Tag Archives: investing

Tanger Shares Take a Wild Ride

Text size

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

Read original article here

Cathie Wood’s ARK Investment Faces Reckoning as Tech Trade Stalls

ARK Investment Management LLC’s winning bets on disruptive technology companies cemented

Cathie Wood’s

status as Wall Street’s hottest fund manager since Peter Lynch or Bill Gross.

Now, those gambits threaten to make ARK a high-profile casualty of the recent shift in investor sentiment away from tech stocks and toward cyclical shares tied to an economic upswing.

ARK runs five exchange-traded funds that actively invest in companies Ms. Wood and her team of portfolio managers believe will change the world through what they call “disruptive innovation.” Among the ETFs’ biggest holdings are electric car maker

Tesla Inc.,

payments company

Square Inc.

and streaming media firm

Roku Inc.

The stock prices of those three companies have surged at least 195% in the year since the Covid-19 pandemic upended the investing landscape—helping ARK’s funds more than double over the same period. But the stocks dropped more than 12% last week amid a broader selloff in fast-growing tech stocks, a slump many attribute to a sharp rise in government bond yields.

They have badly underperformed the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index, which dropped 4.9% last week.

Worries about a rising interest-rate environment have posed a test for ARK, exposing the vulnerabilities of its investment approach. Higher yields generally make growth stocks, including shares of big tech companies, less attractive. Plus, some of ARK’s positions are in small, illiquid stocks that have the potential to swing dramatically.

The ETFs suffered double-digit percentage decreases last week, their biggest routs since the stock market’s plunge last March, according to FactSet. Further declines among growth stocks on Tuesday and Wednesday drove even deeper drops among ARK’s funds, bringing the declines for its flagship ARK Innovation ETF to 14% over the past month.

The cascade of red has proved hard for many investors to stomach. ARK’s funds collectively lost more than $1.8 billion between Feb. 24 and Monday, their biggest stretch of outflows ever, according to FactSet. Together, they managed roughly $51 billion at the end of February, making ARK the ninth-largest ETF operator. That’s after attracting $36.5 billion in assets over the past year, more than

Invesco Ltd.

,

Charles Schwab Corp.

and First Trust—the fourth, fifth and sixth biggest ETF issuers in the U.S., according to Morningstar Direct.

But the recent outflows triggered sales across ARK’s funds to meet redemptions, while the firm also opted to dump shares of its easier-to-trade holdings, including

Apple Inc.

and

Snap Inc.,

to load up on favorites like Tesla.

With tech stocks continuing to fall, ETF analysts and traders worry that a combination of broad market declines and additional outflows could create a snowball effect across ARK’s portfolio. That could potentially cause some of its more illiquid, small-cap holdings to trade sharply lower.

Tom Staudt, ARK’s chief operating officer, dismissed concerns of any liquidity problems and said ARK’s ETFs have continued to perform as any other ETF would during the tumult.

Still, it has been a rough patch for ARK and its star stock picker, Ms. Wood.

“What a crazy week or two we’ve had here,” Ms. Wood said in a YouTube video posted Friday that was viewed by nearly 600,000 people.

Ms. Wood founded ARK in 2014 and now serves as its chief executive and chief investment officer following a 12-year stint at AllianceBernstein. Her funds’ eye-catching performance, coupled with her willingness to engage investors through social media, podcasts and videos, has earned her a variety of endearing monikers from individual investors and Reddit’s day traders, including “Mamma Cathie,” “Aunt Cathie” and, in South Korea, “Money Tree.”

“ARK’s funds fit 2020’s narrative of secular growth, but we’re now seeing a shift in that,” said Steven DeSanctis, an equities analyst at Jefferies. “It probably won’t be the last time in the near term she sees outflows,” Mr. DeSanctis added, referring to Ms. Wood.

Outside of last week’s pullback, ARK’s returns have been the envy of the asset-management industry, reviving some investors’ belief in stock pickers after more than a decade of dominance by index-tracking funds. The ARK Innovation ETF has logged an average annual return of 36% since it started trading in 2014. That compares with the S&P 500’s average return of 11% over the past 10 years.

“There’s been lots of calls with clients over the last six months as the funds gained assets, and the primary conversation has been about what happens when the funds are no longer a hot topic,” said William Kartholl, director and head of ETF trading at Cowen.

Mr. Staudt said ARK has a soft limit of about 10% on any one stock within its funds. Tesla’s stock sits at that level in ARK’s innovation and autonomous funds, as does Square in ARK’s fintech innovation pool. As for ARK’s exposure to smaller stocks, Mr. Staudt said those worries are overblown and pointed to the fact that about 15% of ARK’s innovation fund is invested in stocks with market caps below $5 billion.

If anything, the volatility has created “attractive buying opportunities” for ARK, Mr. Staudt added.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

Do you think ARK’s funds will remain susceptible to further losses and outflows? Why or why not? Join the conversation below.

ARK loaded up on more shares of Tesla,

Teladoc Health Inc.

and Square during last week’s selloff, according to ARK’s daily trading logs. It also added more shares of

Zoom Video Communications Inc.

to one of its funds earlier this week.

Amid the redemptions across ARK’s funds, the firm also sold shares in some of its more widely traded liquid stocks. The firm cut its positions in Apple and Snap last week and sold all its remaining shares in

Salesforce.com Inc.,

he added. ARK also sold shares of

Facebook Inc.,

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. and

Roche Holding AG

this week.

“It’s almost like having dry powder in the portfolio,” said Mr. Staudt, referring to how the funds basically build up a cash-like reserve to buy other stocks.

Not all investors are fazed by ARK’s bigfooted approach to investing. Flows into ARK’s innovation fund turned positive Tuesday, pulling in $464.3 million, according to FactSet.

But ARK’s most recent stumble continued to shake out others.

Paolo Campisi, a 31-year-old entrepreneur in Toronto, bought shares of ARK’s innovation fund in early February but sold his stake last week after shares dropped more than 10%. He decided to take a riskier bet on an eventual rebound by buying out-of-the money call options that expire at the end of the month. But he sold those options as well Wednesday when ARK’s flagship fund fell an additional 6.3%.

“I think everyone’s going to be challenged moving forward,” Mr. Campisi said, adding that he is unsure at what level he’d consider buying back into the fund again. “And the level of scrutiny on someone like Cathie [Wood] is going to be high.”

What You Need to Know About Investing

Write to Michael Wursthorn at Michael.Wursthorn@wsj.com

Copyright ©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here

China is sounding the alarm about a global market bubble

Guo Shuqing, the Communist Party boss at the People’s Bank of China, told reporters in Beijing on Tuesday that confidence in Chinese markets could be hit by volatility around the world.

“We are really afraid the bubble for foreign financial assets will burst someday,” said Guo, who is also chairman of China’s Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission

Guo’s warning follows concerns expressed elsewhere that bubble-like behavior is spreading through financial markets. Wall Street banks have been fielding questions from clients about whether the runaway equity boom will be followed by a crash resembling the bursting of the dot-com bubble burst 21 years ago.

Guo echoed such fears, adding that the rallies in US and European markets don’t reflect the underlying economic challenges facing both regions as they try to recover from the brutal pandemic recession.

“Such [a] bubble bust could trigger substantial foreign capital inflow to China,” wrote analysts at Mizuho Bank in a research note, adding that the regulator said he would study “effective measures” to encourage the free flow of capital while avoiding shocks to financial markets. A huge rush of funds into China could destabilize the world’s second biggest economy by rapidly inflating its currency, assets and prices.

The Chinese banking leader also said he’s worried about whether China’s property sector is at risk of volatility too — an issue that analysts say implies that the country may be ready to tighten its purse strings. President Xi Jinping told an economic conference late last year that the country needs to stabilize the property market in 2021, and Beijing has already taken some measures to do that. In December, regulators issued rules intended to limit lending to the property sector.

Local governments in China, meanwhile, have stepped up measures since the start of this year to cool the market down, including by restricting purchases and reining in developers.

Markets shaken

Guo’s remarks shook markets in the region. The Shanghai Composite (SHCOM) and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index (HSI) were both trending upward before Guo’s speech, building on Wall Street’s rally Monday. But both indexes reversed course soon after. Shanghai’s benchmark was down 1.2%, while the Hang Seng fell 1.3%.
Other indexes in the region also fell: Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 slumped 0.4%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 (N225) dropped 0.9%. South Korea’s Kospi (KOSPI) was the outlier, trading up 1% after markets there were closed Monday for a holiday.

“This indicates how sensitive markets are to policy accommodation being taken away,” wrote Stephen Innes, Chief Global Markets Strategist at Axi, in a Tuesday note. “It also highlights that central banks will run at different speeds in pulling away from last year’s crisis.”

Guo’s comments also reflect concerns from Beijing about the risk that rising debt poses to the economy. Property loans accounted for nearly 30% of total loans issued in yuan by the end of 2020, according to central bank data.

And some in China have already been suggesting that it’s time for the country to taper fiscal and monetary support — including former finance minister Lou Jinwei, who in December said that a “gradual exit” from loose policy will help stabilize and eventually reduce China’s debt ratio.

China spent hundreds of billions of dollars last year in a bid to shore up the country’s economy after the pandemic hit. Its efforts to spur activity — including through major infrastructure projects and by offering cash handouts to stimulate spending among citizens — appeared to pay off, as the economy grew 2.3% last year.
Now the country is looking to keep that momentum going while measuring how much monetary support will actually be needed. It’s also balancing the recovery with a plan to ensure that some 40% of its population receives Covid-19 vaccines by the end of June — a number that amounts to more than half a billion people.

Read original article here

Stocks week ahead: $3 gasoline could be around the corner — unless OPEC and Russia start pumping more oil

US crude has raced back above $60 a barrel. That’s a far cry from the depths it reached last April when oil crashed below zero (negative $40.32 a barrel, to be exact) for the first time in history. Prices at the pump are starting to creep higher, too. The national average hit $2.70 a gallon Friday, according to AAA. That’s well above the April low of $1.76 per gallon.

Investors are betting the pandemic will soon be under control — and that in turn will unleash pent-up demand for road trips, cruises, flights and other oil-consuming activities.

Against this backdrop, OPEC and its allies, known as OPEC+, are scheduled to meet Thursday to deliberate whether to add more barrels into to the hungry market. They’ve certainly got the firepower, and the price incentive, to do just that.
Last year, OPEC+ slashed output by a record-shattering 9.7 million barrels per day. The emergency steps, along with production cuts by US and other producers, drove a strong rebound in prices. That recovery has accelerated in recent months as millions of people around the world have gotten vaccinated against Covid.

OPEC+ could soon announce the market is now healthy enough to step up production this spring.

“Given the allure of higher prices, there should be more supply coming onto the market,” said Ryan Fitzmaurice, energy strategist at Rabobank.

Indeed, sources within OPEC+ told Reuters last week that an output increase of half a million barrels per day beginning in April is possible without building up inventories, although a final decision had not been made.

“Given where prices are, how will anyone tell Russia that they need to curtail production?” said Jim Mitchell, head of Americas oil analysts at Refinitiv.

There are several good reasons for OPEC+ to release more barrels.

First, higher prices mean countries like Saudi Arabia that rely on oil to balance their budgets can bring in badly-needed revenue.

Second, if OPEC+ doesn’t start producing more, other countries will. That includes frackers in Texas who were sidelined by the oil crash.

Bank of America strategists told clients in a recent note that OPEC+ will “preserve market share” by pumping more soon. During the second quarter alone, Bank of America expects OPEC+ to add more than 1.3 million barrels per day of supply.

There’s another reason OPEC+ will want to act before it’s too late: self-preservation.

If gasoline prices keep rising and hit $3 a gallon — and beyond — it will only accelerate clean energy investments and persuade more drivers to dump their gas-guzzling SUVs for electric vehicles.

“If oil shoots up to extreme levels,” said Rabobank’s Fitzmaurice, “that only helps the renewables story and eats away at oil demand.”

The switch to electric means more costly recalls

Hyundai is recalling 82,000 electric cars globally to replace their batteries after 15 reports of fires involving the vehicles. Despite the relatively small number of cars involved, the recall is one of the most expensive in history.

The numbers: The recall will cost Hyundai 1 trillion Korean won, or $900 million. On a per-vehicle basis, the average cost is $11,000 — an astronomically high number for a recall.

The episode signals how electric car defects could create hefty costs for automakers — at least in the near future, report my colleagues Chris Isidore and Peter Valdes-Dapena.

The recall is another indication of just how expensive EV batteries are relative to the cost of the entire car. Until the cost of batteries comes down, through greater production worldwide and economies of scale, the cost of making electric vehicles will remain higher than comparable gasoline cars.

Once batteries do become less expensive, as is expected in the coming years, electric cars could become much cheaper to build because they have fewer moving parts and require as much as 30% fewer hours of labor for assembly compared to traditional vehicles.

Fewer parts on electric vehicles could also mean that auto recalls become less common in the future. But for now, there could be significant costs if battery fire problems require battery replacements.

Up next

Monday: US ISM Manufacturing Index

Tuesday: Target, Kohl’s, AutoZone, AMC Entertainment and HP Enterprise earnings

Wednesday: US ISM Non-Manufacturing Index; EIA crude oil inventories; Dollar Tree, Stellantis and American Eagle earnings

Thursday: OPEC+ meeting; US jobless claims; Kroger, Gap and Costco earnings

Friday: US jobs report for February; Big Lots earnings

Read original article here

As rising Treasury yields spook stock investors, March looms like a lion

After a frenetic February, investors are probably hoping that March holds true to its proverb: In like a lion out like a lamb.

Indeed, February turned out to be a doozy, with benchmark bond yields, represented by the 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.415%
and the 30-year long bond
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.415%,
ringing up their biggest monthly surges since 2016, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

The move was a stark reminder to investors that bonds, considered mundane and straight-laced by some investors, can wreak havoc on the market all the same.

A final flurry of trading, some $2.5 billion in sales near Friday’s close, created a major downside drag for stocks in the final few minutes of the session and may imply that there may be more air pockets ahead before the market steadies next week.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-1.50%
and S&P 500 index
SPX,
-0.48%
barely held above their 50-day moving averages, at 30,863.07 and 3,808.40, respectively, at Friday’s close.

‘An associated 10-20% sell-off in US equities would also focus minds. But before then, the pain currently being handed out to growth-tilted equity portfolios could get worse.’ Citigroup strategists

“The turmoil is probably not over,” wrote Independent market analyst Stephen Todd, who runs Todd Market Forecast, in a daily note.

Yet, for all the bellyaching about yields running hotter than expected, stocks in February still managed to bang out solid returns. For the month, the Dow finished up 3.2%, the S&P 500 notched a 2.6% gain in February, while the Nasdaq eked out a 0.9% return, despite a 4.9% weekly loss put in on Friday that marked the worst weekly skid since Oct.30.

Many have made the case that a selloff in the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite was inevitable, especially with buzzy stocks like Tesla Inc.
TSLA,
-0.99%
only getting frothier by some measures.

“But the market has been overbought and extended all year and arguably for several months in late-2020,” wrote Jeff Hirsch, editor of the Stock Trader’s Almanac, in a note dated Thursday.

“After the big run-up in the first half of February folks have been looking for an excuse to take profits,” he wrote, describing February as the weak link in what’s usually the best six-month period of gains for the stock market.

The beneficiaries of the recent move in yields so far appear to be banks, which are benefitting from a steeper yield curve as long dated Treasury yields rise, and the S&P 500 financials sector
SP500.40,
-1.97%

XLF,
-1.91%
finished down 0.4%, which is, as it turns out, was the second-best weekly performance of the index’s 11 sectors behind energy
SP500.10,
-2.30%,
which surged 4.3%.

Utilities
SP500.55,
-1.86%
were the worst performer, down 5.1% on the week and consumer discretionary
SP500.25,
+0.58%
was second-worst, off 4.9%.

In February, energy logged a 21.5% gain as crude oil prices rose, while financials rose 11.4% on the month, booking the best and second-best monthly performances.

So what’s in store for March?

“Typical March trading comes in like a lion and out like a lamb with strength during the first few trading days followed by choppy to lower trading until mid-month when the market tends to rebound higher,” Hirsch writes.

March also sees “triple witching: occur on the third Friday, when stock options, stock-index futures and stock-index option contracts expire simultaneously.

Ultimately, seasonal trends suggest that March will be wobbly and could be used as an excuse for further selling, but on that downturn may be cathartic and give way to further gains in the spring.

“Further consolidation is likely in March, but we expect the market to find support shortly and subsequently challenge the recent highs again,” writes Hirsch, noting that April is statistically the best month of the year.


Stock Trader’s Almanac

Looking beyond seasonal trends, it isn’t certain how the rise in bond yields will play out and ultimately ripple through markets.

On Friday, the benchmark 10-year note closed at a yield of 1.459% based on 3 p.m. Eastern close, and hit an intraday peak at 1.558%, according to FactSet data. The dividend yield for S&P 500 companies in aggregate was at 1.5%, by comparison, while the Dow it is 2% and for the Nasdaq Composite is 0.7%.

As to the question of to what degree rising yields will pose a problem for equities, strategists at Citigroup make the case that yields are likely to continue to rise but the advance will be checked by the Federal Reserve at some point.

“It is unlikely that the Fed will let US real yields rise much above 0%, given high levels of public and private sector leverage,” analysts on Citi’s global strategy team wrote in a note dated Friday titled “Rising Real Yields: What to do.”

Real adjusted yields are typically associated with rates on Treasury inflation-protected securities, or TIPS, which compensate investors based on expectations for inflation.

Real yields have been running negative, which have been arguably encouraging risk taking but the coronavirus vaccine rollouts, with a Food and Drug Administration panel on Friday recommending approval for Johnson & Johnson’s
JNJ,
-2.64%
one-jab vaccine and the prospects for further COVID aid from Congress, are raising the outlook for inflation.

Citi notes that the 10 year TIPS yields dropped below minus 1% as the Fed’s quantitative easing last year was kicked off to help ease stresses in financial markets created by the pandemic, but in the past few weeks the strategists note that TIPs had climbed to minus 0.6%.

Read: Here’s what one hedge fund trader says happened in Thursday’s bond-market tantrum, which sent the 10-year Treasury yield to 1.60%

Citi speculates that the Fed might not intervene to stem disruptions in the market until investors see more pain, with the 10-year potentially hitting 2% before alarm bells ring, which would bring real yields closer to 0%.

“An associated 10-20% sell-off in US equities would also focus minds. But before then, the pain currently being handed out to Growth-tilted equity portfolios could get worse,” the Citi analysts write.

Check out: Cracks in this multidecade relationship between stocks and bonds could roil Wall Street

Yikes!

The analysts don’t appear to be adopting a bearish posture per se but they do warn that a return to yields that are closer to the historically normal might be painful for investors heavily invested in growth stock names compared against assets, including energy and financials, that are considered value investments.

Meanwhile, markets will be looking for more clarity on the health of the labor market this coming Friday when nonfarm payrolls data for February are released. One big question about that key gauge of the health of U.S. employment, beyond how the market will react to good news in the face of rising yields, is the impact the colder than normal February weather have on the data.

In addition to jobs data, investors will be watching this week for manufacturing reports for February from the Institute for Supply Management and construction spending on Monday. Services sector data for the month are due on Wednesday, along with a private-sector payroll report from Automatic Data Processing.

Read: Current bond-market selloff worse than ‘taper tantrum’ in one key way, argues analyst

Also read: 3 reasons the rise in bond yields is gaining steam and rattling the stock market

Read original article here

Housing market concerns begin to emerge

Home Depot (HD) reported earnings and sales that topped Wall Street’s forecasts Tuesday. Lowe’s (LOW) also reported better-than-expected earnings and sales on Wednesday morning, and CEO Marvin Ellison said in a statement that sales were lifted thanks to “broad-based demand driven by the continued consumer focus on the home.”
Still, rising interest rates could eventually be a problem for Home Depot and Lowe’s. Even though the Federal Reserve is expected to keep its key short-term rate near zero for the foreseeable future, longer-term bond yields have started to spike. And mortgage rates are influenced more by the 10-year Treasury than Fed rates.

In an ominous sign, Home Depot declined to give any guidance for 2021. Its shares fell 3% on the news.

“Increased demand for single-family homes has driven housing turnover and home price appreciation,” said Home Depot chief financial officer Richard McPhail during a conference call with analysts Tuesday. “However, significant uncertainty remains with respect to the course of the pandemic, the distribution of vaccines, short-term fiscal policy and how these developments will impact the broader economy and ultimately, consumer spending.”

For now, it appears that consumers are not too concerned.

The latest housing market numbers still paint a healthy picture. Consumers are eager to find more space and are willing to pay ever higher prices for homes.

S&P/Case Shiller and the Federal Housing Finance Agency reported a more than 1% monthly increase in their latest housing price reports Tuesday.

“Both surveys suggest strong momentum and support our view that the housing market remains in solid footing,” said Blerina Uruci, an economist with Barclays, in a report.

The housing market strength is helping to lift the prices of lumber too, which has also boosted Home Depot. Ed Decker, the retailer’s president, said during the earnings call that “during the fourth quarter, pricing for both framing and panel lumber” surged, helping to lift overall sales.

Forestry companies have benefited from the housing boom and soaring lumber prices as well.

Two timber exchange-traded funds with the ticker symbols of WOOD and CUT — the iShares Global Timber & Forestry (WOOD) and Invesco MSCI Global Timber (CUT) ETFs — are each up more than 5% this year and have both gained more than 25% in the past 12 months.

Builders remain confident that the housing boom won’t come to an end just yet.

Toll Brothers (TOL) reported earnings and sales after the market closed Tuesday that easily beat analysts’ expectations.

“The housing market remains very strong, driven by a tight supply of new and existing homes for sale, favorable demographic trends, low mortgage rates, and a heightened appreciation for home ownership,” said Toll Brothers CEO Douglas Yearley, Jr. in the earnings release. He added that he expects these market conditions “to continue for the foreseeable future.”

Read original article here

A tangled market web of Tesla-bitcoin-ARK Investment could spell trouble for investors, warns strategist

Tuesday is shaping up to be a tough one for technology stocks, after a selloff greeted investors to start the week.

The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-2.03%
— up 40% over the past 12 months — tumbled 2.5% on Monday over concerns rising bond yields could make those tech stocks look pricey. When so-called “risk-free” yields are climbing, it is that much tougher to justify equity valuations that seem lofty.

Leading techs lower in premarket is electric-car maker Tesla
TSLA,
-5.41%,
down 6% after a roughly 8% drop on Monday. Our call of the day comes from Saxo Bank’s head of equity strategy, Peter Garnry, who has been warning clients that Tesla is tangled up in a “risk cluster” that involves bitcoin and Cathie Wood’s ARK Investment Management firm.

Tesla announced a $1.5 billion bitcoin investment earlier this month. Along with Tesla weakness, bitcoin was down 10% early Tuesday, which some attributed to criticism from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (see below). That crypto drop will “obviously illustrate the earnings volatility that Elon Musk has delivered to Tesla,” said Garnry.

Read: Tesla bitcoin gambit already made $1 billion, more than 2020 profit from car sales, estimates analyst

Meanwhile, Tesla “is also the biggest position across all ARK Invest ETFs which added pressure to its biggest fund the ARK Disruptive Innovation Fund
ARKK,
-6.11%
losing 6% yesterday. This is exactly the risk cluster that we have been worrying about and wrote about two weeks ago,” said the strategist.

Read: Stocks aren’t in a bubble, but here’s what is, according to fund manager Cathie Wood

In the Saxo note that deep-dived into the hugely popular, actively managed fund’s holdings, Garnry highlighted ARK’s concentration in biotech names that he said could be risky if the market decides to reverse. And Tesla shares represents 6.7% of total assets under management across ARK’s five actively managed ETFs, according to the data Saxo crunched two weeks ago.

“What it means is, that a correction in equities for whatever reasons, could be higher interest rates or prolonged COVID-19 lockdowns, could set in motion selloffs across either biotechnology stocks or Tesla shares and cause performance to deteriorate which could start net outflow of AUM and then the feedback loop has started,” said Garnry, at the time.

For her part, Wood, the chief executive of ARK Invest and manager of the popular ARK Innovation exchange-traded fund, last week said she was surprised by how fast companies are adopting bitcoin, and that her “confidence in Tesla has grown.”

The markets

Stocks
DJIA,
-0.43%

SPX,
-0.78%

COMP,
-2.03%
are selling off, led by techs, with European stocks
SXXP,
-0.49%
sinking apart from some travel stocks. Asian markets had a mixed day
000300,
-0.32%.
Oil prices
CL00,
-0.19%
are rising, while the closely watched yield on the 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
1.360%
is trading at around 1.35%.

The chart

Treasury Secretary Yellen may have let some steam out of bitcoin
BTCUSD,
-13.19%
after repeating some concerns about the cryptocurrency in an interview with the New York Times’ Dealbook. Bitcoin was last down 13% to $48,886, taking a bunch of other cryptos down with it.

The buzz

All eyes on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who is kicking off two-day testimony on Capitol Hill. With more than 10 million Americans still jobless, “Mr. Powell will go out of his way, I am sure, to put tapering to bed and rightly so, as I dread to think what a taper-tantrum of the 2020s will look like,” said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst, Asia Pacific, Oanda.

We’ll also get the latest home-price indexes from S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, along with an update on consumer confidence.

Shares of home-improvement retailer Home Depot
HD,
-4.49%
are dropping despite upbeat results.

Shares of special-purpose acquisition company Churchill Capital
CCIV,
-31.65%,
also known as a blank-check company, are sinking. After weeks of rumors, Churchill finally announced a deal to buy electric-vehicle company Lucid Motors.

Mourning 500,000-plus American lives lost to COVID-19, President Joe Biden observed a moment of silence late on Monday and urged the public to “mask up.”

Social-media group Facebook
FB,
+0.83%
says it will restore links to news articles in Australia, five days after proposed media law changes in the country.

Random read

“I can mouth obscenities at people and they don’t have a clue.” Redditors on pandemic positives.

Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

Want more for the day ahead? Sign up for The Barron’s Daily, a morning briefing for investors, including exclusive commentary from Barron’s and MarketWatch writers.

Read original article here

Stocks week ahead: How bitcoin is like a teenager

What’s happening: Bitcoin’s dizzying ascent has reached new heights. The price of one bitcoin passed $20,000 for the first time in December. Last week, it breached $50,000.

The euphoria that’s swept through markets certainly plays a role, as investors chasing returns in a low-interest world eye alternative investments. But a spree of recent announcements has also made clear that cryptocurrencies are entering a new phase of maturity, as market participants treat them with growing respect.

“I think the kinds of institutions that are now starting to come into it speaks volumes about acceptance,” Greg King, the CEO of Osprey Funds, told me. Last week, his firm launched the Osprey Bitcoin Trust, which is aimed at increasing exposure for everyday investors.

It sent an important signal when Tesla (TSLA), a S&P 500 company, said it had added $1.5 billion in bitcoin to its balance sheet earlier this month, King said. Not long after, BNY Mellon — the oldest US bank — launched a digital assets unit to issue, hold and transfer bitcoin, while Mastercard (MA) said it would support “select cryptocurrencies” directly on its network later this year.
Even BlackRock (BLK), the world’s biggest asset manager, is dipping its toe in the water.

“People are looking for storehouses of value,” Rick Rieder, BlackRock’s chief investment officer of global fixed income, said in a recent interview with CNBC. “We’ve started to dabble a bit into it.”

Bitcoin is by far the top option for professional investors eying cryptocurrencies. But ether, the second largest cryptocurrency by market value, is also gaining mainstream appeal.

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange, a top derivatives marketplace, rolled out ether futures in early February. Prices have shot up since then.

King emphasized that more work is needed as cryptocurrencies come of age.

“All these institutional caliber tools that make up the capital markets ecosystem … that is still in very early stages for the crypto space,” he said.

On the radar: Most traditional market players are still vetting bitcoin, assessing the liquidity of crypto markets and how they’d respond to various shocks.

Deep skepticism remains. In a research report published last week, JPMorgan strategists called bitcoin an “economic side show,” noting that cryptocurrencies “remain several times more volatile than core asset markets,” and are still almost exclusively used for speculation and not spending.

But it’s hard to dispute the direction of travel given the events of the past month.

“The rise of digital finance and demand for fintech is the real financial transformational story of the Covid-19 era, not the rally in bitcoin prices,” JPMorgan asserted. “But the recent announcements of greater acceptance and adoption by Tesla, BNY Mellon and Mastercard confirm the increased investor demand and interest in transacting payments in cryptocurrencies.”

Biden’s stimulus bill is moving ahead

Bipartisan support may hard to come by. But after weeks of debate, President Joe Biden’s massive $1.9 trillion Covid relief bill is set to glide through Congress.

The latest: The House Budget Committee is taking steps to finalize the legislation so it can move to a general vote. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she’d like that to happen this week.

The sweeping rescue package, which would then get kicked to the Senate, is slated to include a new round of $1,400 stimulus checks, an expansion of the child tax credit and an increase in the minimum wage to $15 an hour.

Sticking point: Democrats plan to pass the legislation through a process known as reconciliation, which will allow approval in the Senate with just 51 votes. The Senate is split 50-50 along party lines. Vice President Kamala Harris has the ability to step in and act as the tie-breaker.

That means Democrats can’t afford to lose the support of even a single member of their party. And some moderate lawmakers have made it clear that the $15 minimum wage boost doesn’t have their backing.

Watching the calendar: Pelosi has said she expects the Covid relief package to be on Biden’s desk by March 14, when current jobless benefits expire. The clock is ticking.

Up next

Tuesday: US consumer confidence; HSBC (HBCYF), Home Depot (HD), Macy’s (M) and Square (SQ) earnings; Apple (AAPL) shareholders meeting
Wednesday: US new home sales; Lowe’s (LOW), Office Depot (ODP), TJX (TJX), Booking Holdings, L Brands (LB), Nvidia (NVDA) and ViacomCBS (VIACA) earnings
Thursday: Initial US jobless claims; Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD), Domino’s Pizza (DMPZF), Best Buy (BBY), Cars.com (CARS), J.M. Smucker (SJM), Moderna (MRNA), Papa John’s (PZZA), Beyond Meat (BYND), Etsy (ETSY), Live Nation (LYV), Nikola, Virgin Galactic (SPCE) and Salesforce (CRM) earnings

Friday: India GDP; US personal income and spending data; DraftKings earnings

Read original article here

Bernard Arnault: Europe’s richest man is joining the SPAC craze

Arnault’s investment holding company Financière Agache is joining forces with French asset manager Tikehau Capital and two high-profile European bankers to launch a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) that will hunt for deals in Europe’s financial services sector.

Tikehau Capital said in a statement on Monday that potential targets include asset management platforms, fintech firms, insurance services and diversified financial services companies. The focus will be on “scalable platforms offering strong profit growth potential,” it added, indicating that this will be the first of several SPACs it plans to launch.

Jean-Pierre Mustier, the former CEO of Italian bank UniCredit (UNCFF), and Diego De Giorgi, a former head of global investment banking at Bank of America (BAC) Merrill Lynch, will be the operating partners of the company, Tikehau Capital said.
SPACs, or “blank-check” companies raise capital through an IPO to buy existing businesses. They were once an obscure part of the market but have exploded in popularity. Last year, 229 SPACs in the United States raised $76 billion, up from just $13 billion in 2019, according to Goldman Sachs. A spate of new filings this year — including from former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick and Rocket Internet co-founder Oliver Samwer — indicates the pace isn’t letting up.
While European stock exchanges have so far largely missed out on the boom, there are early signs that the market is beginning to take off in the region.

Tikehau Capital did not provide details on the amount its SPAC is seeking to raise, saying only that the four sponsors plan to collectively invest at least 10% of that amount. Arnault has a net worth of $114 billion, making him the fourth richest person globally and the richest individual in Europe, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

The SPAC will IPO in Amsterdam, the latest in a series of wins for the Dutch city’s exchange. Euronext Amsterdam is one of the biggest beneficiaries from changes that mean EU financial institutions cannot trade European shares on UK exchanges after Brexit.

— Julia Horowitz contributed reporting.

Read original article here

GameStop Investors Who Bet Big—and Lost Big

Salvador Vergara was so enthusiastic about

GameStop Corp.

GME 2.54%

in late January that he took out a $20,000 personal loan and used it to purchase shares. Then the buzzy stock plunged nearly 80%.

GameStop’s volatile ride is hitting the portfolios of individual investors like Mr. Vergara who purchased the stock in a social-media-fueled frenzy. These casual traders say GameStop was their “YOLO,” or “you only live once,” trade. They bought around its late January peak, betting it would continue its astronomical climb. While some cashed out before it crashed, others who hung onto their shares are in the red.

‘I thought it could go up to $1,000. I really believed in that hype, which was an awful thing to do,’ Mr. Vergara says.



Photo:

Farrah Skeiky for the Wall Street Journal

Mr. Vergara, a 25-year-old security guard in Virginia, started investing four years ago after deciding he wanted to retire young. To save money, he drives a 1998 Honda Civic, eats a lot of rice and lives with his dad. He stashed his savings mostly in diversified index funds, which are now valued at about $50,000. Then Mr. Vergara, a longtime reader of the WallStreetBets page on Reddit, saw others posting about buying GameStop shares and the stock’s colossal rise.

He didn’t want to touch his index-fund investments, so instead he got a personal loan with an 11.19% interest rate from a credit union and used it to fund most of his GameStop purchase. He bought shares at $234 each.

Price return, year to date, 30-minute intervals

Source: FactSet

GameStop shares started the year around $19, zoomed to nearly $350 (and almost hit $500 in intraday trading) in late January, and then began to spiral back to earth. The shares closed Friday at $52.40, down 85% from the peak close.

“I thought it could go up to $1,000. I really believed in that hype, which was an awful thing to do,” Mr. Vergara said.

He plans to hold on to the shares because he believes in the company’s turnaround, he said, and use his paycheck to cover the monthly payments on the personal loan. Once the pandemic is over, he hopes to move back to his native Philippines, live off savings and start a charity. The GameStop loss set those plans back about six months, he said.

One of the artworks by Tony Moy, whose bet on GameStop stock has lost much of its value, is inspired by ‘diamond hands,’ a phrase used to describe hanging onto your position, no matter what.



Photo:

Matt Moy

Free trading and simple-to-use apps have made it much easier for regular investors to pour money into stocks like GameStop. In a world without international travel, live entertainment and other usual pastimes, brokerage apps such as Robinhood Markets Inc. are drawing hordes of new users looking for both a diversion and a jackpot.

Before the pandemic, Patrick Wesolowski checked his portfolio once a week. Then the clients of his Chicago-area dog-walking business stopped taking vacations and started working from home, crimping his income and leaving him with lots of free time.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

Do you trade individual stocks? Has your trading been influenced by conversations on Reddit or other social media sites? Join the conversation below.

With business sluggish, the 31-year-old started spending more time researching stocks to include in his $15,000 portfolio. He “lurked” on WallStreetBets, reading about other investors’ wild bets but not posting much himself. “It’s like reading ‘Florida Man’ news headlines with a Wall Street twist,” he said.

In recent months, Mr. Wesolowski found himself picking up his smartphone to check his Fidelity Investments brokerage-account balance more often. He followed the frenzy around GameStop, and when shares were approaching $300 decided to put in $3,000. Afterward, he checked his portfolio on his phone every 10 minutes. At first, watching the stock drop made him feel queasy, but then he got used to it.

“If I lose it, I lose it. I’m OK. It’s like going to Vegas,” Mr. Wesolowski said. If he still had that money, he said, he might have put it toward a personal splurge like a vacation.

Patrick Wesolowski spent more time researching stocks after the pandemic hurt his dog-walking business and bought $3,000 of GameStop shares.



Photo:

Ola Wazny

For many, GameStop represented more than just an investment. When Tony Moy bought about $1,200 of the shares, two at $379 and two more a few days later at $228, “I knew it was, intrinsically, the wrong move,” he said.

Mr. Moy wasn’t surprised when the stock quickly lost much of its value. A casual reader of WallStreetBets, he was mostly excited about the push to stick hedge funds with losses. Some hedge funds that shorted the stock—betting the price would fall—suffered big losses, though others managed to make money during the turmoil.

The trade was an outlet for Mr. Moy’s frustrations after an abysmal year, a “virtual protest” of sorts, he said. In 2020, after the pandemic shut down large gatherings, the Chicago-based artist lost most of his income from selling his work at comic conventions. He also came down with a bad case of Covid-19 that left him coughing for months. He said his more successful investing endeavors have helped him get by financially.

One of Mr. Moy’s most recent works of art is inspired by “diamond hands,” a phrase used on Reddit to describe hanging onto your position, no matter what. He is keeping his GameStop shares as a memento. “It’s going to be a little reminder to me,” he said, “of how 2020 was the year when hedge funds had a great year and everyone else was struggling.”

The recent run-up in GameStop and other stocks involved investors in opposing camps: traditional Wall Street firms and small investors bucking the system. WSJ asked the same questions to one of each about the role of WallStreetBets in the trading frenzy. Photo Illustration: Carlos Waters

Write to Rachel Louise Ensign at rachel.ensign@wsj.com

Copyright ©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Read original article here