January 14, 2025

What You Need to Know Today:

With stocks looking stalled, Nvidia reports after the close on Wednesday

NVIDIA (NVDA) will release its third quarter results after the market closes on Wednesday. Analysts are forecasting over 80% year over year growth in both revenue and EPS. Several Wall Street firms have raised their price targets on Nvidia ahead of its earnings report, citing strong demand for AI chips and the potential for upside surprises. Analysts from HSBC, Oppenheimer, Susquehanna, Wedbush, Raymond James, and Mizuho have increased their price targets, with HSBC setting the highest at $200. The stock closed at $140.15 on Monday, November 18. On the other hand…

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A 50 basis point interest rate cut from the Fed in September? I don’t think so

A 50 basis point interest rate cut from the Fed in September? I don’t think so

Briefly on Monday’s scary stock market volatility, traders and investors decided that the Federal Reserve would make its first interest rate cut at its September 18 meeting not a “business-as-usual” 25 basis points but a “market emergency” 50 basis points. On the CME FedWatch tool the odds of a 50 basis point cut jumped to 85% from just 13.2% on July 30

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Japan taketh away and Japan giveth–today’s rally in Tokyo wipes out most of yesterday’s loss

Japan taketh away and Japan giveth–today’s rally in Tokyo wipes out most of yesterday’s loss

Today, Tuesday August 6, the Nikkei 225 index closed up 10.23% in Tokyo. That erased most of Mondyay’s 12% loss. And it led to the U.S. futures market opening higher and U.S. stock indexes moving up today. At the close in New York, the Standard & Poor’s 500 was ahead by 1.03%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was higher by 0.76%. The NASDAQ Composite had gained 1.03% and the small cap Russell 2000 had added 1.23%.The volatility eertainly isn’t over but today the market is following the usual patterns–with buying on the drop emerging after a big sell off–and that’s a big relief after the panic-inducing movement of the last three sessions. Those on Wall Street trying to figure out where we are in the unwinding of the yen/dollar carry trade that has lent so much intensity of the drop ay that the selling of dollar assets to buy ten isn’t over. Which makes sense.

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Could the stock correction be all about Japan? And close to an end?

Could the stock correction be all about Japan? And close to an end?

Okay, the correction in the NASDAQ and the near correction in the Standard & Poor’s 500 isn’t all about Japan. U.S. stock valuations are stretched. Air is coming out of the AI bubble. The U.S. economy is slowing But to me those factors don’t explain the stunning rapidity of this drop. Nor why the biggest damage to any global market is taking place in Tokyo. To me this event has all the hallmarks of a move that has more to do with the unwinding of massive speculative trades than with anything we might label “fundamentals” or “macro economics.”Edward Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research and one of the smartest long-time observers of the financial markets I follow, points his finger at Japan and the surprise interest rate increase from the Bank of Japan that has led to a rapid unwinding of the speculative dollar/yen carry trade.

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Saturday Night Quarterback says (on aMonday morning), for the weeks ahead expect…

Saturday Night Quarterback says (on aMonday morning), for the weeks ahead expect…

Yeah, I know you can read a calendar, but take a moment to think about how the extraordinary August economic news vacuum feeds into the current market plunge. No Federal Reserve meeting in August so no interest rate cut until September 18. Which also means no new economic projections from the Fed on GDP growth or the likelihood of recession. No Fed Speak at all, really, with reassurance that the economy is slowing but not headed for recession, until the August 22-24 central bank gab fest in Jackson Hole. No significant earnings news–big enough to affect sentiment at least–until Nvidia’s (NVDA) earnings on August 28.

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Weak July jobs report, tick up in unemployment rate send stocks tumbling on recession fears

Weak July jobs report, tick up in unemployment rate send stocks tumbling on recession fears

The U.S.economy added only 114,000 jobs in July. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had projected an increase of 175,000 jobs in the month. The unemployment rate unexpectedly climbed by 0.2 percentage points to 4.3% in July, exceeding all 69 estimates by economists. Average hourly earnings rose 0.2% on a monthly basis, also less than forecast, and on an annual rate increased by 3.6%–the least since May 2021. The jump in the unemployment rate triggered the Sahm Rule. Coined by former Federal Reserve economist Claudia Sahm, the rule says that when the average jobless rate over three months is 0.5 percentage point above the 12-month low, a recession is coming. And that’s exactly where we are now. “We’re not headed in a good direction,” Sahm said on Bloomberg Radio Friday. It’s fair to say the stocks weren’t happy on Friday.

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Special Report: 10 Great Growth Stocks that Are Getting Greater–today my 6th pick Danaher

Special Report: 10 Great Growth Stocks that Are Getting Greater–today my 6th pick Danaher

GREATER Growth Stock Pick #6: Danaher (DHR). Danaher is a smart (that’s key) serial acquirer–and asset divester–in the life sciences space. And that makes this stock very interesting in an environment where small, young life sciences companies might be looking for help/rescue/acquisition because they can’t raise capital in a tough part of the credit cycle. I like Danaher now, as well, because the stock looks to have just about completed its re-rating after a spike in sales during the Covid pandemic led to over enthusiasm about the stock.

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Live Market Report (20 minute delay)

Special Report: My 5 Favorite Shorts for This Market–Short #4 Retail stocks using a Put Option on the XLY ETF (1 more Short Pick to come)

Special Report: My 5 Favorite Shorts for This Market–Short #4 Retail stocks using a Put Option on the XLY ETF (1 more Short Pick to come)

Investors and the market indexes remain convinced that the economy will dodge a recession, even if only narrowly. Retail companies, however, aren’t nearly so sure. In the last two days, both Home Depot (HD) and Target (TGT) have cut guidance for the quarter(s) ahead. Consumers, they say, are hesitant to take a trip down the aisle devoted t discretionary goods such as furniture and apparel. With the New York Federal Reserve reporting that consumers look increasingly stretched on their credit card balances, I don’t see that reluctance ending soon. So even if the economy as a whole dodges a recession, I think the shares of companies in the consumer discretionary sector are likely to report their own sector-specific recession or the next quarter or two.

Today Target echoes yesterday’s caution from Home Depot on consumer spending

Today Target echoes yesterday’s caution from Home Depot on consumer spending

Target (TGT) easily beat Wall Street earnings projections for the company’s fiscal first quarter with a report yesterday May 16 after the close with a report of $2.05 a share. Analysts were looking for $1.80 a share. Earnings were down, however, 6.2% year-over-year. But like Home Depot yesterday, Target warned that consumers are hesitant to make discretionary purchases.

Retail sales grow in April–but not by as much as expected; Home Depot cuts guidance

Retail sales grow in April–but not by as much as expected; Home Depot cuts guidance

U.S. retail sales increased in April by 0.4% from March levels. Retail sales figures for March were revised upwards to show a 0.7% decrease. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had expected a 0.8% increase for the month. (I would note that retail sales numbers are not adjusted for inflation, so real, that is, inflation-adjusted, retail sales for April were essentially flat since the all-items Consumer Price Index rose 0.4% in April.) Still, the increase in nominal retail sales was the first in three months after the 0.7% drop in March and February. Today’s report does re-enforce one troubling trend in consumer spending.

Consumer credit showing signs of stress

Consumer credit showing signs of stress

The typical pattern is for households to run up credit card balances for holiday shopping and then for consumers to pay down credit card balances in the first quarter. That’s what happens in a healthy economy where consumers are living within their means and aren’t seeing family budgets stretched by high inflation. But that isn’t what happened in the first quarter of 2023. For the first time in 20 years, consumers added to their debt loads in the first quarter rather than paying down some of their fourth-quarter spending.

Special Report: My 5 Favorite Shorts for This Market–Short #3 Go Long Gold to short this market, of course, but gold miners or gold itself (2 more Short Picks to come)

Special Report: My 5 Favorite Shorts for This Market–Short #3 Go Long Gold to short this market, of course, but gold miners or gold itself (2 more Short Picks to come)

Want to short this market and a world full of risk? The choice is gold, of course. And the only question is whether to use the precious metal itself or shares of a gold miner. Here’s the basic case for gold now. The trend is extremely positive for gold under almost all scenarios. Which is why I’m making gold my #3 Short Pick in my Special Report: My 5 Favorite Shorts for This Market

Watch My New YouTube Video: Trend of the Week Credit Squeeze

Watch My New YouTube Video: Trend of the Week Credit Squeeze

This week’s Trend of the Week is Credit Squeeze. SLOOS (Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey), a Fed survey, asks bank lending officers what they’re seeing in the credit market for commercial industrial loans. In the most recent survey, 46% of these officers report that their banks are making it harder to get loans. This is a textbook example of Hyman Minsky’s credit cycle. After a period of booming lending, the credit cycle returns to a period of tightening credit, often coinciding with eye-opening events like the Silicon Valley Bank failure, and a slowing down of the economy overall. The SLOOS report also showed a 56% drop in demand for commercial loans in the first quarter–an indicator that companies are aware that loans are harder to come by. Companies are having real trouble raising capital which is resulting in merger and/or acquisition deals for early-stage companies and employee layoffs as CEOs and CFOs attempt to hoard cash. The signs are that the Fed is taking notice of this contraction in the credit market and is starting to factor it into rate hike decisions. The Fed may decide it doesn’t need as many interest rate increases as it originally thought if the supply of credit is shrinking quiickly.

Is China’s growth rate falling already?

Is China’s growth rate falling already?

Tuesday’s release of new economic data from China for April is expected to show rapid year-over-year growth as China’s economy recovers from its Covid-19 shutdown. For example, economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect industrial output to jumped 10.8% in April year-over-year. That would be much stronger than March’s 3.9% year-over-year growth rate. But the month-to-month growth rate is likely to show a much different picture. Economists at Goldman Sachs. for example, project that industrial production declined 1.3% in April from March

Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…

Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…

If you believe in the gods of the financial marketplace, it looks like they’ve arranged things so that investors and traders have the maximum opportunity to worry about the dangers of a U.S. default.

I’m actually somewhat more optimistic today, Saturday, May 13, than I was on Friday that Congress will pass a debt ceiling bill before the United States goes into default.. The decision to postpone talks between President Joe Biden and congressional leaders scheduled for Friday to next week actually strikes me as good news. It’s a sign that the staffs of the two sides are talking in an attempt to brainstorm a solution. And staffers are more likely than the politician themselves to come up with a pragmatic, cynical, short-term solution. I think we’re still in for two or three weeks of on-the-brink news and market volatility, but I think the odds are good that a short-term solution will emerge before we’re too far into June.
The “solution” will amount to kicking the problem down the road

The regional banking crisis isn’t over–it’s just getting more selective (maybe)

The regional banking crisis isn’t over–it’s just getting more selective (maybe)

Shares of California regional bank PacWest (PACW) closed down another 22.7% today, May 11 after the bank disclosed it lost 9.5% of deposits last week. That took down many regional banking peers. For example, Zions Bancorporation (ZION) finished the day down 4.51% and Comerica (CMA) was lower by 6.76%. The SDPR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE) was down 2.48%.
But not all regional banks fell.

Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick Albemarle

Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick Albemarle

Today’s Quick Pick is Albemarle Corporation (NYSE: ALB), a lithium producer. Lithium demand continues to rise with electric vehicles and rechargeable batteries finding expanding and new markets. Lithium producers have had a difficult time meeting demand–and projections say the demand gap is going to expand– and the price of Lithium has shot up. However, Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile (NYSE: SQM), and Albemarle Corporation (NYSE: ALB), two Chilean lithium producers, took a hit recently due to political risks. Chile’s president, Gabriel Boric announced a plan on April 22 to nationalize the country’s lithium resources, sending the lithium stocks plunging. However, investors may have overlooked some key points in the announcement: the country will honor existing leases (SQM’s leases expire in 2030, and Albemarle’s leases expire in 2043) and this plan still has to be passed by the Chilean legislature. Recent votes have favored the right in Chile and Boric’s party may not have the votes (or inclination) in the current legislature to pass this proposal. A right-wing government would likely be unhappy with the idea of nationalizing a previously private sector. (Chile’s lithium resources already belong to the state with these companies holding time-limited production leases.) Right now, with Albemarle’s longer lease and changing Chilean politics, this is a good time to get in on Albemarle and its expanding lithium production from mines in Australia and the United States. (Only 30% of its revenue comes from Chile.)

The problem with Goldilocks (if you’re an investor or trader)

The problem with Goldilocks (if you’re an investor or trader)

The Producer Price Index rose 0.25% in April from March and at a 2.3% rate year-over-year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today, May 11. This index measures prices at the wholesale level–changes at that level eventually show up in the prices that consumers pay so they’re an indicator of the direction of future consumer inflation. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected producer prices to rise 0.3% in April on a monthly basis and 2.5% on a yearly basis. In March, producer prices slipped 0.5% on a monthly basis and rose 2.7% on a yearly basis. The annual 2.5% rate is the lowest annual increase in producer inflation in more than two years. So in these numbers, we’ve got clear evidence that inflation is falling. But, also this morning, initial claims for unemployment for the week ending May 6 rose 22,000 to a seasonally adjusted 264,000 claims. That was above expectations from economists surveyed by Reuters for 245,000 initial claims for unemployment. The number of workers filing new claims for unemployment hit a 1-1/2-year high.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Lots of Volatility But It’s Not Tradeable

Today’s topic is Lots of Volatility – But It’s Not Tradeable. The market has not been responding as expected to recent events. On Friday, May 5, a combination of a chaotic market, a banking crisis, and job numbers that were much higher than expected, resulted in a completely unexpected market reaction. On previous behavior, these higher job numbers would have led to a conclusion that the Fed would continue to raise rates. Stocks would have tumbled. But Friday this time, we got a big rally in the news in the report. The market is vacillating between belief in a recession with banks failing, and belief in a strong job market where the Fed continues to raise rates. That’s created a scenario of wild swings, driven more, I’d argue, by where prices have been recently than by any trend in the news. You can see this in the VIX. The “fear index” rise as banks struggled but the jobs report said that it was alright to bid bank stocks (and the market in general) higher on the day even if the regional banking crisis is a long way from over. I’d prefer to trade volatility when “all” it requires is getting the direction of the news correct. Bu,t the current market requires getting both the trend in th news and the markrt’s reaction to that trend right in order to make a profit. That’s harder than I’d like and it seems prudent to wait for more predictable (and tradeable) volatility.

April CPI inflation report doesn’t settle anything about Fed rates or rate cuts

April CPI inflation report doesn’t settle anything about Fed rates or rate cuts

CPI inflation ticked lower in April with the all-items (headline) inflation rate nudging down to a year-over-year 4.9%. The core rate, which excludes food and energy prices, also slipped lower to a year-over-year 5.5% from a 5.6% rate in March. On a month-to-month basis all-items inflation rose by 0.4% in April from March after a 0.1% gain in March. The core rate rose 0.4% in April after rising 0.4% in March. If you were looking to have this morning’s inflation report settle the argument on when the Federal Reserve would pause its interest rate hikes, this report didn’t deliver. The most likely Fed reaction to this data would be a pause at the June 14 meeting that left the Fed’s benchmark short-term interest rate at the current 5% to 5.25% range. The CME Fed Watch Tool, which tracks prices in the Fed Funds Futures market, calculates that market participants believe that the Fed will hold rates steady at that meeting. Odds are 93.9% on the Fed Watch Tool in favor of no change in rates at the June 14 meeting. I can see the logic of that.

“Smart” money begins to question the speed of Fed interest rate cuts

“Smart” money begins to question the speed of Fed interest rate cuts

There’s always the question of exactly how smart the smart money is, but I find these moves from big Wall Street names interesting as I look for any signs of cracks in the current consensus looking for a quick pivot to interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve. Strategists at Goldman Sachs have joined those at Barclays in advising customers that the Federal Reserve will be less aggressive in cutting interest rates this year than markets are predicting, Bloomberg reported today, May 9.

Don’t forget tomorrow’s CPI inflation report

Don’t forget tomorrow’s CPI inflation report

Tomorrow, May 10, brings the key CPI inflation report for April. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg are projecting that headline inflation will rise at a 5% year-over-year rate. That would match the 5% headline rate for the Consumer Price Index in March. The headline rate would remain so elevated because of a rise in oil prices in April after OPEC+ announced a drop in crude production. Month-to-month headline CPI inflation is expected to have climbed by 0.4% in April after a 0.1% month-to-month increase in March. The Federal Reserve watches the core rate, which strips out the costs of food and energy. Here too economists are not expecting a significant drop in inflation. Core inflation is projected to have climbed at a 5.5% rate against the 54.6% rate projected in March.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Trend of the Week Where Is All That Oil Cash Going to Go?

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Trend of the Week Where Is All That Oil Cash Going to Go?

This week’s Trend of the Week is Where is All That Oil Cash Going to Go? The likely answer: the Permian Basin and acquisitions. Oil companies like Exxon Mobil (XOM) are putting so much cash into the bank, they don’t know what to do with it. Exxon Mobil had $32.7 billion in cash in the bank. With little debt, and plenty left over after capital spending, dividends, and buybacks, the company is left with a tremendous amount of cash. Historically, extra cash could be used in oil exploration, which could take 5-15 years. In a global warming economy, that doesn’t make sense since we don’t know where oil prices and demand will be in the years ahead. The better option is acquisitions. One of the companies Exxon is rumored to be targeting is Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD) for their assets in the Permian Basin. Chevron (CVX) is in a similar position as Exxon and you can expect them to be in the market for Permian companies as well. Other Permian Basin companies that are ripe for being acquired are Devon Energy (DVN) and Diamondback Energy (FANG). I already have PXD and DVN in a portfolio in my JubakPicks Portfolio, and I’ll now be adding FANG as well.

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Monday)says, For the week ahead expect…

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.

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