Author Archive
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Is Buffett Looking at Hershey?
Eddy Elfenbein, June 28th, 2021 at 12:04 pmThe stock market is mostly flat today. On Friday, the S&P 500 closed at its 33rd all-time high this year. Charlie Bilello points out that since the start of 2013, the S&P 500 has made 327 all-time highs.
This looks to be one of the best first halves on record. In fact, a strong first half has often been followed by a strong second half. Ryan Detrick notes that when the market gains more than 12.5% during the first six months of the year, the median return of the following six months has been close to 10%. That’s nearly double the return of the other years.
Hershey (HSY) got to a new high today. The New York Post reported that the Hershey jet was spotted in Omaha.
A jet owned by candy maker Hershey made an unusual trip to Omaha, Nebraska, the home of Warren Buffett, according to an analyst with a history of spotting deals through plane records.
Don Bilson, head of event-driven research at Gordon Haskett, said in a note Thursday that a plane tracked as being owned by Hershey made a June 12 trip to Omaha.
Is there a Buffett deal in the works? One sticking point is that the Hershey Trust owns a majority of shares. Warren Buffett is about the only person who could win their votes.
There’s not much economic news today, but this is jobs week. Later in the week, we’ll get the jobs report plus several key turn-of-the-month economic reports.
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Morning News: June 28, 2021
Eddy Elfenbein, June 28th, 2021 at 7:06 amBinance, the World’s Largest Cryptocurrency Exchange, Gets Banned by UK Regulator
Bitcoin Leads Crypto Rally in Defiance of Regulatory Crackdown
Crypto’s Top V.C. Is Playing the Long Game
How Two Start-Ups Reaped Billions in Fees on Small Business Relief Loans
Blue Collars Have Outpaced White Collars in Pay—At First Glance
Where Jobless Benefits Were Cut, Jobs Are Still Hard to Fill
Fed’s Rosengren Says U.S. Can’t Afford Housing Market ‘Boom and Bust’
Illegal Gambling Mocks The Economics Profession’s Fed Obsession
China’s Envision to Build Renault $2.4 Billion Battery Plant
Google’s Cookie Delay Is Bittersweet for Trade Desk
United Airlines Closes in on $30 Billion Post-Pandemic Jet Order
NBA Star Risks Billions for Failing to Diversify Executive Ranks
Swiss Bank UBS to Allow Most Staff to Adopt Hybrid Working
Burberry Shares Tumble After CEO Resigns to Join Rival
The Cryonics Industry Would Like to Give You the Past Year, and Many More, Back
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Morning News: June 25, 2021
Eddy Elfenbein, June 25th, 2021 at 7:03 amChina’s PBOC Leads the Fed in Weaning Economy Off Stimulus
China Crushed Jack Ma, and His FinTech Rivals Are Next
China’s Ban Forces Some Bitcoin Miners to Flee Overseas, Others Sell Out
Bitcoin to Become Legal Tender in El Salvador on Sept 7
Supreme Court Kills The Fannie And Freddie Preferred Trade
Job Hole or Inflation? Fed Policymakers Split Over Risk View
Wall Street Sees Big Wish Granted in Biden’s Infrastructure Deal
Why Washington Can’t Quit Listening to Larry Summers
Ousting Toshiba Chairman, Foreign Investors Score Breakthrough in Japan
Panasonic Sells Tesla Stake for $3.6 Billion
Amazon and Google Face UK Competition Probe Over Fake Reviews
Teamsters Pass Resolution to Unionize Amazon Drivers, Warehouse Workers
Nike Earnings Beat Expectations. Why Its Stock Is Jumping.
Phantom Goldman Banker Is Bait in Swiss Trader Kidnapping ‘Trap’
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Another All-Time High for Stocks
Eddy Elfenbein, June 24th, 2021 at 10:45 amThe stock market is again up to a new all-time high. The S&P 500 has been as high as 4,271.16 this morning. The Dow is still about 800 points from its all-time high from May 10.

This morning’s weekly unemployment claims report fell to 411,000. That’s still above the pandemic low of 374,000 from two weeks ago.
Also this morning, the Q1 GDP was revised to 6.4%. That’s the same number as the first and second reports. I don’t ever recall that happening. In fact, there’s a tiny change in these numbers but not enough to alter the decimal.

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Morning News: June 24, 2021
Eddy Elfenbein, June 24th, 2021 at 7:03 amChina ‘Banks’ Time for Its Elderly While U.S. Seniors Drown in Debt
U.S. Bans Imports of Solar Panel Material from Chinese Company
The Little Hedge Fund Taking Down Big Oil
JPMorgan Sees New Headwind for Bitcoin
No End to Whiplash in Meme Stocks, Crypto and More
The Inside Story of the Sideways Ship That Broke Global Trade
Antitrust Overhaul Passes Its First Tests. Now, the Hard Parts.
Yellen Steers the Economy With Brooklyn on Her Mind
Fed’s Mixed Messages on Inflation Unsettle Investors
The Canny Business Model Behind Our Obsession With White Paint
Buffett Weighs In on Tax-Free Philanthropy
Visa to Buy Swedish Fintech Tink for $2.2 Billion
BuzzFeed Nears Deal to Go Public Via SPAC, Eyeing Digital-Media Rollup
Credit Suisse’s New Chairman Sends Chill Through Investment Bank
Bezos’ 2021 Space Odyssey A Risk Too Far for Insurers
Silicon Valley Gave Asia’s Richest Man Billions, But Things Aren’t All Going to Plan
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New-Homes Sales Miss Estimates. By a Lot.
Eddy Elfenbein, June 23rd, 2021 at 11:45 amBy my count, 13 Fed officials are giving speeches or testimonies this week. That’s a lot of jargon headed our way. The good news is that inflation fears continue to abate. The 10-year Treasury yield is below 1.5%.
This morning’s new-home sales report came in at 769,000. That’s the annualized number. That’s a big miss. Wall Street had been expecting 865,000. Of course, home prices have been shooting up so that should put some pressure on buying.
Not only that but the previous three months were revised downward. By a lot.
Shipping bottlenecks and higher input prices have held back homebuilding, contributing to skyrocketing prices for the limited supply of homes available. A silver lining of the report was data showing new-housing inventory continued to increase, though about a third of those homes have yet to be built.
(…)
There were 330,000 new homes for sale in May, the most since July 2019. At the current sales pace, it would take 5.1 months to exhaust the supply of new homes, compared with 4.6 months in the prior month.
The median sales price rose to a record $374,400. Mortgage applications have fallen sharply since January, suggesting that demand for homes is slowing.
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Morning News: June 23, 2021
Eddy Elfenbein, June 23rd, 2021 at 7:06 amHow China Rivals Elon Musk in Rattling Crypto Markets
Reckoning With Brexit, Five Years Later
A Higher Minimum Wage Can Lead Employers to Lower Compensation
Analysis Says Biden’s Tax Plan Will Effectively Cut Lower- and Middle-Class Wages
Everyone Is Quitting Their Job. Great!
Nine Months After Lockdowns, U.S. Births Plummeted by 8%
The SPAC Man Method: Inside the Billionaire Rush for Riches
Manufacturers Have an Answer to Higher Costs: Pass Them On
Tech Giants, Fearful of Proposals to Curb Them, Blitz Washington With Lobbying
Amazon and Other Tech Giants Race to Buy Up Renewable Energy
Electric Vehicles Seen Reaching Sales Supremacy by 2033, Faster Than Expected
Amazon’s Planned Purchase of MGM Faces FTC Scrutiny
Meat Grown in Israeli Bioreactors Is Coming to American Diners
‘It’s Like Coming Home to Family’: Disneyland Paris Reopens
Agreement in Principle Reached Over Suez Canal Ship, Says Stann Marine
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$20 Gold Coin Sells for $19 Million
Eddy Elfenbein, June 22nd, 2021 at 9:41 pmGary Alexander is one of my favorite financial writers. We used to work together years ago.
Here’s Gary’s take on some U.S. currency history:
The Grand Experiment began on July 22, 1776, when the Continental Congress issued $2 million in new bills, known as Continentals, which bore the inscription, “The United Colonies.” Unbacked by gold or any other hard asset, the bills led to almost immediate inflation. By 1778, it took $6 in paper to buy what $1 bought in 1776. By November 1779, it took $40 to buy what $1 bought in 1776. As General George Washington said at the time, “A wagonload of currency will hardly purchase a wagonload of provisions.”
The Continental failed and left the young nation with a hefty war debt. Chastened by the experience of that Continental currency, the U.S. Constitution prescribed: “No State shall…make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts,” and America drafted a series of gold and silver coins in the 1790s, resisting the urge to issue new paper notes until the Civil War, with Lincoln’s “Greenbacks.”
The U.S. didn’t abandon gold in one step. In June 1933, America officially went off the gold standard for domestic convertibility, but nations still traded in gold. The newly minted 1933 $20 gold Double Eagles were almost all confiscated, melted, and destroyed but one remains. On June 7, it sold for a record $18.9 million. Once owned by Egypt’s King Farouk, it was later seized in a Secret Service sting. With a face value of $20, this one-of-a-kind collectible drew nearly $19 million at auction. Beat that price, Bitcoin!
Here’s the whole thing.
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Bitcoin Sinks Below $30,000
Eddy Elfenbein, June 22nd, 2021 at 12:52 pmSuddenly, cryptos have become unpopular. I don’t know why anyone’s waited this long, but here we are.
Bitcoin just dropped below $30,000. At one point, it was negative for the year. At its low today, Bitcoin got down to $28,993.67. That’s less than half of the all-time high of $64,863.10 reached on April 13.
Dogecoin, which I find completely baffling, dropped below 17 cents. It peaked last month at 73 cents.
Cryptos tend to move so quickly that they all may be rallying by the time you read this.
This morning’s existing-homes sales report fell 0.9% to an annualized rate of 5.8 million. That’s for April.
At the end of May, total housing inventory was 1.23 million units. That’s down 20% from a year ago.
On our Buy List, Danaher (DHR) and Moody’s (MCO) are both at new highs. Hershey (HSY) and Zoetis (ZTS) are close to new highs.
The troublesome stock lately has been Miller Industries (MLR). It just dropped below $40 per share. The stock pays a quarterly dividend of 18 cents per share. That now yields about 1.7%.
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Morning News: June 22, 2021
Eddy Elfenbein, June 22nd, 2021 at 7:09 amChina Crypto Clampdown Sends Bitcoin Closer to Key $30,000 Level
Key Oil Spread Jumps to Seven-Year High in Sign of Supply Crunch
Even After Biden Tax Hike, US Firms Would Pay Less Than Foreign Rivals
U.S. Lawmakers Likely to Press Powell on Fed’s ‘Hawkish’ Turn
‘Roller-Coaster Ride’ in Bonds Puts Onus on Powell to Bring Calm
The Pandemic Stimulus Was Front-Loaded. That Could Mean a Bumpy Year.
The World’s Financial Centers Struggle Back to the Office
Banks Slowly Offer Alternatives to Overdraft Fees, a Bane of Struggling Spenders
Google Executives See Cracks in Their Company’s Success
Google Faces EU Antitrust Probe of Alleged Ad-Tech Abuses
Nvidia Hedges Against Crypto Hangover With Chips Just for Miners
The Problem With the Genius Billionaire Philanthropist Superhero
The Hedge Fund that Bet Against GameStop is Closing Down, Report Says
U.S. Supreme Court Tosses Class Action Ruling Against Goldman Sachs
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Eddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His