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Hot Tips

  • February 24, 2025

    1. Berkshire Hathaway Builds Record Cash,

      at $334 billion, up $9 billion in December alone. The Oracle of Omaha has been selling huge chunks of Apple (AAPL) and Bank of America (BAC) and putting the money into US Treasury Bills. Warren earned an eye-popping $47 billion in 2024, up 27% YOY. A price-earnings multiple at a record 25X for the S&P 500. If  Warren Buffet is selling, should you be buying?

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    2. Jamie Dimon Sells 33% of JP Morgan Stock,

      yet another indicator of a market top. Jamie is famous for loading up on (JPM) at the absolute market bottom in 2009. Does he know something we don’t? Banks have been the lead sector in the market since the summer.

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    3. SEC Drops All Investigations of Robinhood (HOOD).

      The firm had been under multiple investigations for securities fraud and failure to disclose. It’s now open season on the retail customers.

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    4. Existing Homes Sales Crater,

      on a closing contract basis, down 4.9% in January to 4.09 million units. Terrible weather was a factor. Inventories are up 17% YOY and 3.5% on the month. All cash sales hit 29%. The average price of a home is at an all-time high at $396,800, up 4.5% YOY.

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    5. Amazon Buys James Bond,

      from the Broccoli family, who have been producing the series in England since 1962. That may be why they killed off Daniel Craig in the last Bond film, “No Time to Die”, to give any buyers a clean slate. Will the next Bond be a woman?

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  • February 20, 2025

    1. Washington DC Economy is in Recession.

      Unemployment claims are up 400% YOU, home prices are down 10%, and the commute is noticeably lighter. Condition will get much worse before it gets better. Will it spread to the rest of the country? A lot of rural states are far more dependent on Washington than they realize. Alaska, Montana, Louisiana, Wyoming, and Kentucky are the top six per capita recipients of federal government money. Four out of five voted for Trump in 2024. California and Vermont received the least.

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    2. Goldman Sachs Gets Whacked,

      down $25, or 3.9%, along with the rest of the financial sector. The new administration has decided to continue with Biden’s ultra-tough mergers & acquisitions policy, which is pro-consumer and anti-monopoly. (GS) is still a great company and the deregulation story still applies, but the bloom is off the rose.

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    3. Cruise Line Shares Get Sunk,

      which big losses in (CCL) and (RCL). The New Commerce Secretary indicated that their tax-free status may end. The ships are registered in Bermuda and employ all-foreign crews buy almost all of the passengers and revenues come from the US.

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    4. Walmart Gets Crushed,

      with the shares down 7%. Nobody wants to take the risk that tariffs get implemented where (WMT) would take the biggest hit.

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    5. Weekly Jobless Claims Jump 5,000,

      to 219,000. A big surge is coming from newly laid-off government workers.

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  • February 18, 2025

    1. Goldman Boosts Gold Forecast,

      to $3,100 per ounce, up from $2,890 previously. Spot gold gained on Tuesday after hitting a record high at $2,942.70 per ounce on February 11. Bullion has hit eight record highs so far this year and is up 11% so far on an annual basis. Buy (GLD) on dips.

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    2. Homebuilders are Panicking Over Tariff Prospects.

      Sentiment among the nation’s single-family homebuilders dropped to the lowest level in five months in February. The drop was largely due to concern over tariffs, which would raise homebuilder costs significantly. Sales expectations in the next six months took a major hit in the National Association of Home Builders’ Housing Market Index.

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    3. Silver is Catching Up with Gold,

      which hit a new all-time high weeks ago. Usually, silver outperforms gold by 2:1. But Chinese savers are after the yellow metal, not the white one, as are central banks. Silver depends more on industrial uses and alternative energy, while is seeing all subsidies eliminated. Buy (GLD) over (SLV).

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    4. Airbnb Shares Jump 13% on Earnings Beat.

      Travel companies have been helped by healthy demand in Asia, especially from Chinese consumers visiting destinations in Southeast Asia. Airbnb said that nights booked by outbound Chinese tourists rose 25% in the fourth quarter. It also saw a 30% growth in nights booked for domestic travel in Latin America, led by Brazil, compared to last year. First-time bookers in the region grew by nearly 15% sequentially. Keep in mind that my home away from home only posts positive reviews of its properties and deletes the negative ones. It’s amazing how much you can dress up a slum property with good pictures.

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    5. Intel Gained 11%

      on speculation that the iconic chipmaker could be broken up in a deal involving Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSMC) and Broadcom (AVGO). (TSMC) might operate Intel’s US factories and own a controlling stake in the venture. Broadcom may make a bid for Intel’s chip-design and marketing business. Avoid. Leave this one to the risk-ab boys.

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  • February 14, 2025

    1. Trump to Cut Defense Spending in Half,

      or by some $425 billion, sending defense stocks into free fall. The comments came in the context of Trump discussing a potential conference on defense spending with China and Russia. A trojan horse comes to mind. Avoid (RTX), (LMT), (GD), (NOC) and (HON).

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    2. US Q4 Profits Hit Three-Year High.

      With reports in from nearly 70% of the S&P 500 companies as of Wednesday, fourth-quarter earnings are estimated to have risen 15.1% from a year earlier, up from an estimate of 9.6% growth at the start of January. The S&P 500 communication services sector, which includes companies such as Meta Platforms (META) is leading estimated fourth-quarter earnings gains among sectors, with year-over-year growth of 32.2%.

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    3. U.S. Manufacturing Production Unexpectedly Fell

      in January, weighed down by a sharp decline in motor vehicle output. Factory output dipped 0.1% last month after a downwardly revised 0.5% rebound in December, the Federal Reserve said on Friday. Production at factories increased 1.0% on a year-on-year basis in January. Manufacturing, which accounts for 10.3% of the economy, has been recovering as the U.S. central bank started cutting interest rates in September.

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    4. Texas and California are the Biggest Trade War Losers.

      U.S. companies are expected to pay roughly $400 billion in trade duties related to President Trump’s trade war, between existing tariffs, threatened tariffs, and a new reciprocal tariffs threat President Trump included in a new memorandum on Thursday. While costs will spread across all U.S. states and ultimately be passed along to consumers in the form of higher prices, Texas and California companies will absorb the highest bills for payment of new customs duties.

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    5. U.S. Retail Sales Dropped Sharply

      in January, in part because cold weather kept more Americans indoors, denting sales at car dealers and most other stores. Retail sales fell 0.9 from the previous month, the Commerce Department said, after two months of healthy gains. It was a much bigger drop than economists expected and the biggest decline in a year. The average temperature in January was the lowest since 1988.

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  • February 13, 2025

    1. PPI Comes in Hot,

      reversing the gains on inflation of the past two years. The Producer Price Index, a measurement of average price changes seen by producers and manufacturers, rose 0.4% on a monthly basis and 3.5% for the 12 months ended in January. That held steady with December, which was upwardly revised to 3.5% according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Thursday.

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    2. BYD Shares Soar at Tesla’s Expense.

      Shares of Chinese electric vehicle leader soared on Wednesday. Essentially free self-driving technology is the reason. The company’s decision to put advanced driver-assistance technology on most of its vehicles, regardless of the cost to BYD, says a lot. Tesla has a lot to worry about. Is Elon Musk paying attention?

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    3. Defense Secretary Slams Defense Stocks,

      telling NATO that a return to Ukraine’s pre-2014 borders is an unrealistic objective. It’s a suggestion that the US will withdraw all support. (RTX), (LMT), (GD), (NOC), and (HON) all have taken major hints. Avoid defense.

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    4. Cisco Beats with Strong Guidance.

      The networking company reported earnings of 94 cents a share on revenue of $14 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet were expecting earnings of 91 cents a share from revenue of $13.9 billion. Cisco’s earnings rose from last year’s 87 cents a share, while revenue increased from $12.8 billion. Buy (CSCO) on dips as another legacy tech stock that has come back from the dead. Defense spending is not controlled by hard core isolationists.

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    5. Weekly Jobless Claims Fall.

      Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell 7,000 to a seasonally adjusted 213,000 for the week ended February 8, the Labor Department said on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 215,000 claims for the latest week.

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