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  • CWS Market Review – November 26, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 26th, 2024 at 7:09 pm

    (This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)

    Healthcare Stocks Have Lagged the Market for Two Years

    The stock market closed at another new all-time high today. The S&P 500 has closed higher for seven days in a row. This was the index’s 52nd new high for this year. There were zero last year. The big caps did the heavy lifting today while the Russell 2000 was down by 0.73%.

    Lately, I’ve been asking, what’s going on with healthcare stocks? For years, this was one of the best-performing sectors on Wall Street. Not lately!

    Make no mistake, there’s a lot to like about healthcare investing. The industry is heavily supported by the government. That’s a great customer to have. The sector is also helped by demographics. All those Baby Boomers need to have their joints replaced, and not how they used to have their joints replaced.

    Investors also like that healthcare performance tends to be steady. There are several healthcare companies who regularly deliver consistent gains. That makes analyzing these stocks much easier. I love many cyclical stocks but those tend to follow boom-and-bust cycles. With healthcare, the lines on the graph are nice and smooth.

    But healthcare has been badly lagging! Look at this chart below. I’ve included the S&P 500 Healthcare ETF (XLV, in black) along with the S&P 500 ex Healthcare ETF (SPXV, in blue), meaning everything in the index besides healthcare.

    Over the last two years, healthcare stocks have lagged the rest of the market by nearly seven to one. Healthcare stocks currently make up about 11% of the S&P 500. That means that if you combine the two lines above at a nine-to-one ratio (nine black and one blue), that roughly makes up the S&P 500.

    Until two years ago, just about any lagging performance from healthcare was a reliable signal to buy. Part of the reason for healthcare’s poor performance can be chalked up to the superior performance of other sectors, particularly large-cap tech.

    Some investors think that healthcare stocks were held back by an unfriendly administration in Washington. That could be, but healthcare stocks continued to lag in the days after the election. To be fair, the sector has acted a little better in the last week.

    There’s also a far simpler explanation: perhaps healthcare stocks were badly overpriced two years ago. For example, shares of Eli Lilly (LLY) have broken down over the past few months, and it’s still very pricey.

    There are currently 62 stocks in the S&P 500 healthcare sector. On our Buy List, we own four of them: Abbott Labs (ABT), Cencora (COR), Stryker (SYK) and Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO). Over the year, Stryker has been a particularly successful stock for us.

    I also suspect that healthcare has done poorly because defensive stocks have been on the outs on Wall Street. That will quickly change in a recession. When things get rough, investors flock to those steady stocks.

    I always take notice when an entire sector flounders, especially one that has done so well over the years. That’s a good place to find bargains. For now, if you’re willing to have a little patience, the healthcare sector may be a rich source of long-term winners. I obviously like our four the best. When the cycle turns, I expect to see some very nice gains.

    Consumer Confidence Rises to a 16-Month High

    Wall Street had some good mixed news today. On the positive front, consumer confidence rose to a 16-month high. This is important to watch. Without confidence, the economy can’t do much. For November, the consumer confidence index increased to 111.7. That’s up from 109.2 for October. Wall Street had been expecting 111.0.

    What’s the reason for the optimism? The labor market is still holding up well, although I’d like to see greater wage gains. Also, the outlook for inflation is much better than it was two years ago.

    Within the consumer confidence report, there’s also an index of consumer expectations. That index rose to 92.3 which is the highest reading in nearly three years. Earlier this year, the expectations index got very low.

    While that’s the good news, the bad news is that the Census Bureau said today that the sales of single-family homes dropped to its lowest level in nearly two years. Clearly, the recent storms impacted these numbers. For October, new home sales fell by 17.3% to 610,000. Wall Street had been expecting 725,000.

    Sales in the south fell 28% to 339,000. You have to go back to the early days of Covid to find numbers that bad. Home prices are still going up. Last month, the median price for a new home sold was $437,300.

    Tomorrow, the government will update its numbers for Q3 GDP growth. Last month, we got the initial report, and it said that the U.S. economy grew in real annualized terms of 2.8%. That’s not bad. I don’t think the revision will be very different than the original report.

    What about Q4? We’re a little over halfway through Q4, and the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model estimates that the economy grew at a real, annualized rate of 2.6%. That estimate was recently increased by 0.1%. It will be adjusted again tomorrow. If these numbers are right, then we successfully averted a recession in 2024. That would have surprised a lot of people 18 months ago.

    I’ve noticed a growing divergence between what the Federal Reserve expects and what Wall Street expects. The Fed keeps talking tough about interest rates, but market participants don’t buy it. Here’s a look at the Fed funds rate adjusted for inflation:

    The Fed meets again in three weeks, and traders think there’s a 63% chance that the Fed will again cut rates by 0.25%. That’s probably too low.

    After that, the markets see the Fed cutting rates twice next year, but the Fed sees itself cutting four times next year. When in doubt, I prefer to side with markets over economists. This afternoon, the Fed released the minutes from its most-recent meeting. In it, the Fed confirmed that it’s looking to lower rates but at a gradual pace. As you know, I’m an expert in the bizarre, convoluted dialect known as Fedspeak. I’ll try to translate their foreign language into regular English.

    The Fed said that if the current situation continues to improve, then “it would likely be appropriate to move gradually toward a more neutral stance of policy over time.” Note that in the Fed’s mind, it’s not lowering rates but it’s really taking back the rate hikes from 2022-2023. Interestingly, the Fed didn’t say anything about the election or possible tariffs.

    The Fed members discussed the “neutral” interest rate. This is the idea that there’s a magic rate of interest and if you go above it, you choke the economy. But if you go below it, then you flood the economy with dollars. The hip econo-name for the neutral rate is R-Star.

    The only hitch is that we don’t know where the neutral rate is. We can only guess. Austan Goolsbee, the Chicago Fed President, started calling it “R-Sasquatch.” There’s a general consensus that wherever R-Star is, we’re probably above it.

    The minutes said, “Many participants observed that uncertainties concerning the level of the neutral rate of interest complicated the assessment of the degree of restrictiveness of monetary policy and, in their view, made it appropriate to reduce policy restraint gradually.” In other words, they’re as confused as everyone else.

    Over the coming few months, I suspect the Fed will gradually reel back its plans for rate cuts for next year.

    Milei Looks to Free Argentina’s Economy

    Last year, I told you about Javier Milei, the libertarian outsider who was looking to become the president of Argentina. Since then, Milei was elected and he’s upending the political establishment.

    He’s also become popular with investors. Bloomberg notes that the Argentina ETF (ARGT) has experienced massive inflows. Last week, ARGT had inflows of $144 million. The ETF has performed well.

    I think investors are genuinely shocked that Milei is following through on what he promised. Since Mikei took office, the assets of ARGT have increased sevenfold. The economy in Argentina is getting better and inflation is finally cooling off.

    I have to confess that I’m fascinated by Milei and his attempt to fundamentally change his country. It’s like a real-world experiment in macroeconomics.

    He’s not done yet. The next big hurdle for Milei is removing capital controls. The fear is that once lifted, money will stampede out of Argentina. That’s happened before when Argentina has moved toward more market-friendly policies. Still, there’s good reason to believe that Milei is an exception.

    The capital controls force the currency to be far stronger than it is on the open market. The government tightly controls the exchange rate. Buying foreign currency for savings is limited to $200 per month.

    Of all his reforms, ending capital controls could be the most difficult for Milei. The reason is that it’s most likely to cause large-scale disruptions within the economy. Milei probably won’t tackle capital controls for several more months.

    Milei is definitely worth following. Argentina is taking a big risk. If he’s right, Milei may offer the blueprint for how other countries can provide shock therapy to their economies.

    That’s all for now. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.

    – Eddy

  • Morning News: November 26, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 26th, 2024 at 7:05 am

    UAE Considers EU-Style Plan to Penalize Polluters for First Time

    Italy’s Banco BPM Rebukes UniCredit’s $10.5 Billion Bid

    The Bank for Moving On From Communism Questions Rise of Industrial Policy

    Trump Plans Tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China That Could Cripple Trade

    Trump’s Tariff Threat to Top US Trading Partners Roils Markets

    Trump Tests Xi’s Appetite to Play Ball With Early Tariff Threat

    After Trump’s Tariff Threat, Is a China Currency War Next?

    Bessent Will Have to Fix America’s Finances. Good Luck With That.

    An Economic Model That Moves Beyond G.D.P.

    The US Gig Economy Is Holding Steady, Not Booming

    Why Real Estate Stocks Took a Hit as Developers Cheered Trump

    Biden Proposes Medicare, Medicaid Coverage of Obesity Drugs

    WorldQuant Stages Shark Tank-Style Contest to Find New Whiz Kids

    The Magnificent 7 Are Beginning to Look Average

    The World’s Pioneering Tech Cop Is Making Her Exit

    The ‘Rocket Docket’ Judge Who Will Decide the Fate of Google’s Ad Technology

    China’s Huawei Takes Aim at Apple With Latest Smartphone

    Intel Gets $7.9 Billion Chips Award for US Factory Expansion

    One of the Hottest Stocks in the Oil Patch is a Defunct 19th-Century Railroad

    What Spirit’s Bankruptcy Means for US Holiday Travel

    U.S. Airlines Collected More Than $12 Billion From Seat Fees

    Best Buy Lowers Full-Year Forecast Amid Turnaround Efforts

    Frozen Home-Improvement Spending Could Take Time to Thaw

    Target Lost Its Mojo. Hits Like $25 Leggings Are Key to Getting It Back

    Dick’s Sporting Lifts Outlook After Strong Back-to-School Season

    Sony’s Pursuit of Anime Publisher Holds More Opportunity Than Risk

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: November 25, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 25th, 2024 at 7:05 am

    G-7 Poised to Boost Pressure on China Over Russian Support

    Inside the Frantic Maneuvers That Saved COP29 Talks at a Cost

    EU Seeks to Streamline ESG Regulations Amid Growing Backlash

    German Businesses Grow More Pessimistic as Geopolitical Pressures Mount

    UniCredit Irks Rome with $11 Billion Banco BPM Swoop After German Backlash

    The World’s Biggest Debtor Gets a New Manager: Scott Bessent

    Dollar, US Yields Fall on Bets Bessent Will Dilute Trump Plans

    A Hedge Fund Manager Should Be Able to Run Treasury

    Trump Trade Muddles Inflation Outlook in Fed’s Favorite Gauge

    Citi Bonuses Buy Time for New Wealth Boss’s Rush to Revamp

    Jamie Dimon Says the Next Generation of Employees Will Work 3.5 Days a Week and Live to 100 Years Old

    Apple’s Cook Joins CEO Summit With China Premier as Economy Sags

    Amazon’s Moonshot to Rival NVIDIA in AI Chips

    Washington Curtails Intel’s Chip Grant After Company Stumbles

    Rocket Lab Signs $23.9M CHIPS Incentives Award to Boost Semiconductor Manufacturing

    Google Chrome Sale Could Upend the Browser Market

    Adani’s Legal Troubles May Worsen With Risk of Investor Lawsuits

    How Trump Could Upend Electric Car Sales

    How Southwest Airlines Lost Its Groove

    Concrete-Maker Quikrete Strikes $9.2 Billion Deal for Summit Materials

    Oneok to Acquire EnLink Midstream in $4.3 Billion Stock Deal

    Big Food’s RFK Selloff Looks Overdone, but the Industry Has Other Problems Too

    Are Value Meals Worth It for Restaurants?

    Macy’s Delays Earnings After Employee Hid Millions in Expenses

    Wrangler and Lee Jeans Maker’s Plan for Growth: Sell More to Women

    The Charm Bracelet Shop That Keeps Going Viral

    Shopping and Shame Share the Shelves in ‘American Bulk’

    Without Drama or Banana, Art Auctions Struggle

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: November 22, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 22nd, 2024 at 7:03 am

    COP29 Summit Pushes for $250 Billion Deal to Narrow Divisions

    Zambia Weighs $900 Million Coal-Power Plan as Drought Hits Hydro

    Putin’s Nuclear Threat Is a Magic Trick, but a Dangerous One

    Ex-Goldman Banker Turned Lithium CEO Vows to Ride Out Downturn

    China’s Plan B to Save the Economy: A Crusade Against Busywork

    Japan Approves $141 Billion Stimulus to Boost Economy, Offset Living Costs

    ECB’s Lagarde Sees Europe Under Growing Trade Threat

    European Farmer Angst Revs Up Again Over Trade Deal and Tax

    Inside the Deadliest Job in America

    Why Trump Allies Say Immigration Hurts American Workers

    While You Do 5-Day RTO I’ll Watch Your Best Workers Quit

    What Bondi Might Do as Attorney General

    The High Risk, High Reward Trump Market

    Dollar Set for Longest Run of Gains in a Year Amid Haven Demand

    Goldman Gives the Blockchain Revolution a Home

    Crypto Tokens Targeted by US SEC Jump on Gensler’s Planned Exit

    Private Equity Financier’s Returns Slump in a $1.2 Trillion Market

    US Probes JPMorgan’s Ties to Iranian Oil Kingpin’s Hedge Fund

    China’s Hacking Reached Deep Into U.S. Telecoms

    How Adani’s Indictment Rocked His Empire and What Comes Next

    MicroStrategy’s Infinite Money Glitch Won’t Last

    Future-Proofing Biden’s Chips Legacy

    Japanese Chip Maker Kioxia Plans Tokyo Market Debut

    Jeff Bezos Says Elon Musk’s Claims Are ‘100% Not True’ After the Tesla CEO Reignites Their Feud

    Roadrunner Scores Fresh Investment, Eyes Deals

    What Happens When US Hospitals Go Big on Nurse Practitioners

    McDonald’s Reaches for Choosy Diners With Value Menu Revamp

    Amazon’s Black Friday NFL Game Is a Play to Keep You Paying for Prime

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: November 21, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 21st, 2024 at 6:57 am

    BOJ Will Consider Impact of Weak Yen in Making Price Forecasts, Gov Ueda Says

    Europe Is Gaslighting Itself About Its Energy Woes

    Turkey Holds Rates, Signals Cuts Coming on Slowing Inflation

    French Bond Risk Rises as Budget Tensions Keep Markets on Edge

    French Factories Shrug off Trump Tariff Threat as November Mood Lightens

    Trump Recruits His Season 2 Cast Straight From the Small Screen

    Trump Seeks His Perfect Treasury Candidate as Search Drags On

    Trump’s Economic Policy Can’t Be Just Nostalgia

    Trump’s Tariffs

    Banks Hoping For Looser Trump Reins Are Too Giddy

    The US Stablecoin Startup Fueling a $3 Billion Boom in Africa

    Worldline to Raise New Debt After Tumultuous Year Hurts Earnings

    Nvidia Says New Chip on Track After Forecast Disappoints

    Apple Pay, Other Tech Firms Come Under CFPB Regulatory Oversight

    U.S. Proposes Breakup of Google to Fix Search Monopoly

    US Watchdog Issues Final Rule to Supervise Big Tech Payments, Digital Wallets

    Clear’s Dominance in Airports Could Be Coming to an End

    Baidu Revenue Falls Again as Advertising Demand Remains Weak

    Alibaba Integrates E-Commerce Operations Into Single Business Group

    Adani Charged by US in $250 Million Bribery Case, Shaking India

    US Charges Erase $15 Billion From Gautam Adani’s Wealth in Hours

    Archegos Founder Bill Hwang Is Sentenced to 18 Years

    Brazil Finds Chinese Ally in Its Feud with Elon Musk

    What Elon Musk Might Want From America

    How Froot Loops Landed at the Center of U.S. Food Politics

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: November 20, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 20th, 2024 at 7:08 am

    COP29 Summit Enters Final Stretch With Nations Far Apart on Finance

    The Clandestine Oil Shipping Hub Funneling Iranian Crude to China

    Asia’s Dark Fleet Hub Highlights Trump’s Oil Sanctions Headache

    Trump’s Treasury Search Gains Steam With Fresh Round of Meetings

    How Howard Lutnick Could Shake Up Global Trade

    Trump’s Cabinet Blitz Is Straight From Orban’s Playbook

    Trump and the Triumph of America’s New Elite

    Wall Street Is Too Pumped About Trump to Worry About His Policies

    American Companies Are Stocking Up to Get Ahead of Trump’s China Tariffs

    VCs Look to Secondary Share Sales as The New Exit While M&A Falters

    Senator Warren Urges Fed to Keep Wells Fargo Asset Cap

    Archegos’ Bill Hwang to Be Sentenced for Massive US Fraud

    Why Some Tax Cuts Can Be Better Than Others

    To Get the Housing Market Moving, Raise Property Taxes

    Miami Condo King Extends Bet on Wealth Boom Spreading up Florida Coast

    Resentment is Building as More Workers Feel Stuck

    Nvidia Traders Brace for Potential $300 Billion Earnings Move

    How Google Spent 15 Years Creating a Culture of Concealment

    Iger’s Hero Act Could Leave His Successor Playing the Fool

    Comcast to Spin Off Cable Networks, Including MSNBC and CNBC

    The Onion’s Bid to Acquire Infowars Has Gotten Messy

    Traffic on Bluesky, an X Competitor, Is Up 500% Since the Election. How Will It Handle the Surge?

    Target Shares Tumble After Retailer Cuts Profit Outlook

    U.S. Military Selects Little-Known Utah Supplier for Drone Program

    Hennessy Workers Strike Over Plans to Bottle Cognac in China

    The Unusual Power of VW’s Union Boss Is Being Put to the Test

    NIO’s Net Loss Widens on Lower Revenue Amid EV Pricing Pressure

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • CWS Market Review – November 19, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 19th, 2024 at 5:06 pm

    (This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)

    Fifty Years Since the Big Low

    We’re soon coming up on a major market anniversary. Two weeks from Friday marks the 50th anniversary of one of the most dramatic lows in Wall Street history. On December 6, 1974, the S&P 500 closed at 65.01. That was the market’s lowest close in the last 60 years.

    It’s hard to convey just how low this low was. This was near the low point for post-war American optimism. The stock market had given back all its gains from the previous 12 years. At its low, the market was not far above its peak from 45 years before. In fact, adjusted for inflation, the market was about where it had been in 1929.

    Here’s the inflation-adjusted S&P 500 over the last 12 decades:

    According to data I saw at Professor Robert Shiller’s data library, the stock market’s P/E ratio in December 1974 was 7.5. It’s more than three times that today. The dividend yield for the entire S&P 500 reached 5.4%.

    This was a brutal time for investors. Watergate, Vietnam and inflation dominated the news. In less than two years, the stock market was cut in half. The 1960s saw an explosion in optimism and faith in the future. All of that seemed to unravel by the 1970s.

    It’s interesting to note how nostalgic the 1970s was. People were looking backward not forward. One month after the market’s low, President Ford said in his State of the Union Address that the state of the union was “not good.”

    Today’s investors assume a constantly rising market that will hit some bumps along the way. That belief hasn’t always been so widespread. Many investors, especially those who had lived during the Great Depression, thought that the stock market was a useless casino that was rigged against them.

    As terrible as the headlines were in December 1974, it was a great time to invest. It just took a little courage and a lot of patience. Not including dividends, the stock market has risen more than 90-fold over the last half century. That works out to an annual gain of about 9.5%.

    The market works, you just have to wait a little.

    Walmart Hits All-Time High

    Last Friday, the government released its retail sales report, but today we got an even better report, Walmart’s (WMT) earnings. The retail giant’s earnings are probably a better barometer of how happy consumers are than any government report.

    The good news is that Walmart’s customers seem to be pleased. Interestingly, Walmart seems to be doing better with affluent shoppers.

    For the quarter, Walmart made 58 cents per share which was a nickel ahead of expectations. Quarterly revenue was $169.59 billion compared with expectations of $167.72 billion. On average, Walmart generates $1.3 million of revenue every minute of every hour of every day for the entire quarter. The stock rose to an all-time high today.

    Walmart now expects full-year sales growth of 4.8% to 5.1%. That’s up from the previous forecast of 3.75% to 4.75%. Sales of general merchandise had year-over-year sales growth for the second straight month, but that comes after 11 straight quarters of declines.

    The current quarter, which ends in January, is the all-important holiday shopping quarter. For many retailers, this quarter is the biggie. That’s why so many retailers have off-cycle reporting dates. They don’t want to have December and January in different reporting quarters. Last week, I told you about the encouraging report from Home Depot (HD). We’ll soon hear from other big box retailers.

    Walmart said it expects sales growth of 3% to 4% for this quarter. Last quarter, Walmart’s e-commerce sales increased by 22%. It’s now 18% of Walmart’s overall business. This was a solid quarter for Walmart and it could be an omen for a good holiday shopping season.

    Housing Starts Plunged Last Month

    This morning, the Commerce Department said that single-family housing starts fell last month. The drop was most likely due to the recent hurricanes in the South. Still, higher mortgage rates are holding back the housing market.

    Even though the Fed is lowering interest rates now, the housing sector is still dealing with the Fed’s aggressive rate hikes of 2022-2023.

    Single-family housing starts, which account for the bulk of homebuilding, plunged 6.9% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 970,000 units last month, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said. Data for September was revised higher to show homebuilding rising to a rate of 1.042 million units from the previously reported pace of 1.027 million units.

    Single-family starts dropped 10.2% in the densely populated South, large parts of which were devastated by Helene in late September. Milton struck Florida in October. Ground-breaking on single-family housing projects plummeted 28.7% in the Northeast, but increased 4.6% in the Midwest and the West.

    Single-family homebuilding slipped 0.5% from a year ago.

    Starts for multi-family housing jumped 9.8% to a pace of 326,000 units. Overall housing starts dropped 3.1% to a rate of 1.311 million units. That was below Wall Street’s forecast. What’s happening is that many homeowners already locked in low rates on their mortgages so they’re reluctant to move now.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which tends to track mortgage rates, recently touched a five-month high. Longer yields have moved against the Fed’s policy of lower short-term rates.

    This is a good reminder that it takes time for the Fed’s policies to impact the real economy. Traders currently think there’s a 60% chance that the Fed will cut again next month. That’s much lower than I expected. Perhaps Wall Street thinks there will soon be good reasons for the Fed to pause.

    Get Ready for Nvidia’s Earnings

    One more item. Nvidia (NVDA) is set to report earnings tomorrow. Get ready because this report could move the entire market. I confess, I have no idea what to expect, and neither does anyone else. The company now has a market value of roughly $3.6 trillion.

    A year ago, Nvidia made 40 cents per share. The consensus this time is for earnings of 75 cents per share. Sales are expected to increase from $18.12 billion to $33.14 billion.

    We can look at the action in the options market and see what to expect. For example, options traders expect shares of NVDA to swing by 8.5% after the earnings report comes out. That’s up or down and that average swing is roughly $300 billion. That amount is far larger than the vast majority of companies in the S&P 500.

    NVDA has had several impressive after-earnings rallies, but that didn’t happen last time. Reuters quoted Matt Amberson who said that of the last 12 quarterly earnings reports, five post-earnings moves have been outside what has been expected by the market. “Of those, all have seen the stock price go higher, Amberson said.”

    Nvidia’s CEO recently said that demand for the company’s next-generation AI chip Blackwell is “insane.” What would people in 1974 have said?

    That’s all for now. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.

    – Eddy

  • Morning News: November 19, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 19th, 2024 at 7:07 am

    Oil Glut Set to Thwart Trump’s Call to ‘Frack, Frack, Frack’

    German Defense Chief Sees Baltic Cable Breaches as Sabotage

    Why US Will Let Ukraine Strike Inside Russia With American Missiles

    Gold Is at the Mercy of Trump, China and King Dollar

    Things Are Quiet in Consumer Credit. Too Quiet.

    Trump’s Impossible Task: Delivering for the Working Class and Billionaires

    Rethinking the Worst-Case Fears About Trump Tariffs

    Wall Street’s Top Cop Plans to Exit Before Trump Takes Power

    Five Ways R.F.K. Jr. Could Undermine Lifesaving Childhood Vaccines

    RFK Jr. Would Put the Economy at Risk, Too

    Companies With Immigrant Workforces Are Preparing for Raids

    While You Were Voting, Corporate America Made Bank

    Goldman Sachs Chairman Expects Deals to Pick Up in 2025

    Morgan Stanley Courts Employees of Near-IPO Companies for Wealth Management

    China’s Chip Advances Stall as US Curbs Hit Huawei AI Product

    When IR Met AI: How the Technology Is Shaping Earnings-Day Prep

    Nvidia’s Options Primed for $300-Billion Price Swing After Earnings

    Google’s Anthropic AI Deal Cleared by UK Antitrust Agency

    DOJ Will Push Google to Sell Chrome to Break Search Monopoly

    Amcor to Acquire Berry Global in $8.4 Billion Packaging Deal

    The Future of Abortion Rights Could Be Decided by Accident

    Lowe’s Lifts Sales Forecast on Improving Housing Spend

    Robots Struggle to Match Warehouse Workers on ‘Really Hard’ Jobs

    Walmart Raises Outlook on Strong Spending From Value-Seekers

    Shoppers Are Ditching Classic Brands They Once Loved

    Blackstone Strikes Deal for Jersey Mike’s Subs

    Swiss Watch Exports Fall Again Amid Plummeting Demand in China

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: November 18, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 18th, 2024 at 7:04 am

    Why Oil Companies Are Walking Back From Green Energy

    Why Big Oil Doesn’t Mind Big Regulation

    A Global Fund for Climate Disasters Is Taking Shape in Trump’s Shadow

    Turkmenistan’s Gas Company Will Enlist Experts to Combat Methane Leaks

    For Decades, Installing E.V. Chargers Didn’t Pay Off for Retailers. Now It Does.

    Indian Students Rush to US Colleges, Driving Attendance Record

    Moody’s Cuts Bangladesh Further Into Junk on Political Risks

    Greek Banks Looking at Deals Abroad After Painful Restructurings

    Eurozone Trade Surplus Rises on Jump in Exports to U.S.

    Powell May Be Waiting Until 2026 for Housing Inflation to Cool

    Trump Treasury Cabinet Pick in Flux as Jockeying Slows Selection

    Trump Picks Brendan Carr to Lead F.C.C.

    Four Priorities for Trump’s Top Telecom Regulator

    Crypto Prediction Markets Have a Cloudy Future

    HSBC Managers Are Competing to Keep Their Jobs in CEO’s Revamp

    Bain Capital Raises $5.7 Billion for Global Special Situations

    Wall Street Bankers Spot a Fat Payday in $1 Trillion AI Hysteria

    Manufacturing Was Set to Rebound. Then Trump Happened.

    Tim Berners-Lee Wants the Internet Back

    Xiaomi Profit Beats on Robust Sales Across Segments

    Why Tech Billionaires Love the Author of Jurassic Park

    Ben & Jerry’s Vs. Unilever Is the End of Corporate Do-Gooderism

    Spirit Air Files Bankruptcy Following Failed JetBlue Tie-Up

    Auto Industry Braces for Whiplash as Trump Takes Power

    Novo Nordisk Launches Wegovy in China With Prices Well Below US

    Substack’s Great, Big, Messy Political Experiment

    Paramount Takes Promotional Stunt to New Level for ‘Gladiator II’

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  • Morning News: November 15, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 15th, 2024 at 7:03 am

    Russia Envoy Backs Paris Climate Deal, Hopes Trump Will Too

    Oil Set for Weekly Loss Amid Demand Worries, Rate-Cut Slowdown Prospects

    World Fears a Wider Trade War. Malaysia Sees an Opportunity.

    China Stimulus Boosts Domestic Consumption as Trump Tariffs Loom

    Eurozone Economy to Grow Less Strongly as Trade Spat Brews, EU Says

    Trump US Election Win Comes With a Catch for Israel’s Far-Right

    America’s Homes Are Piggy Banks That Few People Can Afford to Raid

    CEOs Brace for the Chaos of Another Four Years of Trump

    Boston Fed President Says December Rate Cut Isn’t a ‘Done Deal’

    ‘Flood of Money’ Chases US Banking’s Hottest New Trade

    Traders Chase Post-Election Stock Gains in US Options Market

    Investors Circle the Trump Trade’s Global Market Victims

    Betting on Tesla Helped Ron Baron Beat the Index. Now He’s Getting a Trump Bump

    Pay Close Attention to Your Credit Card Balance Under Trump 2.0

    Musk’s New Job For Trump Already Exists

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  • Eddy ElfenbeinEddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His Buy List has beaten the S&P 500 by 72% over the last 19 years. (more)

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    EddyElfenbein
    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    23h

    I really don't get the bitcoin hate. Skepticism? Sure. But it's been around for 15 years and done nothing but rally (with some hefty corrections).

    Reply on Twitter 1925574875952926862 Retweet on Twitter 1925574875952926862 4 Like on Twitter 1925574875952926862 48 X 1925574875952926862
    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    21 May

    Dow -320

    "Cannes makes it official: No nudity on the red carpet"

    Reply on Twitter 1925223704738386140 Retweet on Twitter 1925223704738386140 2 Like on Twitter 1925223704738386140 17 X 1925223704738386140
    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    21 May

    For being a worthless scam Ponzi scheme, bitcoin sure does go up a lot

    Reply on Twitter 1925213969704263762 Retweet on Twitter 1925213969704263762 6 Like on Twitter 1925213969704263762 144 X 1925213969704263762
    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    21 May

    "How about 100 shares of Progressive?"
    "Car insurance. Pass. Too boring."

    Reply on Twitter 1925211004809404466 Retweet on Twitter 1925211004809404466 3 Like on Twitter 1925211004809404466 32 X 1925211004809404466
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