Archive for June, 2021

Week of June 25, 2021 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Monday, June 28th, 2021

“The last four and a half years have been carefree, halcyon times for investors. That doesn’t mean it’ll stay that way. I’ll give Warren Buffett the last word, as I often do: “It’s only when the tide goes out that you find out who’s been swimming naked.” Pollyannas take note: the tide cannot come in forever.”
― Howard Marks

1. U.S. Existing Home Sales Fell for a Fourth Straight Month in May — contract closings decreased 0.9% from the prior month to an annualized 5.8 million, according to data out Tuesday from the National Association of Realtors. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 5.73 million rate in May. Home prices will likely remain elevated for some time as builders struggle to replace the deficit in existing homes with new builds. They cite high materials prices, supply shortages and a limited number of skilled workers as ongoing challenges. The median selling price rose 23.6% from a year ago to a record $350,300 in May.
2. Mideast Joins Bitcoin Craze With First Dubai Crypto Listing — the Canadian fund was the first of its type to be listed on a major exchange, in Toronto last year. The intent of the Dubai listing is to get trading at all hours around the globe. Dubai-based Dalma Capital Management Ltd. is the joint lead arranger for the offering. The Bitcoin Fund invests in long-term holdings of Bitcoin as a safer alternative to direct investments in the cryptocurrency, according to its prospectus. The fund does not speculate with regard to short-term changes in Bitcoin prices.
3. Fauci Calls Delta Variant the “Greatest Threat” to Defeating Coronavirus — Delta, first identified in India, is now about 20.6% of new U.S. cases and is expected to become the dominant strain, said Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Delta is estimated to be 60% more transmissible than the Alpha variant first identified in the U.K. Fauci said studies have shown that the Pfizer – BioNTech vaccine is 88% effective against the Delta variant two weeks after the second dose, and he urged Americans to get fully vaccinated to “crush the outbreak.”
4. Biden, Senators Agree to Roughly $1 Trillion Infrastructure Plan — President Biden and a group of centrist senators agreed to a roughly $1 trillion infrastructure plan, securing a long-sought bipartisan deal on overhauling the nation’s transportation, water and broadband infrastructure that lawmakers and the White House will now attempt to shepherd through a closely-divided Capitol Hill. Drafts of the agreement had called for $579 billion of spending above expected federal levels, totaling $973 billion over five years and $1.2 trillion if continued over eight. The lawmakers had discussed financing the package with a mix of public-private partnerships, existing federal funds, and revenue collected from enhanced enforcement at the Internal Revenue Service.
5. Hong Kong will ban all passenger flights from the United Kingdom starting July 1, 2021 — the government classified the U.K. as an “extremely high risk,” citing the rebound of the cases in the U.K. and the “widespread Delta variant virus strain there,” the Associated Press reported. People who have spent more than two hours in the U.K. will be prohibited from boarding passenger flights to Hong Kong. Hong Kong has one of the world’s strictest quarantine requirements for incoming passengers, and had recently increased quarantines for travelers from the U.K. to three weeks in hotel quarantine, The Financial Times reported. The Delta variant now makes up 99% of new cases in the U.K.

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

Week of June 18, 2021 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Monday, June 21st, 2021

“It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.”
― Howard Marks

1. U.S. Retail Sales Drop, Hinting at Shift to Spending on Services — the total value of retail purchases fell 1.3% in May following an upwardly revised 0.9% gain in April, Commerce Department figures showed Tuesday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 0.8% decrease. For the last year, demand for goods has been propped up by elevated savings supported by fiscal stimulus, bringing total retail sales well above pre-pandemic levels. The May decline in retail sales suggests that as travel picks up and entertainment venues reopen, spending on goods is starting to moderate.
2. U.S. Talking to China on Boeing 737 Max Approval — The Biden administration is engaging with China in an effort to win approval for Boeing Co.’s 737 Max planes, which remain banned in the country even as other jurisdictions have reauthorized it following crashes. the two countries have yet to resume formal trade negotiations since President Joe Biden took office and initiated a broad review of China relations. Raimondo brought positive news for Boeing, with the U.S. and the European Union agreeing to extend a tariff truce for five years — parking a dispute over aircraft subsidies given to Airbus SE and Boeing that saw the allies impose duties on $11.5 billion of each other’s exports.
3. Fed Signals Earlier Interest-Rate Rise — Fed officials signaled interest rates will rise sooner and faster than previously expected, a surprise development that comes as inflation runs much hotter than officials have anticipated. Seven officials now expect to lift interest rates next year, up from four officials in March. More important: All but five members think rates will need to increase in 2023. In March, only 7 thought so, with 11 members expecting to keep rates pinned at zero. Markets have been expecting no change in rates before 2024. And more important still is the fact that five officials now see rates at 1% or higher in 2023, suggesting rates won’t just rise sooner but faster. The Fed’s statement Wednesday said it would continue buying $120 billion a month in Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities, but Powell opened the door to a tapering announcement during his press conference.

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

Week of June 11, 2021 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Tuesday, June 15th, 2021

“The desire for more, the fear of missing out, the tendency to compare against others, the influence of the crowd and the dream of the sure thing—these factors are near universal. Thus they have a profound collective impact on most investors and most markets. The result is mistakes, and those mistakes are frequent, widespread and recurring.”
― Howard Marks

1. Eli Lilly May Be a Big Winner From the FDA’s Alzheimer’s Decision — The company is developing its own Alzheimer’s therapy, called donanemab, which works along the same principles as Aduhelm. Analysts say the details of the FDA’s decision on Aduhelm may allow Lilly to file for approval for donanemab far sooner than expected. Eli lilly’s unveiling of data from a donanemab trial called Trailblazer-ALZ in March was a major event for investors. While the data showed that the drug had rapidly and dramatically cleared amyloid plaque, the brain buildup thought to have a role in Alzheimer’s disease, experts noted that that the slowing of cognitive decline seen in the study was not statistically significant by all measures.
2. U.S. Senate Is Poised to Pass China Bill — The U.S. Senate could soon pass a wide-ranging China bill that has bipartisan support for major investments to boost the country’s technology edge over China. The package focuses on bolstering U.S. leadership in areas like artificial intelligence, high-performance computing, and advanced manufacturing. The package also lays out funding to increase chip production domestically.
Other proposals range from trying to secure U.S. research and innovation at academic centers from foreign intervention to calling for a domestic boycott of the Winter 2022 Olympics in Beijing.
The package offers a framework for the evolving U.S.-China relationship on multiple fronts as policy makers try to find a balance between pushing back against China over human rights concerns and technology-related issues while avoiding damaging U.S. companies’ lucrative business in China.
3. Bipartisan Group of Senators Reaches Agreement on Infrastructure Proposal — Members of a bipartisan group of senators said they had reached an agreement on an infrastructure proposal that would be fully paid for without tax increases. While the group of 10 senators didn’t reveal details of the plan in its statement, people familiar with the agreement said it called for $579 billion above expected future federal spending on infrastructure. The overall proposal would spend $974 billion over five years and $1.2 trillion if it continued over eight years, according to some of the people.
4. U.S. Inflation Is Highest in 13 Years as Prices Surge 5% — The Labor Department said last month’s increase in the consumer-price index was the largest since August 2008, when the reading rose 5.4%. The core-price index, which excludes the often-volatile categories of food and energy, jumped 3.8% in May from the year before—the largest increase for that reading since June 1992. May’s jump in prices extends a trend that accelerated this spring amid widespread Covid-19 vaccinations, relaxed business restrictions, trillions of dollars in federal pandemic relief programs and ample household savings—all of which have stoked demand for Americans to spend and travel more.
Overall prices jumped at a 9.7% annualized rate over the three months ended in May. On a month-to-month basis, overall prices rose a seasonally adjusted 0.6% and core prices rose 0.7%.

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

Week of June 4, 2021 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Monday, June 7th, 2021

June 4, 2021 Weekly Recap Will Not Be Published This Week; The Office is Closed for Some Needed R&R

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

Week of May 28, 2021 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Tuesday, June 1st, 2021

1. GOP to Offer Biden Nearly $1 Trillion for Infrastructure Plan — Democratic lawmakers have warned that time is running short to determine whether a bipartisan deal on infrastructure is possible, with progressives already calling for a go-it-alone approach using fast-track budget procedures. A new offer around $1 trillion would still be well short of Friday’s $1.7 trillion proposal from the White House. On Friday, the Biden administration reduced its proposal by more than $500 billion from an initial $2.25 trillion by lowering spending on roads, bridges and broadband and saying he is willing to make investments in the manufacturing sector in separate bills — like the China-focused legislation on the Senate floor this week.
2. HSBC to Exit Unprofitable U.S. Retail Banking — HSBC, Europe’s second-largest bank by assets said it would sell most of its branches on the U.S.’s east and west coast to Citizens Bank and Cathay Bank, respectively, as part of a plan to implement some $4.5 billion of cost cuts, shed 35,000 jobs worldwide, and shift its main focus to Asia. The British-Asian bank is also in talks with U.S. private-equity fund Cerberus Capital Management to unload its loss-making French operations. HSBC lost $547 million in wealth management and personal banking in the U.S. last year, compared with the $5 billion profit it made in Hong Kong and the rest of Asia.
2. Amazon to Buy MGM for $6.5 Billion Excluding Debt — Amazon.com Inc. to buy James Bond movie company Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, potentially taking one of the last major independent film studios off the market. The proliferation of streaming services, including newer arrivals such as Disney+, HBO Max and Paramount+, has put pressure on Amazon to acquire more programming. MGM’s vast backlog also provides plenty of material at a time when production of new shows and movies is still recovering from the pandemic.
4. Ford Announces $30 Billion Commitment to its Electric Vehicles Future — Ford Motor is expanding its commitment to vehicle electrification, surprising investors with plans to increase spending on electric vehicles to $30 billion by 2025. It added $8 billion to its previous spending goal, and said it will target the additional money for battery production.
Ford, which sold about 4.2 million vehicles in 2020, expects electric vehicles to be 40% of its sales by 2030. Some analysts say its electric-vehicle strategy has lagged behind General Motors and Volkswagen, which is providing its EV technology to Ford for future plug-in offerings in Europe.
5. Senate Republicans Block Jan. 6 Riot Commission — Senate Republicans blocked the creation of a bipartisan, independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol by a pro-Trump mob, after GOP leaders urged colleagues to reject it. The bill needed 60 votes to advance in the evenly divided Senate, thanks to the chamber’s longstanding filibuster rule. That means 10 Republicans would have had to vote with all 50 members of the Democratic caucus to allow the bill to proceed. Only six did, and the legislation fell short, with 54 votes in favor and 35 against, with 11 senators not voting.
6. Biden Is Expected to Unveil $6 Trillion Spending Plan — the president is proposing a $6 trillion budget for fiscal year 2022, which begins Oct. 1, according to people familiar with the plans. That includes $1.52 trillion in discretionary spending for the military and domestic programs, including more funding for education, healthcare, research and renewable energy, White House officials said in April. Under the proposal, debt as a percentage of annual gross domestic product would within a few years exceed the level at the end of World War II and climb to 117% of GDP by the end of 2031, according to people familiar with the matter. That would be up from about 100% this year.

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

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