Silicon's Military Love
In this issue of the Peel:
Market Snapshot
Happy Tuesday, apes.
And happy August. Welcome to the final full month of summer and hopefully one that involves slightly less smoke from those damn Canadian wildfires. Can we figure it out up there, guys?
Anyway, equity markets managed to figure out a way to steal some green from the jaws of an otherwise red day. US markets traded mostly lower throughout the day as fears about earnings and probably just life, in general, took center stage. Still, a last-minute gap upward right before the 4 pm buzzer kept the bulls on top to start the week and close the month.
In the meantime, treasuries had a more muted and boring day, as they probably should. These things are supposed to be safe, but you might not know it by looking at price action in the last few years. The DXY managed to push the dollar above 102, which for no reason at all, kinda makes me want to start doing a “USA!” chant.
Let’s get into it.
Crack the Code to PE Interviews
Are you dreaming of the buyside? Do you want to learn how to ace not just the paper LBOs but the full-blown LBO modeling tests and PE cases? If so, you need the?WSO Private Equity Interview Course,?the ultimate resource for mastering all the skills and concepts you need to get hired in PE.
It’s not just another online course that teaches you LBOs. It’s a comprehensive and practical guide that covers every angle of the PE interview process, from?networking and resume tips,?to?deal experience and behavioral questions,?to?paper LBOs and full-on modeling tests.
It also gives you access to over?2,000 real-life interview questions?from 200+ PE funds, as well as 12-month access to the?WSO Video Library and Company Database.
With the WSO PE Interview Course, you’ll be able to:
Don’t miss this opportunity to invest in your career and?achieve your PE goals.
Macro Monkey Says
China Check-In
You know how when someone tells you to do something one way, and that immediately makes you want to do it in the complete opposite way? That’s kinda sorta how the Chinese economy (at least appears) to be set up.
And with this unique basis, China set itself up to pretty much always be zigging as others zag. Now, that idea seems to be holding true.
For the last ~18 months or so, Western economies like the US, Canada, UK, etc., have seen rip-roaring inflation causing outrage everywhere, from the gas station to the chicken coop. While some have fared better than others in their battle against inflation (looking at you,?England), China has had the opposite problem: reigniting growth.
"... deflation ... is a far tougher monster to fight than inflation because why buy something today when it’ll be cheaper tomorrow?"
?Consumer inflation in China settled at a whopping 0% annually last month, which might sound great, but it’s important to keep in mind that?deflation,?or falling price, is a far tougher monster to fight than?inflation?because why buy something today when it’ll be cheaper tomorrow? Spending and activity come to a halt.
On the industrial side, we received yesterday the latest Purchasing Managers Index from China’s National Bureau of Statistics, which suggested activity remains in contraction.
Now, it could be a lot worse (just look at 2020), but given China’s—to use the technical term—big-a** impact on the global economy, this could spill any hardships over into the global economy.
While the data below alone would have JPow smashing “BREAK GLASS FOR EMERGENCY” boxes and firing up his trusty ol’ money printers again, China’s economic overseers seem far less keen on the idea.
Already, the Chinese economy has received minor forms of public stimulus, but these efforts have done almost nothing to actually solve any kind of problem.
?"... the Chinese economy has received minor forms of public stimulus ..."
Later in the day, we also learned that the housing market—one of the primary weights dragging down the overall economy—saw the largest monthly decline in almost a year throughout July in new home sales, falling 33.1% compared to last July.
China, of course, is full of surprises and tends to be one of those things that seem to always figure it out. After all, the country’s been around for damn near 3,500 years. The only problem is whether or not to actually trust their data.
What's Ripe
SoFi Technologies (SOFI)?↑ 19.90% ↑
Palantir Technologies (PLTR)?↑ 11.40% ↑
What's Rotten
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)?↓ 3.98% ↓
Xpeng ADR (XPEV)?↓ 10.56% ↓
Data Peel
Thought Banana
Eisenhower’s Worst Nightmare
The military-industrial complex: You know it, you love it, and you watch it (probably). Naturally, Silicon Valley has fallen in love.
Technology and the military have always had a love-love relationship. However, in recent decades, many tech companies have taken on various forms of protest against selling their products to the US military, allied militaries, contractors, and other parties involved.
Investors are absolutely dumping piles of cash into defense technologies in the Valley, almost $11bn in the first quarter of this year, to be exact.
Of course, there appear to be three primary drivers here, including:
Of course, those first two are pretty spooky to consider. Together, they represent an increase in global geopolitical tensions rivaling beef only previously seen between Jim and Dwight.
"... an increase in rates means higher-risk investments like VC have a daunting opportunity cost ..."
?Naturally, more cash will flow to products and services made for this market. However, higher interest rates driving investment in this space are more speculative and likely the most coincidental.
But an increase in rates means higher-risk investments like VC have a daunting opportunity cost in other asset classes. That means investment dollars will follow safer bets, such as bets on companies supplying products and services to an organization with an?$825bn?budget in 2024.
Maybe most importantly, this probably also means more money is being put to work to develop next-gen weapons like AI drones and God knows what other weapons designed to keep you up at night before they’re even invented.
?"... this probably also means more money is being put to work to develop next-gen weapons ..."
Hopefully, we at least get to see some sick explosions along the way. If not, I guess you could always go see?Oppenheimer.
The big question:?Is the Military Industrial Complex falling back in love with Silicon Valley? What does this mean for the venture industry and, much more importantly, global warfare?
Banana Brain Teaser
Yesterday?—?What special characteristic do the following words have in common?
Their pronunciations consist exclusively of the sounds of the letters (“a” through “z”) and/or the digits (0 through 9), as follows:
Today?—?What can be driven yet has no wheels and can be sliced yet still remain whole?
Shoot us your guesses [email protected]?with the subject line?“Banana Brain Teaser”.
Wise Investor Says
“You need patience, discipline, and agility to take losses and adversity without going crazy.”?— Charlie Munger
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.