Capitulation and fiscal responsibility... Silver Banana goes to... [Caplinked. ]() Market Snapshot Futures pointed lower on Thursday morning, and the 24-hour crypto casino has been selling off. Oil is back above 106 dollars, up just like record-high gasoline prices. The 10-yr yield is a full 30 bps lower than earlier in the week, finishing yesterday at 2.87%. Markets retreated again but pared losses as the dayâs session closed. At the closing bell, the Dow was down 0.33%, the Nasdaq was actually 0.06% in the green, and the S&P was down only slightly, finishing lower by 0.12%. Ready for a caffeine kick? Caplinked has joined WSO to offer members âcaffeine for quotesâ. Get a weekâs worth of Starbucks just for requesting a quote. You could also come away with a $500 Amazon gift card. [Fuel up Now]() Happy Friday. For todayâs winner of the banana brain teaser, I will mail you a WSO t-shirt. Letâs get into it. Banana Bits - [Crypto]() continues to sell off, erasing hundreds of billions in market cap
- Are [meme stocks]() en vogue again?
- The future of information sharing is actually yesterday, and nothing better than these [data rooms]() to facilitate quick and effective sharing
- So that [meat shortage]( we were allegedly about to have⦠yeah, that was cap
- More and more countries like Finland desire to [join NATO](, which kind of reminds me of how hard it used to be to get a rez at Dorsia Banana Brain Teaser The answer to Thursdayâs Banana Brain Teaser was to just toss the ball straight up in the air as hard as you can. For todayâs first respondent with the right answer, I will ship you a sick WSO t-shirt, direct to your door. Thatâs our idea of SWAG and service. Letâs go! When combined, which two words have the most letters? Shoot us your guesses at [vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com]( with the subject line "Banana Brain Teaser" or simply [click here to reply!]( Macro Monkey Says Pain â No, this is not an introduction to a revised edition of 50 Shades of Grey. Pain is probably what your portfolio is feeling, at least in some shape or form. Interestingly the sell-off that we are living through, Apes, is historical. We havenât seen such a prolonged pullback since the financial crisis that sparked the great recession. Some of the most beloved companies have watched trillions in collective market cap evaporate in the last few weeks. When you couple the sell-off in equities with moves in crypto and the bond market, I start to think of one thing: capitulation. So when will we bottom? Did it already happen? Or do you dare try and catch a falling knife? Well, important indicators for capitulation are the two Vâs: volume and volatility. When you watch a huge volume surge and a volatility spike, thatâs a decent indicator of capitulation. Inflated valuations aside, when the VIX is between 30 and 35, there are usually a ton of sellers of volatility at those levels. However, weâre not seeing that just yet when it comes to derivative volumes. Iâd argue that weâre not at the bottom yet, but itâs definitely a traderâs market. Thereâs a chance to be a bull somewhere, Apes. Good luck! Coffee is for Closers â And weâre giving it away! [image](=) Have we got a deal for you! As an exclusive offer to WSO members, Caplinked will give you Starbucks coffee for the week just for requesting a quote. Youâll also be entered to win Amazon gift cards valued at up to $500. Caplinked is a better platform at a better price. Founded in 2010 by Eric Jackson (PayPalâs first head of US Marketing), Caplinked has become a leading option for boutique firms, the largest investment banks, and everything in between. [Click here to get fueled up with Caplinked]() What's Ripe Tapestry ($TPR) â Shares of the holding company for luxury brands traded significantly higher yesterday, climbing 15.50% higher. Tapestry is the management arm of Kate Spade, Coach, and Stuart Weitzman, and unlike many of its retail competitors, it had a nice quarter. It beat earnings estimates by almost 25%. As consumer sentiment moves the wrong way, letâs see if people are still spending their hard-earned bananas on $800 purses and $250 wallets in the next few quarters. Dish Network ($DISH) â Dish Networkâs stonk traded higher yesterday, finishing the session up 14.60%. I interpret this as a slight bounce, given that $DISH is still down over 37% in the last month. I dunno if youâve ever subâd to Dish, or if youâve tried to host a Super Bowl party when it was raining â because these two concepts are actually incompatible. Looking at $DISHâs most recent quarterly results from about six weeks ago, it would appear that generating alpha and $DISH are also incompatible. What's Rotten The Boeing Co ($BA) â Yesterdayâs largest loser from the Dow was The Boeing Company. Even after its CFO publicly announced that it looked like things were turning around, the street punished the aerospace giant by pushing its shares down 4.83%. Boeing looks pretty ripe at these levels. $BA is too big to fail, given its ties to the US defense industry. Theyâre probably one big Department of Defense contract away from a nice little 20% pop, but thatâs just my $0.02. Nvidia ($NVDA) â The chipmaker was at the top of the laggard list from the Nasdaq yesterday, closing after giving away 2.74%. The semiconductor producer already got schwacked for not letting investors know how much of its business was dependent on cryptobros and their sick rigs. Now, after crypto is circling the drain, investors fear that crypto wonât ever recover and that this crypto flash crash may hurt $NVDA forever. You be the judge. Thought Banana Balancing the Books â Congrats to the US Government on running a budget surplus in April, its largest in history. This number is a record on the right side of fiscal responsibility. The only problem: the Federal Government still has almost a 1.6 trillion dollar deficit on its hands. 1.6 Trillion with a T. Now, Iâm not sure that this most recent surplus is something to celebrate or something of a wake-up call. Celebrating a small surplus for one month relative to a massive national debt is like congratulating yourself that you were able to walk away from the craps table with free validated parking after youâre only down 2600 bananas. In other words, donât let the news of Aprilâs surplus fool you; things arenât good for the governmentâs balance sheet. The future of capitalism in this country rests on our governmentâs ability to ensure free and open markets, both at home and abroad. This isnât a hot take â itâs a black-and-white fact. A loose purse was great when it was propping up asset prices with liquidity for all its friends. Now, itâs time to atone. Letâs hope that we can continue to make some progress towards a more responsible federal budget. Wise Investor Says âIâm a capitalist, but capitalism without competition IS NOT capitalism.â â Joe Biden 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")
20705 Saint Charles St
Saratoga, California 95070
United States
(617) 337-3353