November 14, 2024
What You Need to Know Today:
Retail sales stronger than expected in September
U.S. retail sales strengthened in September by more than forecast. The U.S. economy continues to show solid growth. And the economic strength continues to say that there’s less need for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates by a larger-than-usual 50 basis points at its November 7 meeting. The value of retail purchases, unadjusted for inflation, increased 0.4% in the month after a 0.1% gain in August, the Commerce Department reported today. Excluding autos and gasoline sales, retail sales climbed 0.7%.
JOLTS survey shows job openings drop to lower level since 2021
U.S. job openings fell in July to the lowest since the start of 2021 and layoffs rose, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS).
August deja vu? Bank of Japan says it will raise rates; U.S. stocks tumble
Coincidence? On Tuesday September 3 Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda reiterated that the central bank will continue to raise interest rates if inflation continues in Japan. And on Tuesday U.S. stocks plunged. Sure seems like a replay of the August rout when U.S. markets fell as the Bank od Japan raised interest rates, the yen gained, and traders looked to close speculative yen carry trade bets by selling dollar-denominated assets in order to pay back yen loans that threatened to get more expensive with a rising Japanese currency.
Nvidia drops another 9.5% on the day
Yesterday the DOJ sent subpoenas to Nvidia Corp. and other companies seeking evidence that the chipmaker violated antitrust laws. The DOJ, which had previously delivered questionnaires to companies, is now sending legally binding subpoenas that require recipients to provide information. That takes the government a step closer to launching a formal complaint.
Saturday Night Quarterbacks says (on Labor Day), For the week ahead expect…
the next big jobs report, the Employment Situation from the Bureau of Labor Statistics for August will hit the wires before the stock market opens on Friday, September 6.
Has the 100% certainty among investors and traders that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates at its September 18 meeting drained all of the drama out of the August jobs report?
The last inflation report before the Fed meets leaves a September rate cut locked in
Today August 30 the Personal Consumption Expenditures index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation, showed core prices rose by just 0.2% in June. On a three-month annualized basis, core inflation, which doesn’t include volatile food and energy prices, climbed at a 1.7% rate, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported. That’s the slowest rate of increase this year.
Special Report It’s a New World for Dividend Income Investors Pick #5 Visa
Bookkeeping. I added Visa as Pick #5 for my New World of Dividend Investors Special Report (You can find it in the Special Report section of this site along with all the content on this market and its trends for Dividend Income investors. But I’m reposting it as a stand alone pick so no one misses it.
Live Market Report (20 minute delay)
Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…
It’s a Federal Reserve meeting week, but I expect Apple’s (AAPL) earnings report for its December quarter to be the big event of the week. With the potential to move the tech sector and the market.
Visa beats but falls on guidance–that’s what “priced for perfection” means
After the close yesterday, Visa (V) reported earnings of $2.41 a share (after adjusting for one-time items) for the December 2023 quarter. (That the company’s fiscal first quarter.) Analysts had been looking for $2.34 a share in adjusted earnings. Revenue grew 8.8% to $8.63 billion, again beating analyst forecasts for $8.55 billion in revenue. Visa said payments volume grew 8%, and that its processed transactions rose 9% in the period. And yet the stock was down $4.70 a share, or 1.72%, to $267.91 at the close today, Friday, January 26. Why?
Special Report: My 10 Picks for how to invest in climate change NOW–3 first 3 picks, LAZR, PLBF and GWH
Here’s how I characterize developments in the global climate crisis in 2023: It was the year when hot air confronted cold cash. And as you might expect cold cash won.
Which gives me the framework for how to invest in the global climate crisis over the next 12 to 24 months. I’m going to use natural gas to develop my investing paradigm. And then I’m going to give you four sectors in which to concentrate your investments. And 10 specific picks for your money. I expect that I’ll be revisiting the topic of how to invest in the global climate crisis again before too long–because I think today’s paradigm will need substantial revision not all that far down the road.
In Part 1 today, I’m going to develop that paradigm. In Part 2 I’m going to tell you why I think nuclear energy, utility scale battery storage, wind and solar are the sectors that deserve your investment cash and attention (and why electric vehicles don’t make the cut now.) In Part 3, I’ll give you the ten stocks and ETFs I’d pick for these four sectors.
Please watch my new YouTube video: Too Far, Too Fast
Today’s video is Too Far, Too Fast. Yesterday, on January 24, the market hit Wall Street’s consensus 2024 target for the end of 2024. Yep, a bit early. The consensus target for the end of the year 2024 close is an average of 4867 and yesterday the S&P closed at 4868. The median target is 4950, and the high end forecast is around 5200–only 350 points from where we are. We’re still awaiting confirmation that the Fed will cut rates and when that happens (likely in June or July–not March), more money will come into the market. This mid-year injection of money is good, but how much of a reward is there in a market that may have already reached its target for 11 months from now? At this point, investors are chasing momentum in an attempt to make up for missing the mark in 2023. That leaves the market risky at the moment. There’s not a whole lot of reward in a market that moves sideways with very few big moves on the up side. We may very well finish the year flat from these levels.
U.S. GDP rose at a stronger than expected 3.3% rate in the fourth quarter
U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew at an annual 3.3% rate in the fourth quarter, the Commerce Department announced today. That was down from the 4.9% annual growth rate in the third quarter, but substantially above the 2.0% rate expected by economists. For the full year, the US.economy expend at a 3.1% rate.
ASML–and chip stocks in general–soar on equipment-maker’s big growth numbers
Shares of ASML Holding (ASML) closed up 8.85% today after the company reported record orders for its chip-making equipment in the fourth quarter. ASML sales grew 12.5% year-over-year. And orders more than tripled from the third-quarter. I added shares of ASML Holding to my long-term 50 Stocks Portfolio on December 12, 2023. The position is up 17.6% since then as of the close on January 24.
Tesla misses on earnings but that’s not the worst news in today’s report
Today, after the market close, Tesla (TSLA) reported fourth-quarter earnings of 71 cents a share. The missed the consensus Wall Street forecast of 73 cents. Sales of $25.2 billion missed forecasts for $25.6 billion. But I’d argue that the earnings and sales misses weren’t the worst news in the report.
3M plunges as company delivers exactly the kind of bad earnings news investors fear
3M (MMM) fell 11.03% today, Tuesday, January 23, the most in nearly five years, after announcing projections for 2024 sales and earnings below Wall Street expectations. Now granted that 3M is a special case–the company is engaged in a huge restructuring effort that has met with a high degree of investor skepticism. In short, investors doubt that the company can pull it off without cutting its dividend. So the stock is especially sensitive to any news that suggest that the restructuring is failing. But the stock’s big drop today is also an indication of how worried this market, trading at record highs, is about the possibility that earnings growth for the fourth quarter, the subject of the current earnings season, won’t support prices at these levels.
Xi’s plan for stimulus and stock market boost fails to convince China traders
China will launch a new stabilization package including about 2 trillion yuan ($278 billion) to buy mainland shares via offshore trading links in the coming days, government sources say. This would come after a market rout that has erased more than $6 trillion in market value from mainland China and Hong Kong stocks since a peak reached in 2021. And certainly China’s stocks rallied on the news. The NASDAQ Golden Dragon Index of Chinese stocks traded in the United States closed up 4.84% today, Tuesday, January 23. But considering the extent of the losses and its duration, I’d count a less than 5% gain–especially since the index was up by more than 6% earlier in the day.
Please watch my new YouTube video: Trend of the Week Auto Semiconductors
Today's Trend of the Week is Auto Semiconductors. One of the biggest trends coming out of the Consumer Electronics Show this year was new technology for automobiles, including chips for automatic driving, entertainment, and advanced AI. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)...
More fuel for this rally in Friday’s consumer sentiment news
On Friday the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index reported a rise of 9.1 points, the biggest monthly advance since 2005, to 78.8. The preliminary January reading stands at the highest level since July 2021. Consumer sentiment jumped 13% in January to its highest level since mid-2021. Since November, consumer sentiment has risen 29%, marking the largest two-month increase in more than 30 years. And that was just the top line in a report with lots of good news for stocks and the current rally.
Please watch my new YouTube video: Quick Pick Merck
Today’s stock pick of the week is Merck, (MRK). Merck’s “problem” is that one of its biggest revenue streams comes from Keytruda, an oncology drug that will be going off-patent in 2028. In 2023, Merck projected new oncology drugs would bring in an additional $10 billion to replace Keytruda’s revenue. At this year’s JPMorgan healthcare conference, the company’s projection was even higher at $20 billion by the 2030s.
Will the Magnificent Seven stocks let the market down?
The Magnificent Seven stocks accounted for virtually all of 2023’s 24% stock market gain. The Magnificent Seven stocks are Alphabet (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), Apple (AAPL), Meta Platforms (META), Microsoft (MSFT), Nvidia (NVDA), and Tesla (TSLA). And according to Wall Street analysts these stocks are set to do it again when they report fourth quarter earnings beginning this week (on Wednesday, Jonuary 24, with Tesla and continuing into the following week.The Magnificent Seven are expected to deliver combined earnings growth of about 46%, according to data from Bloomberg. That’s down slightly from the third quarter’s 53% expansion, but it still dwarfs almost all of the main sectors in the S&P 500 Index. It’s not surprising, therefore, that the long Magnificent Seven (and other tech stocks) is the most common trade in the current market. Nor that the options market is pricing in “virtually no risk” for mega-cap stocks, Brian Donlin, head of equity derivatives strategy at Stifel Nicolaus, told Bloomberg. All of which makes the recent weakness in some of the Mgnificent Seven stocks a bit worrying. Apple and Tesla are most likely to deliver disappointing numbers.
Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…
On Thursday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis will deliver the initial reading on fourth quarter GDP. Economists project that the report will show the economy grew at an annualized 2% rate. That would be down from the 4.9% in the third quarter (however, no one expected a repeat of the annual rate) but together the two quarters would be the strongest back-to-back quarters for growth since 2021. A day later the Federal Reserve’s favorite inflation gage, the Personal Consumption Expenditures index, is expected to show a continued decline in inflation to annualized rate of 3% in December. This would be an 11th straight month of declining inflation.
China’s stocks set another kind of record (to the downside)
In a week where the U.S. Standard & Poor’s 500 and NASDAQ Composite and NASDAQ 100 set new record highs, China’s stock market turned in another big move to the downside. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index has already lost 11% in 2024. That comes after a record four-year losing streak and the slump this year has just reinforced the opinion among money managers that “China is uninvestable now.” The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index slipped was down by as much as 2.2% at the start of US trading Friday, extending losses to a fifth consecutive day. The grim milestones keep accumulating.
Taiwan Semiconductor results set the chip sector on fire
Shares in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM) were up almost 10% yesterday after the company announced an unexpectedly strong return to growth. That has in turn pushed chip stocks higher across the sector. For example, shares of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), which were already moving higher this week ahead of the news, hit a new record high today. The good news from semiconductor companies and the moves on their stock have also rallied the general market.
Congress kicks the government shutdown deadline to March
Today, January 18, with plenty of time to beat the January 19 deadline for funding the government or shutting it down, Congress passed yet another temporary spending bill. The interim measure would fund some agencies-—set to run out of money after Friday–through March 1 and others through March 8.
Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick Visa (V)
Today I posted my 319th YouTube video: Quick Pick Visa. And I’ll be adding the stock to another of my portfolios.
Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Exogenous Factors: Middle East and Taiwan
Today’s video is Exogenous Factors: Middle East and Taiwan. The market has been focused on earnings and the Fed as of late, but, there are a lot of big exogenous factors that should also be on the radar. Two of those factors are Taiwan and the Middle East.
Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Will We Have a Santa Claus Rally Hangover in January?
I’m back! It’s been a long hiatus since I moved to Venice in September (yes, Italy, and not California or Florida) but I’m back and I’ll be resuming my videos from here on out. Today’s video is: Will We Have a Santa Claus Rally Hangover in January?