SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
Consumers, Housing Market, Investing, Oil Market, FDIC, Banking, Federal Reserve, International Travel, Stock Market and Snacking
Consumers
Based on retail sales it looks like the consumer is softening, but I would not say to problematic levels. In the month of April retail sales rose 0.4% compared to last month and were 1.6% higher compared to last April. One problem here is these sales do not adjust for inflation and with inflation increasing 4.9% compared to last year, it appears most if not all of that gain can be attributed to higher prices for goods and services. While the headline number looks soft there are still areas where the consumer remains extremely strong. Food services and drinking places saw an increase of 9.4% compared to last year, health and personal care stores were up 7.9%, and non-store retailers had a gain of 8.0%. With grocery prices remaining high, food and beverage stores also saw an increase of 3.7% compared to last year. Areas that received a covid boom continued to struggle as furniture and home furnishing stores saw sales fall 6.4%, electronics and appliance stores saw sales decline 7.3%, and building material and garden equipment and supplies dealers saw sales decline 3.7%. The biggest negative in the report was gasoline stations as sales fell 14.6%. Overall, it appears the consumer remains in a good spot. They just aren't spending as much on goods and would rather spend money on travel and dining out.
Housing Market
Existing home sales continue to remain under pressure as in the month of April they fell 3.4% compared to March and were 23.2% lower than April 2022. There are several factors which are likely contributing to the pressure which include higher mortgage rates, challenging affordability, and an extremely tight inventory picture. At the end of April there were only 1.04 million homes for sale. This was a 1% increase compared to last April, but at the current sales rate it represents a 2.9-month supply. Generally, 6 months is considered a balanced market. The affordability challenges have really hurt the first-time homebuyer and in the month of April they made up just 29% of sales. Historically, they are around 40%.
Investing
Over the last few weeks, the markets and equities have seemed to go nowhere. They go up for a few days and then go back down for a few days. This can be very discouraging for investors who get impatient and then settle for a 5% T-bill. Over the last 12 months institutions have pulled $333.9 billion from stocks and over that same period, individual investors have pulled $28 billion. As of May 10, 2023, money-markets reached a record in total assets of $5.3 trillion. For patient investors they will be rewarded, could be next week, next month or three months from now. By the time some people realize it, they will have missed perhaps a 5 to 10% increase in their portfolio. Don’t forget what Warren Buffett said, “investors should be greedy when others are fearful." I will add to that, a good dose of patience helps as well.
Oil Market
With the price of oil trading around $70-$75 per barrel some energy companies have declined from their higher stock prices. They have retained a lot of their earnings from the previous few quarters and now cash held by the six big oil companies on March 31, 2023 was around $160 billion. Almost 1/3 of that or $48 billion was held by Exxon Mobil and Chevron. It is nice to see these companies with strong balance sheets after going through such a hard time just a few years ago. I hope they spend that cash wisely and retain some of it for future downturns in the oil market.
FDIC
So far, the FDIC has spent $15.8 billion bailing out uninsured depositors at the federal banks. To build back up their reserves they have proposed having a special charge on uninsured deposits above $5 billion which they believe will raise them somewhere around $16 billion starting in 2024. Banks that have over $50 billion in assets will be handling most of the load and will pay about 95% of the cost. It seems a little unfair since the small banks are the ones that caused all the problems and the big banks helped bail them out. Now they have to bear the burden of the expenses of keeping small banks safe. This is another reason why I believe we should have less banks in the future as the strong are closely watched and smartly regulated.
Banking
People are still concerned about the banking situation. At our firm we have said that depositors have nothing to worry about and we will get through the scariness of the banking situation. It’s not as bad as the media makes it out to be and it is focused on just a few smaller banks. Overall, many of the larger banks are doing more than fine. Proof of this is in the first quarter banks had a record profit of $80 billion. So, as a whole banks are making money and are profitable, but there are a few banks that did some things they should not have done and are now paying the price. Overall, the United States banking system remains very strong.
Federal Reserve
After getting off to a late start, I believe Federal Reserve Chairman, Jerome Powell, is on the right track. I think he now needs to take his foot off the gas and let the rate hikes that they have done take effect. I don’t believe we have to do any more and I don’t believe they should cut rates this year. Compared to a gallop poll of Americans I seem to be in the minority. Only 36% of those polled had a great deal or fair amount of confidence in what the Federal Reserve is currently doing. You won’t find a confidence number that low in the Federal Reserve or the Federal Reserve Chairman unless you go back to the days of Alan Greenspan. He served from 1987 - 2006.
International Travel
If you’re thinking about traveling internationally this summer, be prepared to pay higher prices because international travel is booming. According to an online travel agency, Hopper, airfares to Europe are at their highest levels in more than five years. A plane ticket to Europe is now $1,167 which is up 36% from the same time back in 2019. I know the airline stocks seem to have taken a dip recently, perhaps this could be something that could add more earnings to the airline companies and potentially increase their stock prices.
Stock Market
There is generally an initial disappointment when you see one of the equities that you hold drop in price because of a poor earnings report. But the investor must not be emotional and instead must look at what actually happened. We had a company that reported disappointing earnings and the stock fell from $63.12 down to $50.73, a 19.6% decline. But looking at the weekly numbers that we do each Monday, what actually happened the following week is the earnings estimates actually went up and gave us a target sell price of $92.96, a slight increase from the $91.80 the previous week. It may not sound like much; however, in the previous week the gain to the target price was 45.4% and now because of the 19.6% decline the potential gain to the target price nearly doubled to 83.2%. This does not include an increase to 3.8% on the dividend yield. Whenever this happens to an investor, they need to step back and review what happened in the quarter and then understand if it is a fixable problem. If so, they may want to consider buying more.
Snacking
The pandemic created many problems. One of them being roughly 50% of Americans are now consuming three or more snacks per day, nearly a 10% increase from two years ago. Potato chips are the most consumed, surpassing $10 billion in sales last year. The next most consumed snack is tortilla chips. Companies benefiting from snack sales include Hershey and Mondelez International with sales up 22-30% since 2019. What concerns me is we have a problem in our country with heart disease and diabetes, the increased consumption of sugar and salt is a financial strain on insurance companies, medical companies and even on Medicare.