March 10, 2025

What You Need to Know Today:

Consumer sentiment points to healthy spending; lower inflation fears

Consumer sentiment points to healthy spending; lower inflation fears

U.S. consumer sentiment rose to a four-month high in early September. The sentiment index from the University of Michigan increased to 69 from August’s 67.9, preliminary figures showed Friday. The median estimate in Bloomberg’s survey of economists called for a reading of 68.5. The biggest contributors to the improved sentiment reading were the tamest short-term inflation expectations since the end of 2020 and anticipation of a drop in borrowing costs as the Federal Reserve begins to cut interest rates.

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Lithium stocks jump on reports of possible cut in Chinese supply

Lithium stocks jump on reports of possible cut in Chinese supply

In a report today, September 11, analysts at UBS reported the potential suspension by Chinese electric vehicle battery maker Contemporary Amperex Technology (CATL) of production at its massive lepidolite lithium mine in eastern China. The suspension would amount to an 8%, or roughly 5,000-6,000 metric tons, reduction of China’s monthly lithium carbonate equivalent production. And lithium stocks, depressed by low prices as a result of oversupply in the lithium market, were off to he races today.

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Even long-term China bulls are throwing in the towel on Chinese stocks

Even long-term China bulls are throwing in the towel on Chinese stocks

With Chinese stocks looking at an unprecedented fourth consecutive losing year, even some of Wall Street’s most conspicuous China bulls are throwing in the towel.

Over the past two weeks, long-standing China bulls UBS Global Wealth Management, Nomura Holdings, and JPMorgan Chase have all downgraded the country’s stocks. And there’s a growing consensus that China will fail to meet its economic growth target of around 5% this year. The money NOT flowing into China has made this a good year for stocks in India, Japan, and Taiwan.

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Live Market Report (20 minute delay)

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.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Trend of the Week Is a Minsky Moment Ahead?

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Trend of the Week Is a Minsky Moment Ahead?

This week’s Trend of the Week is Minsky Moment Ahead? Hyman Minsky was an economist who studied credit cycles. Minsky died in 1995, but in 1998, during the Russian Ruble and Asian Currency Crises, economist Paul McCulley recognized the situation was one described by Hyman Minsky, and dubbed it a “Minsky Moment.” A credit cycle starts when credit is abundant and banks are lending generously and gradually taking bigger and bigger risks. Eventually, an event like the Silicon Valley Bank failure hammers the banks, causing them to pull back and tighten their lending to a greater degree than at the start of the cycle. It’s a classic case of locking the barn door after the horses have escaped. Once the crisis is in place banks tighten their lending standards and this causes a constriction of credit when the economy really needs credit–a Minsky Moment. Right now, there are a lot of contractionary forces at work in the economy, including the Fed’s raising of interest rates while selling off some of its balance sheet. The two areas that will likely be hit hardest by these contractions and the Minsky cycle are emerging markets, which are having trouble repaying debt from lenders such as China that are not willing to renegotiate, and the start-up market, where private companies are finding it harder to raise enough capital to keep their companies going. If you’re holding emerging markets stocks or new tech stocks with an eye to the future, make sure you’re comfortable with where they are presently, and watch that they’ve been able to secure the funding they need. Be careful out there.

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.

Venture capital financing dries up

Venture capital financing dries up

It’s not like it was easy to find venture capital financing before the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank. It’s just that now finding money to fund a startup or raising a round of follow-on financing has gone from difficult to almost impossible. In the last three months of 2022 venture capital funding fell by 61%, according to Pitchbook. Now many more venture capital investors are sitting on the sidelines.

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.

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick KBE Bank Stocks ETF

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick KBE Bank Stocks ETF

Today’s Quick Pick is SPDR S&P Bank ETF (NYSEARCA: KBE). I’m not suggesting buying this now: I’m suggesting you watch this and buy Put Options on this ETF when the time is right. The SPDR S&P ETF is approximately 80% regional banks. As you can imagine, it took a huge hit during the recent banking scare and would have been a great Put Option last week during the plunge in the sector. Options are a way to leverage the volatility of this market. The recent exit of my VIX Call Option resulted in a 100% gain in about a week. For KBE, I’d look at Put Options that climb in value as the price of the ETF sinks. At the time of recording, KBE was selling at about 37. I’m looking at the June 16 Put at a strike price o 38. At the moment, the Put is deeply underwater but I’ll continue to watch this rally to see when it’s worth it to jump in. At the moment, I suggest you watch this one: Don’t buy just yet but wait for the next shoe to fall in the banking crisis.

Please Watch My YouTube Video: Where is the Contagion?

Please Watch My YouTube Video: Where is the Contagion?

Today’s topic is Where is the Contagion? I’m not talking about viral diseases, I’m talking about financial market contagion. After the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and the subsequent shutdowns of Signature and Credit Suisse, investors are naturally asking, who’s next? What happens if this pops up in places we aren’t expecting? The problem is in the financial world, many financial companies and systems are connected. They can act as guarantors for one another, or have obligations to each other that see risk passing from one bank to another. All this creates opportunities for contagion to spread. One of these “contagions” to look at is AT1 bonds, otherwise known as CoCos. At1 bond issued by Credit Suisse become worthless when that bank was taken over by UBS. There are about $280 billion worth of AT1 bonds in the world at the moment. The question is, who owns them? Bloomberg discovered both PIMCO and Invesco hold these CoCos, though not at a level that would cause their collapse. If you’re invested in a bond fund, it’s important to know which kinds are in their portfolios. that’s especially true in the case of bond funds that have looked to beat the yield of treasuries by buying riskier classes of bonds.

Fed raises interest rate by 25 basis points as expected

Fed raises interest rate by 25 basis points as expected

Not a whole lot of news out of today’s breathlessly awaited meeting of the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee. The committee raised its short-term benchmark rate by 25 basis points to a range of 4.75% to 5%. That move had about 80% odds in its favor going into the meeting. The Dot Plot projections kept the interest rate forecast at 5.1% for the end of 2023. That was unchanged from the December Dot Pot projections.

FOMA lives!  At least with Big Money

FOMA lives! At least with Big Money

Want to know why stock prices have been so resilient in the face of a global banking crisis and the prospect of higher interest rates from the Federal Reserve? FOMA. Fear of missing out. Especially among some of the world’s largest money managers. Some of the world’s biggest investors are looking beyond interest-rate hikes, bank failures, and the threat of recession to one of the greatest fears of all money managers—-missing out on the next big rally, Bloomberg reports.

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.

Buying Schwab Put Options on outlook for a very rocky April 17 earnings report

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.

Please Watch My YouTube video: Trend of the Week There is No Trend

Please Watch My YouTube video: Trend of the Week There is No Trend

This week’s Trend of the Week: There is no Trend. When I was filming this video on Tuesday the 14th, the S&P was up almost 2%, the DOW was up almost 1.5%, the NASDAQ was up 2.23% and the VIX, which had been climbing higher with the Silicon Valley Bank collapse, was down almost 15%. Since filming, the markets dipped sharply with the threat of Credit Suisse going under, and have trended slightly upward since. If you’re going to trade in this market, you have to do one of two things. One thing is to be very fast, and trade on the bounces as they show up. The other tactic is planning ahead. Long-term in this market is about a week. A week prior to filming (3/6) I bought Call Options on the VIX (the volatility index) and I sold them on March 13 with a 108% return. On March 14, however, those VIX Call options were down 27%. Talk about volatility! The trend is, there is no trend. Subscribe to my JubakPicks.com to get timely posts on how to keep up with the chaos. For more options and other volatility plays, subscribe to JubakAM.com.

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