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Hot Tips

    1. Inflation Explodes to Four-Year High,

      with the CPI up 0.9% in March and 3.3% YOY. The real figure is 3.9% after you add back in the 0.6% missing from October and November. The Consumer Price Index should continue rising at this rate until oil prices come back down, which they likely will not.

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    2. Consumer Confidence Hits Record Lows.

      The University of Michigan's Surveys of Consumers said its Consumer Sentiment Index tumbled to ​an all-time low of 47.6 this month ​from a final reading of 53.3 in ⁠March. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the ​index easing to 52.0.

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    3. Pawn Shop Loans Soar.

      Pawn shop owners across the US say they’ve seen an increase in demand for loans in the past month or so, due to higher gas prices. Lower-income households are among the first to feel the hit when pump prices go up, as they spend a larger portion of their wages on fuel. The surge in gas prices has left some without enough cash to fill up their cars or pay for electricity or groceries, with pawn shops offering short-term loans in exchange for collateral.

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    4. Lockheed Martin Scores Massive $4.7 Billion Missile Contract.

      The contract for the Patriot Advanced ​Capability-3 Missile Segment Enhancement (PAC-3 MSE) follows ​a seven-year agreement with the U.S. Department of ⁠Defense to more than triple its ​annual production, as countries respond to heightened geopolitical ​tensions. Existing stockpiles have become exhausted with the advent of the Iran War. Buy (LMT) on dips.

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    5. Big Banks Told to Avoid Anthropic Apps,

      after the company refused to allow the Pentagon to use their software in killer robots. The government is trying to wreck Anthropos’ coming IPO and market valuation. They have been highlighting risks that also exist in all other AI apps.

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    1. The Straits are Still Closed,

      with only four ships clearing the waterway on Wednesday. Only Iran’s allies are allowed through, and even they must pay $2 million each in crypto, or $1 a barrel of oil. I’d rather not be buying stocks based on “The straights are going to open.”

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    2. Weekly Jobless Claims Jump to 219,000,

      up 16,000. Core PCE price index rises 0.4% for the second straight month; up 3.0% year over year. The Iran War has increased the downside risks to the labor market, and it's too soon to assume that the ceasefire announced earlier this week will last and to say those risks have abated.

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    3. Investors Tried to Pull $20 Billion from Private Credit Funds 

      in Q1 as panic in the asset class runs rampant.  The redemption requests hit huge groups in the sector, including Apollo Global Management, Ares Management, Blackstone, Blue Owl, and KKR, according to FT calculations. The withdrawals reflect intensifying concerns over the private credit industry’s lending to private equity-backed software companies and the uncertainty those businesses face as AI rapidly advances.

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    4. Core PCE price index rises 0.4%

      for the second straight month; up 3.0% year over year. And this is a prewar number, not reflecting a hyperinflationary oil price spike. Monthly inflation rose by the most in 12 ​months in February, and economic growth almost braked in the fourth quarter, other data showed on Thursday. Economists expect that price pressures increased further in March as the war drove up the cost of energy and other products.

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    5. Inventories are Soaring,

      another early recession indicator. U.S. wholesale inventories increased by the most in 13 months in February, boosted ​by sharp rises in the stocks of ‌professional and electrical equipment, government data showed on Thursday. Stocks at wholesalers rebounded 0.8%, the largest increase since ​January 2025, after falling 0.3% in ​January, the Commerce Department's Census Bureau said ⁠on Thursday.

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    1. Atlanta Fed Revises GDP Growth Down to 1.3%,

      from a high of 5.0% last year. The cost of the war keeps growing by the day. Expect negative numbers soon, taking us into recession.

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    2. Apple Delays Foldable Phone,

      taking the stock down 4%. The phone is to be the “next big thing” for the company. Apple has suffered setbacks in the engineering test phase for the iPhone that could hurt mass production and product shipments.

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    3. Physical Oil Hits $150 a Barrel.

      European and ‌Asian refiners are paying record-high prices for some crude oil grades, far exceeding prices for paper futures, highlighting the worsening supply crisis from the U.S.-Israel war with Iran. The Iran war has forced the shutdown of at least 12 ​million barrels per day - about 12% of world supply - from the Middle East due to Iran's effective ​closure of the Strait of Hormuz. As a result, Brent oil futures reached $119.50 a ⁠barrel last month, the highest since 2022, although still short of the 2008 record high of $147.50. The nearby ​Brent contract is for June delivery.

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    4. Delta Raises Baggage Surcharges to $50.

      Jet fuel, which had averaged about $85 to $90 a barrel before the U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran in February, has surged to around $209 per ​barrel globally, according to the International Air Transport Association (IATA). (DAL) earnings are out tomorrow.

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    5. Tech is starting to Look Cheap,

      following a prolonged period of underperformance, creating a potential entry point for investors, Goldman ​Sachs said on Tuesday. So far this year, we have seen one ‌of the weakest periods of relative returns for technology over the past 50 years.

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    1. Nonfarm payrolls rose by 178,000

      in March, a reversal from the 133,000 decline in February. The headline Unemployment Rate edged lower to 4.3%, though that was largely from a sharp reduction in the labor force. Wages also rose less than expected, with average hourly earnings up just 0.2% for the month and 3.5% from a year ago. The annual increase was the lowest since May 2021. As has been the case, health care was responsible for much of the growth, with the sector adding 76,000 jobs.

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    2. Tesla is Getting Trashed,

      as JP Morgan cuts its downside target to only $85. The EV Business is in free fall, and profits from robots are years off. Investors are also selling Tesla to buy SpaceX, and it's coming with a $2 trillion valuation. Avoid (TSLA).

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    3. Avoid SpaceX,

      as the company is likely to go public at a peak valuation. That’s because investors are unlikely to see robust returns from the aerospace manufacturer stock following its likely massive initial public offering, given that much of its value already appears to be “priced in.” If it is already one of the largest companies in the world on day one, what is the upside? Wait for the post IPO selloff as I did with (TSLA) 16 years ago, which could be as much as 50%.

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    4. Oil Breaks Out to the Upside,

      with the (USO) hitting a 20-year high at $139, as there is no sign of a reopening of the Straits. Even if they do eventually reopen, much of the Persian Gulf’s export facilities are now scrap metal requiring five-year rebuilds. Iran is demanding repayment of damage incurred by the US bombing, or more than $1 trillion. I’m not holding my breath on that one. Look for much higher highs in crude (USO).

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    5. Inflation is Heating Up,

      because of the war-driven, explosive rise in energy prices. SM services sector growth slows, PMI falls more than expected to 54.0. Input prices index surges to 70.7, the highest since Oct 2022, amid Middle East conflict and tariffs. Services employment contracts diverged from strong private payrolls in March.


    1. Peace Rumors Abound,

      sending the Dow up 1,000 points and crashing oil 5%. Confusion is running rampant as investors attempt to nail down who said what. Keep your cash, as nothing could be more opaque.

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    2. US Gasoline Tops $4 a Gallon,

      a new four-year high for the national average. It’s over $6 in California. You can almost hear the American economy grinding to a halt. Inflation numbers in April will rocket.

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    3. There’s a Tanker Burning Outside My Hotel Window in Dubai.

      The Kuwait Petroleum Corporation says an Iranian attack on the giant 500,000-barrel Al-Salmi oil tanker at the Dubai Port has caused a fire, warning that it could lead to an oil spill. No injuries were reported among the tanker’s 24 crew members, whose safety had been secured, the media office said. Maritime firefighting teams had been working to bring the fire under control and later said it had been extinguished. It sure puts on a heck of a show.

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    4. Aluminum Soars 10%,

      after Iran’s missiles destroyed smelters in Bahrain and the UAE. The light-weight metal advanced toward $3,500 a ton in London, on course for a monthly gain of 10%. That’s the most since April 2024 and bucks a broader downtrend for metals in March. The war on Gulf infrastructure continues. The conflict has tightened the global market, with around a tenth of aluminum's global production concentrated in the Persian Gulf and exports choked off by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

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    5. McCormick Buys Unilever Food Business

      for $45 Billion. To purchase most of Unilever Foods' portfolio, including Hellmann's mayo and U.K. favorite Marmite, McCormick will pay $15.7 billion in cash. Unilever shareholders will own 55.1% of the combined company, while Unilever will hold a 9.9% stake. For Unilever, divesting much of its food business allows the company to focus on its personal-care segment, which is growing faster.

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