The housing market shows mixed signals with new projects popping up amidst high mortgage rates, while existing home sales... [The Daily Peel... ]() June 23, 2023 | Peel #487 Silver banana goes to... [Firmroom. ]() In this issue of the Peel: - Overstock.com and Amazon stocks rose, while iRobot and Darden Restaurants dipped.
- The housing market shows mixed signals with new projects popping up amidst high mortgage rates, while existing home sales growth remains slow. The rising rates and low inventory make it challenging for buyers.
- Global inequality is reportedly at its lowest in almost 150 years, led by the rise of India and China. While this is positive for global wealth distribution, it could potentially threaten the US's status. Market Snapshot Happy Friday, apes. Hope you enjoyed your 2nd day of summer as much as the first. Equity markets sure did, albeit not by all too much. The âunknown unknownsâ spooking investors in recent down days seems to have abated for the time being, at least. Risk-on names drove the broad-based rise seen yesterday, with the Nasdaq leading the way with a 0.95% gain. Treasury yields had a day of their own in the meantime, with investors seemingly rotating out potentially in favor of more risk-on assets. The 2-year surpassed 4.8% while the 10-year surged as well, reaching levels just about 100bps lower at 3.8%. Letâs get into it. Are you being ripped off by per-page pricing? Let's do the math! [image](=) If you thought the Lorax hated killing trees, just wait until you hear about this⦠Going virtual saves paper, which might save some trees, but prices offered by other virtual data room providers will just turn around and kill your business instead. Not [FirmRoom.]() Like the Lorax of VDR providers, FirmRoom is so dedicated to saving the trees and your business that youâll wonder how theyâre even profitable. Speaking of profits, how would your business like another $80mn in the bank? Thatâs how much the beautiful geniuses at FirmRoom have saved other companies in the past year, why not get in on that? It's irresponsible not to. And thatâs exactly why top 10 firmâs in IB, PE, and Law almost universally trust FirmRoom for all their VDR needs. Think those companies are gonna waste a penny? Exactly. With 50 gig data plans for just $1,195/mo, youâll be able to run over 500,000 pages for nearly 1/100th the cost of any other VDR provider. So, why are you still reading this? Save the trees and your business with FirmRoom and all that sweet, sweet storage they offer. [Start saving]()[now.]() Check out our per-page [pricing calculator]( to calculate how much money you, or your client, can save with FirmRoom. Banana Bits - Powell wasnât getting out of the hot seat after just one day, of course, heading back to the Hill for the [Senate Banking Committee]( yesterday
- Ahh, the invisible hand at work: high rates take home prices down in May at the [fastest clip since 2011](=)
- The tragic ending to the story of the [missing submarine](=) that has captivated the internet Macro Monkey Says Existing Homes Sales D-List musician MIMS is really only famous for one line: the immortal bar of âIâm hot cuz Iâm fly, you ainât cuz you not.â Little did he know it, but he was describing the 2023 housing market. You may be wondering if, in this scenario, the housing market is hot or not. Well, itâs a big market, and according to the additional data we got yesterday, itâs both. We learned earlier this week that housing startsâor projects targeting sales at least a few months down the lineâwere popping off. Builders could very well be taking advantage of the still-elevated prices and overflowing demand present in the market, but with the investments theyâre making, they better hope that lasts. "Builders could very well be taking advantage of the still-elevated prices ..." Of course, buyers hope the opposite. Most volume in the housing market is driven by existing home sales, which we just got fresh data on yesterday. Some of what we learned include: - Existing home sales rose 0.2% monthly throughout May
- Annually, sales were down 20.4% from last May
- Inventory of existing homes grew 3%, or ~3 monthsâ supply at current turnover rates While builders are cranking away, homebuyers havenât begun to budge. Both can largely blame the same trend for this: mortgage rates. As of June 21st, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate in the United States sat at 6.73% per the MBAâs weekly survey data. The combination of low inventory and high rates puts buyers between a rock and their parentsâ basement. Low-inventory levels after years of peak buying seen immediately post-pandemic implies the existing homes still available likely arenât exactly the nicest place to hang your âHome is where the heart isâ sign. "Given the sheer size of the housing market ... as long as this behemoth keeps chugging along ..." Moreover, low inventories mixed with high, demographically-driven demand makes it a lot harder for rising rates to do their job of pulling prices down. But the important thing, as always, is to put this into the big picture. Given the sheer size of the housing market as a percentage of the US economy, as long as this behemoth keeps chugging along, JPow and the gang may actually have a runway to softly land on. Speaking of which, Powell is, of course, back in the congressional hot seat today, going to battle with the Senate Banking Committee. In case you missed it, heâs largely making the same comments as yesterday. Higher rates for longer, two more hikes, monetary policy lagsâyada, yada, yada. Of course, we always recommend tuning in for the inevitable spar with good olâ MA Senator Lizzy Dubs. Matter of fact, Iâm gonna go watch that right now. What's Ripe Overstock.com (OSTK) â 17.28% â - Donât let the name mislead you: based on their actions, itâs clear this website was anything but overstocked.
- Remember that piece of sh*t, Bed Bath & Bankrupt? Well, Overstock.com scooped up the remains yesterday, winning an auction and scooping up the firmâs digital assets and IP for the low, low price of $21.5mn.
- While there wasnât exactly a clamoring for the assets in question, analysts always love to see companies get a nice discount. Weâll see what they can do. Amazon (AMZN) â 4.26% â - Just days following the FTCâs right hook to Amazonâs face, shares have surged on a bevy of mixed news that seems to have traders hyped.
- JPMorgan Chase and Loop both reiterated their buy ratings on the stock, driving further optimism as the newly updated outlooks to Amazon Prime and the stockâs potential for multiple expansions.
- Meanwhile, rumors that Amazon is planning to close a deal with a grocery technology provider. What's Rotten iRobot (IRBT) â 8.32% â - Speaking of Amazon, theyâre also the reason iRobot is getting shafted today.
- What was good news has turned to bad as the EU has begun the dreaded probe process into the bowels of the deal between Amazon and this Roomba maker. I think they make other things too, but the Roombaâs so sick we donât even care to look.
- This is bound to add a few months to the dealâs process, at the very least, so stay tuned because the fun isnât over yet. Place your bets now, Darden Restaurants (DRI) â 2.57% â - Who doesnât love some Olive Garden? Well, apparently, we all love it a little too much or too little as the Italian chainâs parent company disappoints on earnings.
- Either too many free breadsticks or not enough lobster mac orders were the clear problem, it seems. LongHorn Steakhouse, one of the firmâs other brands, carried the weight for this past quarter.
- And despite the mild success seen, a depressing outlook easily overwhelmed otherwise decent numbers. Thought Banana Equality Rises, US Says âStopâ After years of witnessing wild stunts by the ridiculously rich, like Jeff Bezosâ 10-minute ride to space, Elonâs tunnel-digging adventures, and funding hot piles of trash like WeWork, you might not believe the next sentence you read. Global inequality currently sits at the lowest level in almost 150 years, according to estimates from [Foreign Affairs](=) author and socio-economic researcher Branko Milanovic. "The Gini coefficient ... seeks to assign a number to global wealth (in)equality." You may be wondering, âHow the hell is that possible?â like I was a couple of minutes ago. But, according to the Gini coefficient, itâs true. The Gini coefficient (no idea why itâs called that) runs on a scale from 0-100 and seeks to assign a number to global wealth (in)equality. A 0 score is Marxâs dream, where everyone has an exactly equal share, while a 100 is Mansa Musaâs dream, where one person rakes it all in for themselves. In 2000, the way-too-complicated-sounding Gini coefficient sat at a nice score of 69. In 2018, that figure was pegged at 60. While we donât have very recently updated figures, the author asserts 2023âs score to be âalmost certainly lower.â Just check it out: [image] [Source]( Getting a little nerdy with it, as usualâthe index is broken down between measures of inter- and intra-national inequality. Or, in English, it measures inequality both between nations and within nations independently of other countries. The latter half, measuring inequality within national borders, has ticked up a hair to 13 in recent years, according to the report. The rise of India and China, in particular, have been huge drivers of this trend. Globally, lower-income earners in the US have been rich by global standards for a long time now. In this century, the same is slowly becoming true for those economies as well. "Globally, lower-income earners in the US have been rich by global standards for a long time now." While this is an objectively good thing overall, itâs not exactly great for current superpowers. That superpower position comes with and almost mandates economic supremacy relative to other nations, and for the USâs dominant global position, this isnât an ideal trend. I guess you win some, and you lose some. People being less poor is again objectively good, and not only because they clearly followed Paris Hiltonâs age-old advice to â[Stop Being Poor](),â but anything comes with a cost. We hope the US can manage. The big question: Will rising equality threaten the USâs position as the sole global superpower? How long and how rapidly, if at all, will this trend continue? Banana Brain Teaser Yesterday â Can you decipher this phrase: âKNOW-IT-NOâ? âNo two ways about it.â Today â Find a familiar English three-letter word using the following information: - RED has no common letter with it.
- END has one common letter, but not in the correct place.
- TIN has one common letter, in the correct place.
- TIP has one common letter, not at the correct place.
- AIR has one common letter, not at the correct place. Shoot us your guesses at vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com with the subject line âBanana Brain Teaserâ. Wise Investor Says âSuccess in investing comes not from being right but from being wrong less often than everyone else.â â Aswath Damodaran 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? [Be smart like your friend](=). [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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