China economic growth hit official target in 2022, but population plunge accelerates

Well, what did you expect Chinese officials to talk about at Davos? Yesterday, Premier Li Qiang said in a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, that China’s economy is expected to have grown 5.2% in 2023. Which would exceed the government’s target of “around 5%” set in March. Li’s estimate roughly agrees with the average 5.3% expected by economists. In 2022, China’s economy grew at a 3% rate.But also yesterday, the National Bureau of Statistics said that China’s population decline has accelerated.

Good news/bad news from China on stimulus

Good news/bad news from China on stimulus

Chinese officials have indicated that the government is considering issuing 1 trillion yuan ($139 billion) of new debt under a special sovereign bond plan. The plan would sell ultra-long sovereign bonds to fund projects related to food, energy, supply chains, and urbanization. The sale of this type of ultra-long bonds is rare: In the aftermath of the Asian Financial Crisis in 1998, for example, the government issued special debt to replenish capital for major state-owned banks. The most recent sale was in 2020, when authorities issued 1 trillion yuan worth of those bonds to pay for pandemic response measures. The new round of stimulus is good news for a global economy that has been struggling with lagging growth as China’s economy has slowed. But the plan is bad news for anyone worried about the deep structural problems facing China’s economy.

Hertz pulls the plug on electric cars–especially Tesla

Hertz pulls the plug on electric cars–especially Tesla

Hertz (HTZ) plans to sell a third of its U.S. electric vehicle fleet and reinvest in gas-powered cars. The company says the shift is due to weak demand and high repair costs for its electric vehicle fleet. Which is dominated by Telsa’s electric vehicles. Electric vehicles make up about 11% of the Hertz fleet and 80% of those electric vehicles are Tesla. The news certainly isn’t a plus for electric cars and electric car makers. But I think it’s also important not to forget that Hertz is struggling to show improvements to its bottom line. Tesla’s price cuts–and their effect the resale value of the Hertz fleet–may have more to do with this abrupt about face than weak demand and higher repair costs.

Special Report: 10 Great Growth Stocks that Are Getting Greater–today my 10th (and final) pick QCOM

Special Report: 10 Great Growth Stocks that Are Getting Greater–today my 10th (and final) pick QCOM

GREATER Growth Stock Pick #10: Qualcomm (QCOM). I think the market and the current stock price are missing a good prt of the growth story for Qualcomm. Which is why I find the stock undervalued enough to buy here. Right now the market disagrees. However, I’ll be adding the stock to my Jubak Picks and Volatility Portfolios on Tuesday, January 16.

Nothing exceeds like excess–too much of a good thing for bond prices

Is the debt market ignoring the coming wave of bond supply?

Right now all that the bond market and indeed all the financial markets care about is when will the Federal Reserve begin to cut interest rates. The consensus is that sometime relatively soon–March or more likely June–the Fed will begin to deliver interest rate cuts that will total somewhere around 100 basis points (at least) for 2024. But what if the Federal Reserve and other central banks around the world really aren’t in control of interest rates in the bond market anymore?

Earnings season starts–Part 1 banks to disappoint

Earnings season starts–Part 1 banks to disappoint

Earnings season for the fourth quarter of 2023 begins on Friday, January 12 with reports from the big banks JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Wells Fargo (WFC), Citigroup (C), and Bank of America (BAC). Which means that earnings season is going start off with a dull thud. More than 70% of the Standard & Poor’s 500 companies that are scheduled to report earnings for the fourth quarter over the next few weeks are banks and the banking segment of the the financial sector in the index is projected by Wall Street analysts to show a 21% year over year decline in earnings