FINSUM
Tesla’s Stock Isn’t Going Anywhere
(New York)
Tesla is a hard stock to figure at the moment. No one is quite sure how likely it is that the company will be taken private at $420. Many are trying to handicap the odds, with Barron’s guessing they are less than 50%. The stock has given up much of the initial gains it got from Musk’s fateful tweet, but the big question is where it will go next. The answer is that it likely won’t move much until there is more information to digest. The SEC is investigating the company, but there is little word on any potential deal.
FINSUM: We think Tesla is going to be quite banded until more information about a potential deal comes out.
Luxury Stocks are Facing a Big Threat
(New York)
If you hold luxury retail stocks or are thinking of doing so, think again. With all the fears over a trade war, many luxury stocks look vulnerable. While Gucci owner Kering and Louis Vuitton owner LVMH look insulated, look out for weakness in Burberry, Salvatore Ferragamo, and Swatch. The first two look particularly weak because they are trying to regain traction with consumers at the same time as facing trade tensions (as opposed to Gucci, which is very hot at the moment). Most luxury stocks are currently trading at a premium relative to the market.
FINSUM: In our view, the brands that are already hot are going to stay on the shelves, but ones that haven’t been selling as well will be more impacted by trade tensions as wholesalers can more easily just stop stocking them.
Dow Surges as Trade War Fears Ebb
(Washington)
The markets had a scintillating day yesterday. The Dow surged almost 400 points. Why? The reason was simple—the market stopped worrying so much about a US trade war with China. The two countries are planning further high level talks on trade and that alleviated the market’s fears. Barron’s proclaimed that “This is what happens when the market’s not worried about trade”, obviously referring to the strength of the economy and earnings. The market was also more optimistic on Turkey.
FINSUM: There does seem to be a lot of upside that has been stifled by geopolitical worries. Perhaps there is a nice run to be had if the US and China can come to an agreement.
Emerging Markets are Entering a Full Blown Crisis
(Istanbul)
Most sources, including FINSUM, have been concluding that the emerging markets flare up centered on Turkey, would not develop into a correction or financial crisis for developed markets. Today that position is looking weaker, as stocks fell sharply across the world yesterday, and commodity markets got routed. Emerging market stock indices have fallen back into a bear market. While EMs fell big, global markets saw share plunges exacerbated by a dismal earnings report for one of China’s big tech companies, which then seeped into tech shares globally.
FINSUM: The narrative here is that Turkey sparked a big selloff and now fears over China will continue to drag EMs down. This could be the start of a global recession, but perhaps it will not be accompanied by huge losses in developed markets.
Commodities Show a Recession Looms
(Houston)
For those paying attention, the metals market is sending some very worrying signs. Copper and other metals have been going through a rough patch, but yesterday seemed to really spell doom. Copper plunged into a bear market, zinc plummeted, and even gold took a big hit despite the panic across markets. Industrial commodities are a good bellwether for economic activity, and while the markets are partly plunging on worries over the Chinese economy, the big drops signal that the whole world could be in for a recession.
FINSUM: We are growing increasingly concerned about the message that metals markets are sending. The big drop across the board in industrial commodities is quite worrying. Hopefully it is a short-term overreaction to the trouble in emerging markets.