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Tanger Shares Take a Wild Ride

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A worker carries a broom past closed stores at the Tanger Outlets center in Atlantic City, N.J. Shares of Tanger surged on Thursday.


Angus Mordant/Bloomberg


Tanger Factory Outlet Centers

took a wild ride on Thursday, the latest hot potato stock caught in a short squeeze.

The mall operator has a high amount of short interest, currently more than 33% of its shares, according to FactSet. That makes it among the most heavily shorted stocks along with

GameStop

(30.2%),

Rocket Cos.

(39.7%), and

GoodRx Holdings

(27.6%), according to MarketWatch data.

Shares of Tanger (ticker: SKT) jumped 22% Thursday morning to hit a 52-week high before settling down. By midafternoon, they had lost steam completely and were down 5.4%. The stock is up 38% over the last year, compared with a 20% one-year gain in the

S&P 500.

Malls have been among the most downtrodden stocks during the pandemic, forced to temporarily close locations and restrict the number of shoppers while also juggling budget-strapped tenants facing the same challenges. 

Tanger has been a topic on a Reddit forum called WallStreetBets. One post from Wednesday said “SKT is about to reach its highest point since may 2019 and it’s the second most shorted stock after GME. You know what to do!”

“Lets make this explode,” the post says. “Help bring this stock to the spotlight and make it the new GME.”

A spokesman for Tanger wasn’t immediately available on Thursday.

WSB on Reddit is the forum where stock trading enthusiasts share ideas. It’s also a big focus of those investigating the run-up in

GameStop

(GME),

AMC Entertainment Holdings

(AMC), and other stocks a few weeks ago in a trading frenzy described as retail investors going after professional short sellers.

The average rating of the six analysts who publish research on Tanger is Underweight, the equivalent of a Sell. Full-year 2020 revenue fell 10%, to $370 million, according to FactSet.

Write to liz.moyer@barrons.com

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World’s first space HOTEL to begin construction in low Earth orbit in 2025

Work is due to start on the world’s first ‘space hotel’ in low Earth orbit in 2025 – and it will come equipped with restaurants, a cinema, spa and rooms for 400 people.

Developed by the Orbital Assembly Corporation (OAC), the Voyager Station could be operational as early as 2027, with the infrastructure built in orbit around the Earth.

The space station will be a large circle and rotate to generate artificial gravity that will be set at a similar level to the gravity found on the surface of the Moon.  

Voyager Station’s hotel will include many of the features you might expect from a cruise ship, including themed restaurants, a health spa and a cinema.

It will feature a series of pods attached to the outside of the rotating ring and some of these pods could be sold to the likes of NASA and ESA for space research. 

No details of cost to build the space station, or the cost of spending a night in the hotel have been revealed, although OAC say build costs are getting cheaper thanks to reusable launch vehicles like the SpaceX Falcon 9 and the future Starship.   

Developed by the Orbital Assembly Corporation (OAC), the Voyager Station could be operational as early as 2027, with the infrastructure built in orbit around the Earth

The space station will be a large circle and rotate to generate artificial gravity that will be set at a similar level to the gravity found on the surface of the Moon

Voyager station’s hotel will include many of the features you might expect from a cruise ship, including themed restaurants, a health spa and a cinema

VOYAGER STATION: A SPACE HOTEL BUILT ON RINGS

The Voyager space station will be rotating to produce Moon-level artificial gravity.

There will be an inner ‘docking ring’ which is un-pressurised to allow ships to unload passengers and cargo.

There will then be a habitation ring which will include a number of modules along the outer edge. This includes a gym, kitchen, restaurant, bar and crew quarters.

Other modules will be privately or government owned, including villas, hotels or commercial activity zones. 

The Voyager Class space station will be made up of a series of rings, with a number of ‘modules’ attached to the outermost of the rings.

Some of these 24 modules will be run by the Gateway Foundation and will be for things like crew quarters, air, water and power.

They will also include a gym, kitchen, restaurant, bar and other essential facilities for people due to be on the station longer term.

The other modules will be leased or sold to private companies and governments.

For example, people could buy one of the 20×12 metre modules for a private villa or multiple modules to create a hotel with spa, cinema and more.

Government agencies could use the station to house their own science module or as a training centre for astronauts preparing to go to Mars. 

The idea of an orbiting space station build around a central, circular wheel goes back to the earliest days of space travel, in an idea by Wernher von Braun.

He was one of the architects of the NASA Apollo programme and in the 1950s proposed a wheel-shaped habitat spinning to create artificial gravity.

The concept for the Voyager station, which is a similar idea but on a much larger scale, first came about in 2012 with the launch of the Gateway Foundation.

OAC, the firm established by the foundation to realise the vision of an orbiting station, was established in 2018 with the goal of it being operational by 2027.

It will feature a series of pods attached to the outside of the rotating ring and some of these pods could be sold to the likes of NASA and ESA for space research

Some of these 24 modules will be run by the Gateway Foundation and will be for things like crew quarters, air, water and power

LUNAR GRAVITY

Lunar gravity is about 1/6th the level of gravity found on Earth, and this is the level being proposed for the station.

Due to the nature of the spinning disk this can be increased or decreased by spinning faster or slower.

Lunar gravity is 1.6 metres per second, on Earth it is 9.8 metres per second – due to relative size of stellar bodies.

While your mass won’t change on the space station, you will feel lighter. At lunar gravity a 140lb person would weigh just over 23lb.

The station can also be ramped up to Mars gravity – which is 40% of the Earth’s at 3.7 metres per second.

This means the same 140lb person on Earth would weigh 52lb.

Testing the rate of gravity our body can handle will help in future long-haul spaceflight.

Future versions of the space station could see different sections gravity changed at different rates to help with scientific research or to cater for different hospitality sectors. 

If fully realised it will be the largest human created object ever put into space.

While the cost of developing and building the space station haven’t been revealed, with the launch of the SpaceX Falcon 9 and in future the SpaceX Starship, it has become more viable to put large objects into orbit.

The average cost of launching material to space has been about $8,000 per kg for a long time, but the reusable nature of the Falcon 9 saw this come down to $2,000/kg and SpaceX predicts Starship will bring it to a few hundred dollars. 

Starship and other future fully reusable spacecraft will make the station viable as it will allow for regular and rapid connections between Earth and Voyager. 

The team include NASA veterans, pilots, engineers and architects, building a system that includes multiple pods for different purposes and a high-speed ‘space train’.

Each of these 24 integrated habitation modules will be 20 metres long by 12 metres wide and will carry a different function – from hotel rooms to movie theatres.

The firm also expects their ring to include viewing lounges, concert venues, bars, libraries, gyms and a spa – all things you’d see on a cruise ship, but this one will cruise around the whole world every 90 minutes. 

First the team plan to test the concept with a much smaller scale prototype station and a free-flying microgravity facility similar to the International Space Station.

‘This will be the next industrial revolution,’ explained John Blincow, founder of the Gateway Foundation, adding it will create a new space industry. 

Rotation is ‘vital’ says Blincow, as it isn’t viable to have people on a space station without gravity for long periods of time – and people may want to be in space for months at a time, especially when working in a hotel.

‘People need gravity so their bodies won’t fall apart,’ said Blincow, adding that the station can help understand just how much gravity our bodies need as it will be able to increase or decrease the rate of rotation to have higher or lower gravity. 

While the cost of developing and building the space station haven’t been revealed, with the launch of the SpaceX Falcon 9 and in future the SpaceX Starship, it has become more viable to put large objects into orbit

The firm also expects their ring to include viewing lounges, concert venues, bars, libraries, gyms and a spa – all things you’d see on a cruise ship, but this one will cruise around the whole world every 90 minutes

Rotation is ‘vital’ says Blincow, as it isn’t viable to have people on a space station without gravity for long periods of time – and people may want to be in space for months at a time, especially when working in a hotel

When the testing is complete a robot named STAR – Structure Truss Assembly Robot – will build the frame for Voyager in orbi.

The first space construction will be a prototype 61 metre gravity ring in low Earth orbit that can spin up to create gravity at Mars’ level – 40% of Earth’s gravity.

That will take about two years to construct and has been called a ‘near-term demonstrator’ – when in space putting it together will take three days. 

While the hotel is the initial goal of the artificial gravity space station, the company hope to lease pod space to agencies including NASA and ESA in future. 

EXPLAINED: THE $100 BILLION INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION SITS 250 MILES ABOVE THE EARTH

The International Space Station (ISS) is a $100 billion (£80 billion) science and engineering laboratory that orbits 250 miles (400 km) above Earth.

It has been permanently staffed by rotating crews of astronauts and cosmonauts since November 2000. 

Research conducted aboard the ISS often requires one or more of the unusual conditions present in low Earth orbit, such as low-gravity or oxygen.

ISS studies have investigated human research, space medicine, life sciences, physical sciences, astronomy and meteorology.

The US space agency, Nasa, spends about $3 billion (£2.4 billion) a year on the space station program, a level of funding that is endorsed by the Trump administration and Congress.

A U.S. House of Representatives committee that oversees Nasa has begun looking at whether to extend the program beyond 2024.

Alternatively the money could be used to speed up planned human space initiatives to the moon and Mars.

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Despite surging stocks and home prices, U.S. inflation won’t be a problem for some time

When America’s amusement parks and baseball stadiums no longer must serve as COVID-19 mass vaccination sites, some investors believe that households pocketing pandemic financial aid from the government might start to splurge.

While a consumer splurge could initially boost the parts of the economy devastated by the pandemic, a bigger concern for investors is that a sustained spending spree also could cause prices for goods and services to rise dramatically, dent financial asset values, and ultimately raise the cost of living for everyone.

“I don’t think inflation is dead,” said Matt Stucky, equity portfolio manager at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management Company. “The desire by key policy makers is to have it, and it’s the strongest it’s ever been. You will see rising inflation.”

Wall Street investors and analysts have become fixated in recent weeks on the potential for the Biden Administration’s planned $1.9 trillion fiscal stimulus package that targets relief to hard-hit households to cause inflation to spiral out of control.

Economists at Oxford Economics said on Friday they expect to see the “longest inflation stretch above 2% since before the financial crisis, but it’s unlikely to sustainably breach 3%.”

Severe inflation can hurt businesses by ratcheting up costs, pinching profits and causing stock prices to fall. The value of savings and bonds also can be chipped away by high inflation over time. 

Another worry among investors is that runaway inflation, which took hold in the late 1970s and pushed 30-year mortgage rates to near 18%, could force the Federal Reserve to taper its $120 billion per month bond purchase program or to raise its benchmark interest rate above the current 0% to 0.25% target sooner than expected and spook markets.

At the same time, it’s not far-fetched to argue that some financial assets already have been inflated by the Fed’s pedal-to-the-metal policy of low rates and an easy flow of credit, and might be due for some cooling off.

U.S. stocks, including the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.09%,
S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.47%
and Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+0.50%
closed on Friday at all-time highs, while debt-laden companies can now borrow in the corporate “junk” bond, or speculative-grade, market at record low rates of about 4%.

Read: Stock market stoked by stimulus hopes — what investors are counting on

In addition to rallying stocks and bonds, home prices in the U.S. also have gone through the roof during the pandemic, despite the U.S. still needing to recoup almost as many jobs from the COVID-19 crisis as during the worst of the global financial crisis in 2008.

This chart shows that jobs lost to the pandemic remain near to levels seen in the aftermath of that last crisis.

Job losses need to be tamed


LPL Research, Bureau of Labor Statistics

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday that he doesn’t expect a “large or sustained” outbreak of inflation, while also stressing that the central bank remains focused on recouping lost jobs during the pandemic, as the U.S. looks to makes serious headway in its vaccination program by late July. 

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Friday reiterated a call on Friday that the time for more, big fiscal stimulus is now.

“Broadly, the guide is, does it cost me more to live a year from now than a year prior,” Jeff Klingelhofer, co-head of investments at Thornburg Investment Management, said about inflation in an interview with MarketWatch.

“I think what we need to watch is wage inflation,” he said, adding that higher wages for upper income earners were mostly flat for much of the past decade. Also, many lower-wage households hardest hit by the pandemic have been left out of the past decade’s climb in financial asset prices and home values, he said.

“For the folks who haven’t taken that ride, it feels like a perpetuation of inequality that’s played out for some time,” he said, adding that the “only way to get broad inflation is with a broad overheating of the economy. We have the exact opposite. The bottom third are no where near overheating.”

Klingelhofer said it’s probably also a mistake to watch benchmark 10-year Treasury yields for signs that the economy is overheating and for inflation since, “it’s not a proxy for inflation. It’s just a proxy for how the Fed might react,” he said.

The 10-year Treasury yield
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.209%
has climbed 28.6 basis points in the year to date to 1.199% as of Friday.

But with last year’s sharp price increases, is the U.S. housing market at least at risk of overheating?

“Not at current interest rates,” said John Beacham, the founder and CEO at Toorak Capital, which finances apartment buildings and single family rental properties, including those going through rehabilitation and construction projects.

“Over the course of the year, more people will go back to work,” Beacham said, but he added that it’s important for policy makers in Washington to provide a bridge for households through the pandemic, until spending on socializing, sporting events, concerts and more can again resemble a time before the pandemic.

“Clearly, there likely will be short-term consumption increase,” he said. “But after that it normalizes.”

The U.S. stock and bond markets will be mostly closed on Monday for the Presidents Day holiday.

On Tuesday, the only tidbit of economic data comes from the New York Federal Reserve’s Empire State manufacturing index, followed Wednesday by a slew of updates on U.S. retail sales, industrial production, home builders data and minutes from the Fed’s most recent policy meeting. Thursday and Friday bring more jobs, housing and business activity data, including existing home sales for January.

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Tech Stocks Propel S&P 500 Higher

Technology stocks led the S&P 500 higher Thursday, pushing the broad index toward its first gain in three trading sessions.

Shares of chip companies, IT services providers, electronic equipment and software companies all rallied, pulling tech stocks in the S&P 500 up about 1%. Those gains, while most other sectors were either marginally higher or trading in the red, led the S&P 500 up 0.2% in midday trading following two straight days of losses.

That also helped pull the Nasdaq Composite up 0.4%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which has less exposure to tech compared with the S&P 500, was mostly flat after notching a record a day earlier.

Some solid earnings supported the gains, along with ongoing expectations of additional relief measures by Congress to support the economy, analysts and investors said. The latter got a boost after fresh data showed that 793,000 Americans applied for first-time unemployment benefits in the week ended Feb. 6, while new applications for the prior week were revised higher to 812,000.

“There is still obviously a significant number of jobs that have been lost, and there is clearly a need for more fiscal support,” said Shoqat Bunglawala, head of multiasset solutions, international, at Goldman Sachs Asset Management.

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