Morning Briefing

Sunday’s surprise OPEC+ sends oil and oil stocks higher Monday (with slight retreat today)

Sunday’s surprise OPEC+ sends oil and oil stocks higher Monday (with slight retreat today)

Today the prices of oil and oil stocks have soared. At 11:20 a.m. New York time U.S. crude benchmark West Texas Intermediate was up 5.37% to $79.73 a barrel. International benchmark Brent crude was higher by 5.24% to $84.08 a barrel. Among oil stocks, Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD) was up 3.53%; ExxonMobil (XOM ) was up 5.48%; Chevron (CVX) was up 3.73%; Equinor (EQNR) was up 5.91%; and ConocoPhillips (COP) was up 7.79% The U.S. Oil Fund (USO) was higher by 5.40%.

Housing contracts rose in February; market says “maybe” a housing bottom

Housing contracts rose in February; market says “maybe” a housing bottom

Contracts to buy U.S. previously owned homes increased for a third straight month in February. On Wednesday, the National Association of Realtors said its Pending Home Sales Index, which measures signed contracts, rose 0.8% last month to the highest level since August. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast contracts, which become sales after a month or two, would fall 2.3%.

More economists worry about Friday’s PCE inflation report

More economists worry about Friday’s PCE inflation report

Now it’s not just the Cleveland Fed’s NowCast that’s pointing at problems in Friday’s PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures) index inflation report. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg project that the core PCE index–that is excluding food and fuel prices–climbed 0.4% in March from February. Year over year, the core PCE index is projected to be up 4.7% with the all-items rate up 5.1%.

Oil rallies, finally

Oil rallies, finally

Oil rallied today, Monday, March 27, for the first time in, well, quite a while. Oil is likely to finish with a loss in March, for a fifth monthly drop. So today’s move, which saw West Texas Intermediate jump by almost 55, marked quite a shift in direction.

The Search for the Next Shoe to Drop in the Bank Crisis Goes On: What About Commercial Real Estate?

The Search for the Next Shoe to Drop in the Bank Crisis Goes On: What About Commercial Real Estate?

Officials from the White House, the Treasury Department, and the Federal Reserve, are huddling over risks to the banking systems from the $20 trillion market for commercial real estate. Analysts told the Washington Post that this market could be heading for a crash over the next two years thanks to higher interest rates and continued softness in demand after Covid shutdowns. One reason that this market is getting extra attention is that regional banks, already under pressure from problems at Signature and First Republic banks, play a big role in this market for loans to commercial real estate.

Goldilocks fails to capture the Federal Reserve (sort of)

Goldilocks fails to capture the Federal Reserve (sort of)

Goldilocks is just about the only thing keeping the current stock market afloat in the face of a storm of worry from a banking crisis, to stubbornly high inflation, and signs of a cooling economy. The Goldilocks story says, Don’t worry about all that. The Federal Reserve is about to pivot on interest rates. At its May 3 meeting, the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee might raise interest rates by 25 basis points but that will be the last interest rate increase. And then the Fed will move to start cutting interest rates in the second half of the year with financial markets pricing in as much as 200 basis points of cuts by the end of 2024. And all this will happen, too, without a recession, as the Fed engineers a successful soft landing of the economy and a significant slowdown in inflation.
If you believe that, you should be buying stocks. I don’t believe it. And more importantly, the bond market doesn’t believe it.

Ahead of the Fed’s decision on interest rates, the signs are that banks are pulling back on lending because of the banking crisis

Ahead of the Fed’s decision on interest rates, the signs are that banks are pulling back on lending because of the banking crisis

Ahead of the Federal Reserve’s decision on interest rates today, banks look like they’ve cut back on lending as a result of the Silicon Valley Bank/Signature Bank/ etc. crisis. And economists are reminding us all, that a reduction in bank lending because of fear of a banking crisis is just as much a tightening of the money supply as higher interest rates from the Fed.

It’s my VIX Call Options trade all over again–almost

It’s my VIX Call Options trade all over again–almost

On March 6, I bought the May 17 Call Options with a strike of 23 on the CBOE S&P 500 Volatility Index (the VIX) when the index traded at 18.61. I figured that the “Fear Index” was so low that it wouldn’t take much to push it and these options higher. A week later the options were up 116% after the VIX climbed to 26.52. Historically, that isn’t a very high reading for the VIX, which can easily hit 35 to 45 when fear engulfs the market. I’m still holding my June 21 Call Options with a strike of $23. But I’ve been looking for a chance to replay that earlier trade. Somehow (LOL) I don’t think this market is done with volatility.