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03-21-2024 , 02:06 PM
Well in 1945 there was a shortage of oil because of the War.

The government issued ration cards to individuals, specifying the amount of oil and gasoline they were allowed to purchase or consume.
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03-21-2024 , 03:56 PM
global oil demand confirmed unchanged since 1945
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03-21-2024 , 06:02 PM
Demand for newspapers has been falling, but their prices keep rising. I wonder why



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03-21-2024 , 06:20 PM
because nobody reads newspapers anymore so they lost all ad revenue so they charge a premium to a few boomers seeking the comforting tradition of crisp newspaper on their fingertips in the morning, flapping giant sheets this way and that at the breakfast table, ingesting information like dinosaurs

no doubt oil is generally a good inflation hedge. "oil prices rise because of an expansion in the money supply" is overly simplistic when it's also subject to supply/demand shocks
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03-23-2024 , 08:58 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by somigosaden
Basic fundamental question on oil stocks: Why do the servicers (HAL, SLB) move basically in lockstep with the rest of XLE. I haven't done much looking into this, but I brought up the charts for the past few years of HAL, SLB, XLE, XOM, and they're all basically the same. Imagine a scenario, like we had around 2014, where there's a ton of drilling going on, and way too much supply, so oil price plummets, and XLE eats ****, but all these drillers still need to service their wells, so the servicers should be making a killing from all the oil supply that's driving prices and profits down for the E&Ps. But I don't really see that in the charts. It just seems like when oil prices go up, servicers go up. And when oil prices go down, servicers go down.

I realize that when oil prices rise, it means E&Ps are likely to drill more in the future, and hence will need to contract more services. But looking further into the future, the added supply will lower prices, and hence they'll drill less and need less services. And these linkages don't seem all that rigid—whether oil is $70 or $90, the vast majority of producers will keep producing, and producers today are much more disciplined about oversupply than they've been historically. So I don't really see why producers and servicers don't trade more divergently.

Right now I think oil is kind of overbought, and there's tons of capacity, and lots of countries are drilling domestically for energy security. That's a bad backdrop to own XLE, but it seems like a good backdrop to own SLB. Yet, looking at historic performance, I'm not confident there would be any difference in stock performance no matter which I buy.
If your thesis (extracted from your question) is correct, you have a very obvious long-term trade. Earnings and cash flow trump everything in the long run.

"Price change correlated with something it ought not be correlated with" is a definite opportunity.
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03-27-2024 , 04:06 PM
With the Yen continuing to drop to 33yr lows I started a small position in the 'Buffett' trading stocks. I own very little overseas exposure other than LVMH and NVO so a little diversification is also nice.
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03-28-2024 , 12:14 PM
+1 MAG7 / +2 SARK is a trade I like
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04-03-2024 , 09:32 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by NajdorfDefense
Well, 2023 went really well with less than market risk so well done me.


First trade of 2024 is $CPRI which is being taken over by $TPR at $57 cash.
FTC is looking into the merger and has asked for a second review, but it's really hard to see them being made a bigger laughingstock over actually trying to block a midtier leather bag and expensive shoe merger than the giant laughingstock they were made over the ATVI deal.

Deal is supposed to close ~end of Q1 now since FTC asked for more info. 14% deal spread is a nice annualized rate. It's a $6bn deal so you can buy all you want.

Tapestry has already raised the required funds in the bond market. No chance they try to [or can] void the deal with a MAC clause in Delaware.

Obv risk is deal breaking, stock probably drops to $35ish. Market is too pessimistic on this deal which is the issue.
Thoughts on potential EU decision?

https://www.reuters.com/markets/deal...il-2024-03-08/
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04-05-2024 , 02:09 PM
04-11-2024 , 07:51 PM
Who knows what the FTC will do, that is the whole question, but the deal terms obligate TPR to fight them in court and the merger agreement was extended thru Feb 2025.

Europe: TPR/Kors have 6% market share outside the US/Asia. The LVMH/Tiffany's deal was cleared in 5 weeks and that involved, obviously, the largest player in the luxury market.

I don't think it's accurate that they would have 45% of the affordable luxury market in NA. Other reports have their share as low as 20-25%. Probably somewhere in the middle. And they are surrounded by competition, on all sides, from DKNY to Tory Burch to Dooney & Burke to Burberry and Marc Jacobs.

Market share is just a heuristic used anyway, but what really matters is market power which is based on elasticitity of price and substitution effects. A WallSt survey of their consumers revealed that 30% of CPRI/TPR buyers would switch if there was even a 10% increase in price. The same survey revealed that Kors, Spade, Coach handbags are only viewed as equal substitutes by 5-9% of consumers - the same range as a dozen other similar brands. If prices were hiked, a substantial portion of their consumers would either stop buying; or change to a cheaper [or pricier such as true luxury LVMH] brand[s].

Given that consumers can shop omni-channel and click through, literally, thousands of bags online should they desire, and can even check store prices instantly on their phone - a significant issue given the highly discretionary nature of the items, jacking up prices was always a non-starter from purely a sales POV.
Not to mention the importance of the wholesale channel who are generally able to set their own prices/discounts, the mall stores wouldn't have the same incentive to raise prices at retail even if wholesale cost bumps up 5-10%. JWN/Macys will take a smaller margin on these bags than risk no sale at all to a shopper actually in the store.

No deal it could certainly drop to the 32 range, but even the $28 posited by the bear is $12.5 down vs $16.5 up. No change in my opinion that the market has mispriced the risk of FTC fighting this to the death [where they'd likely lose, humiliatingly, again].

The good thing is with an all cash deal, if you're right you get paid out at that price, full-stop [as we saw with twitter] and no risk of ending up with NewCo stock that is in free-fall for any unknown reason. If it takes another ~10 months, that's another ~5% off the TVofM, but that's still 40% up from today.

The joy of binaries: I'll either be 100% right or wrong! That's why it's just one position in my portfolio.


N.b. not part of my thesis, but both Kering and Exor/Agnelli were also circling Kors which is why TPR made the all-cash bid in the first place.

Last edited by NajdorfDefense; 04-11-2024 at 08:01 PM.
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04-11-2024 , 08:00 PM
I noticed the chart of handbag comps by the bear left out these brands: Dooney & Burke, Calvin Klein, Burberry and DKNY. Maybe that's how he got to his estimate of 45% market share...
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04-11-2024 , 09:35 PM
Thanks naj, great read/info
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04-12-2024 , 08:42 AM
Whether you're in the Stagflation camp or this is a new bull market camp, I think down from here in both scenarios is good.

I'm looking for a retest of the former high on the S and P 500, call it a minimum of a 10 percent draw down from here.



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04-17-2024 , 03:13 PM
A very ugly couple of days, with all signs pointing to more to come.

I don't think this has anything to do with Israel and Iran, because the price of oil has been going down.

I think we're seeing some signs that liquidity is starting to dry up and the market may be trying to communicate to the Fed, that it's time to stop the Taper.
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04-25-2024 , 11:22 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by NajdorfDefense
I noticed the chart of handbag comps by the bear left out these brands: Dooney & Burke, Calvin Klein, Burberry and DKNY. Maybe that's how he got to his estimate of 45% market share...
Now what?
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05-12-2024 , 01:57 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Maximus122
Demand for newspapers has been falling, but their prices keep rising. I wonder why



There is is strong demand from a diminishing group but there's also a massive moat as those who still read newspapers have no interest in changing their supplier. So prices rise as fast as they are willing/able to pay before giving up completely.
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05-13-2024 , 09:31 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by chezlaw
There is is strong demand from a diminishing group but there's also a massive moat as those who still read newspapers have no interest in changing their supplier. So prices rise as fast as they are willing/able to pay before giving up completely.
It works out to 5% annualized inflation. Not really a big deal. Now do cigarettes.
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05-13-2024 , 11:07 PM
It's would be a huge a big deal for a product with no constraint on supply and weak demand. The moat explains it.

I dunno with cigarettes. We have to strip out all the taxes and regulatory fees (and maybe insurance) which are nothing to do with supply/demand. Far less brand loyalty moat but maybe all the bad mojo means there's a lack of suppliers competing. Also a ton of black market/theft in the market which may boost prices.

Last edited by chezlaw; 05-13-2024 at 11:15 PM.
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05-14-2024 , 05:24 AM
Inflation comes from government. When Biden is out there forgiving student loans to buy votes it isn't free. It has to be paid for. If you aren't going to raise taxes the money has to come out of somewhere. When the Fed lowers rates Americans are going to get smashed with an inflation tax.

That's why the founding fathers put us on a Gold Standard. They knew that the politician that offers the most free stuff get's elected and so eventually the politicians trying to outbid each other end up destroying the currency. There was no inflation on the Gold standard, when politicians were forced to live within their means.

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05-14-2024 , 05:29 AM
There is Dutch company that manufactures electric light's called Signify. It's market cap is 3.3 billion and it's expected to earn 352 million in 2025 and 395 million in 2026.

The interesting thing about this company is that it only pays a dividend only once a year and it goes ex on Thursday for 5.7 percent.

Does anybody have any experience with this sort of thing. When the dividend goes ex will the stock immediately drop by the amount of the dividend.

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05-14-2024 , 08:48 PM
Gonna buy Appl stock if I can get my hands on extra coins. Facebook couple years ago was in the dog house. Some failed cyber universe noone wanted it. They said nothing about any future ideas just said we are gonna buy back stock and a lot of it. Heard a guy on youtube martin shreki..sp? say to buy it, its a no brainer. They have cash, they are gonna use it to buy the stock, its going up. I didn't do anything but man was he right.

Apple has more cash money than anyone and they just annonced they are buying all of it. This is a no brainer for me. I want. 187 and change now, 400 inc.

Buybacks seem like cheating, but if you have that kinda cash...
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05-15-2024 , 07:00 AM
Meme stocks going crazy.

Semis back to their Dot Com peak relative to the S and P 500.

You never know exactly when it ends, but for the professional, the warning signs are flashing blood red.

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05-15-2024 , 09:59 AM
Ai is this generations dot com bubble - sure ai will revolutionize how we interact with the internet and with computers in general, but most startups are just throwing ai onto their description to get investors.
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05-15-2024 , 10:19 AM
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Originally Posted by lordg52
Ai is this generations dot com bubble - sure ai will revolutionize how we interact with the internet and with computers in general, but most startups are just throwing ai onto their description to get investors.
It reminds me a lot of 2021 where that Bubble was Tesla, Elon Musk, Arkk, Gamestop, Bitcoin.

Then in 2022 the market dropped 30 percent.

Now it's AI, Nvidia, Jensen Huang.

AI isn't even new. You've been able to ask Alexa queries for years. When you play Fifa against the computer that's AI.

I think 2025 could be a horrific crash in the markets.
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05-15-2024 , 06:57 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by chezlaw
It's would be a huge a big deal for a product with no constraint on supply and weak demand. The moat explains it.
It would be a big deal if it were such a product, but since it isn't such a product, it is no big deal.

It is hard (aka, no one would want to) to commoditize certain things.

Plus, and mostly, 5% inflation for a particular product in a particular country isn't noteworthy.

Quote:
I dunno with cigarettes. We have to strip out all the taxes and regulatory fees (and maybe insurance) which are nothing to do with supply/demand. Far less brand loyalty moat but maybe all the bad mojo means there's a lack of suppliers competing. Also a ton of black market/theft in the market which may boost prices.
We didn't strip out the cost of doing business in the other example of something with slightly higher inflation than aggregate inflation.

Would obviously do so if we were considering purchasing or starting a newspaper or ciggy business, but that info is usually included in financial statements.
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