Second, if the Fed pauses rates, gold will be back on the upswing. Gold generally doesn’t pay dividends, so if interest rates are higher, people will put their money where they can get a return through dividends (not gold), but as the rate hikes stop, gold will become more attractive. The third reason is specific to Barrick Gold because although it’s a gold mining company, it gets about 18% of its revenue from the copper it mines alongside the gold. The market for copper has been growing with the renewable energy transition. Electric vehicles use massive amounts of copper and copper miners haven’t been investing to keep up with future demand. Year to date (as of March 10), Barrick was down about 6.81% and Morningstar calculates it as 24% undervalued. While I mentioned that most gold stocks don’t pay a dividend, Barrick actually does, at about 3.23%, and they just announced another $1 million stock buyback. As the turmoil in the market continues, Barrick will continue to go up as people look for a safe haven from the chaos.

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So how scared were banks this week? A record $164.8 billion scared; fear like this doesn’t vanish quickly

Treasury yields jump as prices fall–What me worry?

Today at 2:30 p.m. New York time the yield on a 10-year Treasury was up 10 basis points to 3.55%. Yesterday the yield had dropped to 3.50%. The yield on the 2-year Treasury, very sensitive to sentiment on Fed interest rate policy, crossed back above 4% to 4.15%. Yesterday the yield had dipped to 3.99%. Another day like this and we’ll see some short-term yields, 6-month perhaps–above 5% again.

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ECB sticks to inflation fighting with surprise 50 basis point interest rate increase today

ECB sticks to inflation fighting with surprise 50 basis point interest rate increase today

The European Central Bank raised its benchmark short-term interest rate by another 50 basis points today. The bank said that the European banking system has strong capital and liquidity positions in spite of problems at Credit Suisse that led that bank to borrow $54 billion from the ECB yesterday. Fighting inflation remains the bank’s top priority.

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Swiss National Bank says it will provide liquidity to Credit Suisse

Swiss National Bank says it will provide liquidity to Credit Suisse

The Swiss central bank said today that it will provide a liquidity backstop to Credit Suisse if needed.“Credit Suisse meets the capital and liquidity requirements imposed on systemically important banks,” the Swiss National Bank said in a statement late Wednesday. “If necessary, the SNB will provide Credit Suisse with liquidity.”

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Market consensus converges on 25 basis point interest rate increase from the Federal Reserve tomorrow

Does moderation in Producer Price Index inflation give the Fed enough cover to NOT raise interest rates next week?

U.S. prices at the wholesale level, the producer-price index, fell in February from January, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported this morning. The producer-price index fell 0.1% in February from January after a 0.3% month-to-month increase in January. Will that be enough so that the Fed has an argument for NOT raising interest rates next week?

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