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What we’re reading (3/26)

  • “WeWork Agrees to SPAC Deal That Would Take Startup Public” (Wall Street Journal). “WeWork has agreed to merge with a special-purpose acquisition company in a deal that would take the shared-office provider public nearly two years after its high-profile failure to launch a traditional IPO.”

  • “Suez Canal Blockage Is Delaying An Estimated $400 Million An Hour In Goods” (CNBC). “The stranded mega-container vessel, Ever Given in the Suez Canal, is holding up an estimated $400 million an hour in trade, based on the approximate value of goods that are moved through the Suez every day, according to shipping data and news company Lloyd’s List.”

  • “Global Shipping Was In Chaos Even Before The Suez Blockage. Shortages And Higher Prices Loom” (CNN Business). “But even before the Ever Given ran aground in the Suez Canal earlier this week, global supply chains were being stretched to the limits, making it much more expensive to move goods around the world and causing shortages of everything from exercise bikes to cheese at a time of unprecedented demand.”

  • “Interest Rates, Earning Growth and Equity Value: Investment Implications” (Musings on Markets). “The first quarter of 2021 has been, for the most part, a good time for equity markets, but there have been surprises. The first has been the steep rise in treasury rates in the last twelve weeks, as investors reassess expected economic growth over the rest of the year and worry about inflation. The second has been a shift within equity markets, a "rotation" in Wall Street terms, as the winners from last year underperformed the losers in the first quarter, raising questions about whether this shift is a long term one or just a short term adjustment.”

  • “Comic Gold: The Easterner Goes West In Three Early American Comics” (Public Domain Review). “The California Gold Rush transformed the landscape and population of the United States. It also introduced a new figure into American life and the American imagination — the effete Eastern urbanite who travels to the Wild West in quest of his fortune. Alex Andriesse examines how this figure fares in three mid-nineteenth-century comic books.”

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What we’re reading (3/25)

  • “Cargo Ship Blocking Suez Canal Could Take Weeks To Move” (CNBC). “The massive container ship that ran aground in the Suez Canal, halting traffic in one of the world’s busiest waterways, is still stuck as tug boats continued to try to dislodge the ship on Thursday. A team of expert salvors from Smit Salvage have been called in to assist with the operation.”

  • “Powell Says Now Is Not The Time To Focus On Reducing Federal Debt” (Wall Street Journal). “Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said that the federal government can manage its debt at current levels but that fiscal-policy makers should seek to slow its growth once the economy is stronger.”

  • “Who Are The Biggest Tax Cheats? The 1% — And Here’s How They Get Away With It” (Los Angeles Times). “It’s widely assumed that the biggest tax scofflaws are those with the most money. A new study by a team of IRS analysts and academic economists, however, tells us that things are much worse than anyone suspected.”

  • “Facebook, Twitter And Google CEOs Testify Before Congress On Misinformation” (CNN Business). “Congress is set to grill the chief executives of Facebook, Google and Twitter about misinformation and online extremism on Thursday, in the executives' first appearance before lawmakers since the Jan. 6 Capitol riots and the rollout of the coronavirus vaccine.”

  • “U.S. Regulator Opens Inquiry Into Wall Street's Blank Check IPO Frenzy - Sources (Reuters). “The U.S. securities regulator has opened an inquiry into Wall Street’s blank check acquisition frenzy and is seeking information on how underwriters are managing the risks involved, said four people with direct knowledge of the matter.”

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What we’re reading (3/24)

  • “The Years of Work Behind Washington’s Best-Liked Man” (New York Times). “Mr. Powell and his team swiftly moved to put out fires on Wall Street and Main Street last spring. The efforts were imperfect, but the retirement savings of millions as well as the budgets of states and cities were saved from destruction.”

  • “Massive Cargo ship That Blocked Egypt’s Suez Canal Is Reportedly On The Move” (CNBC). “A cargo container ship that’s among the largest in the world turned sideways and blocked all traffic in Egypt’s Suez Canal, officials said Wednesday. The ship is now on the move, indicating a resumption of traffic in the waterway, a shipping source and witness told Reuters.”

  • “Elon Musk Announces On Twitter That You Can Now Buy A Tesla With Bitcoin” (Business Insider). “Tesla has begun accepting Bitcoin as a form of payment, Elon Musk announced on Twitter Wednesday…[a]dditionally, ‘bitcoin paid to Tesla will be retained as Bitcoin, not converted to fiat currency,’ Musk said.”

  • “Will This Boom Go Bust?” (DealBook). “The bull market is now a year old, with the S&P 500 up nearly 75 percent from its low point at this time last year…[t]he factors that have stoked the rally also raise questions about whether it can last.”

  • “Where Are Those Shoes You Ordered? Check The Ocean Floor” (Wired). “Since the end of November, this is some of what has sunk to the bottom of the Pacific Ocean: vacuum cleaners; Kate Spade accessories; at least $150,000 of frozen shrimp; and three shipping containers full of children’s clothes.”

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What we’re reading (3/23)

  • Credit Cards Slash $99 Billion From Spending Limits During Pandemic” (American Banker). “The notices went out to one cardholder after another, sparking complaints. Big banks were trimming credit limits by hundreds or thousands of dollars as the COVID-19 pandemic spread. None were saying how far it would go.”

  • “Homes Are Selling At Record Speed As Buyers Scramble To Find Properties” (CNN Business). “Finding a home to buy remains a challenge for house hunters right now. Inventory of homes for sale remained at a record low 1.03 million homes in February, the same as January, and dropped a record 30% from a year ago, according to the National Association of Realtors.”

  • “Tech Stocks Led The Market Rally. Now They’re Falling Behind.” (Wall Street Journal). “Recently…[the] rally has stalled, sending the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite briefly into a correction—a 10% decline from a recent high. Since the index’s recent record on Feb. 12, growth and tech stocks have largely struggled. In contrast, other sectors have surged, including energy and financials.”

  • “Pension Funds Have To Buy Bonds To Rebalance Portfolios, And That Might Be Good For Stocks” (CNBC). “Pension funds and other major investors should be big buyers of bonds during the next week or so, as they rebalance their holdings to make up for the bond market’s first quarter sell-off. That could send bond yields lower, at least temporarily.”

  • “Miami Wants To Be The Hub For Bitcoin” (New York Times). “Mayor Francis Suarez of Miami is selling his city as the world’s cryptocurrency capital. “We want to be on the next wave of innovation,” he told DealBook. To make that happen, Mr. Suarez said he was ‘refashioning’ the city’s ‘fun in the sun’ image. Thanks in part to the mayor’s marketing efforts, tech and finance titans have flocked to Miami during the pandemic.”

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What we’re reading (3/22)

  • “U.S. Economy Is ‘On The Brink’ Of A Complete Recovery, Says Richmond Fed’s Barkin” (CNBC). “The U.S. economy is recovering from the Covid-19 recession, but some economic “scarring” may take a long time to heal, said Richmond Federal Reserve Bank President Thomas Barkin. Economic scarring refers to damage left behind by crises that will suppress growth prospects over the medium or long term.”

  • “One Measure Of Debt-Market Distress Is Down 90% Since March Amid Fed Assistance And Easy Money” (Business Insider). “The US distress ratio - the proportion of speculative-grade (rated "BB+" or lower) issues with option-adjusted composite spreads of more than 1,000 basis points relative to U.S. Treasuries - continued to trend down in February 2021, hitting 4.0% after peaking at 35.2% just 11 months earlier, according to a report from S&P Global.”

  • “Bond Rout Hits Safest Company Debt” (Wall Street Journal). “Bonds from highly rated companies have lost more than 5.4% this year, counting price changes and interest payments, through March 18. That is their second-worst start in data going back to 1996, the worst being last year’s pandemic-fueled selling, according to Bloomberg Barclays data. That compares with a 0.2% return for high-yield bonds and a 1.7% gain in corporate loans to highly indebted borrowers.”

  • “States Are Out Of Excuses About Remote Work And Taxation” (Real Clear Markets). “As a result of the pandemic, many Americans switched to remote work for long periods of time in 2020. Many employees that normally cross state lines to an office (as is common in large multi-state metro areas) but instead worked from home last year may find that the state in which their office is located still expects them to pay taxes as if nothing had changed. This also opens up the possibility of double taxation, as both the resident’s home state and their prior work location’s state could allege that the work was done in that state.”

  • “Turkey's Lira Plunges After Erdogan Fires Central Bank Head” (CNN Business). “Turkey could be on the cusp of another currency crisis after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan abruptly fired the head of the country's central bank, putting the lira on track for its worst single day decline against the US dollar in nearly three years.”

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What we’re reading (3/21)

  • “Easy Money? Gen Z Invests Online To Beat Coronavirus Woes” (Reuters). “From South Korea to the United States, a growing number of teens and young adults born after 1996 - dubbed Generation Z - are turning to online investment platforms that offer the chance to make a living with a swipe, but often pose unforeseen risks.”

  • “As Blackstone Barrels Toward Trillion-Dollar Asset Goal, Growth Is In, Value Out” (Wall Street Journal). “Blackstone Group Inc. became an investing powerhouse by making successful bets on undervalued companies. For the next leg of its expansion, the firm is focused on companies with big growth prospects, even if it has to pay up for them.”

  • “Cathie Wood's Ark Invest Expects Tesla To Soar To $3,000 Per Share By 2025 On Robotaxi Service” (Business Insider). “Cathie Wood's Ark Invest is out with a new eye-popping price target for Tesla, and investors are taking notice due to the accuracy of its previous price predictions on the electric vehicle manufacturer. Ark now expects Tesla to hit $3,000 per share by 2025, representing a potential upside of 359% from Friday's close and a market valuation of about $3 trillion. That's a sizable increase from its previous 2024 price target of $1,400.”

  • “Saudi Aramco Profit Slumps 44% After Covid-Battered Year, But Maintains Dividend” (CNBC). “Oil giant Saudi Aramco reported a 44% slump in full-year 2020 results, but maintained its $75 billion dollar dividend payout, with CEO Amin Nasser describing the last twelve months as one of the most “challenging years” in recent history…Aramco said revenues were impacted by lower crude oil prices and volumes sold, and weakened refining and chemicals margins.”

  • “‘MillionaireMike’, a SpaceX Engineer, Tried to Buy and Sell Inside Information on the Dark Web. He’s Now Facing Jail Time.” (Institutional Investor). “The so-called dark web is well-known as a marketplace for illicit activities such as drug dealing and arms sales. Add insider trading to the list. The Securities and Exchange Commission detailed the dark web’s use as a marketplace for insider trading tips in a complaint filed Thursday in an Indianapolis federal court against James Roland Jones, a SpaceX engineer it accused of accessing ‘an insider trading forum on the dark web in search of material non-public information (‘MNPI’) on which to trade securities.’” 

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What we’re reading (3/20)

  • “Larry Summers Versus The Stimulus” (The New Yorker). “The Biden rescue package will pour out enough sand to fill a hole, and then keep pouring. In Summers’s view, this is economically risky, because it means that the Federal Reserve will probably eventually need to manage inflation, a recipe for a bumpy future. “My reading is that there are roughly zero historical examples where we got inflation to the point where the Fed got nervous and had to tighten and the whole thing happened smoothly,” Summers told me last week.”

  • “A Return To Wall Street’s Low-Rent District” (New York Times). “Of all the trading manias in recent months — Bitcoin, SPACs, meme stocks, nonfungible tokens — the latest has a long history of fraud and scandal. That’s right, penny stocks are booming, according to The Times’s Matt Phillips, who visited the ‘low-rent district of Wall Street.’ There were 1.9 trillion transactions last month on the over-the-counter markets, where such stocks trade, according to the industry regulator Finra. That’s up more than 2,000 percent from a year earlier, driven in large part by the surge in retail trading[.]”

  • “5 Big Signs That Travel Is Roaring Back” (CNN Business). “Vacation deprivation is about to be replaced by a travel boom, according to Expedia CEO Peter Kern. He told CNN's Julia Chatterley earlier this week that people are beginning to think about their future travel ‘very quickly.’ Reservations on the travel website for some parts of the United States this summer are ‘all booked up’ and he expects Europe will soon follow as the number of vaccinations grow.”

  • “Elon Musk Says Tesla Won’t Share Data From Its Cars With China or U.S.” (Wall Street Journal). “Speaking via video link Saturday to the government-backed China Development Forum in Beijing, Mr. Musk said that no U.S. or Chinese company would risk gathering sensitive or private data and then sharing it with their home government.”

  • “Taiwan Official Urges People To Stop Changing Their Name To ‘Salmon’” (The Guardian). “A Taiwanese official has pleaded with people to stop changing their name to “salmon” after dozens made the unusual move to take advantage of a restaurant promotion. In a phenomenon that has been labelled ‘salmon chaos’ by local media, about 150 mostly young people visited government offices in recent days to officially change their name. The cause of this sudden enthusiasm was a chain of sushi restaurants. Under the two-day promotion, which ended on Thursday, any customer whose ID card contained ‘gui yu’ – the Chinese characters for salmon – would be entitled to an all-you-can-eat sushi meal along with five friends.”

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What we’re reading (3/19)

  • “Morgan Stanley Says Rising 10-Year Treasury Yields Is Reasonable As Confidence In U.S. Economy Grows” (CNBC). “Morgan Stanley said the rise in 10-year Treasury yields is reasonable and a reflection of the growing confidence in the U.S economic outlook, according to Jim Caron, global fixed-income portfolio manager at the investment bank.”

  • “The New Stimulus Act Offers Big Benefits for Families” (Wall Street Journal). “The coronavirus-relief legislation signed by President Biden earlier this month contains unprecedented benefits for families with children and other dependents—especially for some who plan carefully. The new benefits, which apply for 2021, are largest for low-income families, but they extend well into the middle class, with many eligible for more than $10,000 in tax-free income for this year. Higher earners can also benefit from some changes, such as expanded tax breaks for child-care costs.”

  • “Paris Goes Into Lockdown As COVID-19 Variant Rampages” (Reuters). “France imposed a month-long lockdown on Paris and parts of the north after a faltering vaccine rollout and spread of highly contagious coronavirus variants forced President Emmanuel Macron to shift course. Since late January, when he defied the calls of scientists and some in his government to lock the country down, Macron has said he would do whatever it took to keep the euro zone's second largest economy as open as possible.”

  • “Goldman’s First-Year Bankers Beg to Work Only 80-Hour Weeks in Stinging Deck” (Bloomberg). “Hundred-Hour weeks on the job. Declining physical and mental health. The heightened chance of fleeing the bank in very short order. Those are among the laments of 13 first-year analysts in Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s investment-banking group who surveyed themselves, according to a presentation making the rounds on social media.”

  • “Coinbase Trades Investor Roadshow For A Reddit Q&A” (Coinbase). “Coinbase is opting for a question-and-answer session on online forum Reddit lasting through Friday evening and a series of explainer videos ahead of its public debut, in lieu of a more traditional roadshow or live-streamed presentations for investors…[m]uch about Coinbase's public listing is already unusual—it'll be the Nasdaq's first major direct listing, and it will be the first U.S. cryptocurrency company to become publicly-traded. It's also a nod to the cryptocurrency industry's roots in online forums and where many of its biggest enthusiasts still convene.”

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What we’re reading (3/18)

  • “Bank Of New York Mellon Invests In Crypto Startup” (Wall Street Journal). “The startup, Fireblocks, builds tools for the secure storage and transfer of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. BNY Mellon plans to use Fireblocks’s technology to underpin a new business that the bank unveiled last month, in which it plans to serve as a custodian for digital assets on behalf of institutional investors.”

  • “Google To Spend $7 Billion In Data Centers And Office Space In 2021” (CNBC). “Google says it plans to spend more than $7 billion on real estate across the U.S. in 2021 as it resumes spending in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. The company said the money will go toward expanding offices and data centers across 19 states, creating what it says will amount to at least 10,000 full-time jobs. $1 billion will go specifically toward California.”

  • “Jobless Claims Are Still Higher Than During The Great Recession A Year After The Pandemic Started” (CNN Business). “Last week, 770,000 Americans filed initial claims for unemployment benefits on a seasonally adjusted basis, the Department of Labor reported Thursday. It was an increase from the prior week and 70,000 claims more than economists had expected. It was also nearly 3 times as many claims as in the same week last year, just before the pandemic layoffs made benefit claims skyrocket.”

  • “Back To The 60s” (The Grumpy Economist). “In the 1960s, macroeconomists thought that recessions were just ‘shortfalls’ of ‘aggregate demand.’ The point of policy was to fill the valleys with aggregate demand, as indicated by the dashed line of the top graph. In the conventional reading, they tried it in the 1970s, and got inflation…How can an economy run ‘too hot?’ Well, if your boss asked you to work 7 days a week 12 hours a day with no vacations to finish a special project, you could. But you would not want to do that forever. The economy as a whole can similarly push above what is long-run sustainable for a little while.”

  • “‘Big Short’” Investor Michael Burry Says He’ll Stop Tweeting After SEC Regulators Paid Him A Visit” (Business Insider). “Michael Burry's incendiary tweets have piqued the interest of federal regulators, the investor revealed this week. ‘Tweeting and getting in the news lately apparently has caused the SEC to pay us a visit,’ the Scion Asset Management boss said in a now-deleted tweet. ‘Lovely,’ he continued, adding the hashtag ‘#nomoretweets.’”

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What we’re reading (3/17)

Happy St. Patty’s Day!

  • “Investing In Bonds Has ‘Become Stupid,’ Ray Dalio Says. Here’s What He Recommends Instead” (MarketWatch). “The founder of Bridgewater Associates, the world’s largest hedge-fund firm, decried the ‘ridiculously low yields’ of bonds in a LinkedIn blog post Monday, while urging a diversified portfolio…Dalio has never been a fan of holding cash either — and he still isn’t.”

  • “P/E Ratios And The Case Of The Dueling Denominators” (Fisher Investments). “[I]f a ratio holds steady while the numerator rises, then the denominator must also be rising. That is the case now: Even as earnings were falling last year, analysts looked to the future, to lockdowns ending and normal(ish) economic activity returning, and penciled in a strong recovery. Stock prices rose alongside expectations, in a sign investors were looking to that same future.”

  • “Learning Apps Have Boomed in the Pandemic. Now Comes the Real Test.” (New York Times). “After a tough year of toggling between remote and in-person schooling, many students, teachers and their families feel burned out from pandemic learning. But companies that market digital learning tools to schools are enjoying a coronavirus windfall. Venture and equity financing for education technology start-ups has more than doubled, surging to $12.58 billion worldwide last year from $4.81 billion in 2019[.]”

  • “Commodities Boom Hits Home” (Wall Street Journal). “Prices are surging for the raw materials used to build American homes. Lumber, one of the biggest costs in home-building after land and labor, has never been more expensive and is more than twice the typical price for this time of year. Crude oil, a starting point for paint, drain pipe, roof shingles and flooring, has shot up more than 80% since October. Copper, which carries water and electricity throughout houses, costs about a third more than it did in the autumn.”

  • “U.S. Housing Starts Fall Sharply In February” (CNBC). “Housing starts dropped 10.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.421 million units last month, the Commerce Department said on Wednesday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast starts would drop to a rate of 1.560 million units in February.”

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What we’re reading (3/16)

  • “The Financial Crisis The World Forgot” (New York Times). “By the middle of March 2020 a sense of anxiety pervaded the Federal Reserve. The fast-unfolding coronavirus pandemic was rippling through global markets in dangerous ways. Trading in Treasurys — the government securities that are considered among the safest assets in the world, and the bedrock of the entire bond market — had become disjointed as panicked investors tried to sell everything they owned to raise cash. Buyers were scarce. The Treasury market had never broken down so badly, even in the depths of the 2008 financial crisis.”

  • “Inflation Is Coming — And Active Funds Aren’t Prepared, Bank Of America Warns” (Institutional Investor). “A majority of actively managed U.S. large-cap funds failed to beat the Standard & Poor’s 500 index in 2020 for an eleventh straight year of underperformance, according to a report released last week by S&P Dow Jones Indices, a unit of S&P Global.”

  • “On Wealth Tax, White House Says Biden And Warren Have Different Plans” (Business Insider). “In a press briefing on Monday, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki addressed the possibility of a wealth tax, something the Biden administration is either open or opposed to, based on recent remarks. She was clear that its position, whatever it is, is far removed from the most prominent one: that of Sen. Elizabeth Warren.”

  • “The CEO Of Amtrak Thinks Americans Are Ready For Trains Again” (Slate). “William J. Flynn took over as CEO of Amtrak at the worst possible time. It was April 2020—one month after the country locked down—and ridership on the quasi-public passenger rail network was down by 97 percent. Two recovery bills later, Amtrak’s finances have been shored up. Though business remains way down, vaccines are rolling out, and Flynn aims to double Amtrak’s pre-pandemic ridership in the next two decades.”

  • “What It’s Like To Live In The Robocall Capital Of America” (CNN Business). “Baton Rouge, Louisiana…receives the most robocalls per person in the United States, according to data from YouMail, a robocall-prevention service that tracks robocall traffic across the country. The city averaged 39 robocalls per resident in February, YouMail found. That's more than two and a half times the national average, which is about 14 to 15 calls monthly for each person[.]”

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What we’re reading (3/15)

  • “The Hoarding Economy” (Axios). “Americans are locking away greater shares of their money — especially big businesses and the wealthy — a trend that has increased thanks to the coronavirus pandemic and is likely to stick around for some time.”

  • “Wall Street Is Already Eyeing Biden’s Next Trillion-Dollar Spending Plan” (CNN Business). “Stimulus checks from President Joe Biden's huge relief package, enacted last week, are just making their way out the door. But Wall Street is already looking ahead to his administration's next priority: infrastructure.”

  • “Electric-Vehicle Startups Promise Record-Setting Revenue Growth” (Wall Street Journal). “It took Google eight years to reach $10 billion in sales, the fastest ever for a U.S. startup. In the current SPAC frenzy, a spate of electric-vehicle companies planning listings are vowing to beat its record—in some cases by several years.”

  • “This Quant Manager With Triple-Digit 2020 Return Says Ignore P/E” (Forbes). “Traditionally, price to earnings ratios have been the go-to method for figuring out if stocks are overvalued, but one quant manager says P/E is the wrong way to evaluate equities. He argues that profits growth and new stock highs are the metrics investors should be studying to predict which stocks will outperform.”

  • “When Doing Well Means Doing Good” (DealBook). “Allison Herren Lee was named acting chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission in January, and since then she has been active, especially when it comes to environmental, social and governance, or E.S.G., issues. The agency has issued a flurry of notices that such disclosures will be priorities this year. Today, Ms. Lee, who was appointed as a commissioner by President Donald Trump in 2019, is speaking at the Center for American Progress, where she will call for input on additional E.S.G. transparency, according to prepared remarks seen by DealBook.”

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What we’re reading (3/14)

  • “Commodities Supercycle Looks Like A Stretch” (Wall Street Journal). “Commodity markets are roaring, stirring a debate about whether prices are headed for an extended upswing. The history of booms and busts in raw materials suggests the conditions aren’t right. Prices for Brent crude, the international benchmark in energy markets, have jumped 82% since the end of October. Copper is more expensive than it has been since 2011. Food hasn’t cost as much since 2014, according to a United Nations index.”

  • “Air Travel Is Picking Up As TSA Records Highest Passenger Screenings In Nearly A Year” (CNBC). “TSA officers screened 1,357,111 people at airports on Friday, marking the highest number of passengers on a single day since March 15, 2020. The milestone reflects that air travel is starting to pick up again after a challenging year for airlines caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.”

  • “What Used Cars Tell Us About The Risk Of Too Much Inflation Hitting The Economy” (Washington Post). “What’s happened at places like Deal Depot [a dealership in S.C.] and other dealers shows why some top economists and Wall Street investors are concerned that the $1.9 trillion stimulus President Biden signed into law last week could spur a risky cycle of rising prices across the whole economy. Nationwide, used-car prices soared 17 percent nationally in seven months last year — the most of any product.”

  • “The Simplest Asset To Hedge Against Inflation” (A Wealth Of Common Sense). “It’s counterintuitive to think cash would be a good hedge against inflation since short-duration fixed income is a terrible hedge against inflation over the long-term. This is why long-term assets like stocks and short-term assets like cash can make for a decent inflation-hedged portfolio. Stocks can help protect you against long-term inflation while cash can allow you to use any short-term inflationary spikes to redeploy faster at higher rates.”

  • “A Lawyer Has Filed More Than 100 Lawsuits Over Vanilla Flavoring In Food And Drinks, Arguing Most Of It Is Fake” (Business Insider). “Over the past two years, New York lawyer Spencer Sheehan has filed more than 100 lawsuits against companies marketing products with imitation vanilla flavoring as simply ‘vanilla.’ Sheehan told Insider he started these cases after noticing a bottle of A&W Root Beer had a label saying ‘made with aged vanilla’ on it. He said he was skeptical about whether it contained authentic vanilla.”

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What we’re reading (3/13)

  • “Behind Greensill’s Collapse: Detour Into Risky Loans” (Wall Street Journal). “A Wall Street Journal review of internal Greensill records, including board minutes and emails, along with interviews with more than a dozen people familiar with Greensill’s business, reveals how the company obscured its riskier loans behind a safe but barely profitable supply-chain finance business.”

  • “Bitcoin Surpasses $60,000 In Record High As Rally Accelerates” (CNBC). “Bitcoin crossed a record high of $60,000 on Saturday morning, continuing its rally as major companies and financial institutions adopt cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin, the world’s biggest cryptocurrency, was at $60,415.34 as of 7:25 a.m. ET, according to Coinbase, recovering from a dip at the end of February that followed a previous record high that month.”

  • “The $69 Million Beeple NFT Was Bought With Cryptocurrency” (New York Times). “An artwork by Beeple which exists only as a digital file and was sold as a “nonfungible token” for a staggering $69.3 million at an online auction handled by Christie’s on Thursday was bought by an investor known only by a pseudonym and who paid for it with cryptocurrency, the auction house said Friday.”

  • “NFTs & Copyright Law” (David Lizerbram & Associates). “An NFT is a digital certificate of ownership. It’s simply a way of stating, and verifying, who is the owner of any digital asset, such as a piece of art. The reason anyone cares about NFTs is that they make it easy for someone to verify ownership, and therefore they make it easy to buy and sell digital art. You won’t buy something if the seller can’t prove that she owns it or if you can’t prove that you own it when you want to sell it. As of this writing, the market for digital art NFTs is exploding.”

  • “Neural Mechanisms Of Credit Card Spending” (Scientific Reports). A new study finds credit card spending creates ‘cravings’ for more spending: “Credit cards have often been blamed for consumer overspending and for the growth in household debt. Indeed, laboratory studies of purchase behavior have shown that credit cards can facilitate spending in ways that are difficult to justify on purely financial grounds. However, the psychological mechanisms behind this spending facilitation effect remain conjectural…[i]n an fMRI shopping task…Credit card purchases were associated with strong activation in the striatum, which coincided with onset of the credit card cue and was not related to product price.”

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What we’re reading (3/12)

  • “Value Investors Finally Have Reason to Celebrate—For Now” (Wall Street Journal). “Value stocks are beating growth stocks by the widest margin in two decades, the latest sign that investors expect the next year to bring a powerful economic rebound.”

  • “A Buyout Fund C.E.O. Got In Tax Evasion Trouble. Here’s Why Investors Shrugged.” (New York Times). “The muted public reaction from the public pension plans, sovereign wealth funds and endowments that invest in Vista’s funds highlights an unflattering reality of the financial world: Investors are often willing to overlook the misdeeds of money managers if they’re posting solid returns. And in a prolonged era of low interest rates, private equity is one of the few places where big investors can expect better returns than the bond market.”

  • “The Housing Market Stands At A Tipping Point After A Stunningly Successful Year During The Pandemic” (CNBC). “No one could have predicted it. Not the economists, not the real estate agents, and especially not the nation’s homebuilders. But a pandemic caused an emotional run on housing unlike any other.”

  • “America Is Running Out Of Houses, Which Means Anyone Who Wants To Buy A Home Right Now Is Battling Sky-High Prices” (Business Insider). “Homes have been selling at a breakneck pace in the year since the coronavirus crisis started. The speed of purchasing shows little signs of slowing, especially given that both increased demand for and reduced supply of houses for sale are the byproduct of several economic and social conditions that are still present. And housing inventory could run out soon as a result.”

  • “Mortgage Rates Persist In Their Steady Climb” (Washington Post). “According to the latest data, released Thursday by Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate average rose to 3.05 percent with an average 0.6 point. (Points are fees paid to a lender equal to 1 percent of the loan amount and are in addition to the interest rate.) It was 3.02 percent a week ago and 3.36 percent a year ago. The 30-year fixed average has risen for four consecutive weeks, something it hasn’t done since April 2019.”

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What we’re reading (3/11)

  • “US Jobless Claims Fall To 712,000 As Pace Of Layoffs Eases” (ABC News). “The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits fell last week to 712,000, the lowest total since early November, evidence that fewer employers are cutting jobs amid a decline in confirmed coronavirus cases and signs of an improving economy.”

  • “House Passes $1.9 Trillion Covid Relief Bill, Sends It To Biden To Sign” (CNBC). “House Democrats passed a $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill on Wednesday, sending one of the biggest stimulus plans in U.S. history to President Joe Biden’s desk. The president hopes to sign the bill Friday after Congress formally sends it to the White House, which can take days for large bills. Biden will check off his first major legislative item as the U.S. tries to ramp up Covid-19 vaccinations and jolt the economy.”

  • “The World Went On A Debt Binge Last Year. There Could Be A Nasty Hangover” (CNN Business). “Spurred on by rock-bottom rates, governments issued $16.3 trillion in debt in 2020, and they're expected to borrow another $12.6 trillion this year, according to S&P Global Ratings. But fears are growing that an explosive economic comeback starting this summer could generate inflation, potentially forcing central banks to raise rates sooner than expected. Should that happen, the cost of servicing mountains of sovereign debt will jump"[.]

  • “World's Biggest Asset Manager Says Gold Is Failing As A Hedge Against Inflation And Stocks” (Business Insider). “Gold is failing as a hedge against both equities and inflation, a portfolio boss at the world's biggest asset manager BlackRock has said. In a blog post on Wednesday, Russ Koesterich said gold trades ‘with a positive correlation’ with stocks, causing problems for investors who want to protect themselves against falling equity prices.”

  • “Companies Are Boosting Wages To Bring Workers Back In COVID-19 Recovery” (Yahoo! Finance). “The Bureau of Labor Statistics said that average hourly earnings nationally rose 5.3% year-over-year in February, to $30.01 per hour. But those figures remain noisy. Because a large share of the job losses in the pandemic were among low-income workers, the data for average wage growth ends up becoming more representative of higher-earning workers.”

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What we’re reading (3/10)

  • “States Expected Covid-19 To Bring Widespread Tax Shortfalls. It Didn’t Happen.” (Wall Street Journal). “States have avoided a Great Depression-scale cash crisis. Despite the pandemic’s crushing toll on the economy, total state tax revenues were roughly flat in 2020 from the year before, according to the Urban Institute, a Washington, D.C., think tank.”

  • “Here's What We Know So Far About The Massive Microsoft Exchange Hack” (CNN Business). “Many security experts remain alarmed about the large, Chinese-linked hack of Microsoft's Exchange email service a week after the attack was first reported. The breach is believed to have targeted hundreds of thousands of Exchange users around the world. Microsoft (MSFT) said four vulnerabilities in its software allowed hackers to access servers for the popular email and calendar service, and the company urged customers to immediately update their on-premises systems with software fixes.”

  • “Hedge Fund Managers Are Getting Inside Information From Alumni Networks, Study Finds” (Institutional Investor). “Hedge fund managers are gathering private information from their alumni networks and using that trading edge ahead of merger announcements, a study found. Managers of hedge funds who are connected to directors of companies engaged in mergers increase their call option holdings on targets before the deals are announced, according to a [new] paper[.]”

  • “Wharton Professor Jeremy Siegel Says Value Stocks Will Outperform Tech This Year In 'The Hottest Economy We're Going To See In A Long Time’“ (Business Insider). “Wharton School professor Jeremy Siegel is predicting a value stocks will be big outperformers on the stock market in the next year, as the economy recovers, he told CNBC's Trading Nation on Tuesday. Tech stocks, which have been under pressure in recent days, have further room to trade lower, but Siegel does not expect that correction to become a crash.”

  • The World’s Consumers Are Sitting On A Pile Of Cash. Will They Spend It?” (The Economist). “The economic controls implemented during the second world war make today’s restrictions on restaurants and football stadiums look lax. In America the government rationed everything from coffee to shoes and forbade the production of fridges and bicycles. In 1943 its entire automobile industry sold only 139 cars. Two years later the war ended, and a consumer-led boom ensued. Americans put to use the personal savings they had accumulated in wartime. By 1950 carmakers were producing more than 8m vehicles a year.”

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What we’re reading (3/9)

  • “Americans' Inflation Expectations Hit A 7-year High As The Economic Recovery Picked Up, Fed Survey Finds” (Business Insider). “Consumers' median year-ahead inflation expectations rose to 3.1% in February from 3%, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's Survey of Consumer Expectations — the highest reading since July 2014. The higher expectations come as COVID-19 case counts dive and business activity sharply improves.”

  • “T-Mobile to Step Up Ad Targeting of Cellphone Customers” (Wall Street Journal). “T-Mobile US Inc. will automatically enroll its phone subscribers in an advertising program informed by their online activity, testing businesses’ appetite for information that other companies have restricted.”

  • “Why Bill Gates Is Worried About Bitcoin” (DealBook). “‘Bitcoin uses more electricity per transaction than any other method known to mankind,’ Bill Gates told Andrew, adding, ‘It’s not a great climate thing.’ Studies note that the annual carbon emissions from the electricity generated to mine and process the cryptocurrency equal the amount emitted by New Zealand or Argentina.”

  • “Chamber of Commerce Endorses Gary Gensler To Serve As SEC Chair” (Washington Post). “The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the country’s largest business lobbying organization, is throwing its weight behind Gary Gensler, President Biden’s pick to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission. Gensler, a former Goldman Sachs partner who turned into an aggressive financial industry regulator and progressive darling, was expected to win confirmation thanks to his support among Democrats. But the business lobby’s imprimatur could help him draw some Republican support.”

  • “AT&T Says Rule Barring Selective Disclosures To Analysts Can’t Possibly Be Designed To Bar Selective Disclosures To Analysts” (Dealbreaker). “What information is ‘material’ under securities law involves a very large gray area. Whether or not a publicly-listed company is going to make or miss earnings estimates, however, seems pretty clearly in the black: It is, after all, the kind of thing investors look out for on a quarterly basis, and one that usually has some impact on the price of a company’s stock. And, five years ago, AT&T was very much about to miss, and for the third time in a row. That the company considered this material seems clear from the fact that it felt the need to do something to prevent it. That something was not find an extra $76 million in revenue and quick, but to call all of the analysts covering AT&T and to tell them the not-yet-public information that their earnings estimates were too damned high.”

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What we’re reading (3/8)

  • “David Tepper Is Getting Bullish On Stocks, Believes Rising Rates Are Set To Stabilize” (CNBC). “David Tepper, founder of Appaloosa Management whose comments have been known to move markets, said it’s very difficult to be bearish on stocks right now and thinks the sell-off in Treasurys that has driven rates higher is likely over.”

  • “Cathie Wood’s ARK Faces Test as Tech Rally Cools” (Wall Street Journal). “The stock market’s swift turn against technology and other growth stocks has handed star stock picker Cathie Wood and her firm, ARK Investment Management LLC, their toughest test yet. The firm’s five exchange-traded funds all have declined more than 20% since early February, stung by a sharp rise in government-bond yields. The flagship ARK Innovation ETF has suffered the steepest declines, falling 27% from its Feb. 16 high. In comparison, the Nasdaq Composite Index has dropped about 8% over the same period.”

  • “How Do Silicon Valley Techies Celebrate Getting Rich In A Pandemic?” (New York Times). “The parties are on Zoom, the tax talk is on Slack, the house shopping is slightly less intense, and the vibe is cautious. It’s a weird time to become rich.”

  • “Elon Musk Lost $27 Billion Last Week” (CNN Business). “Elon Musk's net worth plunged last week as tech stocks got hammered and Tesla shares' stunning rise quickly unraveled. Wall Street is growing increasingly nervous about rising bond yields, which could make borrowing more expensive. That could eat into corporate profits, which is why investors have begun to reverse some of the positions they took over the past year in high-growth but risky tech stocks like Tesla.”

  • “The Biggest Private Island For Sale In The Bahamas Is About To Hit The Auction Block — And There’s No Minimum Bid” (Business Insider). “The 730-acre undeveloped island, known as St. Andrews or Little Ragged Island, is the Bahamas' southernmost and largest privately held island currently listed for sale, according to the listing. It features white sand beaches and deep water access that could accommodate large yachts. The listing notes that the island could be transformed into a private home or a resort with enough space for an 18-hole golf course.”

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What we’re reading (3/7)

  • “Covid-19 Crashed The Stock Market A Year Ago. Here Are Some Lessons Learned.” (Wall Street Journal). “The S&P 500 took just 126 trading days to swing from a record to a bear market and back to a new high—marking the fastest such recovery in history. That was even as market prognosticators warned stocks were due for another bout of selling, based on the growing death toll and unprecedented job losses caused by the coronavirus pandemic.”

  • “The Market’s Ride On Easy Street Is Getting Bumpy” (Briefing.com). “Good news just isn't moving the needle like it used to because the forward-looking stock market has priced in so much of it already; hence, it is more sensitive these days to news, and developments, that could act as speed bumps, if not damaging pot holes, on Easy Street.”

  • “Too Many Smart People Are Being Too Dismissive Of Inflation” (New York Times). “Fears were overblown for years. But let’s not be blasé about how hard it could be to halt high prices if they haunt us again…the prices of many commodities are surging — copper and lumber because of a jump in home building. Global steel demand has pushed up iron ore prices. Even tin, heavily used in electronics, has soared as suppliers rush to meet consumer demand for new gadgets.”

  • “The Business Winners In Biden’s Relief Package: Restaurants, Concert Venues And Airplane Manufacturers” (Washington Post). “The restaurant industry emerged as the bill’s biggest private-sector winner. The package establishes a $28.6 billion ‘revitalization fund’ for restaurants that will dole out grants to help them cover pandemic-related revenue losses, with businesses eligible for up to $5 million each.”

  • “Millennial New Yorkers Are Ditching Basements And Roommates For Luxury Apartments At $1,000-Plus Discounts” (Business Insider). “In a city notorious for its unaffordability, the pandemic era has sent once sky-high rents plummeting, making luxury living by New York City standards attainable for those once priced out of such a lifestyle. Millennial New Yorkers…are jumping on deals they know won't last indefinitely, upgrading to luxury apartments that suddenly fit with their budgets.”

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