Warren Buffett has a new favorite child, while Deere & Coâs earnings were abysmal, sending shares higher. B. Riley continued its Boeing-plane-level nosedive, and retailer Dillardâs is feeling the pain. August 16, 2024 | [Read Online]( Silver banana goes to⦠In this issue of the peel: - Retail sales and earnings from Amazon and Walmart paint a rosy picture of American consumers. But, looking under the hood, clear signs of struggle are starting to emerge⦠like more frequent shopping at Walmart. - Warren Buffett has a new favorite child, while Deere & Coâs earnings were abysmal, sending shares higher. B. Riley continued its Boeing-plane-level nosedive, and retailer Dillardâs is feeling the pain. - Mortgage applications storm higher as rates matched their highest level in the last year. Market Snapshot Banana Bits - ISM Manufacturing wasnât as bad as it looked [if we exclude autos](. - Taking a break from writing essays on X, Bill Ackmanâs Pershing Square just revealed new stakes in [Nike and Brookfield Asset Management](. - Average S&P 500 short interest just [hit its annual high](. - Not all Chinese retailers were made equal in Q2 as [JD.com]([rises]( after earnings, but [Alibaba remains flat](. - VP Harris drops a few teasers on her economic plan to [get released today](. The Daily Poll What is the most concerning sign for the American consumer right now? [More shopping at discount stores](
[Slower discretionary spending](
[Surge in mortgage applications](
[Rising S&P 500 short interest]( Previous Poll: Which stock will perform better over the next 12 months? Chipotle: 26.3% // Starbucks: 34.6% // Short them both: 39.1% Tilt the Odds in Your Favor In the competitive world of high finance, every advantage counts. Our exclusive curriculum, designed by industry experts, sharpens your skills and knowledge, making you a top candidate. Enjoy personalized coaching, targeted internship opportunities, and a robust network of finance professionals with [WSO Academy.]([Â]( Macro Monkey Says Sector Spotlight: Retail Shoutout to everyone whoâs made a donation to the economy in recent weeks. Your generosity paid off, at least according to yesterdayâs Retail Sales report and the quarterly numbers recently released by the worldâs largest retailers, Walmart and Amazon. Alongside dominating the Paris Olympics and spreading its influence globally, this has to be confirmation that the American Dream is alive and well. Letâs get into it. The Numbers Retail Sales: Yesterday, the U.S. Census Bureau released its Advance Monthly Sales For Retail and Food Services report for July. According to their data, spending is as strong as the presidential race, which is heated. [Source]( Total retail spending increased by 1.0% in July, beating estimates and rebounding from the 0.2% decline reported the previous month. Annually, sales grew by a healthy 2.7%. As we can see above, most of the increased spending comes from car sales. The auto industry has already seen quite the uptick in activity, along with mortgages, thanks to looming rate cuts. Nonstore retailers, a.k.a. Amazon⦠(spoiler alert), led the way, increasing 6.7% from July 2023. But daddy Bezos wasnât the only one putting the team on his back. Americans are still getting drunk and fat at record levels. Spending on food services and drinking places grew by 3.4% from last year. Iâve never been so proud of my country. [Amazon.com](: Speaking of strong nonstore retailers, Amazonâs Q2 earnings reportâreleased Aug 1stâlooked strong on the retail side. Shares sold off that day, mostly thanks to weak guidance and underwhelming advertising revenue. But, for todayâs purposes, the retail unit is all we care about. [Source]( As we can see, Amazonâs North American retail segment continued taking steroids, with revenue up 9% annually to $90bn. For the 6 months ended June 30th, North American retail sales grew 11% vs 2023. Sales for the first half of the year grew at the same rate as in 2023, but the 9% growth in Q2 slowed down from 11% in Q2â23. Operating income, however, ballooned even faster than Bezosâ wallet, growing 57% from Q2 of last year and implying that sellers on Amazon were still able to pass on cumulatively inflated prices and that cost pressures at the corporate level reduced. Plus, not to mention that 2024âs Prime Day hit a record $14.2bn in sales, growingâ¦Â 11%... from this national holiday in 2023. Walmart: Also on Thursday, the only retailer in the world that pulls more than Amazon delivered a jacked-up earnings report that got champagne bottles popping on Wall Street. Shares in this behemoth rose 6.58% after reporting a beat on sales and earnings, delivering $0.67/sh on $169.34bn in sales vs the $0.65/sh on $16863bn expected. [Source]( Total revenues grew 4.8%, while U.S.-based same-store sales increased 4.2%. Feeling confident in consumers, Walmart increased full-year revenue guidance from 3-4% growth to 3.75-4.75%. However, the retailer at the same time issued sobering earnings guidance, saying the second-half may not be as strong as the first. CFO John Railey used ExecSpeak, saying, âIn this environment, itâs responsible or prudent to be a little bit guarded with the outlook, but weâre not projecting a recession.â In other words, âwe could be f*cked, but we donât think so as of right now.â But, he then went on to add that âwe donât see any additional fraying of consumer health,â pointing to the fact that sales for general merchandise grew for the first time in 11 quarters. [Source]( Sales from Walmartâs discount store (think about that againâthe discount store for Walmart) posted solid performance as well, with same-store sales at Samâs Club up 4.6% in total and 5.2% excluding gas and diesel sales. While that sounds great, this could have contributed to the 42.3% decline in net income, falling to $4.5bn last quarter. Although the top-line is strong, the fact that â... [Walmartâs] members and customers that they remain choiceful, discerning, value-seeking, focusing on things like essentials rather than discretionary items.â could be a sign of consumer weakness to come. However, Walmart's online retail segment grew 22% while its advertising unit led the way up 26%. The Takeaway? Consumers spending is walking a tightrope⦠and it just lost its balancing rod. Sure, spending could still make it to the other side, but theyâre starting to get wobbly. Based on the above data, the key facts to remember include: - Consumer spending is holding up well, especially via e-commerce. - Consumers are becoming more and more deal-seeking and value-oriented. - Discretionary spending is faltering. - Spending on credit-linked items is increasing. So, basically, this means that consumers are fine for now, but it seems that weâre likely entering a period of protracted spending. Because of the strength in spending in the post-pandemic environment, this could still just be a normalization rather than a sign of a recession on the horizon. [Source]( Or, as BofA put it, â... for now, Bank of America internal data on after-tax wages and salaries growth remains supportive of consumer spendingâ despite reporting the above 0.4% decline in card spending last month. Fingers crossed. What's Ripe Ulta Beauty (ULTA) 11.17% - Uh-oh, is the teenage girl recession over? We might be headed in that direction after yesterdayâs gain; I just never expected a 93-year-old man to be the savior. - Warren Buffett officially saved the day by disclosing recently added positions in make-up provider Ulta Beauty, partly answering the firmâs cash question. - Buffett and Berkshire also bought shares in electronics maker Heico. The young buck still owns more T-Bills than JPow, so weâll see if more purchases follow. Deere & Co. (DE) 6.35% - Iâve seen better outcomes at a funeral than Deereâs second-quarter earnings. But, unlike most funerals (hopefully), itâs all smiles⦠for now. - The agricultural equipment company reported net sales and earnings above estimates, but that was only because estimates were so damn low. - Sales decreased across all three segments and guidance for each call for declines of at least 10% and up to 25% across the board. What's Rotten B Riley Financial (RILY) 27.69% - Like showing up late to a party, B Riley was left out of all the fun on Thursday. Delayed and sure-to-be terrible earnings are weighing. - Shares are down almost 90% YTD. A portfolio of bad loans and other securities is triggering write-downs, causing huge losses and liquidity concerns. - Goodwill alone has been marked down over 80% as part of a nearly 50% loss in total asset value. Nobody needs a rate cut more than these guys. Dillardâs (DDS) 10.73% - Tell us how you really feel, William Dillard. The CEO of his eponymous company made us fire up the worldâs smallest violin in response to Q2 earnings. - âWe are disappointed with our weak performance in the second quarter,â he said, as sales fell 5% to $1.489bn while net income fell 42.5% to $4.59/sh. - Both missed estimates. Margins decreased, and discount-seeking customers and lower traffic signaled weakness in discretionary spending. Thought Banana More-tgages What a bunch of losers. Suddenly, just a few weeks after I got my rate, everyone started applying for new mortgages. Idiotsâdonât they know I already have a high score? What Happened? Mortgage applications in the U.S. were similar to that bubble SpongeBob, and Patrick blew when they were painting Mr. Krabsâ house, just waiting to pop. The average 30-year fixed rate sits at its lowest level in at least a year, currently at 6.49%, according to Freddie Mac. [Source]( Refinancing applications led the way, skyrocketing 117% from last year and 34.5% from just a week ago. Mortgage purchases, which measure applications for new homes, grew by just 2.8%. However, the fact that they are growing at all is still a strong sign for the housing market, which likely reflects the industry's weakness in recent years.  [Source]( According to Fannie Mae, 90% of homeowners with a mortgage carry a rate below 6%, and 81% brag to their friends about having a sub-5% rate. Those misfortune enough to have bought a house after March 2022 are making up the bulk of refinancing requests for obvious reasons. But, as rates continue to fall, expect the limitless demand from Millennials and Gen Z to keep lenders busy. According to our recent poll, the vast majority of you anticipate buying a home in the next decade. If you apes are a good national representation, the industryâs bull market could have equally long legs. The Big Question: What stocks would be the biggest beneficiaries in a housing boom? What is wrong with the 5 of you that said youâre renting forever? Banana Brain Teaser Previous A rope of 20.6 meters long is cut into two pieces. If the length of one piece of rope is 2.8 meters shorter than the length of the other, what is the length, in meters, of the longer piece of rope? Answer: 11.7 meters Today When a subscription to a new magazine was purchased for m months, the publisher offered a discount of 75% off the regular monthly price of the magazine. If the total value of the discount was equivalent to buying the magazine at its regular monthly price for 27 months, what was the value of m? Send your guesses to vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com â Buy land, they're not making it anymore. Mark Twain (allegedly) How Would You Rate Today's Peel? [All the bananas]( [Meh]( [Rotten AF]( Happy Investing,
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