âOnly pickleball players can save you now, Dickâs,â chides Cassandra Cassidy at Morning Brew. Dickâs Sporting Goods stock had its worst day ever on the exchange yesterday as the S&P 500 closed lower, weighed down by declines in bank and retail shares. A slew of impotence jokes followedââDickâs Shrinkage Slams Stocks!ââand Chief Financial Officer Navdeep Gupta quickly deferred: âThis is not just a Dickâs Sporting Goods challenge. This is a collective retail challenge. For now, for the near term,â he conceded, âwe do anticipate this will remain with us.â The flash sell-off reveals a distressing trend toward a balance sheet recession in corporate markets, fueled mainly by mixed reads on discretionary spending.
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â August 23, 2023Â |Â Â [View Online]( |Â Â [Sign Up]( Uptown Cheapskate âPhone bill about two G's flat /
No need to worry, my accountant handles that.â âThe Notorious B.I.G. , âOnly pickleball players can save you now, Dickâs,â chides Cassandra Cassidy at Morning Brew. Dickâs Sporting Goods stock had its worst day ever on the exchange yesterday as the S&P 500 closed lower, weighed down by declines in bank and retail shares. A slew of impotence jokes followedââDickâs Shrinkage Slams Stocks!ââand Chief Financial Officer Navdeep Gupta quickly deferred: âThis is not just a Dickâs Sporting Goods challenge. This is a collective retail challenge. For now, for the near term,â he conceded, âwe do anticipate this will remain with us.â CONTINUED BELOW... POWERED BY MONEY MORNING Why the U.S. military pumps billions into this tech The Pentagon requested almost $2 billion in funding to develop [this tech](. Remember, the U.S. military is responsible for creating technologies like GPS navigation and even the Internet itself. What tech are they working on now? [This trader uses it to target triple-digit gainsâClick here for the full story.]( CONTINUED... The flash sell-off reveals a distressing trend toward a balance sheet recession in corporate markets, fueled mainly by mixed reads on discretionary spending. Macyâs also reported shrinking sales across the boardâin particular, the bedazzled department store company saw severe declines in categories like athleisure-wear and other casual vetements. Macyâs blamed the failures on broader financial pressure facing consumers and mounting debt levels. This just a week after the Federal Reserve Bank of New Yorkâs Center for Microeconomic Data slammed the vanilla envelope down in front of consumers with hard facts and scary numbers: its Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit shows credit card balances increased by $45 billion from $986 billion in Q1 2023 to a series high of $1.03 trillion in the Q2 2023. 1 trillion dollars of credit card debt across the nation. Let that sink in. An âempire of debt,â so to speak. Why does all this matter? A trillion dollars in credit card debt and floundering retail revenue numbers means that the American consumer is beginning to show signs of rollover. Even while swiping their credit cards and kicking their debt cans down the road, the consumer is finding it harder and harder to support its spending habits. And if American consumers like to do anything, itâs to spend money. Retailers will continue to have plenty to worry about as food prices remain high, interest rates rise and student loan payments return. That said, there are some interesting winners amid all this balance-sheet recession talk. Aldi, for one, announced this week that it plans to acquire about 400 Winn-Dixie and Harveys Supermarket locations across, you guessed it, [the Southern United States](. âThe way that consumers are shopping is changing quite dramatically,â says Jason Hart, the CEO of Aldi U.S. comments with remarkable foresight. He continues: And obviously, there are alternative retail formats that are growing quicker than the traditional formats. Weâre very proud to be one of those alternative formats thatâs really disrupting the industry. Consumers seem to be willing to try other ways to fill their grocery list, whether thatâs through e-commerce, whether thatâs through trying out discounters like Aldi, [and] trying out different products like private label. When consumers are seeing these changes, and seeing other retailers and other products meet their needs, they change their shopping habits. Similarly, Target and Walmart, both known for catering to thriftier shoppers, are showing embattled outcomes. CONTINUED BELOW... POWERED BY DEMISE OF THE DOLLAR CONTINUED... Target missed Wall Streetâs sales expectations for the fiscal second-quarter. Walmart beat Wall Streetâs revenue estimates for the three-month period. Target slashed its forecast for the year, while Walmart raised its outlook. Some explanations for this dichotomy: For one, Walmart is the nationâs largest grocer. It makes more than half of its annual revenue from selling groceriesâand people need to eat, even when times are tough. In addition, the consumer is choosing to go cheapâand thatâs revealing itself in their spending choices, what economists call âthe substitution effect.â Targetâs chief growth officer, Christina Hennington, says trends in discretionary categories âremain soft overall.â She pointed out some exceptions, including the popularity of a Taylor Swift vinyl and colorful Stanley tumblers designed by Chip and Joanna Gaines. Maybe Taylor is the real inflation hedge. So it goes, Addison Wiggin The Wiggin Sessions P.S. âWall Street added to the confusion with its own counterintuitive move,â writes CNBC. âAfter earnings reports, it snapped up Targetâs stock on Wednesday and sold off Walmartâs shares on Thursday. The potentially surprising moves could reflect the companiesâ recent stock performance, since shares of Walmart are up about 10% this year compared with Target sharesâ decline of about 13% during the same period.â This is why we're focused on the real economy and tangible assets, instead of the fake market in stocks. Stock prices donât often represent real growth. POWERED BY MONEY MORNING A.I. trading so easy anyone can do it For the past year, Iâve been using AI to pick my trades. And when you [look at these results]( youâll understand⦠500% overall gain in just one year. All it took to get a new trade was one click - and one second - to get the best trades for me to choose from. [Click here to see it in action.]( The Daily Missive from The Wiggin Sessions is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. By submitting your email address, you consent to The Wiggn Sessions delivering daily email issues and advertisements. 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