SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
Krispy Kreme x McDonalds, March Jobs Market, JOLTs, Stock Market, Office Rents, Vehicles, Chinese Auto Makers, Tesla and Designer
Krispy Kreme x McDonalds
Do you like Krispy Kreme doughnuts? If you do, you’ll be able to get them at McDonald’s as they signed an agreement with Krispy Kreme after testing some locations a couple years ago. The rollout to McDonald’s for Krispy Kreme doughnuts will begin in the second half, but it will take until around the end of 2026 to be available at all McDonald’s. Krispy Kreme doughnuts is a public company and the stock had fallen below its IPO price many years ago which was under $12 per share. When the news released from McDonald’s the stock rose over 30% to $17 per share. This could be a profitable endeavor for Krispy Kreme, but it’s going to take years for the profits to flow through to the bottom line. Krispy Kreme trades under the symbol DNUT and pays a 0.9% dividend and has a 2025 forward P/E ratio of around 35x. No deal here, if you like the donuts enjoy them at McDonald’s but it appears you won’t make much dough with the stock.
March Jobs Report
I must say, I was very surprised by the strength in the March Jobs Report. Nonfarm payrolls increased 303,000 in the month, which easily topped the estimate of 200,000. Unlike prior reports, there wasn’t a major change to the previous months as February saw a negative revision of just 5,000 and January’s revision brought the total up by 27,000. There were many positives in the report considering the unemployment rate ticked lower to 3.8%, the labor force participation rate actually increased 0.2 percentage points to 62.7%, and average hourly earnings increased 4.1% which was lower than last month’s reading of 4.3%. Areas of strength in the economy included health care and social assistance (+81,300), government (+71,000), leisure and hospitality (+49,000), and construction (+39,000). According the BLS, the leisure and hospitality sector is finally now back to its pre-pandemic level. If the economy and labor market continue to remain resilient, I do worry we may not see those three interest rate cuts we have been expecting during the remainder of the year.
JOLTs
In the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTs) it showed there were 8.8 million job openings in February, which pretty much matched expectations and last month’s reading. The job market has continued to remain resilient and I do believe that it will need to enter a Goldilocks period where it is not too hot or too cold. Too many job openings may deter the Fed from considering rate cuts and obviously we do not want a weak labor market as that would be bad for the economy.
Stock Market
The stock market has gotten off to a strong start and in the first quarter the S&P 500 was up 10.2%, which marked the best first quarter performance since 2019. The Dow and Nasdaq also had good quarters as they were respectively up 5.6% and 9.1% in Q1. In a recent study, it was pointed that of the 16 times the S&P 500 rose 8% or more in the first quarter from 1950 through 2023, only once (1987) did the index lose ground the rest of the year. In the remaining years, the index gained an average of 9.7% over the next three quarters. In 10 of the 15 years the first quarter’s gains were higher than those seen over the remainder of the year. While this is bullish for the remainder of the year, I do worry about the concentration of the market. With Nvidia’s strong start and large market cap it accounted for close to half of the entire gain for the index. I don’t believe this will be able to continue, but I am optimistic that the rally could continue to broaden which would be beneficial to other stocks.
Office Rents
Across the country office rents are holding firm and they are higher now than they were back in the fourth quarter of 2019. The average US office rent has an asking price of $35.24 per square foot. This is an increase from $34.92 per square foot in 2019. It is not a high increase, but compared to a lot of the negativity that the media is spreading, it shows office rents as a whole are still doing OK. I would recommend for investors looking into office real estate to really do their due diligence to make sure they are not buying or investing in a declining property.
Gas, Hybrid and Electric Vehicles
The US car buyer seems confused on whether to buy an electric vehicle or a gas-powered vehicle. So, they have decided to cut it down the middle and get a hybrid. In the first two months of 2024 this caused sales of hybrid vehicles to increase 50% over last year.
Chinese Auto Makers
China’s EV maker, BYD, surpassed Tesla last quarter in global sales of electric vehicles. BYD sold over 526,000 electric vehicles in the fourth quarter and made a profit of $1.2 billion. This was an increase of 19% from a year earlier. This Chinese auto maker is coming on strong and could cause more problems in the EV market.
Credit Card Merchant Fees
You may have heard that Visa and MasterCard are being forced to reduce their merchant fees to help merchants and consumers. It still requires approval from a federal judge in Brooklyn, New York, but as it currently stands the credit card companies would lower all rates by 0.04% for three years and the average rate across the networks would be lowered by 0.07% for five years. The legal team that struck the deal for the merchants makes the deal sound big talking about eliminating $30 billion in fees over five years. But as a consumer, before you get too excited, I don’t think you’ll see any difference at all. There is talk that some of the credit cards with big rewards (which benefits consumers) might have a disadvantage at the checkout counter. I think the only ones that will really get a big benefit from this is yes you guessed it, the attorneys.
Tesla Stock
I was shocked to see Tesla wasn’t down more on the day it released delivery numbers. If the company can’t return to growth, I’d say the stock is still extremely overvalued even with the rough start to the year. Tesla reported Q1 deliveries of 386,810 which fell well short of a mean of 11 estimates compiled by FactSet of around 457,000. It’s also important to understand these estimates have fallen since the start of the year, so Tesla couldn’t even clear a lower bar. I would say the bigger problem here is that deliveries actually fell 8.5% compared to last year. Even though the stock is down over 30% to start the year and it is still down close to 60% from its all-time high of $409.97 in November 2022, it still trades at 42x 2025 estimated EPS. For a company trading at that multiple, it better be growing!
Secondhand Designer Purchases
With high end purses like Chanel selling brand new at $10,200, consumers are picking up secondhand bags at sometimes half the cost from $3000-$8000 for the same Chanel bag. Worldwide the secondhand market for luxury bags is now nearly $50 billion, which has invited many scammers and copycats that pawn off their bags as the real thing at high prices. It has been estimated by some that about 20% of the high-end bags sold on the secondary market are good fakes, but yet sell at high prices. My suggestion to anyone paying such high prices for these secondhand purses is to verify the authenticity BEFORE buying. There are people out there who are experts that certify the bag for anywhere between $35-$100. Here are three people listed in the WSJ article. Keep in mind myself and the Wall Street Journal are not endorsing these three people, but just giving you their names as a suggestion. I would recommend you also verify their experience and again, please before you buy a secondhand bag and pay thousands of dollars for it get it certified by some expert. If you wait to get it authenticated after you buy it, you’ll be heartbroken to know that you’ve overpaid for it and the chances of getting your money back are extremely low. The three people listed in the Wall Street Journal were: Paola Tapia age 35 Atlanta, Georgia, Michelle Peeters age 38 Brooklyn, NY and Zekrayat Husein age 43 San Antonio, TX. I would highly encourage anyone to again pay to have the bag certified before paying for it and you should even take a few minutes to read the article in the Saturday/Sunday, March 23/24th 2024 edition of the Wall Street Journal Section B page one titled “You spent big on a bag. Now find out if it’s real”