The Consumer Electronics Show held in Las Vegas this year has so far included exciting, brand-new products and technology. [The Daily Peel... ]() January 10, 2024 | Peel #623 Silver banana goes to... [M&A Science. ]() In this issue of the Peel: - Globally, meat prices have fallen 1.8% from their year-ago level in December. However, Americans are paying 3.6% more in November for their meat products than in 2022.
- CrowdStrike and Match Group had a ripe day, seeing their share price rise for the day. On the other hand, JetBlue and Hewlett Packard suffered share price declines.
- The Consumer Electronics Show held in Las Vegas this year has so far included exciting, brand-new products and technology. [image](=) Market Snapshot Happy Wednesday, apes. How could it not be a happy Wednesday when the teamâs portfolio over at WSO Alpha has finally reached a positive return for the year? To quote one humble farmer: âIt ainât much, but itâs honest work.â Weâll have to check in again on that whole âhonest workâ part, but itâs great to see the apes no longer setting my retirement money on fire in 2024. Remember, you can follow along with all of our trades and developments within the portfolio too [right here](=). Plus, we have some spicy, institutional-level equity research reports on both portfolio and non-portfolio companies coming soon, and I mean this time when I say STAY TUNED. Letâs get into it. Transparent, so You Always Know What to Expect [image](=) FirmRoom's flat-rate pricing is transparent, so you always know what to expect. Itâs shocking how many companies are still getting scammed by per-page priced virtual data rooms. In the past 12 months, FirmRoom has saved corporations over $80M dollars in per-page fees. Now weâre stepping it up big time with FirmRoomâs new 50 Gig data plan for only $995 per month. Thatâs over 500,000 pages.. Youâd spend hundreds of thousands with any per-page VDR provider for similar storage. If youâre spending more than ten thousand dollars on a VDR, let us show you the easiest way to cut your deal expenses. Start a two-week free trial and check out our per-page pricing calculator to calculate how much money you, or your client, can save with FirmRoom. [Learn More]( Banana Bits - Exhibit Number 4,362,117 of why Iâm never deleting this appâsome legendary X user [hacked the SECâs account]( yesterday to fake-announce that the agency had approved spot BTC ETFs.
- Now, investments in other companies can be considered âantitrustâ as the European Commission is potentially submitting Microsoft and their holdings in OpenAI to the [dreaded probe.](
- You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become a villainâthe [ESG story](=) has officially come full circle.
- According to Bank of America research, the easing in financial conditions over the past 2-months was the [fastest in history.](=) Macro Monkey Says The Dollar Menu is (Not) Back Just days before the official annual meeting of our Lizard-People overlords at the World Economic Forum in Davos, another (probable) Lizard-Person group dropped some data that should get us all good and fired up this Wednesday morning. The United Nations, a global intergovernmental organization with the goal of promoting maximum peace around the world, tracks price data on important things like population, climate, and, of course, food prices. Here in the U.S., we tend not to focus on food prices too much in a macroeconomic context as the Fedâs preferred Core PCE and Core CPI metrics strip out changes in that commodity along with energy prices. But, we all gotta eat. So, letâs see whatâs going on with food prices and find out just how badly grocery stores are ripping us off. The Food and Agriculture Organizationâs price index (FAO) tracks the prices of the most traded global food commodities and their changes over time. It looks a little like this: "... let's see whatâs going on with food prices and find out just how badly grocery stores are ripping us off. " [image] [Source]() Youâd think the UN would be able to create a non-blurry version of this graph, but I guess having the resources of every government in the entire world at your disposal is just simply not enough. Anyway, that chart goes all the way back to the 1960s. The last few years are the important part, however, and show the unprecedented run-up in food prices that came alongside the pandemic. Supply chains and inflation made eating a much more capitalistic endeavor, but since C-19 has chilled out in the past 2-3 years, food prices have fallen right alongside them. "... the same canât be said at grocery stores." Unfortunately, the same canât be said at grocery stores. Take meat, for example. Globally, meat prices have fallen 1.8% from their year-ago level in December. Unfortunately, we donât have Decemberâs CPI data until tomorrow, but if we take a look at the prior month, we can see that Americans are, on average, paying 3.6% more in November for their meat products than in 2022. The FAOâs dairy index makes it even more obvious. Dairy prices have fallen a massive 16.1% globally from December 2022 to last month, but in the U.S., we saw only a 1.4% decline in aggregate dairy prices from November 2022 to the same month last year. The same trend exists when comparing the raw data within [U.S. CPI]() reports compared to the same food indexes in the global [FAO index.](=) Now, there are, of course, other factors to consider. But, given that the U.S. is the worldâs 2nd-largest producer of meat and dairy products globally (behind China and India, respectively), we canât blame global supply chains or even internationally influenced commodity price mechanisms like tariffs. We have the stuff here, and it appears like prices via the CPI should be on their way down, but thatâs not what the data says. The only people happy about this are grocery store owners, who have ostensibly been able to pass along pandemic-era food price hikes into late 2023 without much pushback. Usually, low-margin businesses like grocery stores are always looking to pad their profits while they can. Honestly, kinda gotta respect this level of scumbaggery. What's Ripe CrowdStrike (CRWD) $273.77 (â 4.78% â) - We may have found 2024âs Nvidia. Morgan Stanley sure thinks so, at least, and CrowdStrike has already risen nearly 10% in 2024 alone, while the S&P is up just a few basis points.
- On Tuesday, the gains just kept coming as the Wall Street giant absolutely slammed their âBuyâ button on CrowdStrike shares, bumping the stock to an overweight rating from the equal rate territory they had been living in.
- And, of course, MSâs primary reason for this upgrade is those two little letters youâre probably already thinking ofâAI. This cyber stock has held AI near and dear to their hearts really since inception, and, according to MS, 2024 is the year that demand is gonna start showing up en masse. Match Group (MTCH) $39.04 (â 3.04% â) - Turns out itâs a lot easier for this online dating company to find a partner than it is for me to do so using any one of their apps. Elliott Management has officially swiped right on Tinder and Hinge owner Match Group.
- But although the two have matched, weâre still waiting to see if Elliottâs got the rizz required to turn this into a date. The activist investment firm has built a roughly $1bn stake in Match Group, but itâs not yet clear exactly what their intentions are.
- Elliott has a sterling reputation on Wall Street and a terrifying one in Silicon Valley. Theyâve been known to push out CEOs and executives without lifting a finger, and for a company like Match that has had 7 CEOs in the past decade, this canât be a very comfortable setting for their first date.
- Analysts expect Elliott to engage with management, but as any Tinder user knows, getting someone to agree to an engagement is a tall task. Stay tuned on this one. What's Rotten JetBlue (JBLU) $5.17 (â 10.24% â) - Most of us are taught to never give up, even when times are tough. Unfortunately, JetBlueâs (former) CEO mustâve missed that day of school.
- First, the much larger American Airlines broke up with JetBlue after a yearslong corporate marriage, then regulators started a court battle to block the airlineâs planned acquisition of Spirit Airlines, then operational issues for JetBlueâs damn engines arose. CEO Robin Hayesâ response? âGood luck guys, Iâm out.â
- Thanks, Rob. Knew we could count on you. As a result of his surprise departure, markets sent shares into a nosedive, just like their planes will do to passengers if they donât fix those damn engines. Hewlett Packard (HPE) $16.14 (â 8.92% â) - Grandpaâs version of Apple is making big moves to get the new year going, beginning with a sizable acquisition and, needless to say, markets arenât too happy.
- On Tuesday, HP announced plans to acquire networking products maker Juniper Lab for a cool $14bn. Given thatâs ~65% of HPâs market cap, this smells a little bit more like a merger, if anything.
- The old-school PC giant is reportedly looking to put up the dukes with the 10x larger Cisco Systems in the networking equipment market. And what better way to do so than to just buy one of the larger firmâs top competitors?
- Even after gaining 21.81% on the news, $14bn is still a hefty premium to Juniperâs current value at a ~119.2% premium. Shareholders desperately needed it, however, as shares missed out on the gains in 2023, managing to lose almost 8% for the year despite the S&Pâs >24% gain. Thought Banana Shiny & New in 2024 Geekfest 2024 is officially underway in Las Vegas as all the nerds behind the products we use every day and the companies we invest in have gathered together to see whose tech can out-nerd all the rest. The Consumer Electronics Show, or CES, is an annual event held in Las Vegas where leading (and lagging) tech companies come to showcase all of theâto use the technical termâcool new sh*t theyâve made in the past year. "... as Iâm sure you can imagine, itâs been equal parts exciting and terrifying ..." In 2024, as Iâm sure you can imagine, itâs been equal parts exciting and terrifyingâand not just because it seems like a pair of glasses is required to attend the event. And although itâs only been 1 day so far, some of the sickest new sh*t (sorry for using the technical terms again) includes: - The worldâs first-ever transparent [Micro LED screen](=) from Samsung
- A smart [deadbolt lock]( that uses your palm as the key from Philips
- Round 2 of Samsungâs foray into at-home smart robots with the newest version of â[Ballie](),â an AI robot thatâs designed to act as a movable, infinite screen⦠and probably kill you in your sleep at some point too
- AI-based [holograms](=) from Holoconnects
- Mental health [smart mirrors]() that use AI to make us feel less like trash when weâre faced with the unfortunate reality of realizing what we look like (no pun intended) And there are still 3 more days of this to look forward to. As usual with CES, companies are reserved on all the details youâd actually want to know, like pricing, timetables, and, of course, if/when theyâll start to kill us in our sleep. "... the conference this year has so far included exciting, brand new products ..." Fortunately and unlike some years past, the conference this year has so far included exciting, brand new products and technology. In past events, updates and upgrades to tech products even my grandparents know how to use have stolen the limelight, so we canât wait to see what the next few days bring⦠and, of course, to decide whether or not itâs time to head to our apocalypse bunker just yet. The Big Question: What other products can we expect at CES 2024? Which companies and technologies will steal the show when all is said and done? Banana Brain Teaser Yesterday â A rope 20.6 meters long is cut into two pieces. If the length of one piece of rope is 2.8 meters shorter than the length of the other, what is the length, in meters, of the longer piece of rope? Answer 11.7 meters Today â On Monday, the opening price of a certain stock was $100 per share, and its closing price was $110 per share. On Tuesday, the closing price of the stock was 10 percent less than its closing price on Monday, and on Wednesday, the closing price of the stock was 4 percent greater than its closing price on Tuesday. What was the approximate percent change in the price of the stock from its opening price on Monday to its closing price on Wednesday? Shoot us your guesses at vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com. Wise Investor Says âAlmost every dot-com idea from 1999 that failed will succeed.â â Marc Andreesen 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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