Metal prices skyrocket as supplies flounder... Market Snapshot RIP to that incredibly short winning streak equity markets saw last week. Traders completely killed the vibe yesterday, with hopes for Russian de-escalation in Ukraine fading more than the value of my portfolio. Naturally, oil gained on this news, and tradeoff had a moderately good day. All in all, the Nasdaq lost 1.21%, while the S&P shed 0.63%, and the Dow fell 0.19%. Letâs get into it. [image] Banana Bits - Start lining up, boomers. Your [second booster](=) shot is waiting.
- The US Labor Market [remains less balanced](=) than your diet.
- Former President Donnie T may have lied bigly about his [firmâs asset valuations]().
- Axies got mugged for $600mn in the [second-largest* crypto hack]() of all time.
- [CNN+ officially launched]() because âround-the-clock coverage still isnât enough.
- [Positive drug tests]() for US workers hit a 20-year high in 2021. Nice, lol.
- Robinhoodâs long-time crypto lead says [peace out](. [image] Macro Monkey Says No Homes for You â If you donât already have or didnât buy a home in the last few years, well, good luck being homeless for the rest of your life. Donât worry, though. Iâll be right there with you, and Iâm guessing so will a lot of people. I didnât realize this was actually possible, but home prices continued to accelerate to kick off 2022. January home prices grew at an annualized rate of 19.2%, according to the S&P Case-Shiller Index, increasing from Decemberâs reading of 18.9%. We already knew the housing market was a hodgepodge of garbage right now, but now we know that itâs still possible for things to get worse. Case-Shiller operates on a couple of months lag, hence the January report just dropping on Tuesday, so weâll have to wait a while to see just how strong that trend is. But all signs point to a pretty damn strong trend. Homebuilding in the US remains woefully behind demand, largely leading to the broad price jumps weâve seen lately. Estimates show that between 2012 and 2021, 12.3mn households were formed within the United States, while only around 7mn homes were built. Doing some quick math, we can see that leaves a shortage of some 5.3mn homes. Not a great start. In 2021, just 1.6mn homes were built, according to the US Census Bureau. As demand has only increased over that course of time, safe to say that shortage isnât getting any better. Meanwhile, in 2021, many homebuyers were anything but families finally getting into the home of their dreams. Firms like BlackRock, Blackstone, and a slew of other domestic and overseas investors have been buying up houses at the same rate that Will Smith is losing fans. Of course, the end goal with a lot of those purchases is to sell them, but trading literal houses is a bit different than trading stocks. Residential investors tend to keep them in their clutches for as long as they can. The one shining light that gives us some reason to think weâre not back in 2008 is rates. Mortgage rates hit over 4% for the first time in years recently, and as we saw a few Daily Peelâs ago, price elasticity is showing. New home sales slowed dramatically and against expectations, so while weâre watching prices skyrocket, weâre not seeing the same subprime-loan-fueled buying bonanza that led to the GFC. Or maybe we are. Who really knows because I sure as hell donât. Like Samuel Goldwyn, we donât like to make predictions, especially about the future. What's Ripe Lululemon ($LULU) â Whatâs the saying? When the market gives you lemons, make them Lulu? Something like that⦠Regardless, that saying was hella true yesterday. Lulu popped off 9.6% after a classic beat and raised earnings release late Tuesday. Net income exploded by 131% to $434.5mn, translating to an EPS of $3.36, while the Street was looking for $3.27. Sales were up 47% QoQ, but not enough to beat analyst guesses. I hate to burst the bubble of any Lulu-wearing apes out there, but much like the Fed, rates on the companyâs products are getting hiked next quarter. Might be time to check out one of the millions of Lulu knockoffs that plagues your Instagram feed. Formula One Group ($FWONK) â We love weird ass companies here at the Peel, so letâs take a look at Formula One Group⦠or is it called Liberty Mediaâ¦? Tough to tell. But when a business doesnât even know its own name, Iâm into it. The wonkily named FWONK shares popped 3.5% yesterday, and while there was exactly 0 news to support this, weâll take that all day. Essentially, Liberty Media group is a âmediaâ investment firm. Its biggest holdings consist of, get this, 1) Formula One, 2) SiriusXM, and 3) the Atlanta Braves. Seems legit. Yeah, it sounds pretty f*ckinâ weird, but itâs working out for them. F1 viewership is ramping up and might have something to do with the stockâs 61% 1-year gain. Donât sleep on the weird ones, apes. [image] What's Rotten Restoration Hardware ($ RH) â The worldâs most pretentious retailer has gotten a good taste of the downside lately, falling well over 40% since mid-December and adding another 13.3% loss yesterday. Restoration Hardware â the store thatâs too good to call their stores âstoresâ and instead uses the term âgalleriesâ â completely sh*t the bed last quarter. Revenue came in over $30mn short of expectations, clocking in $902.7mn for the quarter while raking in $4.91/sh GAAP on those sales. Wall Street wanted $5.52/sh. Honestly, I donât even feel bad about this one. Maybe a nice price correction will knock the pompous BS out of them. Concentrix ($CNXC) â Congrats to the Concentrix team for having the second-worst performance in the entire Russell 1000 yesterday (only behind $ RH). Even solid earnings couldnât pull them out of the water. Shares plummeted 11.5% by close, but in classic Mr. Market fashion, there wasnât a whole lotta reason for it. Revenue grew a bit slower than expected. But still, you canât be mad about a 13.5% quarterly bump. EPS grew nearly 24% from a year ago, hitting $2.09/sh, well above the $1.83 expected. So, Mr. Market, what are you mad about? Oh yeah, they also announced that no share repurchases had occurred during the quarter. After authorizing and promising share repurchases for the whole year, Mr. Market may feel a bit betrayed. You donât wanna break a promise with him. [image] Thought Banana Joey B Loves Metal â Turns out Joe Biden is a pretty big Metallica and Black Sabbath fan. The President is reportedly considering invoking the Defense Production Act to ramp up domestic production of metal. Oh, wait a minute, I just read the report, and itâs not metal as in music, but metal as in actual metal. That makes a lot more sense. That makes more sense, as you may have noticed lately that metal prices are skyrocketing as supplies continue to flounder while supply chains seem to still think weâre in the middle of the pandemic. To combat this and ensure all those EV firms have access to their metal, Joey B might dole out some lithium. But itâs not just lithium. Biden has his eyes on supplies of graphite, nickel, cobalt, manganese, and a few other words that remind me of 10th grade chemistry class. Under the Defense Production Act (DPA), companies gain access to government funding to facilitate productivity, general operations, and, of course, safety. Experts view the move as potentially taking us one step closer to energy and material independence, something that weâve all now realized might just be slightly important. Nothing is set in stone yet, but certain material and industrial stocks were hyped. Lithium Americas gained almost 12%, while MP Materials gained 9% early to finish up 3.3%. Apologies in advance, apes, but I have to say it. Got metal? Wise Investor Says âStock prices can go to zero. Commodities cannot. Unlike shares in a company, commodities are real things that are always likely to be worth something to somebody.â â Jim Rogers 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 IB Oasis Corp. (aka "Wall Street Oasis")
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