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  • CWS Market Review – May 14, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 14th, 2024 at 5:52 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.”)

    The Return of Roaring Kitty

    Yesterday, shares of GameStop (GME) soared 74%. At one point, the stock was up another 110% today, meaning it doubled on top of yesterday’s explosive rally.

    On Monday, trading was so heavy in GME that within the first 90 minutes, the stock was halted nine times. Trading volume was 30 times heavier than normal.

    So what caused this rally? A great earnings report? A possible merger? Nope, none of these.

    The answer is that Roaring Kitty tweeted.

    Confused? Allow me to explain.

    GameStop rallied on the news of the return of Roaring Kitty. That’s the nom de Twitter of Keith Gill, the hero of the meme stock universe.

    Three years ago, Mr. Kitty’s advocacy of GameStop spurred a frenetic rally in the stock. In six months, GME went from $1 per share to $120 per share, and it was all led by posters on Reddit, the WallStreetBets subreddit in particular.

    At one point, 140% of GME’s shares were held short. Some prominent hedge funds who were short GME saw their trades get completely blown out of the water. For once, the plucky amateurs routed the smug Wall Street professionals, and Roaring Kitty was their unofficial leader.

    Mr. Kitty’s Twitter account has been dormant for three years. The silence was broken Sunday evening when he tweeted what appears to be a man leaning forward with a game controller. The consensus is that Roaring Kitty has announced his return to action.

    He posted again on Monday. It’s a short video with the words “Fine, I’ll do it myself.” If nothing, he has a sense for the dramatic.

    I’ll confess, I’m a big fan of Roaring Kitty and I’m very interested to hear what he has to say. About GameStop, the stock has not performed very well. After peaking at $120 in January 2021, the shares dipped below $10 a few weeks ago. Perhaps that sparked Kitty’s interest. We’ll see.

    Of course, there’s a longer story involved. Wall Street is no stranger to manias and bubbles. In the 19th century, Charles Mackay wrote, “Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one.”

    When Roaring Kitty first pushed his analysis on Twitter in August 2020, he cc’d several Wall Street big shots, one of whom was your humble editor. Sadly, I don’t recall seeing it. I only learned of it later. I wish I had paid attention.

    The important point I want to stress is that there’s more to a trading bubble than share prices. For example, the meme stock craze happened in the early Covid period. That was a very unusual time. People were looking for an outlet. Plus, the Federal Reserve had slashed interest rates and the government had spent tons of money to help keep the economy afloat.

    As a result, investing risk was removed from the market. I’m not saying that those decisions directly caused GME to rally, but it helped set up the environment where an explosive rally could thrive.

    Not only that, but the rise of Reddit helped spur a culture of relentless amateur investors who wanted to take down traditional Wall Street. That’s why Bitcoin is a close relative to meme stocks.

    There’s still a lot of anger at Wall Street and I certainly understand why, but 2024 is not like 2020. Covid has gone away. The Fed has raised interest rates. Investors have moved on. (I always find it interesting how often GameStop is incorrectly called GameStock. That’s a classic case of an error which tells you the truth.)

    Is GameStop a good investment? I’m skeptical. Last year, GameStop reported a net profit of $6.7 million. Many ballplayers make more than that. GameStop has a market value of around $13 billion. In other words, it’s going for 2,000 times earnings.

    Bloomberg quoted one analyst on GameStop: “Game sales are flattish, hardware sales are down, and the shift to digital downloads continues, so it’s highly unlikely GameStop can stop shrinking.” That doesn’t sound good. GameStop is due to report earnings in a few weeks.

    As I said, I’m a fan of Roaring Kitty and I want to hear what he has to say, but for now, I’ll watch GameStop from a safe distance.

    Bristol-Myers’ Impact on Earnings Season

    We’re just about done with Q1 earnings season. More than 90% of companies in the S&P 500 have reported results. There are a few more reports due to come in. So far, the earnings season is much better than expected (or feared). Earnings growth for the S&P 500 is tracking at 5.15%. That’s up 1.46% from just a month ago.

    That’s the best growth rate since Q2 2022. More than 76% of companies have beaten their earnings estimates.

    There is, however, a statistical footnote to these results and that’s Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY). If you exclude BMY’s massive loss, then earnings growth for the whole index rises to 8.3%. One company’s loss weighed the whole market down by 3%.

    For the quarter, BMY lost $11.9 billion or $5.89 per share. The loss was primarily due to BMY’s buying neuroscience drugmaker Karuna. BMY actually beat its revenue estimate, but the company also announced a cost-cutting program, and it will lay off more than 2,000 workers.

    Stock Focus: Allison Transmission Holdings (ALSN)

    My friend JC Parets has started calling small, underfollowed companies “Eddy Elfenbein-type stocks.” I’m flattered.

    I have another one for you this week which is Allison Transmission Holdings (ALSN). As you might guess, Allison makes automatic transmissions for trucks, buses, and industrial and military vehicles. Except for its earnings reports, Allison almost never makes the news.

    It’s a profitable business. Allison currently has a market value of $6.5 million. Over the last 12 years, the shares have gone from $17 to $75. The quarterly dividend has gradually increased from six cents per share to 25 cents. Allison has increased its dividend for the last five years in a row.

    Currently, seven analysts follow the stock which is more than I would have guessed. Tesla is followed by more than 30 analysts.

    Last month, Allison reported Q1 earnings of $1.90 per share. That was one penny better than estimates. The shares are currently going for just under 10 times this year’s earnings estimate, and only 8.6 times 2025’s earnings.

    I’m going to keep a close eye on Allison. This is a good stock with impressive margins. If only it had a Roaring Kitty of its own.

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

    – Eddy

    P.S. If you want more info on our ETF, you can check out the ETF’s website.

  • Morning News: May 14, 2014
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 14th, 2024 at 7:05 am

    Foreign Private Investors Set to Top Central Bank Bond Buying

    Macron Puts French Banks in Play With Plan to Transform Europe

    Funds Calling Themselves ‘ESG’ Face New Restrictions in Europe

    Big-Name Funds Pile into Real Estate Debt as Banks Retreat

    Biden Adds Tariffs on Chinese Chips, Critical Minerals, EVs

    Will Biden’s Trade War With China Get Results?

    Chinese Lithium Miners Undeterred by EV Battery Overcapacity

    How China Rose to Lead the World in Cars and Solar Panels

    US East Coast Ports Are Spending Billions to Profit From Asia’s Shifting Exports

    OPEC Sticks to Oil-Demand View, Posts Fall in Overall Output

    Anglo Goes for Bold Breakup Plan in Move to Fend Off BHP

    Macron Calls Defending Europe’s Car Industry ‘a No-Brainer’

    Self-Driving Cars? Not Yet. Here’s Why Your Ride Still Needs a Human Co-Pilot

    For David Solomon, ‘Times Are Good’ for Goldman and Economy

    High Interest Rates Are Hitting Poorer Americans the Hardest

    What Forecasters Say About Interest Rates (and Why They Disagree)

    How One of the World’s Oldest Hedge Funds Went Bankrupt

    How the ‘Harvard of Trading’ Ruined Thousands of Young People’s Lives

    A Jobs Program Broke the Rules to Succeed. Now the Rules May Change

    Melinda French Gates Exits Foundation With $12.5 Billion

    GameStop Shares Extend Meme Rally as Retail Traders Pile In

    GameStop Mania Won’t Pack a Punch Like in 2021

    Alibaba Quarterly Profit Sinks Despite Rise in Sales

    Tencent Profit Jumps as High-Margin Businesses Grow

    Flood of Fake Science Forces Multiple Journal Closures

    Paris Olympics May Bring $12 Billion Economic Boost

    Federer-Backed On Boosts Forecast After Sneaker Demand Rises

    Tinder, Bumble Look for Love in New Places as Fewer People Swipe Right

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: May 13, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 13th, 2024 at 7:04 am

    Putin Turns to a Technocrat to Crank Up Russia’s War Machine

    Elon Musk’s Diplomacy: Woo Right-Wing World Leaders. Then Benefit

    Global Chips Battle Intensifies With $81 Billion Subsidy Surge

    U.S. Awards $120 Million to Chipmaker to Expand Facility in Minnesota

    Intel Nears Deal With Apollo for $11 Billion Ireland Partnership

    China to Start $138 Billion Bond Sale on Friday to Boost Economy

    An Inflation Test Looms Over the Economy and the Election

    Why Is Inflation So Stubborn? Ask Your Local Small Business

    The Case for Forever High Interest Rates

    Funds Go All-In on FX Trades Driven by Central Bank Drama

    All the Rage in Private Equity: Mortgaging the Fund

    UBS Announces Equity Conversion Provision for Almost $5 Billion in AT1 Debt

    Priced Out of Housing, Communities Take Development Into Their Own Hands

    Indian Renewable Energy Firm Plans Maiden Dollar Bond Sale

    Biden to Hike Tariffs on China EVs and Offer Solar Exclusions

    Nevermind Those EVs — Oil Demand Keeps Growing

    The Surprising Force Stalling Climate Progress: California Restaurants

    The Solar Storm Fried GPS Systems Used by Some Farmers, Stalling Planting

    SoftBank Commits $5 Billion to AI After Three Years of Losses

    Cybersecurity Risk Rose in Past Year, Say Compliance Professionals

    Squarespace to Go Private in $6.6 Billion Takeover by Permira

    GameStop Surges as ‘Roaring Kitty’ Return Adds Fuel to Rally

    Kids Hooked on Video Games Prompt a Flurry of Lawsuits

    Fast Food Forever: How McHaters Lost the Culture War

    At the Home of BTS, Turmoil Over a Rising K-Pop Star

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: May 10, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 10th, 2024 at 7:03 am

    A German Initiative to Keep Workers Employed by Retraining Them

    ECB June Rate Cut ‘Most Likely’ If Outlook Holds, Elderson Says

    Britain Shakes Off Recession as Economy Grows Faster Than Expected

    Biden Set to Impose Tariffs on China EVs, Strategic Sectors

    Why Higher Fed Rates Are Not Totally Off the Table

    Hedge Funds Draw Pension Money to Riskiest Corner of a $1.3 Trillion Credit Market

    UBS Mulls Bonus for Investment Bankers Who Lure Rich Clients

    Ackman Scolded Over DEI Views at Closed-Door Milken Session

    Corporate America Is Sitting Out the Trump-Biden Rematch

    Severe Solar Storm Threatens Power Grids and Navigation Systems

    Did You Make Your Connecting Flight? You May Have A.I. to Thank

    Microsoft’s Hedge Against OpenAI Makes Perfect Sense

    Tech Conference Touched on Everything From AI Fears to a Belching Robot

    The Dangerous and Lucrative Business of Space Clean-Up

    ‘I’m Not Your Mom’: Tech Exec’s Videos Spark Clash Over China’s Work Culture

    China Auto Sales Fell in April Amid EV Price War

    Does Your EV Hurt, or Help, the Economy?

    Elon Musk Changes Tune on Tesla Superchargers After Mass Firing

    Honda Motor Expects Annual Profit to Fall, Announces Share Buyback

    Novavax Soars on $1.2 Billion Sanofi Vaccine Licensing Deal

    ‘The Caitlin Clark Effect Is Real,’ and It’s Already Changing the WNBA

    Why Your Chocolate Fix Is About to Get More Expensive

    California Says Restaurants Must Bake All of Their Add-on Fees into Menu Prices

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: May 9, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 9th, 2024 at 8:08 am

    The Debate Is Heating Up Over China’s Factory Output

    China’s Exports Return to Growth in April, Boosting Economy

    Why China’s Xi Faces a Pressing Challenge in Europe

    Bank of England Leaves Interest Rates Unchanged, Signals It’s Closer to Cutting

    Malaysia Central Bank Holds Rates Steady, as Widely Expected

    What CFOs Are Saying About Higher-for-Longer Rates

    Ex-Goldman Banker Fights Extradition Over Ghana Bribery Case

    More Regulators Eye Whistleblower Award Programs Hoping for Insider Tips

    Two Chinese Megacities Lift Home Purchase Curbs to Attract Buyers

    With China’s Property Market Struggling, India, Korea and Vietnam Are Hot

    ‘Seriously Underwater’ Home Mortgages Tick Up Across the US

    Gen Z Is Relying on Debt More Than Millennials Did at This Age

    What’s a Golden Visa and Where Can You Still Get One?

    What Happens When a Happening Place Becomes Too Hot

    Floods in East Africa Damp Mother’s Day Cut-Flower Shipments

    Meet My A.I. Friends

    Apple’s New iPad Ad Leaves Its Creative Audience Feeling … Flat

    Tim Cook Can’t Run Apple Forever. Who’s Next?

    ‘It’s a Money Loser’: Tax Breaks for Data Centers Are Under Fire

    Reddit Seeks New Users, Revenue to Keep the Momentum Going

    Norfolk Southern Shareholders Vote Thursday to Keep or Fire CEO

    BAE Systems Backs Guidance as Defense Spending Remains High

    Moderna’s New RSV Vaccine Undercuts the Promise of mRNA

    Sony and Apollo’s Plan for Paramount: Break It Up

    Disney, Hulu and Max Streaming Bundle Will Soon Become Available

    Brands Face Growing Pressure From Activist Shareholders Over LGBTQ Marketing

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: May 8, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 8th, 2024 at 7:03 am

    Sweden’s Central Bank Cuts Key Rate as Europe Moves Ahead of the Fed

    BOJ Governor Says Early Rate Hike Possible if Prices Rise Faster Than Expected

    Profits Are Booming—and That’s Shielding the Economy

    JPMorgan Limits Segantii Exposure Amid Insider-Trading Case

    FTX Has Billions More Than Needed to Pay Bankruptcy Victims

    Hedge Fund Tycoon Loses Ruling Over $40 Million WWII Shipwreck Treasure

    Americans Are Racking Up ‘Phantom Debt’ That Wall Street Can’t Track

    Rents May Be Last Tamed in Inflation Fight

    Billions in Chips Grants Are Expected to Fuel Industry Growth

    Apple’s China iPhone Shipments Soar 12% in March After Discounts

    Google’s Pixel Leaves Little Room to Breathe for Sony Phones

    TikTok’s Legal Bet on the First Amendment

    South Africa Moots New Coal-Plant Closure to Secure $2.6 Billion

    The Company Preaching America’s Nuclear Revival

    EU’s von der Leyen: China Must Be Stopped from Flooding EV Market

    South Korea Plans $7 Billion Push to Pivot EV Battery Industry Away From China

    Will Tesla’s EV Charging Slowdown Supercharge Competitors?

    Companies Are Balking at the High Costs of Running Electric Trucks

    Toyota Motor Projects Annual Profit Drop, Announces Share Buyback

    Activist Investor Seeks to Force Out Norfolk Southern’s Management

    Uber Bookings Miss on Early Holidays, Weak Regional Demand

    Shopify Reports Higher Revenue, Sees Growth Slowing

    Neutrogena Lost Dermatologists and Missed Out on the $42 Billion Beauty Boom

    How Uniqlo’s ‘Millennial Birkin’ Is Beating Designer Bags

    Premier League Strikes Deal With Fanatics on Trading Cards

    Refinery29’s New Owner Plans to Cover Sports, Buy More Media Companies

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • CWS Market Review – May 7, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 7th, 2024 at 8:19 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.”)

    It’s still early, but so far, May is looking a lot better than April. The S&P 500 has rallied for the last four days in a row. On Tuesday, the index briefly stuck its head above 5,200. More importantly, the S&P 500 has overtaken its 50-day moving average. That comes after 15 straight days of closing below it. Still, I’m not convinced that the coast is clear.

    What makes me say that? On Friday, the government reported that the U.S. economy created 175,000 net new jobs last month. That’s a decent figure but it was well below expectations. Economists had been expecting a gain of 240,000. Also, the unemployment rate ticked up to 3.9%. That’s still low, but it’s the highest in over two years.

    Oddly enough, the immediate impact of the jobs report has been positive—not because it’s good news itself but because it could push forward the Fed’s plans to cut rates, and that would be good for the market.

    In other words, bad news is good news because it may spur the Fed to action. I realize that may sound odd, but welcome to Planet Wall Street.

    In the jobs report, I was particularly disappointed to see that average hourly earnings increased by only 0.2% for April. That needs to improve. Over the past year, average hourly earnings are up 3.9%. Both numbers were 0.1% below expectations. These are crucial numbers for Wall Street because it may signal that consumers are close to being tapped out.

    Here’s a look at the year-over-year increase in average hourly earnings. Notice how it’s increased but the rate of increase has consistently fallen.

    The government also calculates a broader unemployment rate, called the U-6 rate, which includes “discouraged” workers. For April, the U-6 rate rose to 7.4% which is the highest since November 2021. The labor force participation rate stayed the same at 62.7%.

    We’re also seeing more part-time workers shift to fulltime. Last month, the number of fulltime workers increased by 949,000 while part-time workers dropped by 914,000.

    Here are some details about jobs growth in different sectors:

    Consistent with recent trends, health care led job creation, with a 56,000 increase.

    Other sectors showing significant rises included social assistance (31,000), transportation and warehousing (22,000), and retail (20,000). Construction added 9,000 positions while government, which had shown solid gains in recent months, was up just 8,000 after averaging 55,000 over the previous 12 months.

    The recent gains had been heavily tilted to government and healthcare jobs. I’d like to see those gains broaden out.

    Moses Sternstein points out that the jobs market isn’t so much growing as it’s “closing in the gaps.” The number of jobs that need to be done has stayed roughly the same but the number of people available to fill those jobs has been fewer than expected. As a result, job gains are modest while the unemployment rate is low. One effect of this has been higher wages for low-end workers.

    That’s part of the reason why we’ve seen an imbalance in inflation. Services like haircuts have been hit hard by inflation while goods like new TVs haven’t moved that much. It all comes down to how much the product is dependent on labor costs.

    So where does this put the Fed? That’s hard to say, but the futures market now thinks the first Fed rate cut will come in September. Prior to the jobs report, we were looking at a cut in November. There’s also a slight chance of another rate cut before the end of the year. Any rate cuts are good for stocks and that’s probably why the market has rallied the last few days.

    We’re still in Q1 earnings season. Overall, the results have been quite good but only relative to expectations. Q1 earnings growth is currently tracking at 5.31%. That’s up from 2.99% one month ago.

    So far, 77.4% of companies have beaten Wall Street’s earnings estimates while 59.1% have beaten on sales. A little more than half have beaten on both.

    Stay tuned for next Wednesday, May 15. That’s when we’ll get the CPI report for April. There hasn’t been much improvement here in several months.

    Apple’s Massive $110 Billion Share Buyback

    Last week, Apple’s (AAPL) board of directors made news by announcing a new $110 billion share buyback plan. That’s an astounding amount of money. Of the ten largest share buyback announcements of all time, Apple owns six of them.

    The plans also raised some questions about how a company ought to use its excess cash. Is a buyback plan the best thing to do with shareholders’ money? Is Apple no longer an innovation giant, or has it become a high-cash-flow value stock?

    I have some thoughts about this. Ideally, I’d prefer to see a company pay out cash dividends. Apple increased its dividend by one penny to 25 cents per share. The best thing about this is that it gives shareholders the option of using their dividend payment to buy more shares, which is effectively what the buyback does automatically.

    I also fear when a company holds too much cash. This often leads to unwise acquisitions. This is known as the Bladder Theory of Corporate Finance.

    I have no problem with the idea of share buybacks, but I think they’re often abused. For example, too often share buybacks merely use shareholder money to buy an overpriced stock. This is what happened at Cisco (CSCO) for many years.

    I also don’t like it when companies offer large stock options to their senior executives but share buybacks tend to mask how much money is at stake.

    Here I have to give Apple credit. The company has gradually reduced the number of shares outstanding. In fact, over the past year, Apple’s profit declined but its earnings-per-share increased slightly thanks to fewer outstanding shares. According to MarketWatch, over the last 10 years, Apple has reduced its share count by 37%.

    If you’re going to do a buyback, that’s the way to do it.

    IES Holdings Revisit

    Three weeks ago, I told you about IES Holdings (IESC). This is one of those great companies with an impressive track record that’s virtually ignored by Wall Street. Since 2012, it’s up 90-fold. Literally, IESC isn’t followed by a single analyst on Wall Street.

    The company “provides infrastructure services including electrical, communications, low-voltage, network, AV, and security alarm systems to the residential, industrial and commercial markets.”

    In the newsletter, I wrote: IESC’s next earnings report will probably be out in early May, but I can’t say what Wall Street’s consensus is since there isn’t one.” Well, on Friday, IESC released its earnings report, and it was a good one.

    For its fiscal Q2, IESC’s revenues rose by 24% and its operating income was up 146%. Q2 earnings rose from $1.07 per share last year to $2.29 per share for this year. IESC has $106 million in cash and not a dime of debt. During Friday’s trading, shares of IESC jumped 18%. In two weeks, IESC gained 50%.

    I certainly can’t take credit for predicting that would happen, but it does show you that there are plenty of good stocks to own that aren’t part of the Magnificent Seven.

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

    – Eddy

    P.S. If you want more info on our ETF, you can check out the ETF’s website.

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

    What India’s Addition to JPMorgan’s Bond Index Means

    Chris Dixon’s Campaign to Overhaul Crypto’s Grifty Reputation

    Revolut Launches UK Crypto Exchange as Digital Assets Recover

    Behind Nigeria’s Arrest of Binance Employee, Claims of a Bribe Request

    Wall Street Bonuses to Rise this Year as Deals Return

    High-Tech Trading Firms Race to Grab Bond Market Turf

    The Big Questions Hanging Over a Blackstone Fund

    UBS Returns to Profit as CEO Ermotti Affirms Buyback Plans

    Insider Trading Allegations Hit Asia’s ‘Block-Trade King’ for Global Banks

    OpenAI Releases ‘Deepfake’ Detector to Disinformation Researchers

    Amazon to Invest $9 Billion in Singapore Cloud Infrastructure

    LMR Partners Adds US Oil Strategy in Commodities Push

    Saudi Aramco Net Income Falls on Declining Crude Oil Volumes

    China’s Solar Panel Giants Say Prices Are Near the Bottom

    Third Point’s Loeb Says AI Will Boost Texas Power Producer Vistra

    A New Kind of Power Company Will Put a Battery in Every Home

    Tesla Autopilot Probe Escalates With US Regulator’s Data Demands

    Apple Needs to Move the iPad Beyond the Toddler Stage

    Disney Beats on Profit, Raises Outlook Despite Revenue Miss

    Instacart, Uber Join Forces to Add Uber Eats to Instacart App

    Let’s All Take a Deep Breath About China

    China’s New Love of Coffee Is Coming for Yours

    How the US Drives Gun Exports and Fuels Violence Around the World

    Taylor Swift Draws Five Times as Many US Luxury Travelers as the Olympics

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: May 6, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 6th, 2024 at 7:03 am

    Oil Climbs as Gaza Tensions Rise, Saudi Arabia Hikes Prices

    Global Gas Glut to Be Delayed by Another Year

    Russia’s War Economy Starves Crucial Oil Industry of Manpower

    Xi And Macron Meet to Confront Trade Tensions

    China Is Buying Gold Like There’s No Tomorrow

    Global Housing Shortages Are Crushing Immigration-Fueled Growth

    What It’s Like to Be a Regional Fed President On the Road

    At $2 Million Per Minute, Treasuries Mint Cash Like Never Before

    Lamborghini Bros No More: Crypto Is Creating a New Wealth Effect

    Bill Gross Is the Bond King, But Diversification Is Emperor

    Italy’s White-Collar Mafia is Making a Business Killing

    Credit Suisse’s Last CEO Koerner to Leave UBS in Coming Weeks

    JPMorgan’s Top China TMT Banker Crystal Zhu Said to Join Morgan Stanley

    Buffett Praises Apple After Trimming It, Drops Paramount Stake

    Elon Musk Is Astonished By Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Amassing As Much Cash As Tesla CEO’s Wealth: ‘Wow’

    The Oracle of Omaha warns about AI: What Buffett said at Berkshire

    How Bad Is A.I. for the Climate?

    Tensions Rise in Silicon Valley Over Sales of Start-Up Stocks

    Qualcomm’s Smartphone Future Looks Brighter With AI

    China Makes Cheap Electric Vehicles. Why Can’t American Shoppers Buy Them?

    Li Auto Shares Gain on Strong L6 Orders

    Boeing’s Big Space Test: Using Starliner to Ferry NASA Astronauts

    Australia’s Qantas to Pay $79 Million to Settle ‘Ghost Flights’ Case

    How Online Shopping Is Saving the Bricks-and-Mortar Store

    Target Is Taking Its Popular In-House Apparel Brand Abroad

    Howard Schultz Urges Starbucks to Fix its U.S. Business

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: May 3, 2024
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 3rd, 2024 at 7:03 am

    Problems Mount for Group of Seven’s Price Cap on Russian Oil

    Oil Companies Expand Offshore Drilling, Pointing to Energy Needs

    Biden, BP and the High-Stakes Sequel to Deepwater Horizon

    Drought to Deluge: Eastern Africa Bears Brunt of Climate Change

    A Billionaire Wanted to Save 1 Trillion Trees by 2030. It’s Not Going Great

    Geopolitics Takes a Central Role in Supply Chains

    The Treasurys Market Is Getting Squeezed From All Sides

    Traders Pull Forward First Full Fed Rate Cut to November Ahead of Jobs

    The April Jobs Report

    HSBC Has No Plans to Dispose of Further Businesses, Chairman Says

    ‘Your Fund Is Under Attack’: BlackRock Fights to Repel Saba Raid

    What Will Warren Buffett Bet on Next?

    Even the World’s Most-Envied Retirement Plan Is Falling Short

    Calls to Divest From Israel Put Students and Donors on Collision Course

    Utah Lights An Innovative Path To Matching Benefits With Work Realities

    Carvana Father-Son Duo Make $11 Billion in 3,000% Stock Rebound

    Google, Meta and Microsoft Apparently Didn’t Get the ‘Monopoly’ Memo

    Google Employees Tune Out Antitrust Threat as Trial Comes to a Head

    Apple Rallies on Upbeat Forecast, Record-Setting Buyback

    Boeing’s Latest Trouble Is a Jet Part Caught Up in Russia Sanctions

    Sony, Apollo Propose $26 Billion Deal for Paramount Global

    Startups Go to Hollywood: AI Movies Aren’t Just a Gimmick Anymore

    The Rise of Food Robots Butchering Cows and Packing Veg

    Starbucks Is Running Out of Americans to Drink Its Expensive Coffee

    Jean Paul Gaultier Owner Puig Shares Rise on First Day of Trading

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

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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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    zerohedge zerohedge @zerohedge ·
    20h

    *UNITEDHEALTH UNDER CRIMINAL PROBE FOR POSSIBLE FRAUD: WSJ

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    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    14 May

    Crossing Wall Street is looking to hire a Director of Social Media. Qualified candidates will be vain, self-centered and argumentative. Relevant skills include missing the point, name-calling, GIFs and being offended.

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    watcherguru Watcher.Guru @watcherguru ·
    13 May

    JUST IN: Elon Musk's Tesla $TSLA is up 48.5% since Tim Walz celebrated the stock "dropping."

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    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    14 May

    185% Tariffs: How the Trade War Hit One Shipment of T-Shirts

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