Matt Wuerker
Spend twenty minutes per week browsing Investment Tools and you will be better informed than most financial experts!
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Notes today:
- The White House says a coming U.S. tax plan will raise rates on corporations and the rich while providing relief for households that bring home around $110,000 per year.
- The EU is set to unveil plans for a vaccine certificate, aka vaccine passport. This is raising questions about how the EU will manage to link up various health systems, keeping people’s data secure and private, while possibly creating a two-tier society.
- Prices for U.S. imports rose 1.3%t in February following a 1.4-%t advance in January. Export prices rose 1.6% in February, after increasing 2.5% MoM. YoY import prices rose 3.0%t and export prices rose 5.2%.
- US Feb. industrial production much weaker than expected at -2.2% vs. +0.3% est.
- Coca-Cola and Home Depot have made it clear that they oppose voting restriction bills in Georgia.
Sunday, March 14, 2021
Notes today:
- Bloomberg: The Nasdaq stock exchange is poised to push businesses to a new level of inclusion with its proposal to require all listed companies to have at least two diverse board members.
- 49% of republicans have no plans for getting a covid shot.
- 6% of democrats have no plans for getting a covid shot.
- Boris Johnson – this is the wrong time for a referendum on independence.
- India will propose a law banning cryptocurrencies, fining anyone trading in the country or even holding such digital assets, a senior government official told Reuters.
Google (GOOGL) will face a $5b lawsuit that it didn't notify users that their data can still be collected while in "incognito" mode, a judge ruled on Friday👍👍
According to Robert Reich the names below had a change in net worth from March 2020 to March 2021
Musk: +$118B
Bezos: +$58B
Page: +$33B
Brin: +$32B
Zuck: +$29B
Ellison: +$28B
Gates: +$24B
Ballmer: +$23B
Dell: +$18B
So, I suppose the two Google Dudes won’t be much troubled by a 5 billion fine..
Saturday, March 13, 2021
- Minnesota utilities have warned that monthly heating bills could spike by $400, after the TEXAS DISASTER that left dozens dead, jacked up natural gas prices across the US.
- Apparently Texas is "delivering and sharing" its policies - Musk is moving in.
- Hundreds of covid cases reported at Tesla plant following Musk’s defiant reopening, county data shows.
- Annual emissions tied to the electricity needed for cryptomining “rigs” (high-powered computers that produce digital tokens by solving math problems) are equal to that spewed by all of Argentina, according to researchers at Cambridge University.
- Italy announced that it will return to near-national lockdown from Monday, with most schools, restaurants and shops closing.
- US consumer sentiment reached a one-year high. The index rose to 83.0 in March after dropping to 76.8 in February; economists had expected a smaller increase to 78.5.
- Germany's domestic intelligence agency hopes to place the entire Alternative for Germany party under surveillance. It views the party as being hostile to democracy.
- Spiegel: With RT DE, Moscow wants to provide a platform for corona skeptics, right-wing populists and leftist fans of the Kremlin to destabilize democracy in Germany. Internal emails provide insights into the media organization.
- China now has a passport structure by which its people can register their vaccination and testing status. It is however “NOT YET” mandatory.
- Ex Brazilian President Lula da Silva, cleared of corruption charges, may run again in 2022.
- FT: Russia is now a country where retweeting a protest joke gets you 15 days in jail, and where a deaf-mute can be fined $70 for allegedly shouting anti-regime slogans.
Friday, March 12, 2021
- US Consumer prices for services other than energy services rose 1.3 percent from February 2020 to February 2021. Not exactly the hyperinflation bs that’s currently emanating from conspiracy bloggers etc. If the US currently has problem with inflation - it is too low.
- Bloomberg: Piracy will cost TV and movie providers some $52 billion in revenue worldwide in 2022 according to statisa.com.
- Canadian Dollar Hits 3-year High. The Canadian economy added 259,200 jobs in February, Statistics Canada reported Friday, well ahead of expectations for a 75,000 gain.
- Philadelphia calls for 'lights out: Scientists estimate between 365 million and 1 billion birds are killed by collisions with buildings or other outdoor structures in the US every year and those crashes are taking a toll on some species.
Wednesday, March 10, 2021
Notes today:
Congress passed a landmark $1.9tn coronavirus relief bill with zero support from republicans - ZERO support - nada.
The lower house of Mexico’s parliament voted to decriminalise the recreational use of cannabis.
- Since 2018, Cox communications has donated $31,550 to Gowan and 24 other sponsors of voter suppression legislation in Arizona.
- The US CPI rose 0.4 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis; rising 1.7 % YoY.
- The European Union’s statistics office said gross domestic product in the 19 countries sharing the euro fell by 0.7% QoQ, more than the initial 0.6% estimate, for a 4.9% YoY
- Merrick Garland was confirmed by a vote of 70 to 30. Among the Republicans who voted in Garland's favor were Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Sens. John Cornyn of Texas and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina. Republicans who voted against Garland included two likely 2024 presidential candidates, Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Ted Cruz of Texas.
Economist: The world’s consumers are sitting on a pile of cash. Will they spend it?
Households do not usually save on such a scale during recessions. For one thing, their incomes usually fall, as their pay is cut or they lose their jobs. But governments in the rich world have spent 5% of their combined GDP on furlough schemes, unemployment benefits and stimulus cheques during the pandemic. As a result, household incomes have actually risen in the past year.
Tuesday, March 09, 2021
- Gold is trying to wake up - it’s up 2% to $1708
- Reserve Bank of Australia chief Philip Lowe repeats that interest rates are unlikely to rise until at least 2024 as inflation is a long way from goal.
- Hackers breach thousands of security cameras, exposing tesla, jails, hospitals..
- The Baltic Exchange's rose for the sixth straight session - up 2.6% to 1,901.
- The Capesize index, rose 6.8% to 1,950.
- The Supramax index rose 36 points to 1,969.
- The Panamax is down a bit to 2,238.
- Asian shipping container shortage - continues.
- Business confidence in India is at at decade high of 74.2 up from 70.2
- The number of China-Europe freight trains hit 1,165 in January, up 66 % YoY.
- Some 9.97 million pieces of anti-epidemic supplies, weighing 80,000 tonnes, have been sent to European countries including Germany, Poland and Belgium by the trains since the epidemic outbreak.
Bloomberg: Bitcoin Has Zero Intrinsic Value. Some People Are OK With That
Soybeans and sturdy shoes are looking better and better by comparison.
Tulips anyone?
Sunday, March 07, 2021
Saturday, March 06, 2021
Friday, March 05, 2021
Notes today:
- US: Total nonfarm payroll employment rose by 379,000 in February, and the unemployment rate was little changed at 6.2%. The number of unemployed persons, at 10.0 million, also changed little.
- Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Friday that despite the strong job gains last month, Congress still needs to “go big” by passing President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion relief.
- Musk’s electric carmaker is down more than 30% since its January high, hurting anything associated with it -- most notably Cathie Wood’s flagship exchange-traded fund, the Ark Innovation ETF (ticker ARKK).
- Britain’s financial regulators on Friday called a formal halt to nearly all Libor rates from the end of this year, as expected, piling pressure on markets to speed the switch in interest rates used in $260 trillion of contracts around the world.
- Singapore’s economy has been ranked the freest in the world this year in The Heritage Foundation’s 2021 Index of Economic Freedom, the second year in a row it topped the list.
- China is aiming for an economic growth rate above 6% in 2021.
- The U.S. trade deficit widened in January as American consumers stepped up purchases of imported products. The deficit in trade of goods and services expanded by 1.9% to $68.2 billion in January - this compares to a $66.97 billion gap in December.
Wednesday, March 03, 2021
Tuesday, March 02, 2021
Notes today:
SCOTUS today: Justice Barrett: What is the interest of the GOP in keeping (laws that suppress minority voters) on the books?
Republican Lawyer: It puts us at a competitive disadvantage relative to Democrats. Politics is a zero-sum game.
- Abbott opening Texas100% - a repeat of last spring. President Joe Biden said Wednesday that moves by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and others to lift statewide Covid restrictions showed "Neanderthal thinking." Neanderthals: Hey, we are all wearing masks!
- When asked about market expectations for earlier rate hikes, Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard said that there is still a lot of ground to cover on jobs and inflation.
- Petaluma, California - a city of 61,000 residents and 15 square miles in size - has become the first in the country to permanently halt the construction of new gas stations.
- The ISM Manufacturing PMI rose to 60.8 in February up from 58.7 in January, beating market expectations of 58.8. The strongest expansion in factory activity since February of 2018.
- MoM Construction spending in the US rose 1.7%
- In response to Navalny’s continued imprisonment, the US is catching up with sanctions imposed on Moscow by the EU👍👍 - where Trump had turned a blind eye.
- YoY Japans Monetary Base came in at 19.6% below forecasts.
- The unemployment rate in Japan is 2.9%
- Australia keeps its border shut for another three months.
Sunday, February 28, 2021
Notes today:
- Debt investors face a “bleak future:” so says Warren Buffett in his latest letter . Risky debt "is not the answer to inadequate interest rates. Three decades ago, the once-mighty savings and loan industry destroyed itself, partly by ignoring that maxim.”
- Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has been
transferred to a penal colony outside Moscow.
- The $1.9 trillion pandemic aid bill narrowly passed the House in the early hours of Saturday, all attention is moving to the vote in Senate..
- ZD Net: Apple now sells more phones than Samsung.
- The official NBS Non-Manufacturing PMI for China dropped to its lowest in a year of 51.4 in February 2021 from 52.4 in the previous month.
- The official NBS Manufacturing PMI for China fell to 50.6 in February 2021 from 51.3 a month earlier and less than market expectations of 51.1
- China’s iron ore futures rose its fourth straight week, while steel rebar and hot-rolled coil advanced on higher downstream consumption. Capacity utilization rose to 92.28%.
- Container shortage slows Indian sugar exports, fuels price rally.
- Iceberg More Than 20 Times the Size of Manhattan Breaks Off Antarctic Ice Shelf
Friday, February 26, 2021
Notes today:
The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has Personal income increasing 10.0 percent (monthly rate) while consumer spending increased 2.4 percent in January as provisions of the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act enacted on December 27, 2020, began to take effect.
Bloomberg:
SEC Suspends Trading in 15 Stocks That Got Hyped on Social Media:
The SEC’s order noted that while the company hadn’t filed reports in years
and its phone number doesn’t work, “social media accounts may be engaged in
coordinated attempt to artificially influence” its share price. SpectraScience
volume surpassed 3.5 billion shares on a single day in late January as the
stock surged 167%.
REALLY!😖
Thursday, February 25, 2021
Notes today:
- Rates are getting interesting. An unsuccessful auction of seven-year Treasuries didn’t help.
- Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 4.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 2020
- U.S. employment grew by 11.8 million from December 2000 to December 2020. The gain was due to increased employment of people age 60 and older.
- Costco, ahead of Sanders: the US second-largest retailer is adopting a $16 minimum wage for its 180,000 employees next week.
- In the coming days, I will be working with my colleagues in the Senate to move forward with an amendment to take tax deductions away from large, profitable corporations that don’t pay workers at least $15 an hour and to provide small businesses with the incentives they need to raise wages,” Sanders said in a statement.
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
Notes today:
- Goldman Sachs thinks the US is about to grow at around 7%, which would be the fastest pace in years - and Fed Chair Jerome Powell signaled that the Fed is nowhere near pulling back its economic support.
- Newhome sales rose at an annual rate of 923,000 in January - up 19% YoY That was 4.3% above the upwardly revised pace of 885,000 in December.
Charlie Munger on Learning etc..
" Without the method of learning, you're like a one-legged man in an ass-kicking contest."
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
- The Case-Shiller index rose 10.4% in December - the biggest surge since 2014.Phoenix, San Diego and Seattle are leading gains.
- Conference board Consumer Confidence Index rose to 91.3 from 88.9 in January.
- The MyPillow libertarian dude Mike Lindell’s complaining he is losing money ($65M) amid Dominion lawsuits.
- Some air is coming out of Tesla, now below the price when it was included in the S&P.