Highs, Lows, and Future Glows
In this issue of the Peel:
Market Snapshot
Happy Tuesday, apes.
Friday may feel like years ago after this wonderfully long weekend, but it’s officially (sadly) time to get back to it. To paraphrase a once-adored American philosopher/rapper, “Even if you are not ready for the?trade, it cannot always be night.”
Friday broke a 6-day green streak in broad equity market returns, but last week still managed to pull off the best 5-day session in months. The minor selloff seen Friday had breadth but not all too much depth as traders seem to be, at the very least, catching their breath from this recent run straight back into a bull market.
Still, investors appear to remain more uncertain as the market’s turnaround before any kind of recession is a little bit like a drug addict going to Amsterdam to celebrate being 1-day sober.
Anyway, treasuries and the US Dollar gained to end the week, potentially reflecting a simultaneous adjustment for further interest rate moves following the Fed’s move to scare the bullishness out of everyone last week.
Let’s get into it.
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Banana Bits
Macro Monkey Says
The Average Joe’s Vibe
Strong markets make good times, good times make weak markets, weak markets make bad times, and bad times make strong markets—or something like that, right?
But that framework couldn’t possibly be more accurate in describing the post-pandemic market and macroeconomic environment. Simply put, we had:
Decent summary, right? The last bullet hasn’t really written itself yet, but based on the way consumers are feeling in June 2023, optimism sure isn’t in short supply.
The University of Michigan reported Friday in its monthly measure of consumer sentiment that our outlook on the economy isn’t actually as bad as the CNBC and Bloomberg headlines want you to believe.
?"... our outlook on the economy isn’t actually as bad as the CNBC and Bloomberg headlines want you to believe."
Aggregated sentiment jumped to a 4-month high after rising 8% to 63.9 in June, beating economist expectations as expectations for inflation over the next 12 months dropped from 4.2% last month to 3.3% this month. Along with those data points came:
"Consumers like you and I are nodes in this economic machine ..."
?Obviously, the average Joe consumer doesn’t have a clue what’s going on in the macro landscape, but why would they?
Consumers like you and I are nodes in this economic machine; the microeconomic environment we find ourselves in and the conditions along with the future expectations for that environment are all that matter to any one of those nodes. Aggregated, however, those expectations can shake the macro outlook.
That’s because consumers plan right now for what they expect to happen then. For example, in a deflationary environment, no one buys anything because they know whatever good it is will be less expensive next month, and so on.
The point is that despite consumers not actually knowing anything, what we?think?we know about the future can end up shaping it, so it’s important to stay tuned.
Last month’s report certainly doesn’t indicate that consumers expect good times to get rolling immediately, however. Sentiment readings above expectation are generally positive signs, but we’ve still got a lot of deadlifting to do to get off these historic lows. Hope your back isn’t hurting too much yet.
What's Ripe
iRobot (IRBT)?↑ 21.20% ↑
Virgin Galactic (SPCE)?↑ 16.50% ↑
What's Rotten
Cava Group (CAVA)?↓ 12.86% ↓
SoFi Technologies (SOFI)?↓ 9.95% ↓
Data Peel
Thought Banana
Bets, Bags, and Balls
Spending money to make money: a concept that is both true and wildly overused by unemployed dropouts begging their parents to “invest” more in their “startup.”
In those cases, having the bank of mommy and daddy dump more cash into the incinerator won’t do much (or really anything), but for companies like Meta, Amazon, and Google, burning cash has long been just another day at the office.
Now, these organizations are some of the most profitable in the entire history of capitalism, but that doesn’t mean every product they launch rakes it in (remember Google’s?Loon ?project?).
Anyway, as venture/angel investor and certified tech-bro Matthew Ball pointed out in his month-ago piece (more like a novel, but we digress), even some of the most popular tech platforms in the world have been net losers for their creators, specifically shouting out:
"... Ball argues that steampiling losses like this can actually be a decent strategy ..."
?Even if every analyst on Earth expects profitability going forward, it’s going to take one helluva long time to reach cumulative net profitability.
But aside from simply creating new cash-burning verticals just to steal more data from you in a new, innovative way, Ball argues that steampiling losses like this can actually be a decent strategy and, even crazier, is something investors should learn to not only stomach but encourage it. This all comes with the caveat of having some kind of long-term vision.
Ball goes on to point out that the end of 0% interest rates brought on by JPow and leading to shifts like Meta’s focus on efficiency and current cash flows could distract from the investments that lose money now yet lead to massive outperformance at some point down the line.
?"In the month since dropping, investors may have been reminded of this tech-induced dynamic to burn cash now in order to reap it in down the line."
In the month since dropping, investors may have been reminded of this tech-induced dynamic to burn cash now in order to reap it in down the line. That’s exactly what Amazon, the classic example, did for years on end in order to reach the scale it has today.
So, are you ready to start burning cash again? My portfolio is already one step ahead of me there, so I might as well join in on the fun!
The big question:?Will companies continue to pile cash into money-losing investments in a non-ZIRP environment? How will investors react to investments like this in the new rate environment?
Banana Brain Teaser
Friday?—?A clothes shop was running a promotion giving away free jeans. In order to get the free jeans, you had to try a pair on, and while still wearing the jeans, you had to put your right hand in the left pocket and your left hand in the right pocket and reach right to the bottom of the pockets at the same time. Many people tried but were unable to achieve the feat until one chap walked in and walked out a few minutes later with his free jeans. How did he do it?
He tried the jeans on inside-out. The left pocket was then on his right side, and the right pocket was then on his left side.
Alternate answer: He tried the jeans on backward.
Today?—?Unscramble the words below, then take the letters from each word as instructed to form another word that is the answer to this teaser:
Unscramble the letters you collected... what do you get?
Shoot us your guesses [email protected]?with the subject line?“Banana Brain Teaser”.
Wise Investor Says
“Cash combined with courage in a time of crisis is priceless.”?— Warren Buffett
How would you rate today’s Peel?
Happy Investing,
Patrick & The Daily Peel Team
Next Trend Realty LLC./wwwHar.com/Chester-Swanson/agent_cbswan
1 年Thanks for sharing.