December 16, 2021 Coinbase fixes the glitch Good morning traders, Welcome back to The Daily Setup. Markets were up yesterday thanks to the Fed's announcement that it will raise interest rates faster than anticipated. Here's what's on the docket today: - Fed's announcement
- Coinbase fixes its price glitch
- Nancy Pelosi still thinks Congress should buy stocks So have a cup of coffee, read through the newsletter, and let's make today a good one. Jeff CMC Materials, the Fed, and Retail sales BIGGEST MOVER Silicon Surge â CMC Materials Shoots up due to Acquisition Shares in semiconductor materials supplier CMC Materials (CCMP) [gained 33.91%]( yesterday thanks to the announcement that CCMP will be acquired by rival Entegris in a cash-and-stock transaction. Gold is so last century, silicon wafers are the new hotness. - Entegris will be paying CCMP shareholders $133 in cash and 0.4506 shares of Entegris for each CCMP share that they hold. This is a windfall for those investors as this exchange will be a [35% premium]( compared to where the stock closed on Tuesday.
- The transaction is paid via fully committed debt financing from Morgan Stanley Senior Funding but is not subject to [financing conditions.]( When all is said and done, CMC shareholders will own 9% of the company, with Entegris shareholders controlling 91%. Despite the number of shortages and shipping delays that have affected semiconductor manufacturers for the past 2 years of the pandemic (stares at the calendar and cries), itâs a pretty safe bet that their services arenât going anywhere (just like their products due to shipping delays). Entegris CEO Bertrand Loy has a similar amount of confidence on the matter, positing that the company expects to realize [$75M in run-rate cost synergies and $40M in CapEx synergies]( within the 12-18 month period after the deal closes in 2022. If they end up staying true to predictions, it could be positioned to make a serious splash on the semiconductor scene and investors will be hoping to strike some serious silicon. Jay fixes inflation [Spongebob Squarepants I Give Up GIF - Find & Share on GIPHY]( [Jay goes back to sleep after the inflation problem is solved]( Well it finally happened, the eggheads at the Fed got together and agreed that maybe, just maybe, [inflation is getting to be a problem](, and that they should do something about it. On Wednesday Fed Chairman Jerome Powell announced that the Fed will be raising interest rates in 2022 faster than initially anticipated. Talks on the matter began to swirl around mid-November, with a number of officials doing their best to wake 'ol Jay up, and the market began to adjust [accordingly](. A faster taper rate than expected reflects the chairâs confidence in the economy going forward. That or heâs as tired of hearing the word âtransitoryâ as are the rest of us. - In November, the Fed started taking baby-steps towards combating inflation by curbing its $120B-per-month bond purchasing program by [$15B starting November and December](, a pace which would cut the program by mid-June 2022. Todayâs announcement doubles that rate to $30B a month, now concluding the program by end of Q1.
- With the bond-buying programâs conclusion on the horizon, the likelihood of rate hikes is pretty much assured. Powell went on to say they donât anticipate the need to raise rates before the taper ends, but reserve the right to do so before the country hits [full employment.]( In fact, Jay and his buddies are so confident that policymakers see five more increases as appropriate across 2023 and 2024 to really let the air out of inflationary tires. This is certainly great news for the market, which has been looking for any kind of concrete policy from the Fed instead of: âletâs throw taxpayer money at it and see what happensâ. Rate hikes happening sooner than anticipated is due to inspire a lot more confidence in the market amongst the public, bringing us from the brink of bearishness. The markets adjusted accordingly, with[the S&P 500, Dow, and Nasdaq rising 1.3%, 0.9%, and 1.7% respectively.]( Holiday cheer worthless Santa dropping an absolute dump of a CPI into your stocking this year While November spending outpaced YoY price gains, the lead was measlyâ just a seasonally adjusted [0.3%](â in comparison to Octoberâs phat 1.8% gain. Some analysts attribute this weak holiday performance to the record-high transitory inflation thatâs even got [J-Pow]( freaking out (cough cough gas prices are up [52%]( from December 2020 cough). Or maybe Santa just isnât coming this year. - But itâs not as bad as it looks. For one thing, consumer demand is way better than it was this time last yearâ 18.2% better, in fact. For context, the YoY gain from 2019-2020 was [just 6.8%](.
- And it turns out that people did do their Christmas shoppingâ in October. Apparently people started shelling out their cash [before stores started]( assaulting customers with Michael Bublé.
- Inflation does have something to do with the slump, though. While most customers will pay inflated prices for longer than youâd expect, that lack of resistance drives prices even higher, creating a [cycle]( where eventually a significant portion of customers get fed up and leave. The Fed signaled a more hawkish stance towards inflation, and in this context thatâs a good thing. The prospect of lower inflation will improve consumer sentiment and likely drive up spending. Higher spending will (hopefully, after a while) combine with realized lower inflation and produce better seasonally-adjusted retail sales numbers for the coming months. In general this news is a sign for optimism in markets across the board. We fixed the glitch Token Talk Tuesday afternoon around 4 p.m. EST, Coinbaseâ and data provider CoinMarketCapâ briefly experienced a [glitch](, which valued Bitcoin at $799B-$887B per coin, for a market cap of [$14.7 quintillion](. Ignore the dips and swells, though, amirite? The error caused many traders to believe that theyâd become millionaires or even billionaires overnight. COIN [resolved the issue]( on their website by 5:30 and on their app by 6:30, but frat boys the world over may never recover. - Coinbase insists that the mistake didnât impact trading, just display images. As if in the digital asset world those two are different.
- This isnât a great time for Coinbase to f*ck up. Thousands of users are still upset about a glitch back in [November](that locked them out of their accounts and kept them from trading or withdrawing their funds for weeks.
- Luckily for Coinbase, the [5.3%]( dip their shares took early on Wednesday were also a glitch, corrected by marketsâ close to leave shares gaining [0.95%.]( The glitch itself has been resolved and was never anything more than hot air. Whatâs clear, though, is that digital assetsâ volatility and speculative appeal still account for much of its value. Whatâs more, Coinbase has left some investors wondering whether it can really be trusted to perform well under pressure if they canât perform well when thereâs not much going on. Big bank + big bank = big big money Rumor has it First Citizens when they have to wait a little bit for their enormous windfall First Citizens BancShares initially declared their intention to acquire CIT group for $2.2B back in [October 2020](. That announcement must have gotten lost in the mail, though, because itâs been 420 days (#blaze) and the Fed still hasnât okayed the merger despite the fact that [the FDIC approved it]( (and markets approved of it) pretty quickly. Regardless, many think the gridlock is nearly over, with a big fat payload at the end of the rainbow for First Citizens. - How big, you ask? Some analysts expect First Citizensâ stock to jump [24-30%.](
- Itâs not you, BancShares, itâs me. The Fed might be waiting to vote on the merger until after theyâve filled all the [empty seats]( in their leadership (several other delayed bank mergers support that idea). If thatâs the case, the mergerâs probably going through.
- On the other hand, an anonymous letter sent to the Richmond Fed branch alleged that First Citizens was guilty of antitrust violations, in which case the merger could be boned. Nor does it help their chances that the FDIC and Fed have just launched a [regulatory crackdown]( on bank mergers. First Citizensâ possible rally is all dependent on whether the merger goes through. That said, even if the merger fails, First Citizens will be fineâ their stock has risen [125%]( in the past five years. Their strength, size, and security as a financial institution are exactly why the Fedâs worried about allowing them to grow even more powerful via the acquisition of CIT group. They might not get a lot bigger in the near future, but theyâre sure not getting any smaller. Which is also what I tell my girlfriend. Link Roundup ð¿ Other News Other News Link Roundup - Musical Chairs â SEC Forcing firms to reveal swap positions ([Read]() - Good Karma â Samsara IPO valued at $11.5B ([Read]() - Dropped Like a Brick â Roblox is missing targets and dropping quick ([Read]() - Pfizer Gets Their Booster â Pharma company hits all time high ahead of potential for the pandemic pill ([Read]() - Stop Licking Batteries! â Goldman Sachs says to drop Lithium stocks ([Read]() - Full time trader and part time Speaker of the House thinks Congress should continue to be able to buy stocks ([Read]() Trader of the year, [via @RampCapitalLLC]( [Image] RagingBull, LLC 62 Calef Hwy. #233, Lee, NH 03861 [Unsubscribe from all RagingBull emails]( Questions or concerns about our products? Call or text us on your mobile: 1.800.123.4567
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