Low oil production and new nukes... Market Snapshot Some of us apes woke up on the wrong side of the bed Friday morning and chose violence. The indices were sent tumbling. The Nasdaq plummeted 2.78%, the S&P lost 1.90%, and the Dow followed with a loss of 1.43%. Letâs get into it. Macro Monkey Says Energized Oil â To quote the great American poet Flo Rida, âItâs goinâ down for real.â The nuclear-powered stare down between U.S. President Joe Biden and President / Owner of Russia Vladimir Putin intensified on Friday with American national security officials warning that an invasion of Ukraine by the Red Army seems imminent. Oh, and happy Monday. Now, this isnât great for a lot of reasons. Weâre not geopolitical analysts here at The Daily Peel, so we canât speculate on what may or may not turn into World War Three. Weâre here to make money, apes, and one thing this conflict has been great for is oil prices. On Friday, global oil and gas prices spiked even more than theyâd already spiked over the past few months. U.S. crude, aka West Texas Intermediate, sits at $93.90 while the U.K.âs crude benchmark, known as Brent, closed at $95.10. Both benchmarks have gained >53% in the past year and sit at +7-year highs, making the S&Pâs returns look like that of the average Robinhood trader who just discovered Dogecoin. Meanwhile, gasoline prices have gained even more in the past year, shooting up 66%, which is almost as much as my stress levels when I see the price per gallon at the Mobil down the street. But it takes more than just a potential skirmish at a 199-mile eastern European border to drive gains like that. We canât forget about the IEA and OPEC. Amid the egomaniacal brouhaha boiling between Russia, Ukraine, the U.S., and the E.U., the International Energy Agency threw yet another wrench into the calculus of oil prices. âIncredibly tightâ is how one IEA official described conditions in the global market. Basically, even without the Russia-Ukraine conflict, oil supplies were already precipitously low, largely thanks to an estimated one billion barrel shortfall between what OPEC was supposed to produce and what the cartel actually produced since the start of 2021. Of course, many countries hold sizable stockpiles of oil that could ease prices if released en masse. However, weâve just been using way more of that black gold than anticipated. At the end of the day, anything can happen. WTI did go negative back in 2020, so really nothing should surprise us at this point. [image] The Week Ahead â Weâve got another fun week of degeneracy ahead of us, apes. Letâs take a look at what we can expect. Monday: While youâre busy eating heart-shaped candy from your mom and watching your friends post cringe-a** love quotes on Instagram, the treasury will be auctioning off both 3- and 6-month bills, and weâll get a reading on consumer inflation expectations. Tuesday: After recovering from your Valentineâs day hangover, Tuesday brings a lot of fun as well. Macro nerds will flock to read the latest PPI and Empire State Manufacturing Index. Meanwhile, firms including Roblox, Airbnb, and Wynn Resorts report their latest earnings. Wednesday: On Wednesday, details about import and export prices over the last year will drop along with the latest retail sales data. Earnings will be the real fun. Nvidia, Shopify, and Cisco will update us on their latest quarter, and given the state of the semi-market, itâs gonna be exciting. Thursday: Housing data will take over the minds of economists on Thursday, along with the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index. On the earnings side, Walmart, Palantir, Roku, and Dropbox will steal the limelight. Friday: Fridayâs gonna be boring from the data side for economists, but maybe speeches from the Fedâs Lael Brainard and governors Wallard and William will cheer them up. Meanwhile, DraftKings and John Deere will dazzle us with their latest numbers. As I said, itâs gonna be fun. We'll see you there! What's Ripe Zillow ($Z) â Take note, apes. Weâve just been given a masterclass in failure recovery straight from Zillow and CEO Rich Barton. Over the past few months, weâve all had some good laughs at Zillowâs nearly 80% fall triggered by the embarrassment that was their ibuying business. But now, courtesy of the firmâs latest earnings report, the segment is getting cleaned up a lot faster than expected. Even better, increasing the outlook for 2022 and dropping the phrase âhousing super appâ sent shares on a 13.6% ride. Gold Stocks ($NEM, $GOLD, $FNV) â War, what is it good for? Well, gold prices, for one. As the worldâs oldest surviving currency, gold has a special place in investorsâ hearts. Outside of all this fiat f*ckery and crypto crap, there exists another form of currency, rare metals, which is basically just gold. So, given that gold is the oldest and theoretically âmost soundâ currency available, it is the epitome of a safe haven asset. When the world gets hairy (shoutout to Ukraine), investors flock to the safety of shiny rocks. Perhaps no one benefits from this more than gold producers, like those listed above, who all soared over 5.3% on Friday. What's Rotten Under Armour ($UA) â Poor, sweet Under Armour probably thought their earnings and revenue beat would lead to a good day. Well, little did Nikeâs little brother know, it would notâ¦at all. The sports equipment firm delivered $0.14/sh on$1.53bn top line vs $0.07 on $1.47bn expected. The big mistake, this time, came from the lips of CEO Patrik Frisk, who used Wall Streetâs least favorite word when he pointed out âongoing uncertainty in the marketplace.â With that, shares tanked 11.4%. Chip Stocks ($QCOM, $NVDA, $AMD) â Semiconductor stocks mustâve thought sh*tting the bed was an Olympic sport because they certainly won gold on Friday. Shares in major U.S. chip firms Qualcomm, Nvidia, and AMD all plummeted 5.4%, 7.3%, and 10.0%, respectively, ending what was beginning to be a turnaround week for the industry. A WSJ report from Friday morning detailing âcontaminationâ of flash memory chips at two plants in Japan has sent a ridiculous amount of FUD through the minds of traders. And with that, have fun trading today! Thought Banana New Nukes â What if I told you a potential remedy to a nuclear-powered conflict driving insanity in the energy marketâ¦could be more nukes? Okay, youâre right, it probably isnât, but weâre not talking about regular old nukes here. For these nukes, we took a lesson from the Sun and all the other stars out there and switched from boring old fission reactions to the way more based and cool fusion reactions. Time to put on our science hats. Nuclear fission, the process currently used to power reactors around the world, is your grandpaâs nuclear reaction. This is a process of splitting heavy atoms into lighter ones that then (somehow) produce energy. Fusion, on the other hand, is your non-existent grandkidâs nuclear reaction. Still not achieved at scale, fusion involves combining light atoms to produce the heavier helium, which in turn (somehow) produces energy. So, who cares? Well, everyone, or at least, everyone should. Nuclear fusion is the holy grail of sustainable energy, and just last week, we witnessed a remarkable breakthrough in this technology. Fusion > fission. Why? Well, fission is, in a word, dangerous. The process induces a chain reaction that can lead to things like Chernobyl and Three Mile Island when not properly monitored. Fusion, on the other hand, uses an inherently safe reaction in a tokamak system that does not present the same threats as fission while also producing much less waste with much less radioactivity. Now, for the breakthrough. Scientists at the U.K.-based JET Labs just smashed their own record, set way back in 1997, for how much energy can be produced from a fusion reaction. The experiment produced 59 megajoules of energy over the course of 5 whole seconds, equivalent to 11 megawatts of power. Thatâs more than 2x the previous record and is a groundbreaking step towards a clean, safe, and sustainable fusion energy future. This is huge. While fusion, like quantum and other deep sciences, is one of those things thatâs always â10 years away,â some scientists actually think this time is different. Moreover, the amount of energy that can be produced through this technology at scale is so powerful that the 22nd century could see effectively free energy. It sounds crazy, but as we said earlier, oil did go negative, so who knows what could happen. Wise Investor Says âIf stock market experts were so expert, they would be buying stock, not selling advice.â â Norman Ralph Augustine Happy Investing, Patrick & The Daily Peel Team Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up for the WSO Daily Peel [here](). [ADVERTISE](=) // [WSO ALPHA](=) // [COURSES]( // [LEGAL](=) Don't want The Daily Peel? [Unsubscribe here](). Click to [Unsubscribe]( from ALL WSO content Wall Street Oasis (IB Oasis Corp.)
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