Costco Goes Netflix
In this issue of the Peel:
Market Snapshot
Happy Monday, apes.
I know. I wish I got hit by a train on the way into the office this morning too, but it’s okay. That’s because we have one helluva fun week ahead of us and beyond, with CPI, earnings szn, rate hikes, and PCE all set to drop in the next 3 weeks. Something tells me you won’t wanna miss it.
Neither do equity markets, for that matter. The news of the day centered around the 8:30 am drop of the June jobs data out of the BLS, which, surprisingly, jolted markets at the start of the day. However, by 1-2 pm ET, the pullback began, led by large-cap names, and forced most of the US majors into the red for the day. Small-cap Russell 2k was the only player left standing, gaining 1.22%.
Since setting decade-and-a-half highs earlier this week, the 2-year treasury yield has pulled back slightly to just below 5% leading into the week. The 10-year yield is still cooking as well, gaining above a high 4.20% to slightly narrow this monstrous yield curve inversion. Speaking of which, are we still sure that’s nothing?
Let’s get into it.
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Banana Bits
Macro Monkey Says
The Real Show
As usual, the previews got us a little too hyped up for the real movie. As we discussed the Jobs Report trailer released by ADP last Friday, today it’s time for the critics to come out and chop it up about the real thing.
As you can see below, the US economy added 209,000 jobs to our non-farm payrolls in the month of June, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
"Sources say that Fed Chair JPow was pumped to see the news but quickly came back to reality ..."
?That’s the lowest rate of additions we’ve seen in 2 years. Sources say that Fed Chair JPow was pumped to see the news but quickly came back to reality after being reminded that it’s still well above the 2019 monthly average of 175,000 - and even?that?was a strong labor market.
Once again, the headline for how this data fits into the US macro equation remains the same: we’re moving in the right direction.
But, at the same time, we’re arguably not moving there fast enough. Markets didn’t vomit this data on Friday as they did for the ADP numbers on Thursday, but it was still far from a good day as wage growth data bolstered arguments again for further rate hikes.
Basically, markets appear fed up with the audacity of people like you and me to actually have the gall to ask for more money. Can you imagine? All of us greedy wage-earners saw our average pay increase 4.4% annually for the period, higher than expected amid a month with lower-than-expected demand for new labor, creating a seemingly opposed dynamic to squeeze more money out of poor, sweet executives and shareholders.
I hope that sarcasm is obvious enough, but in case it’s not, let’s dive a little deeper…
This whole rate hike bonanza JPow has taken us for a ride on has one goal: bring inflation structurally back down to 2%. So far, rate hikes have proven an effective blunt tool for doing so, getting us from +9% CPI to 4% in less than a year.
Much of that inflation has been driven by wage gains driven by a smaller pool of labor following the C-19 shutdowns and supply chain/production shenanigans we witnessed that brought the labor participation rate back below average levels. Less labor supply = higher cost per unit of labor, or what nerdy economists call “wage-push inflation.”
?"... this all but guarantees JPow being given the green light to once again jack up your interest rates."
With wages still rising strongly even during a period where job growth was weaker than expected, this all but guarantees JPow being given the green light to once again jack up your interest rates.
There’s plenty of data to come out between now and the July 26th FOMC meeting and rate decision. Most notable will be the dropping of the June CPI report on Wednesday and the slew of bank earnings set to light up your Bloomberg Terminal starting on Thursday and Friday.
Long story short, get ready for a fun end to the month. We’re getting into the good part of summer here in the US, but with all this macro data, something tells me none of us will be touching grass for a while.
What's Ripe
Rivian Automotive (RIVN)?↑ 14.25% ↑
Alibaba (BABA)?↑ 8.05% ↑
What's Rotten
Levi Strauss (LEVI)?↓ 7.79% ↓
Costco (COST)?↓ 2.29% ↓
Data Peel
Thought Banana
Land of the Free, Home of the Debt
Everyone knows that the United States is a global superpower. Most of the time, that fact is recognized via our military, the US dollar’s dominance, our immigration stats, yada, yada, yada.
But getting more meta (not the Mark Zuckerberg kind), not everyone is aware of America’s own internal superpower: spending money.
Not only spending money but, for the most part, spending money?we don’t have. In other words, we’re really, really good at racking up credit card debt.
"As any statistician will tell you, survey data is borderline garbage for the most part ..."
?Hard data on this stuff varies and can be difficult to ascertain, but surveys are here to save the day. As any statistician will tell you, survey data is borderline garbage for the most part, given that people don’t actually?know?what they purport to “know” when answering these questionnaires.
But you could make the argument that, in an economic survey, the fact that people don’t actually?know?could be a positive given how much?expectations?(aka, things we don’t?know) weigh on the macro environment. Just food for thought.
Anyway, let’s look at some data from?Yahoo Finance:
Wow. We all know that most Americans aren’t financially savvy, mostly thanks to the complexities of regulations, products, and lack of true knowledge of exactly what kind of trap they’re getting themselves into.
But with JPow’s nuclear rate hike bomb over the last year and potential to remain steadily on the rise while consumer credit growth is still going strong, those monthly payments just might come in to clock some borrowers right in the face.
?"... those monthly payments just might come in to clock some borrowers right in the face."
Usually, this is a manageable issue for the economy as a whole. As discussed above, incomes are rising above the rate of inflation (finally), but with growth in interest payments and yet another “end” to the student loan moratorium in, the storm we’ve been expecting in downbad consumer spending may be brewing.
Once again, this is your call to go out there and spend money, or even more preferably, spend your parent’s money. That way, you get your sh*t, the economy gets its spending, and your parents can deal with the debt and other bullsh*t. Just how nature intended.
The big question:?Will the explosion in debt?and?rates lead to an eventual spending slowdown? How will student loan payments coming back online change this?
Banana Brain Teaser
Friday?—?Some words can be used as both nouns and adjectives. You will be given a definition, and that definition can be replaced by a single word that is used twice, once as an adjective, the other as a noun.
For example: “a 12-inch podiatrist specialty” is a “foot foot.”
Given the following four definitions, what are the corresponding doublets?
Answers:
Today?—?A man hijacks an airplane transporting both passengers and valuable cargo. After taking the cargo, the man demands two parachutes, puts one of them on, and jumps, leaving the other behind. Why did he want two parachutes?
Shoot us your guesses [email protected]?with the subject line?“Banana Brain Teaser”.
Wise Investor Says
“We know from chaos theory that even if you had a perfect model of the world, you’d need infinite precision in order to predict future events. With…economic phenomena, we don’t have anything like that.”?— Nassim Taleb
How would you rate today’s Peel?
Happy Investing,
Patrick & The Daily Peel Team
Student at JMS College, Munger
1 年U
Realtor Associate @ Next Trend Realty LLC | HAR REALTOR, IRS Tax Preparer
1 年Thanks for Sharing.