January 16, 2025
What You Need to Know Today:
Pick #7 CNH Industrial for my Special Report “10 new stock ideas for an old rally”
Today I added CNH Industrial (CNH) as Pick #7 for my Special Report “10 new stock ideas for an old rally.” I also added the stock to my Jubak Picks Portfolio. Here’s what I wrote:
I like farm equipment maker CNH Industrial for the same reason I own Deere (DE) in my long-term 50 Stocks Portfolio. In the long term the world’s farmers are facing a huge challenge: produce more food as an increasingly chaotic climate makes growing stuff harder and harder. One important piece of the solution is a new generation of intelligent farm equipment that uses artificial intelligence to guide everything from when to plant to when to fertilize. At the moment, though, I like CNH more on price. CNH, the #2 farm equipment maker, is invitingly attractive because it is so cheap, absolutely and in comparison to Deere.
One more round in the tech trade war before the election
Look for one more round of technology restrictions from the Biden administration before the November elections. The new measures, Bloomberg reports, would target a coming generation of chips expected to power a new wave of innovation in artificial intelligence. The measures being discussed would limit China’s ability to use a cutting-edge chip architecture known as gate all-around, or GAA, sources told Bloomberg. GAA, which promises to make semiconductors more powerful, is just being introduced by chipmakers.
Fed’s newest Dot Plot: Just one rate cut in 2024
While a slight dip in CPI inflation kept hopes alive for an interest rate cut in 2024, the Federal Reserve”s newest Dot Plot economic projections, released today, showed the central bank forecasting just one rate cut in 2024.
CPI inflation slows slightly keeping alive hopes for rate cut in 2024
However, as all dedicated inflation watchers know, the Federal Reserve watches the core inflation rate and not the all-items rate. That index, which excludes more volatile food and energy prices, rose 0.2% month over month in May, after rising 0.3% month over month in April. The core index rose at a 3.4% rate over the last 12 months. While the dip in core inflation is surely encouraging to the Federal Reserve as it fights to get stubborn inflation down to the central bank’s target 2% rate, today’s data show a continued problem the housing prices. The shelter index–the stand-n for housing prices in this index–increased at a 5.4% annual rate in May. That accounted for over two-thirds of the total 12-month increase in inflation.
Moderna finally proves it has a post-Covid vaccine life
Can you say rollercoaster? In 2022, the biotech company generated sales of nearly $18.9 billion, all of it from sales of its Covid-19 vaccine but it expects revenue of only $4 billion this year. On February 14, 2023, shares sold for $175.62. On $86.04 on February 14, 2024 they traded at $86.04. Today, June 11, they closed at 148.39. I added them to my Volatility Portfolio at $157.10 on April 14,2023. That position was still down 5.54% as of the close on June 11. But I think the rally is still in its early stages. Why the turnaround now?
A big difference of opinion on Apple today–and I’d sell
Traders and investors reacted to Apple’s (AAPO) AI announcements during the first days of the company’s World Wide Developers Conference with enthusiasm today sending the stock up 7.26% in June 11 trading. That’s a new all-time high for the stock. Technology analysts were at best mixed. Their more tepid response set the tone yesterday when the stock dropped 1.9%. Typical was this from KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst Brandon Nispel in a client note: Apple’s AI enhancements aren’t compelling enough for the average consumer to purchase a new device. I’m with the tech folks on this and today I made Apple a sell in my Special Report: Trade Wars! Trade Wars!
Special Report: 10 Contrarian Bargains to Buy Now–My first 3 picks are Luminar, Nidec, and Barrick
a lot of individual stocks are cheap right now, I’d argue. 180 of the 500 stocks in the S&P 500 trade now at the same or lower price that they commanded a year ago. And for many individual stocks the performance is even worse. For example, Luminar Technologies (LAZR), a maker of LIDAR safety and navigation equipment for cars, is down 40% in the last three months. Albemarle, the world’s leading supplier of lithium, is off 27% in the last three months. Nidec (NJDCY), a Japanese maker of small electric motors and electric vehicle drive trains, is down 13% in the last three months. I’d argue that these and the rest of the 10 Contrarian bargain stocks that I’m going to recommend in this Special Report share a number of characteristics that have led to their losses over the last few months or longer.
Live Market Report (20 minute delay)
Financial markets aren’t happy with Fed minutes from February 1 meeting
Minutes from the Federal Reserve’s February 1 meeting show a central bank anticipating Federal Reserve further increases in interest rates in order to bring inflation down to the Fed’s 2% inflation target. “Participants observed that a restrictive policy stance would need to be maintained until the incoming data provided confidence that inflation was on a sustained downward path to 2%, which was likely to take some time,” according to the minutes of the February 1 meeting released today February 22.
Shares of Palo Alto Networks pop on earnings
After the market close on February 21, cyber security company Palo Alto Networks (PANW) reported fiscal second-quarter 2023 year-over-year revenue growth of 26% to $1.7 billion. Billings in the quarter also rose by 26% to $2.0 billion. The rock-solid consistency of revenue and billings growth in this quarter and as projected for the rest of the year got a cheer from the market. In after-hours trading shares gained 8.56%.
Treasury yields continue to creep higher
Today, February 21, the yield on the 10-year Treasury rose 14 basis points to 3.95%. Other Treasuries dropped in price and showed higher yields as well.
Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Quick Pick Cameco
Today I posted my two-hundred-and-thirty-ninth YouTube video: Quick Pick Cameco Today’s Quick Pick: Cameco (NYSE: CCJ). I’m not a fan of nuclear power. Relying on an energy source that produces waste that will remain radioactive for thousands of years when we have no real solution for long-term disposal, is, to me, not the best idea. However, we’ve waited so long to deal with climate change and we still haven’t upgraded the grid so that wind and solar can replace current baseload power sources, so nuclear power will remain in the mix longer than expected. And might even see an increase in its share of the electricity market. Cameco is one of the largest producers of uranium in the world. The company has a lot of capacity that it can bring back into production since it shut down a number of mines when demand for uranium was down. The stock is up about 35% in the last year, 30% year to date, and 16% in the last month. For the trailing 12 months, the company was actually profitable ($116 million), following a loss in 2021 and 2020. You may want to wait for another dip in the general stock market for this one, or dollar cost average into it, but for global warming solutions, this is a good play since we’ve dragged our feet until we’re in an emergency that will require non-optimum, shall we say, solutions. I’ll be adding the stock to my Jubak Picks Portfolio tomorrow, February 22.
Walmart’s caution a red flag on consumer spending: stocks fall today
Today, February 21, Walmart (WMT) reported s 76% year-over-year jump in earnings to $1.71 a share. Wall Street analysts had forecast earnings of $1.52 a share for the fourth quarter. Revenue rose 7.3% to $164 billion. Comparable store sales gained 8.3%. All that pushed the company’s shares higher today with the stock up 0.59% at the close. But Walmart’s cautious guidance for the rest of 2023 helped send the general market lower.
Special Report: 7 AI Stocks to Own Now–with a couple of speculative picks to come on Thursday
You can understand the gold rush: One AI stock is up 105% (and 78% in the last month) in 2023 as of the February 17 close.
But are shares of that company, the software artificial company C3A (AI), the stock you want to own, or is this stock simply a beneficiary of hot money jumping on anything that sounds like artificial intelligence? As one market observer put it on Seeking Alpha recently, “The ticker is more valuable than the company.” This doesn’t mean that the current revolution in artificial intelligence isn’t real. And here I give you my 7 picks for investing in the latest AI revolution
Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Monday) says, For the week ahead, expect…
The big event of the week will be Friday’s report on the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation index. This, rather than the CPI, is the inflation measure that the Federal Reserve watches.
Please Watch My New YouTube Video: You Can Get 5% in a CD
This week’s Trend of the Week is: You Can Get 5% in a CD. Thank you, Jerome Powell and the Federal Reserve. Recently we’ve seen a huge rally in short-term yields. Right now, you can get a 5% CD from Capital One with a $0 minimum. As far as money market accounts go, you can get one from CFG Community Bank at 4.45% with a $1,000 minimum. For a fund, PIMCO Enhanced Short Maturity Active Exchange (NYSEARCA: MINT) is an actively managed fund that shifts among Treasury and corporate bonds and some other income assets, and currently, you could get more than 4.5%. One thing to think about in this environment is whether or not you want to hold a fund or buy bonds from TreasuryDirect, knowing that the debt ceiling crisis could cause Treasury prices to go down. If the Treasury prices do go down, bond funds will get hurt. You’ll be better off holding a Treasury bond to maturity. My suggestion is to buy the Treasury, if it rallies, you can sell, otherwise, keep it and get a guaranteed yield. For more on this, go to JubakPicks.com or JubakAM.com to find a complete, in-depth look at all these options.
The best way to get a 5% yield–my choices and their pluses and minuses
Remember the good ol’ days when Treasuries paid 0% or so and you had to give a bank your toaster to open an account, paying 0.01%? Right now you can find a CD paying 5%–and it doesn’t require locking up your money until the sun goes super-nova either.
Today, the 12-month Treasury closed with a yield of 4.99%. And the 6-month bill paid an even higher 5.02? You can find a bond ETF with an SEC yield of 4.63%. And even a money market fund paying 4.45%. What’s the case for stashing some of your cash in something “safe” as the stock market looks like it’s about to go into one of its periods of volatility? And what’s the best choice when you’ve suddenly got so many vehicles offering to pay you 5% or so? In today’s post, I’ll sketch out the pluses and minuses of these alternatives.
Just as Wall Street starts to get comfortable with more 25 basis-point interest rate increases, some on the Fed start talking about a return to 50
The comments come from two of the Federal Reserve’s most hawkish members on the need for higher interest rates to combat inflation, so the remarks aren’t exactly a surprise. Nonetheless, the language does push the envelope on thinking about where the Fed’s interest rate peak for this cycle of interest rate increases might be.
More on Wall Street see a Federal Reserve interest rate increase in June
Economists at Bank of America and Goldman Sachs now see the Federal Reserve extending its interest-rate increases through the June Fed meeting.
Is soaring credit card debt and rising defaults a threat to the consumer economy?
In the fourth quarter of 2022 credit card balances rose to a record high of $986 billion. The $61 billion increase from the third quarter was the biggest in data going back to 1999. The increase pushed Americans’ total credit card debt past the previous high of $927 billion, which was set in the fourth quarter of 2019, according to the New York Fed’s Household Debt and Credit Report. And it’s not just rising balances. Borrowers are missing payments too and delinquency rates have passed pre-pandemic norms.
Special Report: 7 AI Stocks to Own Now will go up on Monday
Sorry for the delay on my Special Report: “7 AI stocks to Own Now.” The Special Report will be posted Monday
Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Sell! Time to Take Some Rally Profits
Today’s topic is: Sell! Time to Take Some Rally Profits. Wednesday’s rally had all the earmarks of a blow-out-the-top rally. Though it wasn’t a huge jump, the markets went up on a goldilocks reaction to stronger-than-expected retail sales for January. The S&P was up 0.28% and the NASDAQ Composite was up 0.92%. The interesting part of this jump is the stocks that saw the big action – not Microsoft, Amazon, or some of the big stocks, but some more speculative things. One of them was Quantumscape Corporation (NYSE: QS), a tech company that is in the process of creating a solid-state lithium battery- though it’s not expected until 2025. They reported losing less money than they expected, and their stock shot up 32% in one day. Wayfair (NYSE: W) is up in the last month by about 58% and was up 10.4% yesterday. These are both examples of a big jump in 2023 and an even bigger jump on a blow-out day. These kinds of numbers are not sustainable, especially with more interest rate hikes from the Fed on the way and an impending debt ceiling crisis. This really is not likely to last too long. If you want to learn more about what I’m selling now, you can go to my latest post on JubakPicks.com and JubakAM.com for a detailed breakdown of what I’m selling and why.
Wednesday’s rally in the market’s most speculative stocks is the last straw for me: I said I’d be a seller into any post-Fed rally–but what specifically would I be selling? Here are the 12 stocks I’d sell now
The rally on February 15 sure looked like a speculative blowout of the kind that often signals a market top. For me, it was the last straw and I’m selling into the rally. This post tells you what I’m selling and how I arrived at these decisions. But first, a few words on Wednesday’s move.
CBO says federal government could default as early as July
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office warned, today, that the federal government would be at risk of a default as soon as July if lawmakers fail to raise the debt limit. The Treasury Department is currently using accounting gimmicks to keep paying federal obligations, after hitting the statutory debt ceiling last month. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen signaled last month that those measures would enable Treasury to keep paying the government’s bills at least until early June. Today’s CBO estimate is, thus, an updated timeline.
More evidence of a strong economy in latest retail sales report–I’m sure the Fed is paying attention
U.S. retail sales in January jumped by 3% in January from December, the Commerce Department reported today, February 15. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected a 2% increase. Retail sales had dropped in December and November. Together with the strong job gains in January, this data point reduces the likelihood of a recession in 2023 and increases the odds that the Federal Reserve will continue to raise interest rates after its May 2 meeting.
Higher and longer creeps further into Wall Street thinking
Stocks didn’t move much today after the Consumer Price Index for January showed enough inflation strength to bring Federal Reserve officials out in force to talk about a potential need to raise interest rates above current financial market expectations. But other indicators–the CME FedWatch Tool, most obviously–showed that investors and traders continue to reposition for more interest rate increases beyond the Fed’s May 3 meeting.
Fed quick out of the blocks after today’s CPI inflation report: Higher interest rates may be needed
The pixels weren’t even dry on this morning’s CPI inflation report–6.4% year over year, a 10 basis point drop from December, but a 0.5% month-to-month increase from December–before Federal Reserve officials were out talking up the idea that the Fed will have to raise interest rates more to bring inflation down to its 2% target.
Year-over-year inflation rate drops again, but month-to-month rate shows increase
On a year-over-year basis headline CPI inflation fell in January. Data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics this morning, February 14, showed all-in prices rose 6.4% in January 2023 from January 2022. That was a slight drop from the 6.5% year-over-year rate measured in December. (Remember the inflation rate peaked at 9.1% in the summer of 2022.) But on a month-to-month basis, January prices rose 0.5% from December.