PE recruiting is here, but returns are not. Private credit is where itâs at June 28, 2024 | Peel #740 In this issue of the Peel: - ð¢ The numbersâgrowth and inflationâwere both higher in Q1
- 𥦠Walgreens closed at its lowest price since 1997, its worst day in 50yrs
- ð¼ PE recruiting is here, but returns are not. Private credit is where itâs at Market Snapshot ð¸ Banana Bits ð - All 31 âlarge banksâ in the U.S. passed the Fedâs latest stress test, able to [absorb $685bn in combined losses](=)
- Listings are up, prices are downâthe housing market [is starting to heal]()
- Levi Strauss got hammered (and not in a good way) [on tough earnings](
- Finally, something we can all get behindâthe Supreme Court just told the Sackler family [to go f*ck themselves]() 3 Reasons Why You Are Striking Out At Your High Finance Job Search The recruiting game is changing. Computers are taking over most aspects of application screening. You are filtered out before you get a chance to talk to the recruiter.
Gone are the days when you could afford to have a shit resume but still walk out with a job. Or get a job because you attended a certain school. The competition is much higher, and your odds are much lower.
The old-school mentality of letâs apply and hope we get an interview does not work. Below are four things you could be doing that will get you insane results. - Crappy resume. Wrong format. Typos. Wrong keywords. Things no one wants to know about you. You name it. In our experience, 99% of resumes have massive gaps. And most of them think they could no better. Our academy students (including ones from the top target schools) are awestruck every time we complete a resume review session with them. Hereâs just one review so you hear from them, not us.
- 100-500 LinkedIn connections. Really? Those connection requests are free. You donât pay for them. And it can be done while you take a break from scrolling on your phoneð No, seriously, whatâs stopping you? At WSO Academy, we help you draft proven outreach templates to 10x your LinkedIn networking success rate and push you to achieve weekly targets.
- AI. You hear AI can pass standardized tests and will eventually rule over us, but you still havenât started using it. At this point, thereâs no excuse for not leveraging the power of AI. Tools exist. Many tools. And we use them at WSO Academy to supercharge your job hunt. From resume reviews to LinkedIn reviews and much, much more. As part of the academy, you have not just natural but artificial intelligence working for you. Here is a computer-scored report card of a resume before and after the mentor review and finally after the AI review.
As part of WSO Academy, we help you address these problems and much more and get you a job in high finance. Canât wait to start hearing from recruiters? [Click here to join the WSO Academy Waitlist. Limited slots only.]() Macro Monkey Says ð Good News, Bad News GDP Report The third tryâs the charm, right? Counting is hard. And now that weâre at the end of the second quarter of 2024, the federal government has finally finished counting all the economyâs data⦠from Q1. They took their sweet time, but we finally have the official data on GDP growth and inflation during the first quarter of 2024. Letâs get into it. The Numbers In their third and final estimate, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) announced on Thursday that real GDP grew 1.4% in Q1, slightly higher than their previous estimate of 1.3%. [Source]( Weâll take an increase, but weâre still not gonna be happy about it. The new data suggests that while imports were higher and consumer spending was lower than previously thought, both detracting from growth, nonresidential fixed investment and good olâ government spending were both higher. As a reminder, GDP = Consumer Spending + Investment + Government Spending + (Exports - Imports), or C + I + G + NX. Looking at just the âInvestmentâ and âGovernment Spendingâ categories, which encompass gross private and public spending, we can see that private goods producing industry spend were the biggest detractor among these line items. That weakness was born out of declines in durable and nondurable goods production investment, led by metals, petroleum, and coal products, declining 1.1% in total. [Source]( Meanwhile, private service producing industries grew 1.9%, and government spending, of course, grew 2.3%, to absolutely no one on Earthâs surprise. Retail trade, construction, and all of us in finance and insurance carried the team by contributing the most to the GDP growth of any industry group. Manufacturing, utilities, and mining were the primary detractors, as seen below. [Source]( None of this is exactly groundbreaking, as the changes are little more than alterations of a few basis points compared to the second GDP estimate from May. But I might get nightmares from the weaker consumer spending data. We will get the full PCE report tomorrow, but alongside this GDP report, we learned that the quarterly PCE Price Index came in slightly higher than expected at 3.4% compared to the prior estimate of 3.3%. That might not change our views on inflation much. But, the double whammy of lower spending and higher prices than we previously thought means demand for goods and services was even weaker than total dollar consumer spending indicates. Thatâs because if prices were higher and total dollar spending still came in lower than our previous estimates, it must be because we bought even less bullsh*t than expected. Finally, the scariest part of the report was the update on quarterly inflation. Based on the BEAâs data, JPowâs got some more work to do: Q1â24 saw the highest quarterly PCE inflation since the first quarter of 2023. This doesnât necessarily mean inflation is coming back with a vengeance, but it does mean Fed Chair JPow and the FOMC could have a problem on their hands. The Takeaway? Real GDP came in much slower than expected as inflationary pressures roared back to life in Q1. Not that this means anything at all, but if we had the same 1.8% quarterly inflation that Q4â23 saw, real GDP growth wouldâve clocked in at a healthy 3.0%. Clearly, however, the market isnât too worried. Treasury yields sank across the maturity spectrum, and CME implied rate cut/hike odds barely moved. Weâll find out soon if the same holds true for today. Fingers crossed, apes, fingers crossed. What's Ripe 𤩠National Beverage Corp (FIZZ) ð15.0% - Sadly, the beverages this company makes arenât very fun, but Thursdayâs returns definitely were. The company beat across the board on earnings.
- Owner of La Croix, Everfresh, and other drink brands designed to let people know theyâre better than you saw a 20% jump in net income.
- Volumes grew by 5%, along with prices, as this company had no issues passing inflation on to their wannabe-wealthy consumers. RH (RH) ð9.2% - Marsh Carter said, âIncreasing stock price is not a business strategy. A good business strategy will increase your stock price.â RH proved him wrong.
- Putting the team on his back, CEO Gary Friedman threw another $10mn into RH stock at an average cost of $216.10/sh.
- There are many reasons to sell, but insiders buy for just one. Investors loved the vote of confidence, sending shares higher. What's Rotten 𤮠Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA) ð22.2% - There are bad earnings reports, and then thereâs this. The company beat on sales but missed on earnings and is now looking to cut costs.
- To cut costs, Walgreens announced they are closing even more stores as â75% of our stores drive 100% of our profitabilityâ, per CEO Tim Wentworth.
- Health care was the only strong segment of the pharmacy and drug stores, but not strong enough to save them from their worst trading day in 50 years. Micron (MU) ð7.1% - Like shaking up your 11th can of Miller Lite later tonight, we knew this was gonna be a little bubbly. Micron plummeted on great earnings and in-line guidance.
- This chip maker reported $0.62/sh on $6.81bn vs estimates for $0.51/sh on $6.67bn. Guidance was in line, so obviously, the market hated that.
- Micronâs specialty is in memory or storage, making some tech analysts think they could get a huge boost from AI inference as opposed to AI training. Thought Banana ð¤ Poverty in PE Recruiting for private equity may have just started, but making money for private equity is apparently ending. The industry famous for its riches and douchebagginess now just has the latter after these returns. Private credit was the place to be. Letâs take a look. The Numbers Like Nvidia, private credit has exploded in popularity since JPow and the FOMC started raising rates. However, like Nvidia, the industry delivered the performance to back it up. [Source](=) Above, we can see returns of what is essentially the private version of a 60/40 portfolio. Since 2022, most of the returns have come from that 40. Reasons are obvious, for once, as to why private credit suddenly started to outperform. With higher rates, the challenge of selling a portfolio company or position increases drastically in private equity. Simultaneously, private credit funds are able to exponentially jack up charges on the loans they make. So, itâs no surprise that cumulatively, since 2022, the returns of these two industries look like this: [Source]() With far fewer buyers willing to take on buyout loans, distributions in private equity have sunk to a nearly 5-year low at just 8.7% of total fund values. There was a brief moment of optimism in late 2023 on the Fedâs dovish pivot, but⦠That didnât last long. Distributions rose from their actual 5-year low of 8.2% in Q2â23 to 11.6% in Q4 but have fallen right back all throughout 2024. Thatâs allowed returns in private credit to nearly double those of private equity thus far in 2024. PE has delivered 1.3% in total, while PC is at 2%. The Takeaway? Outside of Treasuries, money market funds, and other mind-numbingly boring investments, finding returns in private markets has become as challenging as finding Zyn anywhere in the United States. It might be easier to get a job in PE than to get an exit. Make sure you secure your offer with [WSOâs Private Equity Interview Course & Guide here](=). Maybe then your parents will finally be proud of you. If thatâs the goal, my only advice isâdonât start writing a newsletter. The Big Question: How long will private credit outperformance last? Banana Brain Teaser ð¡ Previous ð Club X has more than 10 but fewer than 40 members. Sometimes, the members sit at tables with 3 members at one table and 4 members at each of the other tables, and sometimes they sit at tables with 3 members at one table and 5 members at each of the other tables. If they sit at tables with 6 members at each table except one and fewer than 6 members at that one table, how many members will be at the table that has fewer than 6 members? Answer: 5 Today ð In order to complete a reading assignment on time, Terry planned to read 90 pages per day. However, she read only 75 pages per day at first, leaving 690 pages to be read during the last 6 days before the assignment was to be completed. How many days in all did Terry have to complete the assignment on time? Send your guesses to vyomesh@wallstreetoasis.com Wise Investor Says ð¤ âPrivate equity has absolutely no reason to exist. The private equity holder has all the upside and the banks all the downside.â â Nassim Taleb How Would You Rate Today's Peel? ð[All the bananas](=) ð[Meh](=) ð©[Rotten AF]( Happy Investing, David, Vyom, Jasper & Patrick [ADVERTISE]() // [WSO ALPHA]( // [ACADEMY]() // [COURSES](=) // [LEGAL](=) [Unsubscribe]( IB Oasis Corp. (aka "Wall Street Oasis")
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