Powell showed off his dance moves at Jackson Hole, confirming that rate cuts are coming. Itâs like watching your dad try to be cool at a weddingâawkward, but you appreciate the effort. Now, we wait to see how markets react when the music stops. August 26, 2024 | [Read Online]( Silver banana goes to⦠In this issue of the peel: - Powell showed off his dance moves at Jackson Hole, confirming that rate cuts are coming. Itâs like watching your dad try to be cool at a weddingâawkward, but you appreciate the effort. Now, we wait to see how markets react when the music stops. - Cava is the cool new kid in the restaurant game, winning hearts (and wallets) with a killer Q2. Meanwhile, Workday is proving misery loves company with solid earnings, but Red Robin and Intuit had the kind of quarters that make you want to hide under the bed. - Finally, the DOJ is coming for landlords, claiming theyâve been using shady software to squeeze renters dry. Itâs about time someone asked, âWhoâs really the victim here?â Spoiler: Itâs not your landlord. Market Snapshot Banana Bits - The only question for rate cuts now is [how much](. - Mag 7 companies remain [under-owned in active portfolios](. - Looks like the CEO of Telegram is adding ['arrested in France']( to his list of accomplishmentsâright next to 'master of cryptic messaging!' - NASA forces Boeing to do the walk of shame and taps [SpaceX to save stranded astronauts](. - Intel called Morgan Stanley for backup in their [ongoing activist battle](. Lever Up Your Learning As Earnings Szn comes to an end, Learning Szn is just getting started. And if youâre an ambitious ape who wants to use your time wisely and get aheadâ[Brilliant]( is the learning platform for you. Your path to Master of the Universe status wonât be paved by slogging through books or spending hours drooling in front of the computer. 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Macro Monkey Says Takes One To Tango They say it takes two to tango. But on Friday, it only took one as the Silver Fox Fed Chair himself danced all over the central banking world to the music of rising stock prices. The Powell pivot is complete⦠again. However, after pivoting this much during his tenure, itâs starting to look more like JPowâs been dancing this whole time. And now, the market is loving his moves. Letâs get into it. What Happened? On Friday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell delivered his magnum opus at Jackson Hole. The main point of JPowâs speech was a Fedspeak-riddled declaration that the U.S. Central Bank would cut rates in September. But, before he got to that point, Powell gave a speech reminiscent of a high school valedictorianâsummarizing events of the last four years, explaining why certain decisions were made, and drawing a few forced laughs from the audience. Needless to say (hopefully), inflation was a big focus. After regaling the audience of our economic traumas from the early pandemic period and explaining how inflation got so out of control in the first place, he went on to describe how the Fed landed the knockout punch. Long story short, the Fed does not see inflation as a worrisome problem anymore. Powell clarified this by saying, âThe upside risks to inflation have diminished.â Now itâs time for a new problem. Powell immediately followed the above statements by saying, âAnd the downside risks to employment have increased.â I dream of a day we can go 5-minutes without this guy killing the vibe, but looking at the above chart, itâs easy to understand why the stick is so far up his... Anyway, recent months have seen an increase in unemployment alongside a steep drop in job openings. Speaking to the Fedâs employment outlook, Powell added, âWe do not seek or welcome further cooling in labor market conditions.â Then, the mic drop moment came. Story time was over when Powell declared, âThe time has come for policy to adjust,â adding, "The direction of travel is clear.â Boom. Rate cuts are coming. Ironically, the ambiguity of JPowâs language actually made it blatant that the FOMC is open to cuts larger than 25bps (or 0.25%). Although the above charts show a weakening economy with lower inflation, higher unemployment, and lower labor demandâ all forecasting slower growth to comeâitâs not a âweakâ or âbadâ economy at all. GDP growth is slowing but remains healthy and above pre-pandemic trends. Overall, macro conditions are still good, and inflation remains above the Fedâs target, but the trends are clear in the Fedâs view. If left unchecked, inflation will fall below target, unemployment will continue to rise, and growth could slow, stop, or enter a recession. To mitigate these risks and maintain credibility, the central bank feels that they have to do something. However, itâs not exactly an emergency this time. The Fed has made clear that some loosening is necessary to uphold their dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment, but even a slight loosening of monetary policy could have big implications. We donât necessarily need a loose policy, but rather a less tight policy. Markets are pricing rates to sit in a range of 3-3.5% by the end of 2025, implying at least 200bps (2%) of cuts by then. But, according to the latest dot plot, Fed officials donât see a need to follow shawty and get that low, low, low, low, low, low, low, low. [Source]( The Takeaway? Rate cuts are coming. Not because weâre in emergency circumstances but simply to mitigate employment risks. As Renmacâs Neil Dutta pointed out, âThe risk of recession is now receding because the Fed is seeking to support the labor market.â [Source]( Market-implied odds still forecast just a 25bp cut, but with the next Q2 GDP growth estimate coming on Thursday, Julyâs PCE data on Friday, Augustâs jobs report the following week, and some big earnings left to come like Nvidia on Wednesday, that narrative could change quickly. Stay tuned. What's Ripe Cava Group (CAVA) 19.63% - Cava is the Barack Obama of restaurant chainsânew to the scene, adored by young people, some question where theyâre from, but they just keep winning. - Q2 was the latest example as the Mediterranean fast food chain destroyed estimates with sales up 35.2% and same-store sales up a huge 14.4%. - Driving the results was a 9.4% jump in traffic and a new steak menu item. Margins grew, EBITDA spiked 59%, and the market decided Cava earned its premium valuation. Workday (WDAY) 12.49% - So this is why employee satisfaction has plummeted this yearâcompanies are using Workday more. Maybe owning shares is a good hedge against office misery? - The administrative software provider reported 16.7% sales growth and a 17% spike in subscription revenue, more than doubling operating margins to 5.3%. - Free cash flow rocketed 43% to $516mn as net margins expanded too, thanks to good cost controls. The total number of users came in at 70mn, also a new record. What's Rotten Red Robin Gourmet Burgers (RRGB) 8.25% - What, yâall donât like bottomless fries anymore? Or maybe we like them too much, and thatâs what caused Red Robinâs losses to come in wider than expected. - Shares in the burger chain sh*t the bed worse than their customers as losses widened to $0.47/sh. Alongside a 7.6% increase in prices, traffic fell 6.7%, - Same-store sales fell 0.8% in total, leading to lower guidance. The company is still trying to pass inflation onto customers, but it isn't working out too well. Intuit (INTU) 6.83% - Rookie mistakeâIntuit delivered a helluva quarter but ruined it by being way too honest. The owner of TurboTax, QuickBooks, etc., beat but issued weak guidance. - Total revenue grew 17% for the quarter and 16% for the full 2024 fiscal year. The firmâs Small Business and Self Employed units led, growing 19% annually. - Analysts were distracted by guidance for just 5-6% sales growth in Q1 and the fact that TurboTax continues to shed users, falling 1% in total for the year. Thought Banana Controlling Rent Pausing their tireless work of maintaining properties and collecting rent, it turns out the landlords of America have been the real victims all alongâwhoâd have thought? Youâre not alone in thinking your rent is too high. In addition to every other renter in the country, the Department of Justice agrees. Letâs dive in. What Happened? Days after VP Harris fledged out her theory of monopoly-driven rent prices, the DOJ opened a lawsuit against RealPage, a Thoma Bravo-owned property management software and service provider. The DOJ is alleging four violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act, including: - Unlawful sharing of information (collusion). - Agreements with landlords to align rent prices (again, collusion). - Monopolization of the commercial revenue management software market. - Attempted monopolization of the same market. The DOJ claims all this bad boy behavior has led to unjustly high rent costs, and itâs not hard to see why. For 70.7% of the post GFC-period, rent prices have grown more rapidly than overall inflation, sometimes by more than 2.5x⦠as Iâm sure most of you know all too well. The allegations center on the fact that RealPageâs revenue management tools, YieldStar and AIRM, use âtransactional competitive market dataâ to give their pricing recommendations. Essentially, this means that the DOJ thinks RealPageâs data-sharing requirements strip our poor, sweet landlords of âfully independent centers of decision-making on pricing.â The DOJâs second charge claims that RealPageâs terms effectively force landlords to price units at whatever the pricing algorithm spits out. So, landlords are harmed by a loss of independence. Then, consumers are harmed because RealPageâs models (allegedly) âare designed to increase prices as much as possible and minimize price decreases.â DOJâs third and fourth allegations allege that RealPage is only able to do this through monopoly power. [Source]( The Takeaway? Federal agencies are getting smart when it comes to data sharing. Similar practices are common in other industries, so Iâd be shaking in my shoes if I were out here sharing transactional, competitively sensitive data. 8 state attorneys general joined the DOJ in the lawsuit and are now looking for a federal judge to stop RealPage from continuing these practices going forward. Slower rent price growth could be on its way. As U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland so eloquently put it, âEverybody knows the rent is too damn high, and we allege this is one of the reasons why.â The Big Question: Are other industries at risk of similar lawsuits? Will these proposed changes actually lead to slower rent increases? Will the DOJ win the case? Banana Brain Teaser Previous There are 10 books on a shelf, of which 4 are paperbacks and 6 are hardbacks. How many possible selections of 5 books from the shelf contain at least one paperback and at least one hardback? Answer: 246 Today There are 5 cars to be displayed in 5 parking spaces, with all the cars facing the same direction. Of the 5 cars, 3 are red, 1 is blue, and 1 is yellow. If the cars are identical except for color, how many different arrangements of the 5 cars are possible? Send your guesses to vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com â I measure what's going on, and I adapt to it. I try to get my ego out of the way. The market is smarter than I am, so I bend. Marty Zweig How Would You Rate Today's Peel? [All the bananas]( [Meh]( [Rotten AF]( Happy Investing,
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