Wednesday, 6 November 2024

Trump 2.0? A Republican Trifecta? A Payback Presidency?

Baltic Dry Index. 1405 +31            Brent Crude  74.33

Spot Gold 2739                  US 2 Year Yield 4.19 +0.02

Five percent of the people think; ten percent of the people think they think; and the other eighty-five percent would rather die than think.

Thomas A. Edison.

As I write this morning, it’s still too early to know the final results of the US elections, but the early signs point to a win for Donald Trump and a likely Republican win in the Senate and House.

That was certainly the way that Wall Street had bet.

By this time tomorrow, we will likely know the final tally.

Dow futures jump 500 points, Russell 2000 futures rise 2% as traders bet Trump winning: Live updates

Updated Wed, Nov 6 2024 12:46 AM EST

Stock futures rose sharply in overnight trading as investors started to speculate that former President Donald Trump may have an edge in the presidential race.

Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 548 points, or about 1.3%. S&P 500 futures gained 1.1% and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 1%.

Bitcoin jumped to a record high, and the U.S. dollar — which was expected by Wall Street to rise in the event of a Trump win — was also rallying on Tuesday night. Futures for the small cap benchmark Russell 2000, also a projected Trump beneficiary, jumped 2.5%.

Shares of Trump Media & Technology Group, a social media company closely tied to the candidate, surged 40% in overnight trading on the Robinhood brokerage platform.

The 10-year Treasury yield surged to around 4.45% on speculation Trump’s proposed tax cuts and other spending plans would increase the fiscal deficit, while possible tariffs could reignite inflation.

Americans cast their votes across the country in the tight race between Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. By shortly after 12:30 a.m. ET, NBC News had projected that Trump had won 246 electoral college votes, including the battleground states of North Carolina and Georgia. Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are still too close to call. He needs 270 electoral college votes to win. Follow CNBC’s 2024 election live blog here.

NBC News also projected that Republicans would retake the Senate, but control of the House of Representatives remains undecided.

Goldman Sachs predicts that a Trump win and Republican sweep of Congress would spark a 3% pop in the S&P 500. Even a Trump win and a divided Congress would cause about a 1.5% gain, the bank predicts. On the other hand, a Harris win with a divided Congress would cause a 1.5% drop in the S&P 500, the bank told its clients.

“I very much ascribe to that view that a Trump victory would be very good for stocks,” Jason Trennert, chairman at Strategas, said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Power Lunch.” “And I think a Harris victory would not be particularly good for risk assets.”

More

Stock market today: Live updates

Asia-Pacific markets mixed after Wall Street rallies ahead of U.S. election results

Updated Wed, Nov 6 2024 12:13 AM EST

SINGAPORE — Asia-Pacific markets were mixed Wednesday after Wall Street surged overnight ahead of the U.S. presidential election results.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 was leading gains, up 2%, while the Topix rose 1.5%.

The Bank of Japan September monetary policy meeting minutes showed members were in agreement over the central bank raising rates if economic and price growth meets expectations.

South Korea’s Kospi was trading down 1%, while the Kosdaq fell 1.3%.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 2.7%, while mainland China’s CSI 300 was flat in choppy trading.

A five-day meeting of China’s National People’s Congress will continue on Wednesday, with investors watching for information on additional stimulus and polices aimed at stabilizing the economy.

In a meeting on Tuesday, the head of the People’s Bank of China said that the central bank planned to maintain supportive monetary policy, according to state media.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.83% to end at 8,199.5.

Overnight in the U.S., the S&P 500 index gained 1.23% to close at 5,782.76, while the Nasdaq Composite advanced 1.43% to 18,439.17. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 427.28 points, or 1.02%, to settle at 42,221.88.

The race between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris is expected to be tight. Focus will also be on Congressional polling, given that a sweep by either party could impact spending and tax policy.

Asia markets live updates: U.S. election, China NPC, BOJ meeting minutes

Republicans will win Senate majority, NBC News projects

Published Wed, Nov 6 2024 12:40 AM EST

Republicans are expected to regain majority control of the U.S. Senate in 2025, according to NBC News.

Democrats entered Tuesday’s elections with 47 seats out of 100 in the Senate. But the four independents in the chamber caucus with Democrats, giving the party a one-seat majority.

Republicans arguably faced an easier path to regaining a Senate majority this election cycle.

The GOP was defending just 11 seats where candidates were seeking reelection, compared with 23 seats that Democrats were trying to retain.

In Ohio, Republican nominee Bernie Moreno was projected by NBC News to unseat incumbent Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown, boosting the GOP effort.

Another pickup for Republicans came in West Virginia, where Gov. Jim Justice cruised to victory in the race to replace Sen. Joe Manchin, who did not seek reelection to his seat, to which he had been elected a Democrat. Manchin quit the party in May.

In Nebraska, incumbent Republican Sen. Deb Fischer won re-election.

A total of more than $1 billion was expected to be spent by Election Day on winning just three of the seats at stake, in Montana, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Republicans will win Senate majority, NBC News projects

In other news, would the last one out of the German auto factories remember to turn out the lights.

German Auto Parts Manufacturer Lays Off 4,700 Employees

5 November 2024

German automotive parts maker Schaeffler AG announced plans to eliminate 4,700 jobs across Europe, following a 45% drop in third-quarter profit this year.

Bulk Layoffs In Germany

Schaeffler, which supplies components to major automakers worldwide, is the latest in a series of companies within the automotive industry hit hard by the shifting market dynamics and mounting global competition.

Schaeffler cited several factors driving the decision, including intensifying competition, rising costs, and an ongoing shift within the automotive sector, especially in the supply chain segment.

“This is the company’s response to the challenging market environment, growing global competition, and the transformation of the automotive industry, particularly in the supply chain,” Schaeffler said in a statement according to Ziare

The bulk of layoffs — approximately 2,800 positions — will occur in Germany across ten sites. Additionally, Schaeffler announced plans to close two facilities elsewhere in Europe but did not specify which locations would be affected.

These measures are expected to save Schaeffler about €290 million ($310 million) annually through 2029, with an upfront cost of approximately €580 million ($620 million).

$640 Million in Cost Savings

Schaeffler has also been investing in electric vehicle (EV) components to adapt to the market’s shift away from traditional combustion engines.

In October, the company announced plans to acquire Vitesco, a manufacturer specializing in EV parts, with the goal of expanding Schaeffler’s EV product line and reducing costs.

Schaeffler projects that the acquisition will lead to €600 million ($640 million) in cost savings by 2029.

The decision to downsize comes as the global automotive sector faces significant challenges, including high inflation, supply chain disruptions, and declining demand for internal combustion vehicles.

Rising costs for raw materials and energy have put pressure on profit margins, leading many automakers and suppliers to restructure and streamline operations. Moreover, consumer demand for new cars has dropped in some regions, partly due to economic uncertainties and rising interest rates, which have made financing new vehicles more expensive.

In the third quarter of 2024, Schaeffler reported an EBIT (earnings before interest and taxes) of €187 million ($200 million), falling short of analyst expectations of €209 million ($224 million).

Globally, Schaeffler employs over 120,000 people, and this recent round of job cuts reflects the intense restructuring sweeping through the automotive industry.

German Auto Parts Manufacturer Lays Off 4,700 Employees

Michelin to close two French plants in latest blow to Europe's auto sector

5 November 2024

PARIS (Reuters) -Tyre maker Michelin plans to close two of its French factories, affecting about 1,250 workers, it said on Tuesday as Europe's embattled automotive sector comes under increasing pressure.

The French company, founded 135 years ago, cited high costs and cheap Asian competition for the closure of its Cholet and Vannes sites in western France.

Michelin's announcement comes just weeks after unions at Europe's largest car manufacturer Volkswagen warned of planned plant closures and peers including Peugeot-maker Stellantis issued hefty profit warnings.

----Michelin's move outraged French labour unions. The hardline CGT called on all Michelin workers to go on strike, while its more moderate peer CFDT urged management and the government to revisit the closures and seek alternatives.

"We assessed our options but couldn't find any alternatives to (closing) these two sites" Michelin Chairman Florent Menegaux told newspaper Le Monde, adding: "The only constant at Michelin is that it's always on the move."

Speaking in the National Assembly, Prime Minister Michel Barnier said he regretted Michelin's decision and said affected workers must be helped with all available means.

"The automotive sector is in a difficult spot and not only in our country,", Barnier said, adding that Europe must protect its auto industry against "unfair" foreign competition with stronger action and less "naiveté".

Industry Minister Marc Ferracci called for a European "emergency plan" to save the sector, saying he would work towards formulating policy proposals at the EU level in the coming weeks.

----The two sites to be closed have been "severely impacted by the structural transformation of the passenger car and light truck and truck tyre markets and worsening competitiveness of Europe, notably due to inflation and rising energy prices", it added.

It has already halted production at both plants through Nov. 11 to give management and the unions time for group and individual discussions with employees, it said, recording a provision of approximately 330 million euros ($360 million) in non-recurring expenses in its consolidated financial statements as of Dec. 31.

Michelin announced last year the closure of two German heavy-duty truck tyre sites and last month lowered its annual profit forecast due to a more marked slowdown than expected in the auto market in the third quarter.

It employs nearly 15,000 people in France at 15 manufacturing plants.

Michelin to close two French plants in latest blow to Europe's auto sector

Toyota posts nearly 20% drop in second-quarter operating profit, missing estimates

Published Wed, Nov 6 2024 12:27 AM EST

Japanese automaker Toyota Motor on Wednesday reported its first quarterly operating profit drop in about two years, as it strives to navigate the market shift toward electric vehicles.

Here are Toyota’s results compared with estimates from analysts, compiled by LSEG.

  • Revenue: 11.44 trillion yen vs. 11.41 trillion yen
  • Operating profit: 1.16 trillion yen vs. 1.24 trillion yen

Toyota has been slower in embracing fully battery-powered electric vehicles, with chairman Akio Toyoda reportedly saying that an “electric-vehicle only future” would lead to job losses in the automotive industry.

“There are 5.5 million people involved in the automotive industry in Japan. Among them are those who have been doing engine-related (work) for a long time,” Toyoda told reporters, according to Reuters.

“If electric vehicles simply become the only choice, including for our suppliers, those people’s jobs would be lost.”

The world’s largest automaker by sales volume saw a 20% year-on-year drop in operating profit.

The company maintained a full-year operating profit of 4.3 trillion yen.

Toyota also has been in the spotlight this year due to the multiple vehicle recalls, most recently in September.

The latest recall of 42,000 vehicles was over the loss of power brake assist that can extend the distance required to stop, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. It affected certain 2023-2024 Corolla Cross Hybrid vehicles, the administration said.

Early in June, Toyota lost over $15 billion in market value after Japan’s Transport Ministry found false data was used by Japanese automakers to certify certain models.

The wide-ranging inspection by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism also found irregularities in certification applications by other automakers Honda, Suzuki and Yamaha.

Toyota posts nearly 20% drop in second-quarter operating profit, missing estimates

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

Given our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians, inflation now needs an entire section of its own.

7 big clues that a recession is going to clobber the stock market

November 4, 2024

When stock investors are as bullish as they are now, it’s a good time to ask what could go wrong.

We got a hint last week in the October U.S. jobs report, which came in below expectations that were already ratcheted down because of bad weather. This could signal the beginning of labor-market trouble, which could tip the economy into a recession by the middle of next year, according to Doug Ramsey, chief investment officer at The Leuthold Group and co-portfolio manager of Leuthold Core Investment Fund LCORX and Leuthold Global Fund GLBLX.

If Ramsey is right, your stocks will suffer. Few things kill off a bull market like a recession. “A recession is likely,” but not until mid-2025, Ramsey said in a recent interview. He described the current market environment as “perilous.”

Even before the October employment surprise, Ramsey was skeptical of the U.S. job market. He described the super-strong September jobs report — which had zeroed out recession risk for many people — as a temporary growth scare. “It was not a great report. There are issues with the employment numbers,” he said. 

Four big-picture concerns

1. Recessions most often begin in the year after a presidential election: In the past century, eight U.S. recessions have started in the year after the presidential election. Six began in the election year. Two started in the midterm year, and none of the recessions began in the pre-election year. The idea here is that the party in power pulls levers to stoke the economy ahead of elections to garner votes. Then after the election year, the hangover sets in. 

2. Valuation risk is extremely high: Valuations are not a good market timing tool, but they suggest where the market may be heading — sooner or later. The current extreme valuations are troubling. The S&P 500 trades at around 22 times forward earnings. “The only time it has persistently traded above 21 was during 1999-2000 and during the COVID-19 stimulus mania of 2021,” Ramsey said. “Valuations are high enough that I would be well below my maximum equity allocation.” Midcap and small-cap stocks are more reasonably priced, he adds. 

From here, if the U.S. markets fell back to their long-term median valuations, the S&P 500 would decline 26%, midcaps would fall 14% and small caps would slip 3%. Ramsey said he doubts earnings and profit margins growth will be high enough for stocks to “grow into” current valuations, as some strategists suggest.

3. It will take a while to reverse the impact of aggressive monetary tightening: The U.S. Federal Reserve cut rates half a percentage point in September. But the preceding rate-hiking campaign was so aggressive, it’s going to take more cuts to dull the impact of the rate hikes, Ramsey said. The Fed raised the federal funds rate more than five percentage points to 5.5% from early 2022 to last August. It typically takes at least a couple of quarters for shifts in monetary policy (the recent September rate cuts) to have any impact. 

4. Inflation may not continue in a downtrend: The S&P 500 is up 35% in the past year. Normally these big bull-market runs happen when unemployment is much higher. So, the weak labor market dulls the impact of portfolio gains on consumer spending. But that isn’t the case now, because unemployment is so low. 

Without the buffer of joblessness, asset price inflation spills over into consumer prices. The upshot: “Inflation may not be as dead as everyone thinks,” Ramsey said. If that’s the case, the Fed may have to pause rate cuts, increasing the odds of recession. 

Three hidden warning signs

Here’s a look at the troubling signs Ramsey sees in the employment data:

1. The number of unemployed workers is rising at a rate that normally signals a recession: Over the past year, the number of people out of a job is up by 13.7%. “In the past when the rate of change exceeds 10% you are on the doorstep of a recession or in a recession,” Ramsey said. “This has been the point of no return.” To smooth out the high volatility in employment numbers, Ramsey looks at the rate of change over the past year in the three-month moving average. 

2. The number of full-time jobs is contracting: As of the end of September, full-time jobs were down 0.5% compared to a year earlier. “This has never happened outside of a recession,” Ramsey said.

Companies seem reluctant to take on full-time workers and are hiring part-time workers instead. “That normally forecasts recession,” Ramsey said. “It is a sign of a lack of business confidence, but it also means less income for workers.” Part-time jobs normally pay less, and usually do not offer benefits. 

3. Employment growth has almost fallen to a level that signals recession: Typically when nonfarm payroll growth falls below 1.4%, a recession follows. We are there, with October growth at just 1.35%. “Historically, that is the stall speed,” Ramsey said. “That has been the point of no return.” 

The reason: Lower job and income growth leads to weaker demand, which generates weaker employment growth, creating a vicious cycle for the economy. “This debunks the view that the September jobs report puts a recession off the table,” Ramsey said. 

More

7 big clues that a recession is going to clobber the stock market

UK debt woe as borrowing costs surge again amid fresh market jitters over US election result

5 November 2024

UK borrowing costs hit a post-Budget peak yesterday

Yields on ten-year UK bonds – known as gilts – surpassed levels seen last week to reach a new one-year high of 4.541 per cent.

Meanwhile, an auction of new ten-year gilts attracted the weakest demand since December, with bids covering the £3.75billion on offer 2.81 times.

Investors are anxious about Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s £162billion borrowing binge to fund her spending pledges – and is expected to add to inflation pressures.

That has pushed back expectations of how quickly the Bank of England will cut interest rates, resulting in a sell-off of bonds – whose yields rise as their prices fall. 

The sheer scale of bond issuance coming to the market is also weighing on the price. 

The Bank is expected to cut rates by a quarter of a percentage point tomorrow and markets will be closely watching for clues on its next move.

Experts warned that the rise in gilt yields could jeopardise the Chancellor’s plans for balancing the books because it will add billions to the cost of paying interest on the Government’s debt pile.

Some of this was planned for but the bond market fall-out has so far been worse than expected. 

Richard Hughes, chairman of the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), told the Commons Treasury select committee yesterday: ‘We had expected the gilt market to be a bit surprised.’

The OBR had forecast the Budget to cause a quarter of a percentage point rise in yields. He said where they had settled was ‘broadly in line with that expectation, maybe a little bit above, but not significantly’.

But after he spoke, yields rose further.

Julian Jessop, economics fellow at the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), pointed out that yields on five-year gilts were expected to average 3.6 per cent in the fourth quarter of this year and 4 per cent between 2025 and 2028.

But yesterday they were trading at more than 4.4 per cent, a five-year high. ‘Of course, a lot could still happen between now and 2028,’ Jessop said. ‘But the early signs are not encouraging.’

Yields on UK bonds are rising faster than those on their US and German equivalents. 

More

UK debt woe as borrowing costs surge again amid fresh market jitters over US election result

Covid-19 Corner

This section will continue until it becomes unneeded.

Federal immunity protections do not apply to COVID-19 wrongful death case in assisted living facility, court rules

Kimberly Bonvissuto  November 5, 2024

A federal court has remanded a COVID-19 negligence and wrongful death lawsuit filed against a Florida assisted living community to state court. The federal court recently ruled the case did not fall under federal protections in place during the pandemic. 

The US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit delivered a 2-1 split decision last week in a case involving healthcare provider protections implemented under the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness, or PREP, Act. The PREP Act offered liability protection to healthcare providers when prioritizing distribution of countermeasures — including COVID-19 vaccines — especially if done in accordance with public health guidelines. The court’s dissenting opinion said the case fell squarely under the PREP Act.

“Given the strong dissent included in the opinion, we are assessing our options with our legal counsel, and until we have completed our assessment we won’t be able to offer any comments,” Sandi Poreda, a spokeswoman for the community involved, Grand Villa, told McKnight’s Senior Living.

Sara Schleider, a resident of Grand Villa of Delray Beach East, died of COVID in June 2020. Her family filed a lawsuit in Florida state court alleging that Grand Villa’s failure to provide personal protective equipment or take other protection measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19 results in Schleider’s death. The lawsuit named Grand Villa’s operating and management companies, GVDB Operations LLC and JSMGV Management Company LLC. 

Grand Villa moved the case to US District Court for the Southern District of Florida, claiming it was acting under the direction of a federal officer as part of the “critical healthcare infrastructure.” The provider also argued that it had immunity protections under the PREP Act.

But the district court rejected Grand Villa’s arguments and remanded the case to state court, prompting an appeal to the 11th Circuit Court. The appellate court agreed with the district court, finding that compliance with federal guidelines did not equate to acting under federal authority, particularly if those guidelines were not followed. The appellate court also found that the PREP Act did not completely preempt state law claims for negligence.

More

Federal immunity protections do not apply to COVID-19 wrongful death case in assisted living facility, court rules - McKnight's Senior Living

Technology Update.

With events happening fast in the development of solar power and graphene, among other things, I’ve added this section. Updates as they get reported.

Solar brick based on perovskite, textile ceramic technology

A European research team has sought to combine for the first time perovskite solar cell technology with textile ceramic in a novel building-integrated photovoltaic device. The result is a solar brick with potential for future commercialiation, according to its creators.

November 5, 2024

A research group led by the Universitat Internacional de Catalunya (UIC) in Spain has developed a solar brick based on textile ceramic technology (TCT) and perovskite photovoltaic cells.

The new device is intended for applications in building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPV). “We are planning to bring this technology to market,” the research's corresponding author, Pedro Casariego, told pv magazine. “This was the main goal of this research and a few parallel projects we are working on.”

TCT was patented in 2011 and consists of a system made of ceramic units installed in a grid of steel wires. It was conceived to be used on cover roofs, grounds, and principally façade claddings, as well as a curtain wall that should make ventilation inexpensive.

“Most commonly, TCT is used as a dry construction system consisting of long shells with widths between 0.6- and 2-meters,” the scientists explained. “One of the advantages of the system is the reduced time construction, since traditional ceramic cladding systems require a manual procedure on site where the bricks are placed one by one joined by mortar. Moreover, the large length dimension of the shells makes it possible to cover ground, façade and roof with the same element.”

The research group describes the 300 mm x 117 mm solar brick as a system integrating a 99 mm × 99 mm perovskite solar module (PSM) compatible with TCT mesh. It used welding to make the electrical connections for the module, which was embedded in a groove with an inclined geometry.

It also utilized stainless steel plates with the shape of a double L to achieve a dry joint between PSM and the ceramic pieces. “It must be pointed out that the groove is not always done in the center of the ceramic piece and can be made further to the right or left to allow different possibilities and play a bit with composition,” the academics explained.

---- Overall, the solar brick was found to perform well “in general terms” with market viability possibilities, with the main challenge being identified in the brittle rupture of the ceramic pieces.  “A revision of the solar brick design must be carried out in future research,” the academics concluded.

The novel technology was presented in the study “Design of perovskite solar brick for textile ceramic technology,” which was recently published in Construction and Building Materials. The research team included scientists from the University of Rome Tor Vergata in Italy and the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA).

Solar brick based on perovskite, textile ceramic technology – pv magazine International

Next, the world global debt clock. Nations debts to GDP compared. 

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

There is a better way for everything. Find it.

Thomas A. Edison.

No comments:

Post a Comment