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Morning News: October 4, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 4th, 2023 at 7:07 amFraud Is Forcing Global Trade to Fix Its Paper Problem
Oil Prices Edge Lower Ahead of Supply Data as Saudis Affirm Extension of Production Cut
Japan Keeps Yen Traders Guessing Over Whether It Intervened
ECB Interest Rate Hikes May Be Over, Centeno Says
Bond Selloff Threatens Hopes for Soft Landing
Investors Eye Profit Rebound After Yearlong Earnings Recession
A ‘Shadow’ Lending Market in the U.S., Funded by Insurance Premiums
Every Generation Makes Money Mistakes. Here’s What They Are
Chaos in Washington Adds to Market Jitters
McCarthy Exit Means More Turmoil Before New US Shutdown Fight
Why 8% Mortgage Rates Aren’t Crazy
As Student Loan Payments Resume, Biden Cancels $9 Billion in Debt
Kaiser Workers Launch Largest Health Care Strike in US History
America’s High EV Costs Are Driving Buyers to Hybrids
Amazon Used Secret ‘Project Nessie’ Algorithm to Raise Prices
SAS Stock Dives 95% as Restructuring Announced
How Dodgy Spare Parts Got Into Jet Engines, Leaving Airlines Scrambling
F.C.C. Issues First Fine Over Space Junk Rule
Spotify Gave Subscribers Music and Podcasts. Next: Audiobooks
Netflix Plans to Raise Prices After Actors Strike Ends
Hollywood Ignored Tyler Perry, So He Built His Own Empire
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CWS Market Review – October 3, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 3rd, 2023 at 7:41 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 Stock Market Continues to Drift Lower
Wall Street is still in a cranky mood, and the culprit is higher interest rates. There appears to be an emerging consensus that the Federal Reserve will hold interest rates “higher for longer.”
Wall Street doesn’t like that. Last week, the S&P 500 closed out its first losing quarter since Q3 of last year. The index continued to fall today. The S&P 500 closed at its lowest level since June. The Dow is now down for the year.
The S&P 500 has already dropped below its 50-day moving average and it’s not too far from breaking below its 200-day moving average. The index has traded above its 200-DMA without stopping for six straight months. Falling below moving averages is often an omen of bad things to come.
What’s next? All eyes are focused on Friday’s jobs report. So far, the labor market has remained calm, but any weakness could convince the bears that they’ve been right.
For August, the economy created 187,000 net new jobs. That was higher than both June and July, and the unemployment rate rose from 3.5% to 3.8%. For this Friday, Wall Street expects to see 170,000 net new jobs created for September and it expects the unemployment rate to fall to 3.7%.
However, the number I’ll be watching most closely is average hourly earnings. The consensus on Wall Street is for earnings to rise by 0.3%. Workers have been getting paid more but that’s mostly keeping with inflation. That’s probably part of the reason why we’ve seen organized labor activity recently.
I won’t make a prediction for Friday’s report, but I will note that other labor reports have been pretty good. For example, the initial jobless claims report is near a seven-month low. On Tuesday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said that job openings increased in August from 8.9 million to 9.6 million.
I was also impressed by Monday’s ISM Manufacturing Index. This report comes out on the first business day of the month. Monday’s report came in at 49.0. Any number above 50 means the factory sector of the economy is growing, and any number below 50 means it’s contracting.
This was the 11th month in a row of contraction, but it wasn’t by much. Monday’s report was the highest in 10 months.
Despite those selected positive notes, Wall Street seems to be very worried.
As grumpy as the stock market has been, the bond market is even grumpier. On Tuesday, the yield on the 10-year Treasury reached its highest level since 2007.
The yield on the 10-year got as high as 4.781% while the 30-year reached 4.874%, also the highest since 2007. A little over three years ago, the 10-year yield was going for just 0.5%.
Rising interest rates are bad for stocks for two major reasons. One is that interest expense is an important part of a company’s income statement. If it costs more to borrow money, companies will do less of it. It also costs more to refinance existing debt.
The other reason is that higher yields provide stronger competition for investors’ money. The one-year Treasury is going for 5.5%. Sure, it’s not for me, but I certainly can understand investors who’d prefer to make an easy 5.5% for one year than deal with the frenzy of stock market volatility. That 5.5% works out to more than 1,800 Dow points over the coming year, and it’s basically risk-free. What we want to look at isn’t so much the absolute level of interest rates but rather, their direction. Lower yields are good for stocks and higher yields are dangerous.
What’s interesting is that “real” yields, meaning after inflation, are rising as well. Since May 11, the yield on the 10-year TIPs, the inflation-adjusted security, has increased by 1%. It’s not just an inflation story (but that is a big problem).
The two-year yield is often considered to be the maturity that is most sensitive to the Fed’s interest-rate policy. The two-year yield recently rose to 5.129%.
The Federal Reserve doesn’t meet for another month, but the interest rate “hawks” have gotten a little stronger. The futures market still indicates that the Fed will pause at its next meeting, but the dissenters are growing. One week ago, the odds of a 0.25% rate hike in November were just 16%. Now they’re at 30%.
This week, Raphael Bostic, head of the Atlanta Fed, said he can see interest rates at the current range of 5.25% to 5.5% well into next year.
He’s not alone. Loretta Mester, the president of the Cleveland Fed, said rates could be held higher “for some time.” The next CPI report will be out on Thursday, October 12.
I’ve also been struck by how many conservative stocks have been getting squeezed by this market. For example, utility stocks are lagging badly. Check out this chart of the S&P 500 versus the S&P 500 Utility ETF:
Related to this is that growth stocks have been holding up much better than value stocks have this year. I’m not sure that can last for much longer. If the broader economy starts to get shaky, that will help the relative performance of many defensive stocks.
The Boring Stock Portfolio
In his book, One Up on Wall Street, Peter Lynch extolled the virtues of investing in boring stocks. There are many stocks that are very good businesses, but they really don’t do anything interesting. As such, investors tend to overlook them.
Just because the sector isn’t interesting doesn’t mean it’s not important, or unprofitable. These are companies that are rarely mentioned on TV.
There’s a group of boring stocks that I like to follow. Here’s a sample of some good but very dull stocks.
American Water Works (AWK) is a nice, dull stock. AWK is a public utility that provides water to 1,700 communities across 24 states. Water is a good business to be in. No town wants to be another Flint, Michigan water disaster.
American Water “owns 80 surface water treatment plants, 480 groundwater treatment plants, 160 wastewater treatment plants, 52,500 miles of pipes, 1,100 groundwater wells, 1,700 pumping stations, 1,300 water storage facilities, and 76 dams.”
Amphenol (APH) is a former Buy List stock. The company makes electronic and fiber optic connectors. Bor-ing. Over the last 31 years, it’s up more than 42,000%.
Many people assume that Clorox (CLX) is a brand that’s owned by some larger multinational. No so. Clorox owns Clorox. The company also owns Pine-Sol and Liquid-Plumr. Clorox was founded in 1913.
Cummins (CMI) is an engine company but it’s so much more. The company makes diesel and natural gas engines, plus electric and hybrid powertrains. It’s also engaged in filtration and power generation. Cummins employs more than 70,000 people around the world.
Donaldson (DCI) is a filtration company. It makes air filters for several different sectors. Another former Buy List stock.
Eaton (ETN) is a power management company that’s based in Dublin, Ireland. The company has been listed on the NYSE for 100 years. Only 32 companies have been listed that long.
Graco (GGG) makes fluid-handling systems. Snore. Over the last 30 years, it’s only up 20,000%.
Illinois Tool Works (ITW) “produces engineered fasteners and components, equipment and consumable systems, and specialty products.” Yes, it’s based in Illinois.
Public Storage (PSA) is the largest self-storage real estate investment trust (REIT) in the United States. There are currently more than 2,600 Public Storage locations around the world. PSA has relatively few employees. The lots are automated so customers can access their units at any time.
The company does a lot more than just provide the space. They also provide a broad range of services for their clients. PSA offers insurance and packing products. The company also had a subsidiary that provides boxes and truck rentals.
Sysco (SYY) is a major supplier to restaurants and dining facilities. The company has 600,000 clients.
WD-40 (WDFC) is like Clorox. Many people assume it’s a brand owned by a larger company. Nope, WD-40 is owned by WD-40.
Most every homeowner is familiar with WD-40. The lubricant spray is instantly recognizable by its yellow and blue label. Some folks at the firm were working on a Water Displacement formula. The first 39 tries failed, but #40 worked and the name was born.
Did you know WD-40 can soften leather? It can also clean tile and erase crayon. It can even unstick Legos.
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.
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Morning News: October 3, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 3rd, 2023 at 7:06 amOPEC+ Shows No Sign of Easing Oil Squeeze as Ministers Meet
US Supreme Court to Hear Case Targeting Consumer Financial Watchdog
The Fed Seeks to Up Its Influencer Status
Fed’s Mester Says One More Rate Hike May Be Needed This Year
Wall Street Thinks America’s Homes Are Overvalued
Americans’ Growing Reluctance to Quit Their Jobs, in Five Charts
A Plot to Oust the House Speaker Hits Weary Investors
‘Dumb Money’ Exposes the Baffling Allure of Bad Investment Advice
Can AI Beat the Market? Wall Street Is Desperate to Try
J.P. Morgan Growth Equity and Index Ventures Back Logistics Payment Platform Loop
Brookfield Raises $12 Billion for Flagship Private Equity Fund
Zoom’s Ex-CMO Will Now Pitch Hybrid Work as CEO of Video-Tech Firm Neat
Meta Explores Charge for Ad-Free Instagram and Facebook. Its Model Is Under Threat
From $26 Billion to Bust: Sam Bankman Fried’s Astonishing Rise and Fall
U.S. Car Sales Expected to Increase Again in the Third Quarter
China Is Suffering a Brain Drain. The U.S. Isn’t Exploiting It
A Rural Michigan Town Is the Latest Battleground in the U.S.-China Fight
China Evergrande Shares Soar as Trade Resumes Amid Police Probe
Key Taiwan Tech Firms Helping Huawei With China Chip Plants
Rare Look Inside TikTok Parent’s Finances Shows Slowing Revenue Growth
Tiger Woods-Backed Golf League Signs Sponsorship Deal with SoFi
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Morning News: October 2, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 2nd, 2023 at 7:06 amDoes China’s Property Bust Make a Financial Crisis Inevitable?
China’s Precarious Economy Signals More Support Is Needed
BOJ to Buy Additional Bonds to Curb Rise in Sovereign Yields
Kenya’s Stock Market Becomes World’s Worst Performer
Why a US Recession Is Still Likely — and Coming Soon
Will Companies Keep Their Pandemic-Era Gains? It Depends
Higher Rates Starting to Hit US Profits, Goldman Strategists Warn
Wall Street’s Most Hated Regulator Faces a Fundamental Threat
Severe Crash Is Coming for US Office Properties, Investors Say
With Banks Offering 5% Returns, Financial Advisers Fight Irrelevance
Americans Are Still Spending Like There’s No Tomorrow
Why Consumers Are Mad About Inflation Even Though It Has Fallen
Birkenstock Attracts Norwegian Wealth Fund to $1.6 Billion IPO
Vaccine Breakthrough Behind Pfizer, Moderna Shots Wins Nobel
Aging Trees Show a Crisis Looms for the World’s Everything Oil
The Secret Behind the First $1 Billion Green Hydrogen Startup
Rivian’s Quest to Build the Ultimate Truck Burns Through Billions
Crypto Goes on Trial, as Sam Bankman-Fried Faces His Reckoning
Who’s Rooting Hardest for a Sam Bankman-Fried Conviction? The Crypto Industry
Airbnb Is Fundamentally Broken, Its CEO Says. He Plans to Fix It.
Peak TV Is Over. A Different Hollywood Is Coming
Longtime Union Leader Steps Fully Into Hollywood’s Spotlight
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Morning News: September 29, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 29th, 2023 at 7:03 amOil Prices Near $100 per Barrel Raise Questions Over Demand Destruction
Evergrande Tycoon Crossed a Red Line When Wealth Funds Ran Dry
Japan’s 30-Year Bond Yield Reaches Highest Level Since 2013
Eurozone Inflation Rate Drops to 4.3 Percent
Europe Is Trying to ‘Trump Proof’ the Transatlantic Relationship
Turmoil Over Migrants at U.S.-Mexico Border Is Straining Trade Flows
The Threat of an American Debt Crisis
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink Sees 10-Year Yields Heading Above 5%
Quirk of Bond Futures Threatens to Accelerate Surge in US Yields
A Silver Lining From the Pandemic: A Surge in Start-Ups
Huawei Takes Revenge as China Catches Up on Semiconductors
Biden’s $100 Billion Chip Bet Caught Up in Arizona Union Showdown
UAW Expected to Expand Auto Strikes Friday
EVs Will Hit Detroit Harder Than a UAW Raise
Billionaire Agarwal Shakes Up Vedanta Empire as Debt Bill Looms
VW Scraps Plan for New €2 Billion EV Factory in Germany
How West Africa Can Reap More Profit From the Global Chocolate Market
Meal-Kit Maker Blue Apron to Be Sold (Ending Disastrous Six-Year Experiment with Public Ownership)
Nike Clears a Low Bar With Investors
Henry Kravis, Endeavor, Fenway Eye PGA Tour Deal to Rival Saudi Arabia’s
The U.S. Tried to Pitch Peanuts at Japanese Baseball Games. It’s a Tough Nut to Crack
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Morning News: September 28, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 28th, 2023 at 7:06 amEvergrande Halts Trading After Founder Put Under Police Control
Saudi Arabia and Russia Win Big in Gamble on Oil Cuts
Oil Touches $95 With Shrinking Inventories Fanning Fresh Rally
Feeding the World Once Brought the US Untold Influence—No More
Want to Spur Green Energy in Wyoming? Aim for the Billionaires
Standoff in Congress Brings Government to Brink of Shutdown
Missing ‘Gold Standard’ Economic Data Will Test Alternatives in US Shutdown
Bond Selloff Pushes Treasury Yield to New ‘07 Peak
What’s Driving the September Stock Swoon
In Suing Amazon, FTC’s Lina Khan Turns Her Earlier Pricing Argument on Its Head
US SEC Nearing Settlement with Wall Street Firms Over WhatsApp Probe
GameStop’s Billionaire Backer Cohen Replaces Ousted CEO
Elon Musk Wins US Space Force Contract for Starshield
Meet the A.I. Jane Austen: Meta Weaves A.I. Throughout Its Apps
To Bring Socializing Back to Social Networks, Apps Try A.I. Imagery
Google User Data Has Become a Favorite Police Shortcut
The Magic Number: 32 Hours a Week
What Worries UAW’s Striking Workers, in Their Own Words
Car Sales Are Slowing. Car-Listing Websites Are Just Getting Started
Peloton Soars After Deal With Lululemon to Share Fitness Content
Logistics Companies Grow Cautious on Holiday Hiring
When Corporate Confessions Make Companies Look Good—and When They Don’t
Delta CEO: Airline ‘Probably Went Too Far’ with SkyMiles Changes
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Morning News: September 27, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 27th, 2023 at 7:06 amChina Has Second Thoughts About Controlling Prices in Its Multi Trillion-Dollar Housing Market
China Puts Evergrande’s Billionaire Founder Under Police Control
What the U.S.-China Chip War Means for a Critical American Ally
US Investors Want Clarity on Biden’s Vague Curbs on China Tech
ECB’s Holzmann Floats Tenfold Hike in Minimum Reserves
IPO Optimism Grows, Fueling Hope for Global Recovery
US Government Shutdown’s Economic Risks Grow the Longer It Lasts
DOJ Steps Up Probe Against Credit Suisse, UBS Over Alleged Russian Sanctions Evasion
Crypto’s Wild D.C. Ride: From FTX at the Fed to a Scramble for Access
A $12 Million Request to Cover a Crypto Scam Sank a Bank CEO
Why Now Is a Horrible Time to Refinance Student Loans
Britain Approves Huge, Controversial Oil and Gas Field in the North Sea
E.U. Law Sets the Stage for a Clash Over Disinformation
Lina Khan vs. Jeff Bezos: This Is Big Tech’s Real Cage Match
How Elon Musk Came to Influence the Fates of Nations
A Futuristic Plan to Make Steel With Nuclear Fusion
This Ford vs. GM Feud Could Shape the Future of EVs in America
Auto Workers Aren’t Striking Only For Higher Wages. They Want Their Pensions Back, Too
Las Vegas and Its Big, Big Ambitions
Las Vegas Hospitality Workers Authorize Strike at Major Resorts
Costco Keeps Members and Investors Guessing
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CWS Market Review – September 26, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 26th, 2023 at 5:40 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 S&P 500 Drops to a Three-Month Low
Wall Street has been in a sour mood lately. As I’ve discussed before, early fall has historically been a tough time for Wall Street. It’s happening again this year. On Tuesday, the Dow had its worst day since March. The S&P 500 closed at its lowest level since June 7.
It’s as if everyone got back from the Labor Day weekend in a lousy mood. This time, investors are worried about a sluggish economy and (another) potential government shutdown. Mind you, the market hasn’t experienced a sudden drop. Instead, it’s been a slow and gradual decline. Nor has the damage been severe — at least not yet.
Since the end of July, the S&P 500 has pulled back by 6.9%. The S&P 500 had already dropped below its 50-day moving average, which can be a sign of continued weakness. The index isn’t far from its 200-day moving average (the green line in the chart above). The S&P 500 has traded above its 200-DMA without stop for more than nine months.
Counting Thursday, the S&P 500 has now had six daily drops of more than 1% in August and September. In July and August, there were zero 1% drops.
Of course, we should remember that the market had a very nice run from mid-March until late July. The S&P 500 gained 19% in 20 weeks.
As impressive as the July peak was, it was still well short of the all-time peak from early 2022. This means the stock market has gone 21 months without making a new high. And I’m not adjusting that for an unpleasant bout of inflation which isn’t fading as quickly as we hoped.
Here’s an odd stat for you. The S&P 500 has closed higher for the last 12 Mondays in a row. That’s an all-time record (via Callie Cox).
The market may be sensing a growing unease among consumers. On Tuesday, the Conference Board reported that consumer confidence fell to a four-month low. I like to keep a close eye on the report because so much of the economy comes down to how optimistic people are.
For September, the Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index fell to 103. That’s down from 108.7 for August. It’s the second-lowest reading for this year. In fact, this month’s number came close to dipping below May’s number of 102.5 which would have been the lowest number this year.
Interestingly, the drop in consumer confidence was felt most strongly among folks who make more than $50,000 per year.
Within the Consumer Confidence report, the Conference Board also tracks its Expectations Index. For September, that fell to 73.7. Unofficially, a reading below 80 often tells us that a recession is near. I don’t want to sound alarmist, but we should note that consumers are feeling anxious.
What’s driving all this negative sentiment? That’s not much of a secret. Consumers are worried about higher interest rates, higher mortgage rates and rising gasoline prices. America’s credit card debt recently hit $1 trillion. Overall household debt is now more than $17 trillion.
Folks are feeling the strain. Bank of America recently said that the number of people tapping their 401(k) accounts due to financial stress jumped 36% from a year ago.
Look at the bond market where we see rising yields. The 10-year Treasury yield recently hit a 16-year high while the two-year yield touched a 17-year high. In fact, the two-year yield came within 17 basis points of making a 23-year high. Two years ago, the two-year yield was going for 0.3%. Now it’s going for 5.1%.
The housing market is also feeling the squeeze of higher rates. On Tuesday, the Census Bureau said that sales of new homes fell 8.7% from July to August (that’s seasonally-adjusted and annualized). That’s the slowest pace since March.
Guess what happens when there’s more supply than demand? That’s right. Prices drop. The median price of a new home sale in August was $430,300. That’s down 2% from last year. Housing affordability is at a three-decade low.
Homebuilders are cutting prices to get rid of their homes. Interestingly, the supply of new homes was already fairly tight. The problem is that higher mortgage rates are holding back demand.
Expect 10% Earnings Growth for Q3
This week is the final week of trading for Q3. In a few weeks. the Q3 earnings season will start up. The overall earnings results should be pretty good, but that’s largely because earnings one year ago were weak.
Right now, analysts expect earnings to be up nearly 10% compared with last year’s Q3. Wall Street sees the S&P 500 reporting earnings of $55.27 per share. (That’s the index-adjusted number. Every one point in the S&P 500 works out to about $8.35 billion.)
This is a big downward shift in expectations. In the middle of 2022, Wall Street had been expecting Q3 2023 earnings of more than $63 per share. Over the course of the last year, analysts gradually pared back their Q3 estimates by more than 13%. Recently, however, earnings estimates have increased a little bit. The first reports will start coming in in about two weeks.
As important as earnings are, we also want to see the kind of guidance that companies are willing to offer for the rest of this year and into 2024.
Last year was tough for earnings. For all of 2022, earnings were down just over 5% from 2021. That means earnings growth this year will be helped by favorable comparisons. For Q4, Wall Street currently expects earnings growth of close to 14%. If that’s right, it means the S&P 500 will deliver full-year earnings growth of 11.7%.
That would place full-year earnings at $220 per share and next year’s earnings at $245 per share. That means the S&P 500 is going for 17.5 times next year’s estimate. That’s a little pricey, but I don’t think it’s unreasonable. Right now, the worry isn’t valuations but rather that earnings growth is falling off.
Here’s the S&P 500 along with its earnings. The two lines are scaled at a ratio of 20 to 1. That means that whenever the lines cross, the S&P 500’s P/E ratio is 20.
The S&P 500 is the black line. Earnings are the red line. The green line is Wall Street’s earnings forecast.
The largest tech stocks are looking very stretched. Charlie Bilello points out that the 10 stocks in the S&P 500 now account for 30.5% of the index’s value. The other 490 stocks comprise the other 70%. The Russell 2000 index is down for this year.
There’s more news to come this week. Tomorrow, we’ll get the durable goods report. Wall Street is expecting a drop of 0.5%.
On Thursday, we’ll get the latest report on initial jobless claims. These reports have been quite good recently. We’ll also get the final revision to Q2 GDP. I’m not too concerned about this report since it covers a time period that began six months ago and ended three months ago. We’ll also get the report on pending home sales.
On Friday, we’ll get reports on personal income and spending. Along with this report, the government will include the PCE price data which is the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation.
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.
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Morning News: September 26, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 26th, 2023 at 7:05 amCan the U.S. Make Solar Panels? This Company Thinks So.
Slowing, Graying and in Debt, Can China’s Industrial Heartland Be Revived?
Ford Tried to Sell the Electric Mustang to China the Tesla Way—It Didn’t Work
Teetering China Property Giants Undercut Xi’s Revival Push
World’s Mega-Rich Are Betting on US Renters to Grow Their Billions
The Very Rich Are Often Bad Investors. Here’s Why
Only Richest 20% of Americans Still Have Excess Pandemic Savings
Banks in EU Largely Comply with ‘Basel Endgame’, Says Watchdog
Bond Traders Roiled by Fed See US Shutdown as Next Big Wild Card
Shutdown Would Blindfold Fed in Piloting Course on Rates
Dimon Warns World Not Ready for 7% Fed Rate
Wall Street Echoes Fed’s View on Growth, Higher-for-Longer Rates
UAW Fight Against Billions in Buybacks Forces Investor Rethink
Why Biden and Trump Are Courting Striking Autoworkers
Auto CEOs Make 300 Times What Workers Make. How That Stacks Up
Why Ford Has Been More Willing to Work With the UAW Than GM or Stellantis
Corporate America Promised to Hire a Lot More People of Color. It Actually Did
Cisco’s $28 Billion Splunk Deal May Ignite Software Deal Frenzy
As Its U.S. Shop Opens, TikTok’s Chinese Merchants Struggle to Sell Their Mops and Soap Dispensers
Sam Bankman-Fried’s Trial to Test Dueling Explanations for FTX’s Collapse
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Morning News: September 25, 2023
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 25th, 2023 at 7:05 amGreece, Battered a Decade Ago, Is Booming
China Developers Drop Most in 9 Months on Evergrande Woes
Hedge Fund Boom Turns Into Hangover on Brazil Rate Surge
Britain Grapples for Agreement Over Listing Rules Overhaul
Private Equity’s Slow Carnage Unleashes a Wave of Zombies
Ermotti Sees Good Momentum in Recovering Credit Suisse Funds
Why Traders Aren’t Buying the Fed’s ‘Higher-for-Longer’ Vision
Wall Street Is Hoping $100 Oil Ain’t What It Used to Be
Shutdowns Cost Billions as US Federal Workers Paid to Stay Home
Railroads to Receive $1.4 Billion for Fixes and Upgrades
Ex-Wall Streeters Help Washington Divvy Up $100 Billion to Win the Global Chip Race
Broadcom’s AI Business Won’t Be Easy to Chip Away
Amazon to Invest Up to $4 Billion in AI Startup Anthropic
Apple’s Cheapest iPhone 15 Is Winning Buyers After Upgrades
Booking’s €1.6 Billion Etraveli Deal Blocked by EU
Tata Steel Raised to Investment Grade by Moody’s
Lego’s Latest Effort to Avoid Oil-Based Plastic Hits Brick Wall
Where Did All the Dark-Suited Japanese Businessmen Go?
Why America Has a Long-Term Labor Crisis in Six Charts
Hollywood Screenwriters Reach Tentative Deal to End Strike
How a Storied National Airline Became Reviled in Its Own Country
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