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Wall Street Breakfast: Buckle Up

Oct. 01, 2021 7:02 AM ETMETA, ZM, FIVN, MRK, PLTR, MO, PM, BTC-USD, BBBYQ, DIS, RIDEQ39 Comments
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Buckle up

U.S. stock index futures are trading down 0.6% following another rough session on Thursday as market closed out September and the third quarter. The S&P 500 finished the month off 4.8%, while the Dow and the Nasdaq slipped 4.3% and 5.4%, respectively. The losses - triggered by fears of inflation, slowing growth and rising interest rates - even led the S&P 500 to notch its worst monthly performance since the pandemic took hold in March 2020.

Currents from the sea of red are also spreading outside of the U.S. Over in Asia, the Nikkei 225 closed down 2.3%, while in Europe, the pan-European STOXX 600 fell 1.5% and major bourses slid into negative territory.

Analyst commentary: "For most of the last two or three decades, central banks have had a relatively easy task because every time we come up to a crisis, they have been free to ease policy considerably because of downward inflationary pressure," said Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid. "The problem now is that a lot of the exogenous forces at the moment are inflationary, whether it's supply chains or stimulus. This raises the risk of a policy error, but the problem is we don't know which way that policy error is. Is it to do too much (i.e. to keep stimulus going for too long), or is it to tighten policy with all the inflation around and risk choking off the recovery?"

On the economic calendar: Traders will be closely watching key inflation data set to be published at 8:30 a.m. ET. The core personal consumption expenditures price index, which surged an unexpected 1.1% in July, is expected to slow to a gain of 0.2% in August, but any more unforeseen surges could cause some panic. The inflation figure, which measures price change from the perspective of the consumer, is of utmost importance as the Federal Reserve uses it to set policy.

Facebook grilling

During a three-hour Senate hearing on Thursday, Facebook (FB) came under fire from lawmakers who were upset about the revelations brought to light by The Wall Street Journal's "Facebook Files." Internal documents showed that Instagram makes body image issues worse for a substantial minority of teen girls and was blamed for increases in anxiety and depression. With the company on the defensive (and minimizing its own research), it looks to be signaling new enthusiasm among Senators for regulatory proposals that had stagnated a bit.

Criticism from both sides of the aisle: "We now have deep insight into Facebook's relentless campaign to recruit and exploit young users. And we now know it is indefensibly delinquent in acting to protect them," said Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT). "Facebook is incapable of holding itself accountable." Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) was also quick to admonish the tech giant. "We do not trust you with influencing our children."

Some, like Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA), even compared the social network to Big Tobacco, which "pushes a product that they know is harmful to the health of young people." He also announced plans to reintroduce legislation that would regulate a number of features, including follower counts, autoplay videos, and marketer and influencer promotions on apps aimed at young children.

Go deeper: Facebook on Monday said it would pause work on a controversial effort to build an Instagram for those under 13 (currently prohibited from joining the service). During the hearing, however, Antigone Davis, Facebook director of global safety, was noncommittal about whether the company would shelve Instagram Kids for good. "Sen. Markey, those are the kinds of features that we will be talking about with our experts trying to understand in fact what is most age appropriate and what isn’t age appropriate, and we will discuss those features with them of course." (55 comments)

Deal is off

It was set to be the second biggest tech deal of the year, but Zoom Video Communications (ZM) and Five9 (FIVN) are calling off their $14.7B merger. Zoom had hoped the all-stock transaction would build on the explosive growth it experienced during the pandemic as it became a household name in a world without social contact. Five9 is a provider of cloud-based call center technology, which allows representatives to do their jobs from home.

What happened? Five9 stockholders still had to approve the deal, but it did not receive the requisite number of votes. Proxy advisory firm ISS previously recommended FIVN holders vote against the tie-up on the grounds that a decline in ZM's share price has dragged down the value of the deal. Last week, Zoom also disclosed that a DOJ-led panel has been investigating the agreement over national security risks given Zoom's ties to China.

Buying Five9 "presented an attractive means to bring to our customers an integrated contact center offering,” Zoom CEO Eric Yuan wrote in a blog post. "That said, it was in no way foundational to the success of our platform, nor was it the only way for us to offer our customers a compelling contact center solution."

Stock movement: Shares of Zoom and Five9 barely budged in premarket trade, suggesting investors had been anticipating a breakup. (5 comments)

Funding, infrastructure and debt

Keeping track of the latest happenings on Capitol Hill can get confusing, especially when deadlines are as close together as they are in the fall of 2021. While it's still too early to tell how things will play out, investors have been monitoring the events as lawmakers play politics with the nation's pocketbook. Here are the three big items that are on the radar and how they could impact your portfolio:

Government funding - Congress last night passed stopgap spending legislation to avert a U.S. government shutdown, which was later signed by President Biden. The bill will keep the lights on at federal agencies through Dec. 3, giving Congress nine more weeks to pass a full budget plan. Buzz surrounding government shutdowns can trigger some market volatility, but this is the least likely event to affect investor holdings.

Infrastructure - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi promised to move ahead with a vote on a $1.2T bipartisan infrastructure bill before Democrat progressives said they have the numbers to stall it. They want the Senate to agree to a separate $3.5T social spending and climate policy package (or what the White House terms "human infrastructure") before pressing ahead on this front. Negotiations are still ongoing, but the developments have the potential to dent some sentiment in the market, especially infrastructure-related names, since the bill was a key part of Biden's economic agenda.

Debt ceiling - Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has said the U.S. will run out of funds to pay its bills by mid-October and even called on Congress yesterday to eliminate the mechanism entirely. A default would "likely precipitate a historic financial crisis that would compound the damage of the continuing public health emergency," according to Yellen. It could also "trigger a spike in interest rates, a steep drop in stock prices and other financial turmoil. Our current economic recovery would reverse into recession, with billions of dollars of growth and millions of jobs lost." (11 comments)

Today's Markets

In Asia, Japan -2.3%. Hong Kong -0.4%. China +0.9%. India -0.6%.
In Europe, at midday, London -1.1%. Paris -0.7%. Frankfurt -0.8%.
Futures at 6:20, Dow -0.6%. S&P -0.6%. Nasdaq -0.6%. Crude -0.7% at $74.53. Gold -0.1% at $1755.40. Bitcoin +9.3% at $46918.
Ten-year Treasury Yield -3 bps to 1.49%

Today's Economic Calendar

8:30 Personal Income and Outlays
9:45 PMI Manufacturing Index
10:00 ISM Manufacturing Index
10:00 Construction Spending
10:00 Consumer Sentiment
11:00 Fed's Harker: Economic Outlook
1:00 PM Baker-Hughes Rig Count
1:00 PM Fed's Mester: "Inflation, Employment, and the Federal Reserve"

Companies reporting earnings today »

What else is happening...

Buzz stocks trail in September, but quant analysis plays.

Merck (NYSE:MRK) buys Acceleron (NASDAQ:XLRN) for more than $11B in cash.

CDC director urges pregnant women to get COVID-19 vaccines.

New Gen Z ETF focuses on innovation, disruption and ethics.

Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) plummets as supply chain headwinds pile up.

Palantir (NYSE:PLTR) faces loss of pricey government FALCON contract - report.

Scarlett Johansson and Disney (DIS) settle lawsuit over Black Widow.

Cash infusion... Lordstown Motors (RIDE) sells Ohio plant to Foxconn (OTC:FXCOF).

Altria (NYSE:MO), Philip Morris (NYSE:PM) banned from selling IQOS tobacco heating device.

Bitcoin (BTC-USD) erases some losses, then jumps, after Jerome Powell talks crypto.

This article was written by

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Comments (39)

S
Sure glad SA created a separate post for political and social commentary thus leaving this site for the 1-2 folks who wish to talk about stocks.
P
700,000 Americans now dead from COVID-19 Great job Joe and Kamala. Can't get AOC to vote for your infrastructure package.... she doesn't trust ya because yer a Blowhard! I don't either.
Ishi Kenjo profile picture
LOL... like most news, fake as all Hell!!! 😂
A
😂😂😂
This didn’t age well
Aminu saadu profile picture
Am new may someone make understand something here please
j
I guess the market it up big today because it knows the infrastructure bills are dead?
j
why is everybody so concerned about the fed. the fed is on its course so go with it don't go against the fed whatever it does.
S
Almost every day, the Power Brokers attempt to trigger another rally by surging up the Futures buying fails.
So they have temporarily lost control - a rarity.

At the moment, the market is placing a higher premium on Small and Mid Cap Value stocks, and there are very good reasons for that - but on a relative basis one of these is a safer bet than the other.
B
"
And we now know it is indefensibly delinquent in acting to protect them," said Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT). "Facebook is incapable of holding itself accountable." Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) was also quick to admonish the tech giant. "We do not trust you with influencing our children." "

Government parenting at its best and many parents like knowing someone else will do it for them. One less thing they cannot be blamed for.

FB will continue on keeping on making $Billions and $Billions more. Anger, Hate and Fueding is more profitable than Sex. Humans thrive on both, unfortunately.
J
@BamTech "Humans thrive on both,"

All part of the competition for survival that drives evolutionary progress.
blueline profile picture
"CDC director urges pregnant women to get COVID-19 vaccines"

Pregnant women are told not to drink alcohol, clean out the cat box, dye their hair, smoke, eat certain foods or take certain medications and the list goes on and on yet now they want them to get a vaccine??? Lordy Lordy Lordy!
g
@blueline sounds like good advice to me since the conspiracy disinformation is not based in reality or facts
Ishi Kenjo profile picture
@blueline What is next? Toddlers & fetuses? I am sure they can pay Faucci a few thousand to inject both with vaccines. And pets too! 😂
N
Teeter-totter see-saw,
the market's rise and the market's fall.
herohero profile picture
Ed Markey is right. If Faceborg were a tobacco company, they'd be drawn and quartered right now. At least you can quit smoking - but can anyone expect teens who grew up on their products to ever quit?
GreenEggs&Ham profile picture
@herohero Look how many decades it took to reign in big tobacco.
u
if FB were a tobacco company value investors would buy it for its high dividend as they do for MO
d
@user 11202791 If Facebook paid a high dividend like MO, I would surely own it. No divvy, no thanks.
blueline profile picture
"pushes a product that they know is harmful to the health of young people."

Keep your kids off of Social Media for as long as you can and when they do get on it make sure you can monitor what they are doing.
herohero profile picture
@blueline some counties have older age limits for Facebook accounts. Wonder why Facebook doesn't raise the minimum age all around? Money.
D
@blueline Also keep them off the internet, away from television and magazines, don't let them in a department store, don't let them watch professional sports (for their body image issues), and it's probably better they don't go to a public/private school at all since some of the other students might have access to social media. Having a problem with Facebook targeting teens is the same as having a problem with targeted advertising in general. Good luck avoiding that :)
P
@DanielGannon1 "Having a problem with Facebook targeting teens is the same as having a problem with targeted advertising in general."

Nah, it's clear that Facebook is simply evil. My problem with targeted advertising is that it isn't. I can't remember the last time I saw an ad for something that I might actually want to buy.
blueline profile picture
Nothing on China's energy problem?

I saw a report that said 20 provinces were having rolling power outages. They are allegedly running low on coal to fuel their coal power plants because they stopped buying coal from Australia over a pricing feud.

Something doesn't sound right. It's one thing to negotiate for a better price but when you can't keep the lights on you have to pay the going rate. Another theory was that Xi was intentionally cutting off coal power to force these provinces to accelerate their transition to "green" energy.

When you add this to the collapse of the real estate development company it starts to make one wonder what is really going on.
odlidrocket profile picture
@blueline good points
I am so confused over the blackouts in China
It makes no sense, as it looks like they are shooting themselves in the foot.
It doesn't seem like a good political move to make the populist mad either. Are they preparing for war?
b
@blueline the sun never shines is what is going on in China
j
@odlidrocket
No they are preparing for a little thing called the Olympics they think the world will be watching and they want to clear the smog so the world can see it.
CaffeinatedPirate profile picture
Jim Reid has it exactly right. We face an enormous risk for error but nobody knows what the error is. The same thing applies to us as investors. There are many potential outcomes now but it's far from clear which ones are most likely. You can err on the side caution and ride an index but then you're not really seeking alpha.....
ELINTGOD profile picture
@CaffeinatedPirate Seeking Alpha is not a day to day thing...it is a year to year, decade to decade, born and then die thing. Being aware of your surroundings or they will be dictated to you.
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