May 8, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
The next potential BIG volatility day comes on Tuesday, May 9, when President Joe Biden is scheduled to meet with Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy will hold talks on raising the debt ceiling to avert a U.S. default. I don’t expect a breakthrough of any dimension. The politics say to me that both sides are dug in and that we’re still too far away–weeks perhaps–from the excrement hitting the propellers. The question for investors and traders is when the financial markets might start taking the prospects of a U.S. default seriously.
May 5, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
The U.S. economy added 253,000 jobs in April, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced today, Friday, May 5. The official unemployment rate dipped by 10 basis points to 3.4%. (The U-6 unemployment rate, which includes discouraged workers who have stopped looking for a job and workers with part-time jobs who would like full-time work, fell to 6.1% in April (before seasonal adjustments) from 6.8% in March.) Economists were looking for the economy to add just 180,000 jobs in the month. The number is a huge surge after a drop from 472,000 jobs added in January to a revised 165,000 in March.
May 4, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing, Short Term |
Initial claims for unemployment rose by the most in six weeks while continuing claims fell in the week ended April 29, the Labor Department reported this morning. Initial unemployment claims rose by 13,000 to 242,000. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg were looking for 240,000 initial claims. Continuing claims, which include people who have received unemployment benefits for a week or more and are a good indicator of how hard it is for people to find work after losing their jobs, fell by 38,000 to 1.81 million in the week ended April 22. That marked the biggest drop since July. If you think that a rise in unemployment and a weakening of the labor market is a good thing, as the Federal Reserve does, because it sets the stage for a decline in inflation, then today’s data had its negative aspects too. A separate report out today showed U.S. worker productivity declined in the first quarter by more than forecast and labor costs accelerated. That’s a strong argument for higher inflation.
May 3, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
Today, Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee raised the Fed’s benchmark rate by 25 basis points to a target range of 5%- to 5.25%. The interest rate increase was expected by just about everyone. At 1:50, 10 minutes before the Fed’s announcement, the Fed Funds Futures market had priced in 88.2% odds of a 25 basis point increase. The Fed’s statement omits prior language from the March meeting that said “some additional policy firming” may be warranted. Instead, the Fed said it will take into account various factors “in determining the extent to which additional policy firming may be appropriate.” In other words, rate increases or a pause will depend on the data.
May 2, 2023 | Daily JAM, KRE, Morning Briefing, Short Term, Volatility |
Yes, it’s a volatile market. Yesterday, May 1, the take from the Wall Street talking heads and JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon was that the banking crisis (or at least this stage of it, to be fair to Dimon) was over. Today, May 2, the fear is that the crisis isn’t over. Regional bank stocks have plunged again with Western Alliance Bancorporation (WAL), for example, down 17.12% for the day as of 3 p.m. New York time. The regional bank ETF, the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE) is down 6.61%. That all means that the August 18 Put Options with a strike price of $41 that I bought yesterday at $2.55 are selling at 3 p.m. today at $4.72. Counting a slight gain from yesterday’s action after the buy, these Puts are up 85% in a day. I’m taking that gain today and selling this position out of my Volatility Portfolio
April 28, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
The headline Personal Consumption Expenditures index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure, climbed at 4.2% in the year through March. That was a big drop from the 5.1% year-over-year rate in February. (Although, I’d note, economists were expecting this all items number to drop to 4% before the actual report.) But the core inflation rate, after stripping out more volatile food and fuel prices, hardly budged in March at 4.6% year-over-year from the 4.7% year-over-year rate in February. And it’s the core PCE inflation rate that carries the most weight with the Federal Reserve. In other words, inflation remains elevated and very, very sticky.
April 27, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
Gross domestic product rose at a 1.1% annualized rate in the first quarter of 2023, the Commerce Department reported this morning. Consumers, again, kept the economy going with s 3.7% increase in consumer spending. Business investment in equipment posted the biggest drop since the start of the pandemic and inventories subtracted 2.26 percentage points from GDP in the quarter, the biggest negative impact on GDP in two years. The GDP data showed services spending rose at a 2.3% annualized rate, led by health care and restaurants and hotels. Outlays on goods increased at a 6.5% rate, the most in nearly two years. The results put even more pressure on continued job growth and increases in wages to keep consumer spending growing.
The median projection in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 1.9% GDP growth rate in the quarter.
April 26, 2023 | Daily JAM, Jubak Picks, Morning Briefing, MSFT, Top 50 Stocks, Volatility |
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April 25, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
Global central banks injected $1 trillion into financial markets during the first quarter, according to calculations by Citigroup as they sought to limit the damage from a banking crisis that claimed Silicon Valley Bank and Credit Suisse. That cash injection was equivalent, Citigroup says, to a 50 basis point cut to global investment-grade risk premium. Which goes a way to explaining the huge risk-on rally in the first months of 2023. And now, Citigroup warns, central banks will be looking to claw back some of that cash.
April 24, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
Important observation out of Morningstar on Friday. While the Morningstar U.S. Market Index is up 15.4% from its bear-market low on October 14, the market is only 1.4% higher than it was at the end of November. AND in recent months, the stock market has been moving in tighter and tighter bands. So far in April, the Morningstar U.S. Market Index has only moved up 0.9%. That puts the month on track to show one of the flattest monthly returns since May 2022.
April 23, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing, Short Term |
The Bureau of Economic Analysis is scheduled to report the Personal Consumption Expenditures index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation, on April 28. But because the Fed’s pre-meeting quiet period stretches from April 22 to May 4, there won’t be any comments from Fed officials to spin the data for the financial markets. That could be, well, awkward, since it will leave Wall Street more in the dark than usual about what the inflation results mean. The PCE index is expected by economists surveyed by Bloomberg to have fallen in March to a 4.1% annual rate from the 5% reported for February. If the inflation numbers come in on expectations, investors and traders will be left wondering if the drop is enough to lead the Fed to stop its interest rate increases after a 25 basis point boost at the May 3 meeting.
April 21, 2023 | Daily JAM, Morning Briefing |
A big increase in provisions for bad credit card debt overshadowed beats on revenue and confirmed positive revenue guidance for 2023. The company reported earnings of $2.40 a share, below the consensus projection of $2.65.