How a resilient economy, interest rates, and earnings impact markets: Stocks in Translation podcast

    [Music]
    welcome to stocks and translation Yahoo
    finances vodcast cutting through the
    Mayhem the noisy numbers and hyperbole
    to give you the information you need to
    make the right trade for your portfolio
    today I’m joined by Ben emans he is a
    senior portfolio manager at newedge
    wealth along with our All-Star producer
    Sydney Fred uh thank you both for
    joining us here today and on the docket
    we’re going to be talking about the
    inflation Eclipse a story that Never
    Dies never getss old and our word of the
    day resilience in the market earning
    season and even life and this episode by
    the way is brought to you by the number
    100 dollars that is dollars a barrel
    could geopolitical risk end up goosing
    black gold prices back up to Triple
    digits we’re talking Brent WTI Ben let’s
    go beyond the noise we want to talk some
    markets and we’re coming off a spade of
    strong economic data in the US we just
    had ISM print above 50 that was a week
    or two ago we had jobs a week or two
    just really accelerating to the upside
    300,000 payrolls which you called by the
    way um but I you got to think are
    investors getting this wrong because it
    looks like things are getting stronger
    this prevents this presents possibly a
    problem for the FED it could be you know
    it’s a strong economy so the The
    Narrative now shifted to like why should
    you cut rates in a strong economy you
    cut rates typically when things go south
    or things go bad so I think the FED can
    stay on hold here but it has to watch
    what it’s doing because even being on
    hold you know there was one fat member
    last week again voicing the the the word
    hike you know it’s still on the table
    and that I think is not the narrative in
    the market so if you getting a strong
    economy and it continues and you have to
    bring in the hike idea again I will
    really change sentiments yeah well let
    me just bring up Jamie Diamond who just
    released his annual sharehold letter for
    JP Morgan he thinks uh rates are going
    at 8% and the 10e 10 the 10e yield right
    now is at something like
    4.45% so not even quite at 4 and a half%
    but it’s been up to five he thinks it’s
    going to eight that is substantially
    higher than anybody’s pricing in um what
    do you think about that coming from the
    most important Banker in the world I
    definitely to take note of because you
    know these numbers are let’s say
    long-term averages for the 10 year you
    know if you go back to the to the 1600s
    until now the average is about 7 and a
    half 8% in that range so that’s a long
    time very long time but you would what
    we call mean Reverb right so meaning
    like you go back to the average um why
    would this be possible you know we do
    have a deficit problem and and we’re not
    getting out of it amazingly with a
    strong economy we’re not actually
    narrowing it because just don’t have
    enough tax revenues and we’re spending
    far more than what we’ve ever done in
    the past so this will at some point have
    to be reckoned sou either change the
    whole course of fiscal policy or let the
    market sell itself out this is what d
    damy diamond is really talking about
    there will be at some point a new
    equilibrium in interest rates where
    people say I want more yield for this
    deficit risk yeah it’s always when we’re
    searching for that new equilibrium that
    things tend to go Haywire but you look
    like you had a question well I was going
    to say is Jamie Diamond the only one
    with that kind of call I don’t I don’t
    know anybody else of his stature that
    has an 8% handle on the tenure do you
    not 8% but you had Bill Amman last year
    6% maybe yeah he was making those case
    and then he backed away from it when he
    saw that that he thought it was high
    enough right as you know Trader you know
    you got to talk your book for a while
    and when the market comes in line with
    your book you shut up that’s the way it
    works um but you know we’re talking
    yields and stocks and all this kind of
    stuff and I know you always have
    questions for US based on uh your your
    uh armchair work yeah I’m thinking so
    why is it explain yields and stocks
    essentially like why is it price up
    yield down question so you have bonds
    which are inversely correlated with
    yields uh so you talk about bond prices
    when people are buying bonds that means
    the yield goes down your explanation
    yeah it’s really called a Teter totter
    you know love that not tater tot Teter
    tot tot and it’s like the idea that that
    yes there’s math really but you know if
    you if you if your yield go goes up you
    know you’re going to be having you know
    more interest to earn in the future but
    it is discounted over time that’s why
    bond is a cash flow and that leads you
    to a lower price in the future that’s
    sort of the the the math behind it so
    yes you should buy bonds when yields go
    up and then you earn more interest and
    then eventually if if the economy goes a
    different direction gets weaker then
    that high yield will be your return and
    you make that back into the price yeah
    and I think it’s important to understand
    that there are different buyers of bonds
    all around the world if we’re just
    talking about US government bonds you
    might have uh us individual retail
    investors buying through treasury direct
    they have investment dires directives of
    their own you might have Japanese uh
    people not so much anymore but
    historically when we have INF interest
    rate differentials such that the US is
    paying a lot more money on bonds people
    overseas will want to invest in the US
    bonds so when yields here get to a
    certain level even though that means
    that the price of the bond is going down
    when it when it hits that level um
    automatically people say okay I should
    be buying some of that so 3% 4% 5%
    correct me if I’m wrong here uh but
    that’s I think basically the way it
    works all right now we want to get to
    our word of the day this is resilience
    and this is not just about the
    persistently High GDP that we’ve seen uh
    that could be characterized as resilient
    the US economy uh not just about sticky
    inflation and not just the minations of
    j po and Cole at the FED uh we want to
    talk about interest rates and Company
    earnings because company earnings have
    been very resilient recently we have
    climbed out of an earnings recession
    last year I believe and uh what do you
    see we’re heading into big Bank earning
    season what’s your outlook so right now
    we’re still having sort of a
    year-on-year negative growth rate
    apparently in in earnings that’s if you
    take everything if if you strip out the
    max7 which is really high growth rate
    right you you end up with this negative
    rate but the four
    then starts to improve in fact actually
    is really interesting my my colleague
    was showing me this graph that um it
    starts to really broaden out at least
    the analysts expect that the earnings
    will improve from from a negative 3% to
    plus 10% to plus 15 20 in the following
    quarters I think that’s really your
    expectation about that resilient economy
    doesn’t get thrown of course it sounds
    like we’re at the beginning of this
    cycle so it’s not even like we’re in the
    middle and wondering are we going to
    inflect up or down there’s going to be
    some poti poal momentum to the upside
    then that’s what you would expect yeah
    that’s that’s that’s what it looks like
    and to an extent we’ve had a bit of a
    preview of it in the market since the
    October lows where we had a real
    momentum building but we haven’t seen
    the major rotation out out of these Mega
    seven stocks just yet I mean some in the
    bank or in energy but not major like so
    that’s I think next when those earnings
    come out in the future okay so uh I I
    was looking at the sector action year-to
    date energy now the number one sector
    but we also have Industrials creeping up
    that’s a cyclical play we also have
    materials that’s a cyclical play
    financials which is value and cyclicals
    um what of these groups like we’re
    waiting I mean we’ve seen a broadening
    out but what are we waiting for like is
    there an all clear signal where
    everybody’s finally on the same team I
    have an answer for that because I’ve
    been in this business long enough but
    you’re
    answer yeah I think people are watching
    the the data of sh the economy and
    what’s interesting the group groups that
    you mentioned every one of these data
    points have been really strong when you
    look at manufacturing data durable goods
    data out of production data that’s all
    linked into that those groups that have
    rallied over time but I think what
    people are waiting for still is like the
    real green light as in green where we
    are right now is obviously what the
    Federal Reserve will do you know if this
    is an economy that expands and Supply as
    PO says that will bring ultimately
    prices down the green light really for
    that rally is that rut that the fat can
    deliver as it has reached his inflation
    goal I think that’s what people are
    still waiting for yeah and when the FED
    starts I think it’s important to
    differentiate too the FED can cut rates
    proactively as a kind of an insurance or
    it can be reactive in other words
    historically they’ve seen okay we got
    the economy wrong things are
    deteriorating quickly we need to cut by
    50 basis points we need to cut you know
    four rate Cuts today that’s much
    different than these proactive rate cuts
    that I think we’re talking about now
    yeah as exactly the right word proactive
    and the reason why it’s proactive is
    because if you get inflation further
    down towards where the fat Target is and
    you will not be cutting rates you could
    actually have the situation of you
    complete opposite what we’ve been
    through spiral deflationary Spiral
    exactly you get to go to the downside
    and then you end up in a really bad
    situation where the fat has no choice
    but the slash rate so being proactive is
    in putting one two rate Cuts ahead of
    that event happening should you should
    keep you from that say that Abyss so to
    speak in in prices and and that you know
    that’s that’s why they want to achieve
    that want to do that now will they
    they’re currently kind of on a whole
    holding pan we were talking about
    because if the economy being that strong
    that there’s no need for it but they’re
    watching it obvious SE on both sides you
    know if inflation starts to pick up
    again they may have to hike but
    conversely if you having a situation
    where things turn the other direction
    binary situation yes very binary so if
    they cut in June you consider that a
    proactive cut because the economy is
    still doing well yeah and and in fact
    now in the market people have
    expectations that that probability is
    less than 50% in June on the basis of
    all the strong data so if they were to
    go ahead in June Market will take it
    like you’re throwing a little heat here
    on the fire right you wrot I just want
    to bring up you wrote something really
    interesting and one of your newsletters
    that I want to bring up and that’s you
    know when we talk about central banks in
    the FED we got to consider that there
    are other central banks in the world and
    that this is an entire ecosystem and uh
    you were saying in one of your
    newsletters how the ECB could actually
    cut first and that could potentially if
    I’m reading this right take pressure off
    of the FED um how that’s something I
    hadn’t considered before so how explain
    that Dynamic for us right so if you look
    at the since the pandemic that all the
    central banks followed each other almost
    syn in a synchronized way everybody had
    to ratchet up the the policy rate much
    higher than they have ever done
    of last 20 years and much faster so
    emerging markets were first to do that
    and once they sort of did that they were
    able to lower rates exactly for similar
    reasons somewhat proactive because
    inflation started to come off of
    Emerging Markets but in the developed
    markets Europe us Japan we haven’t
    gotten to that point yet so now the ECB
    seems to be much more in that position
    to do so they have this meeting this
    week by the way they will likely signal
    strongly that they will go ahead and
    lower rates in June and that does take
    the pressure of the markets of
    everybody’s expectations because once
    one Central Bank like that goes ahead
    with lowering rates there will be others
    that will follow that has been
    historically that way and that’s really
    because these economies are so link to
    each other that if the ECB is in the
    position to low rates because the
    economy is weak enough that the the
    prices are moderating then the FED will
    eventually follow too all right we got
    to pause for a quick break here so for
    our viewers on streaming platforms forms
    we’re going to take a quick break and
    for everybody else we’re going to carry
    on with the show here Sid you look like
    you had a question on the tip of your
    tongue I I wasn’t a question I was going
    to State for the record that I would
    like the FED to cut in May for the drama
    oh wow I I want I want everyone to be
    shocked I want us to like not have the
    full screen prepped or whatever when the
    Dow is down 1500 points I can just show
    you the screen and say it’s Sid’s fault
    and say my money is draining from my
    accounts all right all right but I I I
    like the drama of a surprise we got you
    cut we might get some drama yeah well it
    really plays into the idea of salame and
    go away go
    recovery salame and go away all right
    now it’s time to get technical on some
    definitions here that we call jargon
    Busters and today we’re going to take a
    look at net interest margin and
    according to Investopedia net interest
    margin is a measure of the difference
    between the interest rate paid and the
    interest rate received and this is
    adjusted for the total amount of
    interest generating assets held by the
    bank so basically Banks try to borrow at
    low rates they try to lend at a higher
    rate and they pocket the difference um
    so what what this is kind of a cyclical
    phenomenon so where are we in the
    business cycle and what’s happening with
    net interest margin now and going short
    term into the future so it’s amazing
    that the net interest margin has been
    fairly stable even though the yield
    curve is in now the term structure of
    interest rates is in twoe
    it’s been inverted for over 15 months
    yeah longest inversion we’ve had since
    the 1980s people have always connected
    the inversion of the Yi curve with a
    narrowing interest rate margin but I
    think what banks have been able to do is
    that they earn a lot of interest on
    short dated assets Securities or or or
    deposits um and as a result have been
    able to sustain that margin while
    there’s a lot of loan demand in the
    economy because the economy is good and
    that that spread is relatively stable
    and and I think for the yield is
    therefore not mattered at this point at
    some point it will but banks have always
    been able to capitalize on that too once
    the UK becomes normally slope like
    positive slope then Banks would probably
    buy longer dated assets and earn that
    yield and have you know the remain of
    deposits pay out of a very low interest
    and make money that way so I think
    they’ve been pretty smart about how to
    manage it but that it is a a uh a
    cyclical phenomenon is clear you know
    because it will change like so the
    margin is could actually actually if
    you’re getting a normal uker it probably
    will widen the net interest margins all
    right something to pay attention to as
    we get these big Bank earnings starting
    later this week and now yes yeah I was
    just going to say uh I know Delta is
    Wednesday and Delta’s big but Bank
    earnings are always first first St why
    why I mean back in the day it was Alcoa
    which was an aluminum is an aluminum
    Alcoa was number one just because they
    were number one it has I look banks are
    huge entities and they’re reporting on a
    quarter which just ended basically 10
    days ago for them not even 10 business
    days so that’s incredibly short they
    have the resources to do this I think
    it’s just because they’re so big and you
    know on their game your thoughts yeah I
    think it’s really sort of more of a I
    call like a red herring idea like is in
    you know there’s a calar issue here
    smaller companies get up to 90 days
    something like
    big guys go pretty quickly it’s also
    board driven right me companies can make
    a decision when to report you know
    that’s that’s you know there has been
    companies who I they also by the way
    make a decision whether they would give
    guidance on future earnings we’ve had
    for some companies not giving guidance
    for some time because of the pandemic
    others have given guidance much sooner
    so that matters I think too I’m not
    otherwise sure why the are first but
    everybody’s looking at the banks first
    and that it maybe the way it is is like
    as the banks goes the the rest of the
    earning season goes I mean they are
    definitely in in the big attention right
    now because they have there’s a lot of
    Market activity happening yeah for sure
    so the their results are probably going
    to be strong from reads on the consumer
    to uh the m&a market uh IPOs everything
    all right we got to move on here this
    episode brought to you by the number 100
    and that refers to dollars a barrel that
    is the WTI price and this is a number
    that has woven its way through the
    financial fabric of the SpaceTime
    Continuum recently ly as the debate
    about $100 crude oil returns to the four
    we’re talking about the impact of
    geopolitics and oil like most
    Commodities is mean reverting so it’s
    range-bound and most of the price
    activity that we’ve seen in WTI over the
    last year has been from the mid-60s to
    the low 90s so maybe $25 a barrel but
    what happens if we see WTI and Brent
    ticking higher 85 for WTI Brent 990
    another $10 we’re talking about $100 oil
    how does that change game I want to end
    psychological as in you know this is an
    important Milestone $1 barrels like I
    know you can see the headlines in the
    newspaper I’m picturing a barrel with
    the Benjamin on top something like that
    and you know and and and people will
    will look at gas prices immediately
    which by the way have also been on the
    rise Nationwide it’s up about 6% over
    the past month and so I think that is
    for that reason um it’s not targeted by
    OPEC in itself they don’t have put out a
    specific number what is in interesting
    from OPAC maybe not as known is that all
    these countries calculate the oil price
    where they break even on their on their
    fiscal budget now that price the fiscal
    Break Even price is actually about $95
    on average currently across most OPEC
    members so there’s something about $100
    a barrel that that’s important to them
    um you know ultimately it’s all the the
    oil Market is much about Supply and
    inventory and now as we know OPEC has
    been contined to cut
    production um not everybody’s complied
    with that but they’ve been able to do it
    so far and keep it together that’s why
    the market has been pricing towards that
    $100 a barrel as opposed to if they
    didn’t like and they get all this
    Discord with each other then it would
    that that $100 a barrel would not be so
    likely yeah and you’re right it is a lot
    about the headlines because anytime I
    see a $100 barrel of oil especially when
    it’s been locked in a lower trading
    range know it piques my attention as
    well um I want to stick with commodities
    here and talk about
    gold and um something really interesting
    another thing I learned from your
    newsletter you’ve been tracking the term
    structure of gold not only in the
    Futures Market but spot gold versus
    Futures gold and uh just real quick if
    you have a gold contract in the Futures
    let’s say you want to invest in gold
    through the Futures Market you’re buying
    maybe December uh 2024 delivery gold
    that means gold that’s going to be dece
    uh delivered at the end of this year
    well that’s several months away and so
    you’re paying
    uh you have to store somebody else has
    to store it in the interim and so
    there’s going to be a price there if you
    want to buy it you have to maybe borrow
    money so there’s a risk-free interest
    rate and so storage costs and interest
    rates risk-free interest rates those
    play mathematically into these
    calculations of future prices so what
    we’re seeing now is an aberration that’s
    where the spot price it looks to be
    climbing above the Futures prices and
    just explain how that uh what that means
    for us yeah it’s a very unque unique
    situation in in the gold market it
    happens a lot in oil because of that it
    is ultim really about Supply and as we
    know with gold it has a very limited
    outstanding Supply and Mining activities
    have have slowed down a lot and they
    haven’t found much gold over the last
    couple years and China has been one of
    the central banks has been on the
    physical gold market accumulating large
    volumes of gold so that’s driven up the
    spot gold price the actual price that
    way you pay for physical gold you you
    can actually go to to to like gold
    exchanges or retailers and if you try to
    buy gold it’s not that simple anymore
    and that’s that’s it’s gets sold out
    really quick so I think this back what
    we call backwardation is that’s the term
    for it in in the in the Futures Market
    when this the the spot price gold is
    higher than Futures that’s really I
    think there’s just not enough gold
    Supply available in the market and
    therefore you’re getting a higher spot
    price when you buy gold Futures what you
    were saying earlier someone literally
    has to store the gold for you somewhere
    well what does it mean okay is it a
    piece of paper so we’ve opened up a
    giant can of worms if we can if we had
    another 3 hours we could explain um
    basically we don’t have we don’t have
    three
    hours okay no short explanation um is
    there a short explanation the question
    um always the question okay if you buy
    when you’re buying gold features is it
    gold that someone is storing for you or
    you’re just buying something in the
    universe that it’s a theoretical
    calculation it’s basically a promise so
    to speak on the promise promise I
    want gold end promise it will be 2500 in
    the future and it’s and it’s paper gold
    and there’s all kinds of nice conspiracy
    theories there so we’re just going to
    leave that where it is and not touch
    that um oh we have a fun segment before
    we go so at here at stocks and
    translation we do like to roll out the
    red carpet but no new movie today no
    movie stars we do have charts yes we do
    have a movie along with a new spin on an
    old Hollywood gossip segment who wore it
    better and today we’re zeroing in on
    bitcoin and gold that’s right the other
    Bitcoin don’t write letters both the
    yellow metal and digital gold gold
    recently surged to Fresh record highs
    but each took a vastly different Journey
    Bitcoin it peaked in late 2021 promptly
    shed over 34 of value over the next year
    before furiously launching to record
    highs last year and we’ve seen it
    continue this year meanwhile gold peaked
    in early in the early in the pandemic
    and this was a year before Bitcoin
    peaked it spent over three years trying
    to punch through $2,100 per ounce Max
    draw down was only 22% in Gold versus a
    78% draw down in Bitcoin so the bottom
    line is both Bitcoin and gold they
    rocketed from technical Purgatory but
    which one wore that better which one
    wore the breakout better I think it was
    Bitcoin you know because has been it was
    a a currency was such in hibernation
    that I call it right oh winter winter
    sleeping you know sleep in hibernation
    in the winter and it awoken suddenly and
    it was all about that you know one I
    guess exting yeah exciting it’s it’s
    it’s a recognition the technology is
    adopted more and more everywhere
    blockchain technology in this case um
    and and they talk about what they say
    having oh that’s a big one look at the
    previous having they’ve been
    tremendously bullish and I think the
    bottom line is I got I got to vote with
    crypto too um I I got to go with crypto
    because it’s exciting and gold all right
    so we’re talking about a replacement
    currency some people talk about that you
    don’t want a lot of volatility so that’s
    not a that’s not necessarily a feature
    you probably want something with less
    volatility like gold nevertheless uh we
    do look like we have to go go here so we
    got to say thank you for Ben Ben thank
    you for joining us here today Sydney as
    always and we will see you another day
    that was finances stocks and translation
    with our Master stats guy Jared blicker
    he knows how to cut through the
    headlines and noisy data points to give
    you the inside scoop now you know why
    the FED has a 2% inflation Target but
    doesn’t stop there I’ve got some chatter
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    Inflation is on the top of everyone’s minds as expenses continue to pile up and cause volatility throughout the market. Oil (BZ=F, CL=F) remains in flux as geopolitical tensions endure while the flow of goods through that region are also in trouble. While issues persist, parts of the market continue to thrive on the heels of a big week of earnings and economic data.
    Yahoo Finance Markets Reporter Jared Blikre is joined by NewEdge Wealth senior portfolio manager Ben Emons for the latest episode of Stocks in Translation to discuss where to find resilience in the market, give incredible insight into potential moves from the Federal Reserve, the energy sector, and more.
    #youtube #news #stockmarket
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    4 Comments

    1. If the economy is "good" as these people repeat every 30 seconds; then why do 76% of Americans polled say that the economy is going in the wrong direction? And why is credit card debt at an all time high, with delinquencies on credit cards, auto loans and mortgages at 15 year highs?

    2. High rates don't mean a bad economy, quite the opposite. The Fed has to keep the rates high to bring down inflation because the economy is so strong. These same people complaining about high costs have jobs and higher wages. The Fed could lower the loan costs – then car and house prices could jump 20..30%. I'd rather have higher rates temporarily.

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