Mid-Year Market Checkup
In this issue of the Peel:
Market Snapshot
Happy Wednesday, apes.
Hope you had a great 4th of July and managed to keep all your fingers. Now that you’re good and sunburned, hungover, hotdog-filled, and miserable at school/work, let’s talk markets.
Monday gave us a shortened session, with equity markets closing at 1 pm, and as you may expect, it was far from the most exciting day. All the volatility and adrenaline must’ve been saved up for the 4th because the US majors barely moved at all, seeing a mixed day across the board to finish mostly in the green.
Yields followed a similarly boring mood. Closing at 2 pm, treasury markets fluctuate minimally, if at all, with the 2-year yield still hovering around that 4.9% level.
Let’s get into it.
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Banana Bits
Macro Monkey Says
Time for a Check Up
If fireworks, hotdogs, gallons of beer, and a whole lotta freedom weren’t enough to get you fired up this 4th of July, maybe this will.
The great thing about the 4th is that it comes basically right at the midpoint of the year. Naturally, with all attention on the Red, White, & Blue anyway, this gives us a great chance to take a beat and reflect on exactly what the hell is going on.
Spoiler alert: It’s going pretty not-terrible, mostly. In large part, economic and financial market data YTD has been, if anything, a surprise to the upside. Specifically, let’s take a look at…
Equity Markets?have been on an absolute tear, with the Nasdaq seeing its hottest start to a year since 1983. That means the index has been outpacing even dot-com year numbers—and please, take that as you will.
Meanwhile, the S&P is pushing around double its lifetime average annual return, sitting above 16.5% YTD.
"Inflation has continued to steadily fall just about all year ..."
?Safe to say investors are pleased, and there’s a lot of good reason for it.?Inflation?has continued to steadily fall just about all year from both a consumer and a producer perspective.
Most recently, we saw Core PCE, the Fed’s fav inflation reading, clock in at 4.6% while the headline number registered 3.8% annual growth, the lowest in 2 years.
While consumer and producer prices have been moving in the right direction,?unemployment?has remained mostly stable (albeit while hovering around half-century lows) and remains at a tight 3.7%.
Much of that goes back to the snail’s-pace growth seen in the labor force participation rate, slowly moving back to that ~63.5% pre-pandemic level (currently 62.6%).
Behind all of this, certain sectors of the economy have been either carrying the team or adding bricks to the load. The?housing market?has managed to keep demand elevated well above pre-pandemic levels even in the face of monstrous interest rate rises.
Given that the housing market is to the US economy essentially what Tom Brady was to the Patriots, we can thank this industry for holding up and (so far) keeping us from collapse.
?"... we can thank this industry for holding up and (so far) keeping us from collapse."
We’ll get some fresh data on the?labor market?this Friday, though, as the June jobs report drops. But in case you forgot, we saw a +339,000 strong army of workers raised in May. Everyone (notably except JPow) was pretty psyched, but we’ll see if that can continue.
So, all in all, we may not be where we want to be, but major signs have been pointing in the right direction, in large part, all year. And isn’t it all about the journey rather than the destination anyway? Let the fun roll on.
What's Ripe
Coinbase (COIN)?↑ 11.71% ↑
Tesla (TSLA)?↑ 6.90% ↑
What's Rotten
AstraZeneca (AZN)?↓ 8.83% ↓
Apple (AAPL)?↓ 0.78% ↓
Data Peel
Thought Banana
An American Hero
George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, John F. Kennedy, and Joey Chestnut—these men round out the complete list of the most American Americans of all time.
Unfortunately, the first three have been dead for decades and centuries. So today, we’ll be focusing on the fantastic number four: Joey Chestnut.
Hotdog eating contests are pretty much the only thing more American than un-walkable cities, and our boy Joey Chestnut is the undisputed best to ever do it. Yesterday, this man ate a ridiculous 63 glizzies in 10 minutes to win his 16th Mustard Belt at the annual Nathan’s hotdog eating contest.
?"Yesterday, this man ate a ridiculous 63 glizzies in 10 minutes to win his 16th Mustard Belt at the annual Nathan’s hotdog eating contest."
Like Chestnut’s toilet, none of the other participants are pleased with the outcome, but they must just be glad it happened. The organizers originally wanted to cancel the contest due to weather, but then they realized their “sport” was literally just eating, and Chestnut himself saved the day in saying, “I’m gonna get the rest of the guys out, and we’re gonna do this f---er.”
"That’s about 22,800 calories, which is about the amount of calories the average adult man should eat in a 7-11 day period."
?Inspiring. More so, 63 dogs is a light day for the aptly named eater. Chestnut’s all-time record is 76 hotdogs downed in a 10-minute (aka 600-second) span. That’s about 22,800 calories, which is about the amount of calories the average adult man should eat in a 7-11 day period.
Absolutely ridiculous. That’s also approximately 15 lbs of dogs, roughly 6.5% of the 230lb man’s body weight. Honestly, the more you think about it, the crazier it gets, but absolutely no one in the history of competitive eating holds a candle to this guy.
You could make a damn good argument that Joey Chestnut is the most?dominant?athlete in the history of American sports. The fact that his sport of choice happens to be slamming glizzies like a goddamn coked-out rottweiler is one of the most American things I can think of. All we can say is: Thanks, Joey.
Banana Brain Teaser
Monday?—?In these Word Pyramids, the first letter is given to you (which is the first answer). Use the clues to build the pyramid to find the answer. In each consecutive answer, a letter is added to the previous answer. However, the answer letters might not be in the same order. Go
Starting letter: D
Clues:
Answer:
Today?— In each sentence below, two words are incomplete. The two words end in the same three letters, so they look like they should rhyme, but they don't. See if you can figure out the missing letters in each sentence.
Example: One symptom of bronchitis is a ro___ co___. (The two words are: rough & cough.)
Shoot us your guesses at?[email protected] ?with the subject line?“Banana Brain Teaser”?or simply?click here to reply!
Wise Investor Says
“Opportunities come infrequently. When it rains gold, put out the bucket, not the thimble.”?— 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 Posting.