Wall Street Breakfast

Wall Street Breakfast: March Madness

bmotrader
Publish date: Mon, 01 Mar 2021, 09:05 AM
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Wall Street Breakfast news for the day.

Which sectors will make it to the Final Four? That's a question investors are asking as the new month kicks off after things turned south for stocks at the end of February. The biggest monthly rise in bond yields since 2016 injected fresh uncertainty into the market, bruising technology stocks and triggering volatility streaks that saw the DJIA swing more than 1,000 points over three days. Things appear to be turning around this morning as the 10-year Treasury yield fell 4 bps to 1.4%. Futures: Dow +1%; S&P 500 +1.1%; Nasdaq +1.5%.

Quote: "This week is key. I'm expecting turbulence or volatility to remain with us until we have a better understanding of where central banks stand," said Andrea Carzana, a fund manager at Columbia Threadneedle Investments. "Further consolidation is likely in March, but we expect the market to find support shortly and subsequently challenge the recent highs again," added Jeff Hirsch, editor of the Stock Trader's Almanac, noting that April is statistically the best month of the year.

Another area that is taking bets is a potential increase in inflation due to recent stimulus efforts. The House passed President Biden's $1.9T coronavirus relief bill on Saturday, while the Senate is expected to follow suit shortly. The package includes funding for vaccines and medical supplies, an extension of unemployment benefits, a round of $1,400 stimulus checks to individuals, and financial aid to small businesses and state and local governments. As a result, the U.S. Treasury is expected to sell a huge amount of debt in coming months to pay for the measure aimed at supporting the recovery.

Go deeper: Fed Chair Jay Powell has aligned with the administration in waving off concerns about an over-heated economy, saying the job market has ways to go before inflation fears are justified. The support could trigger a strong period of growth, low unemployment and rising wages, though critics argue that it may lead to a cycle of rising prices, higher interest rates and a ballooning national debt. The views don't only have investors sizing up March, but also who will be in the championship at the end 2021.

Covid - Third coronavirus vaccine

Traders today are also applauding the FDA approval of Johnson & Johnson's (JNJ) COVID-19 shot, which was the third jab to be approved in the U.S. It's the first to have a single-dose regimen, a key tool in accelerating the vaccination drive. The decision clears the way for immediate distribution and vaccination of the Janssen vaccine to Americans 18 and older, building on a broader rolloiut that's currently utilizing jabs from Pfizer/BioNTech (PFE, BNTX) and Moderna (MRNA).

Bigger picture: Shipments from J&J will be limited at first, with just a few million vaccines going out immediately, but the company has a deal to supply 100M doses by the end of June. The single-shot product had an overall efficacy rate of about 66% in the Phase 3 clinical trial, and the U.S. arm of the trial showed an efficacy rate of about 72% and of 85% when protecting against severe or critical disease. The lower efficacy rate compared than rivals is raising concerns that some people may opt to wait for other vaccines, but shares of JNJ are still up 3.5% premarket to $164.

"Be careful when you try to parse this percent versus that," Dr. Anthony Fauci told NBC's Meet The Press. "They were not compared head-to-head. They were compared under different circumstances. All three of them are really quite good and people should take the one that's most available to them."

Outlook: As of Sunday night, 49.8M people across the U.S. (15% of the population) had received their first coronavirus vaccine, while 24.8M people (7.5% of the population) had received two doses, according to the CDC. J&J has said it plans to ship the vaccine, which contains five doses per vial, at 36 to 46 degrees Fahrenheit. That compares to the ultra-cold freezers that are needed for Pfizer's vaccine - between minus 112 and minus 76 degrees Fahrenheit - as well as Moderna's vaccine, which needs to be shipped at 13 below to 5 degrees above zero Fahrenheit.

Outlook - Buffett's annual letter

First things first: Berkshire Hathaway's (BRK.A, BRK.B) Q4 operating earnings totaled $5.02B, up from $4.42B in the year-ago quarter, bolstered by its railroad, utilities and energy unit and "other businesses." The conglomerate also bought back $9B of its stock during the quarter (the same amount as Q3), bringing total buybacks for the year to $24.7B. That boosts shareholders' ownership "in all of Berkshire's businesses by 5.2% without requiring you to so much as touch your wallet," Warren Buffett said in his annual letter to shareholders.

The Oracle of Omaha also didn't reference any elephant-sized acquisitions, but rather stressed the importance of operating earnings. Berkshire's focus is to "increase this segment of our income and to acquire large and favorably-situated businesses." "Last year, we met neither goal: Berkshire made no sizable acquisitions and operating earnings fell 9%," he declared, adding that the company's intrinsic per-share value increased by retaining earnings and repurchasing about 5% of its shares.

Meanwhile, Buffett seemed to indicate that he's more content with acquiring stakes in well-run companies than buying them outright. "What’s out of sight, however, should not be out of mind: Those unrecorded retained earnings are usually building value - lots of value - for Berkshire," he wrote. Those companies that Berkshire invests in "use the withheld funds to expand their business, make acquisitions, pay off debt and, often, to repurchase their stock (an act that increases our share of their future earnings)."

Bottom line: Buffett pointed to Berkshire's investment in Apple (AAPL) as an example of the power of buying back stock. The company paid about $36B for a 5.2% stake in Apple as of mid-2018. Since then, Berkshire has received regular dividends of ~$775M a year and received an additional $11B by selling a small portion of its position. Even with that sale, Berkshire now owns 5.4% of Apple - an "increase that was costless to us, coming about because Apple has continuously repurchased its shares, thereby substantially shrinking the number it now has outstanding."

2021 Golden Globes

Shares of Disney (NYSE:DIS) and Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) are ahead by 2% and 1.2% premarket, respectively, after the two emerged as top winners at the 2021 Golden Globes. The studios won 15 of the prizes handed by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association in a broadcast hosted by Tina Fey and Amy Poehler. Things were also a little different this year as presenters and winners appeared remotely due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Awards? Disney scored the top accolade of Best Motion Picture (Drama) for Nomadland, while Netflix dominated television with hits like The Crown and The Queen's Gambit. Other streaming services also picked up key honors. Borat Subsequent Moviefilm from Amazon Studios (NASDAQ:AMZN) was named Best Picture, Musical or Comedy, and star Sacha Baron Cohen won Best Actor. Daniel Kaluuya meanwhile notched Best Supporting Actor for his work in Warner Bros.' (NYSE:T) Judas and the Black Messiah (also streaming on HBO Max), while Schitt's Creek captured the award for Best TV Series, Comedy or Musical.

The supremacy of streaming services vs. traditional studios doesn't come as a surprise. Over the last year, many theater chains have been shuttered, while the biggest new films have been delayed or put online. Disney+ has gained an explosive 86M subscribers within a year and now expects 230M-260M on its flagship streaming service by 2024. It also temporarily halted its dividend last year following calls from activist Dan Loeb to plunge that cash into original content as it centers its operations around streaming.

Outlook: In its most recent earnings call, rival Netflix revealed that it had surpassed 200M global subscribers for the first time after topping 100M subs in 2017. The streamer additionally detailed plans to be cash flow positive after 2021 and said would no longer need to tap debt markets to fund its programming (it has borrowed $15B to produce original content over the past decade). Netflix is also considering share buybacks, a practice it hasn't done since 2011, which was the last time the company was cash flow positive.

Trending - #PotStocks

With 1 in 3 Americans now living in a state where adult marijuana use is legal, Virginia is no longer sitting on the sidelines. Over the weekend, local lawmakers narrowly approved compromise legislation that would make it the first state in the south to allow recreational weed. The bill now goes to Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D), who supports legalization, for his signature.

Fine print: The law would legalize the use of cannabis by people over the age of 21. It would also allow possession of up to an ounce by anyone over 21 and establish an agency to oversee regulation of the cannabis market. The state is hoping that its commercial recreational marijuana program could generate nearly $1.5B in annual sales within five years of the scheduled start on Jan. 1, 2024.

Specifics of the regulations were punted until next year, when they'll be decided by the legislature. Under discussion are the framework and criminal penalties for several offenses, including underage use and public consumption of marijuana. Currently, people under the age of 21 would face a $25 civil penalty and have to undergo treatment.

More details: Part of the bill is aimed at ending disparate treatment faced by people of color in the criminal justice system. The legislation calls for 30% of marijuana tax revenue to go to a fund aimed at communities historically over-policed for marijuana-related crimes. Some lawmakers and advocacy groups also complained the years-long waiting period needlessly extends unjust treatment, though others argued that going ahead without regulations could boost illegal pot sales.

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