Weekly Points - 5 Things To Know In Investing This Week

The Employment Issue

Lots of interesting news this week where we address these important questions:

One last hat tip to former DKI Intern, Tristan Navarino. Tristan is now back in school for his senior year, but the work he did this summer on the DKI graphs you’ll see below made my job much easier this week. Credit to former (now graduated and employed) Intern, Dylan Kogan, for excellent work on these as well. Great job guys!

Ready for the week? Let’s dive in:

  1. Job Openings Below 9MM:

The trend is positive for those hoping for an end to Fed rate hikes.

  • Housing Prices Rising Again:

The Case-Shiller National Home Price Index was reported for the month of June, and it was up by .9% vs May. After an incredible Covid-related run up in pricing, the index has now made up all of its losses from the prior year and is back at all-time highs.

Great news for sellers. Terrible news for buyers.

DKI Takeaway: Many (including DKI) thought higher interest rates would bring down housing prices. Instead, as the cost of a new mortgage rose, fewer people were willing to sell their home and pay more for a mortgage on a comparable or smaller house. The lack of inventory on the market has kept pricing high. With 30-year mortgages now solidly above 7.5% and housing prices at highs, affordability is at all-time lows despite substantial wage gains in recent years.

  • Best Buy ($BBY) Beats Expectations and Lowers Guidance:

Best Buy (NYSE:BBY) stock rose after the company reported earnings of $1.25/share which was down from last year’s $1.35, but above analyst estimates of $1.06. The company slightly lowered sales guidance for the second half of the year. Of greater concern, comparable store sales were down 6.2%

The market liked the earnings beat. Chart from Yahoo Finance.

DKI Takeaway: The spending trend towards services and away from goods continues. Consumers bought a lot of electronics in recent years as they set up work-from-home offices and new home theaters. In the past year, as the economy and social lives have reopened, consumers are getting out of the house and focusing on enjoying experiences. A weaker employment market might help, but there may be more services inflation on the way.

  • Payroll Data is Good but Also Disappointing:

The ADP payroll report came out on Wednesday. Private employers added 177,000 jobs in August which was below last month’s 371k jobs and expectations of 200k jobs. Relative to expectations and the last two fantastic months of job growth, this was a disappointment. However, if you check the charts below, you’ll see that job creation is still excellent compared to pre-pandemic results, and the overall employment situation continues to be excellent.

A good month, but trending down.

The employment situation remains strong.

  • Prices and Spending Increasing Where the Fed Cares:

The Fed wants to see the red line falling.

  • Friday’s Jobs Report Stronger Than Expected:

At the end of the week, we got the non-farm payroll report. The US added 187,000 jobs in August. This was above last month’s 157k and above expectations for 170k. The unemployment rate rose to 3.8% vs the 3.5% expected. The market rose early on Friday in anticipation that a higher unemployment rate would cause the Fed to pause and not raise rates in September.

The labor market is still strong and growing.

DKI Takeaway: At this point, it seems slightly more likely that the Fed will pause in September rather than raise rates again. However, I have a slightly different take on today’s unemployment rate. The US only counts job seekers as unemployed. When employment rises and the unemployment rate rises, that means more unemployed people are coming in off the sidelines and looking for work. As wages rise, more Americans want to work. That’s good news for all of us.

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