SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
Jobs Report, JOLTs, NVIDIA and S&P 500, Natural Gas Prices, Game Stop, Credit and Loans, Orange Juice Price, Voting Rights, Store Brands and the Value of a Dollar
Jobs Report
The Jobs Report showed the labor market continues to remain on good footing considering nonfarm payrolls rose by 272,000, which easily topped the estimate of 190,000. Strength occurred in health care and social assistance (+83.5K), leisure and hospitality (+42k), professional and business services (+33k), and construction (+21k). Government was also strong as it added 43k jobs in the month. I generally don’t like to see government adding this many jobs as it is essentially an expense to taxpayers and it can detract from showing an accurate picture of the private labor market, which should ultimately drive our economy. The strangest part of the report was the divergence between the establishment survey and the household survey. While the establishment survey showed strength, the household survey showed the unemployment rose to 4% for the first time since January 2022 as the level of people who reported holding jobs fell by 408,000. Wage inflation was also a slight concern as average hourly earnings rose 4.1% compared to last year. This was above the estimate of 3.9% and last month’s reading of 4.0%. Overall, I’d say this report was somewhat complicated with a mix of positives and negatives. I don’t think it provides any evidence for the fed to cut rates, but I also wouldn’t view it as problematic.
JOLTs
The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTs) showed there were 8.06 million job openings in the month of April. This missed the expectation of 8.4 million and was also below the prior month’s reading of 8.4 million. The number marked the lowest reading since February 2021 and it was well below the peak above 12 million in March 2022. While this all sounds like bad news, I believe this puts us back in line with a more normal labor market. Even with this decline, the labor market is still historically strong and I believe there is further room for it to soften without causing problems. There are still about 1.2 job openings for every available worker, which puts us back in line with where we were before Covid.
NVIDIA and the S&P 500
There is no doubt that AI has pushed Nvidia to records that are nothing short of astounding. It should be noted that when you include Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, Apple and Alphabet into the equation, these six companies now account for nearly 30% of the value of the S&P 500. Nvidia alone has accounted for close to 35% of the index’s gain this year. Even a powerful freight train eventually gets derailed when it gets going too fast. What could cause Nvidia to fall off the tracks? I see more articles about how the demand and future sales of AI could be overhyped. If that comes to be true, then the earnings estimate for Nvidia will fall, which would cause a deep decline in the stock price. It is currently the king of the mountain and no one can knock it from the top, for now. But no company stays on top forever and competition can come out of nowhere causing the price of chips to be cut dramatically, which also could cause a problem for earnings. Keep in mind Nvidia does not make the chips, they rely on Taiwan Semiconductor to manufacture the chips for them. The contracts that they have are rather secret, but what if Taiwan Semiconductor says they want a bigger piece of the pie? This could really hurt Nvidia’s profits and there’s no other company that can produce the chips at this time. I think it could be a very rocky summer for equities, especially stocks that are trading at valuations that are well above the norm.
Natural Gas Prices
It was a hot May across the country, except for here in San Diego. We seemed to have some nice weather with temperatures still in the 70s. But with hot weather across the country, it increased electricity demand as people cranked up their air conditioners to stay cool. Before the increase in demand, there was a large inventory of natural gas that brought natural gas prices down to levels not seen in a long time. The reduction in natural gas inventories to more normal levels has allowed natural gas prices to rise and they now trade around $2.60 per million British thermal units which was about 65% higher than the low reached in late March. It is forecasted that this could be a hot summer, which means a higher use of natural gas for electricity to run those air conditioners. One area that is helping is solar, which is reducing some of the need for natural gas. Currently, estimates are that natural gas should not be too much higher as recent prices are perhaps just enough to bring back the drillers. This should make consumers happy with lower natural gas prices and the drillers happy since they can drill more and get a reasonable price for natural gas. It’s a nice situation, but keep in mind it will not last forever and something will cause the market to move one way or the other and spoil the party.
Game Stop
Roaring Kitty is back and I must say I still don’t get why people follow this guy. He seems nice and all, but he has profited tremendously from this GameStop (GME) craziness. Keith Gill who goes by Roaring Kitty now holds 5,000,000 shares of GME and has 120,000 call options with a strike price of $20 that expire June 21st. It is unlikely he will be able to take full possession of that stock after the options expire as he would need $240 million to take custody of it after exercising the calls. Just looking at the value of his GME shares he has a net worth of at least $140,000,000. Considering he started this crusade sharing his positions with a $53,000 stake in September 2019 he must have sold during the craziness in 2021. I cannot think of any other way that he was able to amass such a fortune considering the major fall in GME’s stock price that occurred over the last few years. The initial premise for buying the stock in 2021 was to stick it to hedge fund managers who were shorting the stock. At that time short interest was over 100% and a short squeeze was rather easy to achieve. Recently the short interest was around just 20%. While the intention was to essentially take money from these big hedge funds, I believe there were many small investors that Gill profited off and this time around if he sells with a big gain, I believe it will come at the expense of even more small investors. The company has terrible fundamentals considering the business model is dying with sales that declined 29% compared to last year and a loss of $32.3 m in the recent quarter. GME also said it would sell an additional 75 million shares on top of the 45 million share sale it had announced in May that raised more than $900 million.
Credit and Loans
There appeared to be a trend that consumers were having trouble paying their credit cards and auto payments, but recent data has come out showing that trend is reversing. People with auto, credit card, home and personal loans that were between 30 and 59 days past due stood at 0.86% in April. This was a nice decline from the February number of 1.04%. I also think it’s important to point out that in February 2020, before Covid the percentage was 1.07%. Remember how good we all felt about the economy then? This doesn’t mean there aren’t some people that are struggling as consumers with subprime credit, which is a score between 300 and 600 had a delinquency rate of 10.37% in April. This did climb from 10.01% in the previous year. I believe lenders are now seeing a more normalized credit environment, which would allow them to expand their lending and we could see more loans in the second half of the year. Obviously, if the banks are lending more money, they’ll be collecting more interest, which will help their profits.
Orange Juice Price
If you like orange juice with all that vitamin C, it’s going to cost you a little bit more going forward because of a poor Brazilian harvest. In the past I have posted about the decline in orange production in both Florida and California, this now means we are at the mercy of foreign countries to get our orange juice. The price for concentrated orange juice hit a new high of $4.92 per pound last week.
Voting Rights
One lesser-known consideration when investing is voting rights. Some companies may issue two classes of stock to ensure a founder or a select group of people preserve a majority of the voting rights. This may be fine for a while, but if there is a major potential change to the business and a founder controls the voting rights there is little the shareholder class can do to challenge them. Dual class stock has been on the rise as in 2019, 9% of companies in the Russell 3000 used the structure. Over the following three years, 40% of tech companies that went public adopted it, along with 20% of non-tech companies. In a Barron’s article they pointed out that opponents of dual class structures have called for provisions that automatically convert shares to a single class after a certain number of years, or when the economic stake of founders drops below a certain level. I believe steps like this would be beneficial to the shareholder class over the long term, but sometimes a successful founder is able to avoid proxy battles or corporate raiders looking for short term profits if they control the voting rights. The problem is you have to hope that founder is able to navigate the company properly for a long time. Personally, I try to avoid companies that have this dual class of shares.
Store Brands
With the rising cost of food, consumers have shifted their spending at the grocery store from national brands such as Kraft, Mondelez and Campbell Soup to the lower priced private store brands. Products that have seen the most change to store brands in the grocery store have been pasta, pet food, and condiments. Switching to store brands is hard on the psyche because the national brands spend billions of dollars in marketing and have built their reputation over decades. It is ingrained in many people that the national brand ketchup or mustard tastes better than a store-bought brand. I remember many, many years ago that was the case, but I think times have changed and there’s very little difference between the store brands and the national brands. What is your opinion?
Value of the Dollar
We don’t write much about the US dollar and the strength of the dollar because it is a rather complex situation. But the dollar still remains rather strong, which has been helped by the tariffs that our government have put on products from overseas. These tariffs have mainly been placed on China. On an inflation adjusted basis the dollar remains high and it’s just about 10% short of the level it traded at when Richard Nixon ended the gold standard in 1971. Going forward, things could change as economies in Europe and Asia are showing strength not seen since the Great Recession in 2008. This could put downward pressure on the dollar, which in my opinion is not a bad thing because it makes foreign goods more expensive for us to buy. This means we would likely buy less foreign items and it also would make our goods less expensive to foreigners buyers. Our trade balance is way out of whack and this would bring it back to a more normalized level. If Donald Trump is reelected in November, he has mentioned that a strong dollar is a negative for the overall strength of our economy and that buying overseas products sends our dollars overseas to other countries. If he wins the election, we probably would see a reduction in the value of the dollar as he would probably promote policies to push the dollar down.