[The Daily Peel... ]() Apr 24, 2023 | Peel #446 Silver banana goes to... [Shortform. ](=) Market Snapshot Happy Monday, apes. And welcome to the big week. Earnings szn has been fun already, but this week is really where the action's gonna be. Hope you saved room after last weekâs appetizer because this main course is gonna be a lot to handle. Coke reports today, but Microsoft and Googleâs numbers dropping on Tuesday will really get the people going. We just donât know which direction just yet. Amazon, Meta, Snap, and others come later in the week, but weâll have to wait until next Thursday to get a peek at the big dawg Apple. Despite heavy trepidation around earnings in both nominal and real terms, markets have managed to hold up well thus far, with the S&P almost completely flat last week. Itâs boring for sure, but itâs a lot better than the August-October vibes of last year. With expectations as low as theyâve been, however, itâs not exactly a high bar to cross. Letâs get into it. Read More. Learn Faster. [image](=) To get ahead, you should be reading books in finance, economics, or even self-improvement and productivity - but why spend days (or weeks) reading dense books when you can use Shortform to consume it in a fraction of the time? [Shortform]() goes above and beyond other summary services by offering super comprehensive book guides. They cover a growing list of 1,000+ non-fiction books and articles to help you learn more, faster. Guides include: - 1-page summary
- Chapter by chapter break-down
- Smart insights and analyses
- Connections of ideas from one author to another
- Interactive exercises to help you retain the information you read
- Audio version Whatâs best is for the price of 1 book per month, you get access to thousands, and The Daily Peel subscribers get a [FREE Trial and a 25% Discount at shortform.com/oasis]() - thatâs 3 months off! Banana Bits - Experts and analysts increasingly expect another [geriatric throwdown]() for the Oval Office in 2024
- This website has an awesome name and also reported on Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrongâs [arm-strong-words]() for SEC Chair Gary Gensler
- Bed, Bath, and Bankrupt finally kicked the bucket after several [miserably idiotic failed attempts](=) to save itself; at least something that makes sense is occurring
- This Twitter account has been tweeting some phenomenal stats related to population growth from recent international reports, for those interested in the single [most important underlying economic force]( Macro Monkey Says Janet Yellen Has Bad Credit Given the fact that Treasury Secretary Yellenâs academic background is like the economist version of Pablo Escobarâs rap sheet, spending time at just about every school your parents wish you couldâve gotten into, that title probably isnât true. But for her government agency, itâs certainly far from the best itâs ever been. And itâs no secret why. The build-up to the inevitable debt ceiling debacle ainât slowing down, and Wall Street is paying a whole lot of attention, most clearly seen in the cost to insure government debt. Credit default swaps (CDS) are essentially insurance plans for lenders. Imagine youâre an actually responsible investor, and you buy a bond, but youâre worried it might not get paid back with full principal and interest: - You go to X Bank and voice your concerns. They say, âYeah, we got you,â and arrange a CDS contract
- You agree to periodically pay them a small amount, called the âpremium,â over the term of the bond you bought
- In exchange, X Bank agrees to pay you a predetermined amount in the event that the borrower defaults on your bond
- The amount of the payout can vary, along with the interest rates and a lot of other factors, but you get the point That âsmallâ amount the buyer of a treasury CDS contract pays isnât so small anymore. CDS rates, which are quotes on $1mn principal into a given treasury bond, have ballooned to 0.96% as of Friday, more than 6.5x the 0.14% we saw at the start of the year. So, buyers of insurance on US government debt now pay $9,600/yr for that insurance, an arrangement that ran you only $1,400/yr in January. A creeping debt ceiling crisis is the obvious and primary driver of this record-setting CDS rate spike. JYell and her gang at the treasury hit the $31.4tn borrowing limit back in mid-January, instituting âextraordinary measuresâ that allow for obligations to be paid until sometime around mid-June, or whenever the notoriousâ X Dateâ truly is. No one really knows what day X Date will fall on, but two things remain certain: 1) Weâre getting closer to it every day, and 2) Not much is being done about it. Generally, the market for treasury CDS is wildly small because if US government debt is ârisk-free,â why would you need to insure it? Banks will do it to get regulators to chill tf out from time to time, but otherwise, itâs a surprisingly illiquid market. That lack of liquidity means one paranoid buyer can cause sizable gyrations in CDS rates that donât truly reflect the broad market view of the odds of a US default. But still, a move like this certainly isnât nothing, especially with the showdown of the century between Uncle Joey B and House Speaker Kevvy Mac only getting hotter. Both parties have laid out their demands for battle. Republicans in Congress, like McCarthy, have voiced unwillingness to raise the debt ceiling without spending concessions. The White House and congressional Democrats, on the other hand, have voiced opposition to considering spending cuts before raising the debt limit again. Hopefully, that was written unbiasedly enough for yâall to stay out of my DMs, but I guess weâll see. Either way, it wonât help the intransigence on both sides here. Some kind of compromise is going to be required here unless the Federal government wants to completely destroy the bedrock of the global financial system in the USâs ârisk-freeâ debt status. Not sure if anyone out there could even get Congress to agree on a restaurant for dinner, so this wonât exactly be easy. Luckily, we wonât have too long to wait before we see what happens. Maybe just keep your fingers crossed in the meantime. What's Ripe Lyft ($LYFT) â 6.10% â - Bad news is still good news in the tech world as Lyft announces plans to lyft ~1,200 people away from their livelihoods, naturally sending shares rallying for their best day in a while.
- Thatâs about 30% of the companyâs overall workforce, sending a clear sign to the Street that the company is committed to the cost-cutting fad taking over 2023. Per internal memos, as reported by the [WSJ](), management is all too aware of just how much Uber has been eating (or, more accurately, delivering) Lyftâs lunch since C-19 showed up.
- Lyftâs decision to focus on core ride-hailing and mobility services during the pandemic turned out to be dead wrong, as hindsight shows. Uberâs strategy to diversify its offering and go global has granted the big dawg even more market share.
- The hope is that job cuts will (allegedly) allow the company to offer cheaper rides. Probably a solid move considering no one on Earth even opens the app unless Uber is more than $20 or 10-mins away. Procter & Gamble ($PG) â 3.46% â - Brush your teeth, wipe your ass, and get ready to party with P&G, as one of the worldâs largest consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies is still killing the game.
- Unfortunately, we havenât seen boomers go to blows for the last pack of Charmin Ultra Soft since the good olâ days when the pandemic started, but sales for these products are still booming. EPS and sales beat healthily and managed to still grow sizably from heights reached last year.
- It wasnât all pearly whites and Old Spice-style horseback riding, however. Inflation gave P&G an excuse to sell at higher prices, leading to a 3% decline in sales volume but still giving enough sauce to drive the outperformance. What's Rotten Albemarle ($ALB) â 10.00% â - Itâs 1984 again in Chile as the nationâs Federal government announced plans to nationalize its lithium industry.
- As Chile holds the largest lithium reserves in the world and is one of the largest exporters of this mineral thatâs absolutely vital to things like battery storage and green energy, lithium producers like Albemarle had their days ruined.
- Alongside Albemarle, homegrown lithium player SQM got massacred, too, losing nearly 20% on the day. The fear isnât whether or not the industry does get nationalized (that ship has pretty much sailed already) but whether or not the government pays market prices for the assets.
- Spoiler alert: they probably wonât. Best of luck, though! Truist Financial ($TFC) â 6.00% â - Looks like Trusit kept things a little too true on its last quarterly report released late on Thursday, sending shares down the toilet to end the week.
- But then again, it wasnât just Truist getting hated on. Fellow regional and mid-sized banks as a whole continue to confirm customers ran to larger players in the wake of the SBV meltdown. For one, Truist saw deposits lose 2% for the quarter and 5% compared to Q1â22.
- Earnings of $1.05/sh missed expectations as well, but not by much. The day likely wouldâve been much worse if a lot of this wasnât already priced in, as shares have already been bullied more than 25% lower YTD.
- Still, top line revenue put up big numbers with almost 15% growth for the year, but safe to say traders were far from impressed. For depositors and management, however, theyâre probably just glad theyâre not SVB. Thought Banana Automating Automation Oh, you still use ChatGPT? Psh, get with the times, boomer. What if I told you that ChatGPT is already outdated? Youâd probably say, âThatâs not true,â and youâd be mostly correct, but probably not for too long. Technological development is an exponential curve once it gets going, and recent developments with things called AutoGPTs are the perfect example of this occurring today. OpenAIâs most advanced large language model (LLM) was released about 5-weeks ago, and already we have this thing called AutoGPT that appears to be capable of a whole lot more. Essentially, reports allege you just have to give it a prompt, and it will not only give you a response but fulfill a task. It actually does something instead of just telling you what to do. To paraphrase Neil Armstrong, itâs a small change in language but a large change for mankind, potentially. Everything in cutting-edge AI seems to get replaced like 2-weeks later, but the potential here is crazy. Weâre talking everything from personal assistants to running entire departments at companies, again, allegedly. Sound ridiculous, but we are at literally the very beginning, and if the past year, decade, and/or century have taught us anything, itâs that wild stuff can and will happen. Applications are already abundant for these things, something that infuriates crypto bros waiting for the same from most of the sh*tcoins out there. Hereâs a solid synopsis of [a few examples](, but we can also see a dramatic pullback in VC funding correlated with the launch of all these things. Of course, the rest of the economic environment has gone insane as well, thanks largely to JPow, with rates and inflation being the most obvious and impactful, but even segments like seed funding are getting wiped, which [wasnât the case for most of 2022.]( Some VCs / pseudo philosophizers pontificate that this could be a result of an increase in bootstrapping, as anecdotally evidenced by applications like Midjourney, which currently employs âaround 10â people while having [millions of users.]( The future is gonna be really weird, it seems. And itâs coming faster than you may expect. Run with it or run from it, I guess. The big question: What the hell is going on in AI? What is possible, practical, viable, and sustainable, and whatâs not? What kind of timeline are we talking for these AI assistants? Because that sounds pretty sweet. Banana Brain Teaser Friday â You start with 1000, then add 40. Add another 1000, then add 30. Add another 1000, then add 20. Add one more 1000, then add 10. What is your answer? 4100. Today â Itâs 150 bananas off the [Venture Capital Course]( for the first 3 correct respondents. LFG! It is in the rock, but not in the stone; it is in the marrow, but not in the bone; it is in the bolster, but not in the bed; it is not in the living, nor yet in the dead. What is it? Shoot us your guesses at [vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com](mailto:vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com?subject=Banana%20Brain%20Teaser) with the subject line âBanana Brain Teaserâ or simply [click here to reply!](mailto:vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com?subject=Banana%20Brain%20Teaser) Wise Investor Says âWaiting helps you as an investor, and a lot of people just canât stand to wait. If you didnât get the deferred-gratification gene, youâve got to work very hard to overcome that.â â Charlie Munger How would you rate todayâs Peel? [All the bananas]() [Decent]() [Rotten AF]() 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