Silver Banana goes to... [M&A Science. ](=) Market Snapshot There ya have it, folks. 75 basis point hike for September, right in line with expectations. Down the street from the Fed, head honchos from Wall Streetâs megabanks took questions from Congress. Busy day overall in D.C. Stocks opened in the green but turned red in the afternoon as the 2-year sailed past 4%. At the close, the Dow dropped 1.70%, the Nasdaq sank 1.79%, and the S&P lost 1.71%. Letâs embrace the crisp days of fall, turn over a new leaf, and hear what other M&A practitioners are doing every day to source the biggest and best âpumpkinâ of a deal. Join us on October 20 for the M&A Science Academy Fall Virtual Summit, registration is free! [Sign up today](=) Letâs get into it. Banana Bits - If you got caught in the tech layoff bonanza this year, Amex is [hiring like crazy]() right now
- [Hurricane Fiona](=) is wreaking havoc in Puerto Rico, knocking out its power in recent days
- Grab a pumpkin spice latte, and [sharpen your deal-making skills with M&A Science](=)
- The global food supply is [straining]( under the weight of droughts and war
- Single-family home rents are way up versus last year, but increases have [plateaued](=) Banana Brain Teaser Yesterday â What is made of water but if you put it into water it will die? Ice. Today â It's 30 bananas off a [1-hour mentoring session]( for the first 20 correct respondents. LFG! There was a green house. Inside the green house, there was a white house. Inside the white house, there was a red house. Inside the red house, there were lots of babies. What is it? Shoot us your guesses at [vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com](mailto:vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com?subject=Banana%20Brain%20Teaser) with the subject line "Banana Brain Teaser" or simply [click here to reply!](mailto:vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com?subject=Banana%20Brain%20Teaser) Macro Monkey Says Structurally Inflated â Remember when inflation was supposed to be transitory? Supply chain issues are driving it, they said. War in eastern Europe is screwing up inventories everywhere, they said. But last monthâs data seems to cement this bout of inflation as more structural, and that means more pain will be required than with the transitory variety. Companies are saying that supply chain pressures are easing, and weâve all enjoyed gas prices coming down in the last few weeks. But the fact that inflation hasnât followed suit is concerning. Maybe itâs just a timing delay. Weâll see if thatâs what JPow thinks in the next few days. But inflationâs broadening out to just about everything we spend money on could mean that a capital ârâ Recession is needed to bring prices down. Not one of these âtechnicalâ recessions where GDP dips for two quarters, but things generally seem OK. Iâm talking heavy job losses and blood-red earnings reports kind of recession. The real estate market, both residential and commercial, is already basically in a freefall. Iâm not trying to be a doomsayer here, but crank the rate dial up too high, and we could see â08 levels of foreclosure in this country. Best of luck, Jerome. The M&A Science Academyâs Fall Summit, Oct 20 [image](=) Just like that, we are already approaching the end of the year. Before the leaves completely turn and fall, thereâs still time to implement new M&A practices that will leave you saying, "oh my gourd". Letâs embrace the crisp days of fall, take the time to turn over a new leaf, and hear what other M&A practitioners are doing every day to source the biggest and best âpumpkinâ of a deal. Join us on October 20 for the M&A Science Academy Fall Virtual Summit, registration is free! [Sign up today](=) What's Ripe General Mills ($GIS) â Bottomless mimosas are great, but have you ever downed a bowl of Cocoa Puffs and then had the chocolate milk thatâs left over? Nothing compares. Anyway, $GIS managed to eke out a strong day after a stellar earnings report. It beat estimates on the top and bottom lines as it benefited from higher prices and a consumer shift to cheaper, non-perishable food. It even raised its FY forecast. Who else is doing that these days? At the end of the session, $GIS was up 5.72%. Lithium Carbonate â Car makers have turned on their heels and moved to EV manufacturing seemingly overnight. More EVs means more battery manufacturing, which means a lot more lithium. The industry has been scrambling to secure a stable supply and price of the metal, but both have been made difficult by a lack of mining infrastructure. Energy prices are going to have a big effect on lithium in the near future. A lack of power will shut down lithium mining, which could send the price even higher. Lithium carbonate is up 615% since the start of 2021. What's Rotten iRhythm Technologies ($IRTC) â This medtech focused on cardiac arrhythmias fell through the floor on the same day it hosted analysts in NYC. While it has maintained revenue growth and solid gross margins around ~70%, the problem is still the bottom line. EBITDA for the year is projected to be about negative $15mn. It just ainât that kinda market anymore; you actually need to make money these days. Maybe theyâll change investorsâ minds during their presentations Wednesday. $IRTC closed the day down 14.8%. Las Vegas Sands ($LVS) â $LVS rode the wave of gaming stock optimism yesterday on reports of valuable Macau loosening quarantine restrictions. It came back down to Earth Wednesday. Growth opportunities are out there, especially in Singapore. But ultimately, an economic slowdown will outweigh any reopening benefits, so expect the likes of $LVS and $WYNN to continue to be choppy through the rest of 2022. By the end of the day, $LVS was down 6.72%. Thought Banana âTheater, Not Oversightâ â Thatâs what North Carolina Rep. Patrick McHenry, a prominent GOPer on the House Financial Services panel, had to say about Wednesdayâs hearings from big bank CEOs. Canât say I disagree with him. Is there a single ape out there thatâs going to fire up C-SPAN and actually watch this thing? Hopefully, itâs not as embarrassing as those tech CEO hearings from a few years ago. Based on prepared remarks, there probably wonât be a whole lot of juicy content. The theme seems to be, âyea, prices are way too high, war and supply chain creates an uncertain future, yada yada.â Most of these sessions will probably be dominated by political posturing ahead of the midterms, but there are some topics that could actually have some substance. Overdraft fees and savings rates are two big ones. Most think the former is too high and the latter too low. Despite rates likely landing at 3% after the FOMC meeting, the average savings account rate is just [0.17%](. Something doesnât add up there. Overdraft fees are criticized for punishing the poor, and while theyâre not as harsh as they used to be, thereâs probably room to bring them down further. Other than some substance in these two areas, expect a lot of political posturing. Wise Investor Says âSave when you can and not when you have to.â â John D. Rockefeller 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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