Nvidia cannot stop printing cash for investors, and it turns out that Robinhood has been a huge beneficiary, too. Meanwhile, B. Riley Financial collapsed under the weight of its own idiocy, and JetBlue joins Uncle Sam in a struggle to raise cash. August 13, 2024 | [Read Online]( In partnership with In this issue of the peel: - Demand for newly issued Treasury bonds continues to fall. Uncle Sam is having a hard time raising cash, potentially pushing us into a downward spiral that the Roman Empire remembers all too well. - Nvidia cannot stop printing cash for investors, and it turns out that Robinhood has been a huge beneficiary, too. Meanwhile, B. Riley Financial collapsed under the weight of its own idiocy, and JetBlue joins Uncle Sam in a struggle to raise cash. - 91% of companies have reported earnings so far. Check-in on how they're doing and remember to focus only on the things that truly matter. Market Snapshot Banana Bits - The article weâve been waiting forâThe WSJ went deep into the [culture of long hours in banking](, which many of you know all too well. Make sure to give it a read to be a part of the change the industry so desperately needs. - Markets have been extra jittery this [earnings szn](. - Turns out the U.S. employment situation isnât as much of a situation [as we may have thought](. - Rising monthly prints may be gone, but the nut shot of inflation [still looms large](. - Go Trees! (wtf is that mascot?) Stanford University earned more medals in Paris [than most countries](. The Daily Poll Which sector will have the highest returns between now and the end of 2024? [Technology](
[Financials](
[Healthcare](
[Consumer Discretionary](
[Communication Services](
[Industrials](
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[Real Estate]( Previous Poll: Juneâs CPI came in at 3.0% annually. Will Julyâs printer be higher or lower? Lower: 49.5% // Higher: 29.3% // The same, right at 3.0%: 21.2% All your news. None of the bias. Be the smartest person in the room by reading [1440](! Dive into 1440, where 3.5 million readers find their daily, fact-based news fix. We navigate through 100+ sources to deliver a comprehensive roundup from every corner of the internet â politics, global events, business, and culture, all in a quick, 5-minute newsletter. It's completely free and devoid of bias or political influence, ensuring you get the facts straight. [Subscribe to 1440 today.]( Macro Monkey Says Untreasured Treasuries Much like my old Tinder profile, recent treasury auctions have received much less interest than anticipated. Also, just like my Tinder profile, I donât know why anyone is surprised. Last weekâs 10 and 30-year Treasury auctions highlighted the countryâs shift into borderline subprime borrower status. If this trend continues, funding our super-competent and effective government could become much more challenging. Letâs get into it. What Happened? When the U.S. government needs to raise cash and doesnât feel like raiding your wallet just yet, they do so via debt financing by selling U.S. Treasuries. This is done through an auction process. The goal of the auction is to minimize the governmentâs financing cost through competitive bidding and a liquid secondary market. When your national debt looks like this, low financing costs are crucial. [Source]( However, for several months now, traders havenât been feeling very patriotic, allowing auction yields to surpass expectations. The difference between expected and auction yields is called the âtail.â Generally, the greater the tail, the weaker the demand for Treasuries at that auction. Last week, the Treasury Department held auctions for 10 and 30-year bonds, both âtailingâ 3 basis points (3bps⦠a.k.a. 0.03%), meaning the auction yield came in 3bps higher than the when-issued yield (a.k.a., the expected yield). You might ask, âBut David, youâre not tweakinâ about a 3bp tail, are you?â to which Iâd say, âI absolutely am tweakinâ about 3bps, and Iâm scared and want my mom andâ¦â Sorry, quick panic attack. But, as always, itâs not the level that matters; itâs the direction. And in this case, itâs the reason behind that direction that matters.  [Source]( We can thank certified smart pants Torsten Slok, Chief Economist at Apollo, for the above chart showing the tail size of 10-year Treasury bond auctions for the last 4.5yrs. As we can see, last weekâs 10-year auction clearly continued the post-pandemic trend of higher, more frequent tails. That makes some sense when rates are expected to rise, but⦠When rates are expected to fall, this generally strengthens demand for auctions prior to the expected rate cut because investors know that the starting point for yieldsâthe Fed Funds rateâwill move lower, thus decreasing yields for Treasuries issued after the cut. Given that a September rate cut is more certain than this email hitting your inbox today, itâs even more concerning to see weak demand for long-dated Treasuries heading into this cut. [Source]( Yields have continued to move lower in the last few months, showing that demand is abundant in the secondary market. However, investors clearly have quite a taste aversion to sub-4% long-dated yields in the primary market, being the auction itself. The Takeaway? In summary, we have: - A looming rate cut amid a worsening macro outlook. - Auction yields repeatedly coming in higher than expected on an increasingly frequent basis. - Declining bond yields in the open market. The quote âIf youâre not a little confused, youâre not paying attentionâ has never been more applicable. While thereâs no flashing red sell signal (yet), continually rising auction yields, especially in the face of a looming rate cut, are particularly concerning as this signals that investors have little interest in lending directly to Uncle Sam. Uncle Sam has found himself in a pickle. Already high rates are making payments on the comically large national debt harder to make. This leads investors to demand higher rates at auctions, making interest payments harder to make and worsening fiscal conditions even more, leading investors to demand higher rates, making interest payments harder to make, worsening fiscal condi- You see where this is going. Maybe Uncle Sam could benefit from some expert financial advice to go through these tough times. How about we look to our best and brightest for portfolio management? What's Ripe Nvidia (NVDA) 4.08% - Although the [Fountain of Youth]( is mythical, weâve finally discovered the Fountain of WealthâNvidia stock. Money may not buy happiness, but it can buy chips. - The stock is giving JPow a run for his money as the worldâs largest money printer, especially now after getting further upgrades on Monday. - Renewed optimism comes in response to the unfathomable spending on AI investment by tech companies announced throughout earnings szn.  Robinhood (HOOD) 3.46% - Wow, weâre SO damn back. Since last weekâs hella-strong earnings report, Robinhood shares have been ripping, leading to a lot of hype from analysts. - The exchange reported 40% total revenue growth on a 161% boom in digital asset trading revenues. Equities revenue grew 60%, with Options up 43%. - Needless to say, the firm beat across the board, leading to an upgrade to Overweight from Piper Sandler on a growing bull market in degeneracy. What's Rotten B. Riley Financial (RILY) 51.92% - There are good earnings reports, bad earnings reports, and then thereâs B. Riley. All thatâs been revealed so far is that this firm has a new arch-enemyâitself. - Thatâs because this financial services provider just delayed its quarterly filing, suspended their dividend, and issued new guidance. - The firm now anticipates a massive $14-$15/share loss. Despite claiming theyâre âworking diligentlyâ on the filing, the market took it much like when your coworker says theyâre âliving the dream.â JetBlue (JBLU) 20.66% - Who knew that [breaking a passenger's ankle]( with a seatbelt (however, if that happens) wouldnât be the worst news for JetBlue coming into Monday? - Not letting passengers hog all the pain, JetBlue passed some of the suffering onto shareholders by announcing a slew of fundraising rounds. - The airline is raising $2.75bn in debt and another $400mn via a convertible note offering, leading to a downgrade from Moodyâs and yesterdayâs selloff. Thought Banana The Only Thing That Matters Veterans, police officers, nurses, and financial newsletter writersâwhat do all these societal heroes have in common? Besides all being heroes of equivalent valor, they experience quite a lot of volatility in their professional lives. Most of the time not much is going on. Then, all of a sudden, everything starts all at once. The last few weeks have been the latter for we financial newsletter virgins, I mean writers. But itâs important to keep in mind what really matters. Letâs dive in. What Happened? As of last Fridayâs close, 91% of S&P 500 companies had reported earnings for the second quarter. Viewing things positively, results have been⦠mixed. [Source]( Some of the headlining numbers so far include: - 78% of companies have beaten EPS estimates. - This is above the 5-year average of 77% and the 10-year average of 74%. - The average EPS beat in Q2 has been 3.5%, below the 5yr average of 8.6% and the 10-year average of 6.8%. - 59% of companies have beaten revenue estimates. - This is well below the 5-year average of 69% and the 10-year average of 64%. - The average revenue beat in Q2 sits at 0.5%, below the 5-year average of 2% and the 10-year average of 1.4%. - The average annual revenue growth rate (so far) has been 5.2%, while the average EPS growth rate has been 10.8%. - If these growth rates hold, it will be the fastest revenue growth rate since Q4â22 and the fastest EPS growth rate since Q4â21. The Takeaway? Companies have been extremely effective in managing their cost basis and share count to keep EPS growing above estimates despite revenue doing the opposite. The lower magnitude of revenue beats could signal weaker economy-wide demand, but given that itâs still the fastest growth rate in a year and a half, this speaks more to overzealous estimates from analysts. The same is true on the bottom line. With EPS beating by less than average despite the fastest growth in two and a half years, the proportion of companies delivering beats remains higher than historical averages. What this tells us is that the selloff that has coincided with much of earnings szn is a valuation-driven pullback. Fundamentals are still going strong, but markets are valuing those strong fundamentals at lower multiples. Welcome to the all-guts no-glory market. Pick your portfolio wisely. The Big Question: Can we expect higher returns in the future due to this valuation reset? Banana Brain Teaser Previous The annual interest rate earned by an investment increased by 10% from last year to this year. If the annual interest rate earned by the investment this year was 11%, what was the annual interest rate last year? Answer: 10% Today A certain financial institution reported that its assets totaled $2,377,366.30 on a certain day. Of this amount, $31,724.54 was held in cash. Approximately what percent of the reported assets was held in cash on that day? Send your guesses to vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com â No matter how wonderful a business is, it's not worth an infinite price. Charlie Munger How Would You Rate Today's Peel? [All the bananas]( [Meh]( [Rotten AF]( Happy Investing,
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