Spotting safe havens... Silver Banana goes to... [Yieldstreet.]() Market Snapshot Futures were boringly flat yesterday morning, and then markets moved only slightly higher during the trading session. Australiaâs central bank raised rates yesterday for the first time in 11 years, and the UKâs fed equivalent is meeting later this week to consider a similar move. Consumer discretionary and staples had a rough day, and small caps moved higher. The 10-year yield again flirted with 3%. At the closing bell, the Dow ended up 0.20%, the Nasdaq was up 0.22%, and the S&P was up 0.48%. Weâre trying a new section today: take a look at our Banana Brain Teaser right below todayâs Banana Bits. Show us your nerd skills for a chance to unlock access to our [Company Database]() for zero bananas. Yieldstreet lets you invest beyond the stock market with investments in real estate, art, supply chain finance, venture capital, and more - all at more attainable minimums than institutional funds. Deals target annual yields of 3-18% to help diversify and grow your portfolio. Come learn [why over 350k members have invested over $2.5B]() to date. Letâs get into it. Banana Bits - I canât remember the last time I ordered [a Whopper](=), but apparently, a lot of you can
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- The US dollar is at 20-year highs going into the Fedâs 2-day FOMC [extravaganza](
- BP [cashes in](=) on rising oil prices, more than doubling its profits
- Crypto exec resume turns out to be [fraudulent](=)⦠you donât say⦠Banana Brain Teaser For the first Ape to respond with the right answer to the following brain teaser, we will unlock full access to the WSO Company Database for zero bananas! Letâs give this a whirl: You have 100 isothermal (one side is the same temperature as the other) discs laying flat on a table, each with a dark side and a white side. 10 of them are white side up, and 90 are dark side up. You canât feel, see, or in any other way find out which 10 are white side up. Your goal is to split the discs into two piles, so there are the same number of white and dark side up discs in each pile. Macro Monkey Says Strong Dollar Economics â Any forex nerds in the crowd? Iâm sure youâre licking your lips watching the dollar index and the greenbackâs strength relative to other currencies lately. Take a look at the USD/EUR currency pair. As of yesterday morning, the Euro was only worth $1.05. We havenât seen an exchange rate at this level in years. Indeed, the dollar is showing its strength. Unfortunately, this doesnât mean the same thing as having a stock that has a high share price; there are macroeconomic implications of an engorged dollar that might not be intuitive. First, a strong dollar means that American goods, priced in dollars, become more expensive in other markets around the world. You want a new iPhone? Instead of â¬800, itâs more like â¬1,000 now. Hereâs a simplification to illustrate the issue. Imagine that because of currency exposure, the dollar is worth 10% more than it was a year ago. If thereâs only the same amount of foreign capital to spend on American goods, that would result in roughly a 10% cut on our exports. Calculating GDP is straightforward. Personal consumption plus government expenditures plus domestic investment minus our trade deficit. Itâs not rocket science at MIT. Hereâs where a strong dollar can hurt GDP. When itâs cheaper to spend money overseas than it is to invest or consume domestically, GDP will suffer. Some economists blamed inventory top-ups during the most recent quarter on our GDP contraction in Q1; now imagine if the dollar continues to strengthen and businesses have no choice but to invest overseas. That could have serious implications for a potential r-word in the coming quarters. Invest like you own the Mets [image]( You love your art, but does your art love you back? Has it ever done anything for you besides collect dust? Seems like you may have some framed freeloaders on your hands... Thankfully with Yieldstreetâs alternative investing platform you can invest in art that could earn you money instead of just looking pretty. From Banksy to Basquiat, youâll get access to private market art investments once reserved for the ultra-wealthy in just a few clicks. [Sign up]() to start appreciating art that appreciates today What's Ripe Western Digital ($WDC) â Shares of the digital storage solutions provider ripped 14.47% yesterday. This major move came shortly after news of an activist push by Elliott to split $WDCâs businesses. Elliott sent a strongly worded letter to the board, urging $WDC leadership to spin off its flash media business. Airbnb ($ABNB) â Shares of Airbnb moved higher after its earnings announcement yesterday, trading up 5.69% after hours. Airbnb posted a slimmer loss than expected, and it looks like they might be on their way to turning a profit this year as the Street expects. It is also notable that volume for the accommodations marketplace has returned to pre-C19 levels, an indicator of the companyâs progress in the past few quarters. What's Rotten Estee Lauder ($EL) â Shares of the cosmetics brand took a steaming dump pre-market yesterday, dropping like a ton of bricks before the opening bell. $EL announced its quarterly earnings, and the Street wasnât happy. Estee Lauder beat on the bottom line, but revenues didnât live up to expectations. The biggest gripe investors had with the makeup brand was its guidance. The company cut its full-year outlook, predicting headwinds compared to its previous expectations. On the news, shares fell 5.81% yesterday. Expedia ($EXPE) â To put it lightly, Expedia didnât have a good quarter. Sure, they posted a narrower loss than analysts expected, but apparently, the rest of their quarterly results were so bad that analysts at eight firms cut their price targets for the stonk. Expedia took an absolute thrashing yesterday, and in spite of the reopening play, shares closed down 14.02%. This could be a buying opportunity if youâre bullish on travel. Thought Banana Where to Hide â Generating alpha during a bear market is a challenge. Period. Not only is it tough to pick individual positions in a market that is trending lower, but itâs also a mentally and emotionally draining proposition. Letâs talk about hypotheticals for a minute; the Fed continues with quantitative tightening and its hawkishness as youâd think they will, given everything thatâs been in the public eye lately, and Daddy JPow squeezes us *just a little* too tightly, and there is no soft landing. What next? Well, the mythical r-word, of course. During a recession, how should I invest? Historically speaking, investors tend to seek risk-off assets during a recession. Safe havens like treasuries and gold end up helping preserve wealth. Equities and higher-risk bonds lose value. Technically speaking, a recession is two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction. So after last weekâs GDP print, thereâs a chance that three months from now, we will be hit with more surprising news: the feared r-word could be here. Lately, weâve seen the major crypto benchmarks move relatively in sync with the Nasdaq, but I have a hypothesis that if we have a significant r-word, BTC and ETH might be reliable stores of value in a broad downturn more significant than the correction we have lived through in the last few months. As far as stonks go, Utilities and Consumer Staples tend to attract capital during a recession. This makes sense: people have to keep their electricity on, and when you take a $hit, you probably need to wipe. Thanks, Procter & Gamble. If we do dig ourselves an even deeper hole, another sector to consider is Energy. If we have a hot summer when hydrocarbons are already priced at decade highs, it wonât just be utility companies raking in the profits; youâll see ESGâs favorite sector grow fat with gainz. Wise Investor Says âItâs a recession when your neighbor loses his job; itâs depression when you lose yours.â â Harry S Truman 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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