Market Overview

  • As "not so hard" economic data were released one after another, the market continued to digest the dovish Powell (there are many hawkish other members), and expectations for rate cuts rebounded. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose for five consecutive weeks, the S&P and Nasdaq rose for four consecutive weeks, especially the Nasdaq Technology Index, which rose more than 3% this week. After the CPI data this week, U.S. stocks have recovered all of April's losses and hit a record high.

  • The bull run that began in October 2022 has not been without its setbacks, with the main setback coming from concerns that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates high for a long time. Still, the S&P 500 has returned nearly 52% since then, including a gain of more than 10% so far in 2024.

  • While much of the market's rise since 2022 has been driven by significant growth in the tech sector (along with the so-called "Big Seven" and a particular enthusiasm for artificial intelligence), what we need to see is the near-term market's Breadth is beginning to increase, which is a positive sign for the durability of the bull market. It can be noted that recent weeks have seen a decline in cyclical sectors such as industrials and financials, as well as more defensive and rate-sensitive sectors such as utilities.

  • The latest inflation data and speeches by central bank officials in Europe both support a rate cut in June, which seems to be a foregone conclusion. However, European stock investors have begun to focus on the prospect of a rate cut after June. This prospect has been hit by the cautious speeches of officials, and European stocks closed slightly lower last week (but still near historical highs).

  • Chinese stocks continued to strengthen, supported by unprecedented real estate market stimulus policies. The CSI 300 rose to a 7-month high, the China Concept Index (HXC Index) rose to an 8-month high, and the Hong Kong stock market's strongest HSI rose 4.74% to a 9-month high, of which the domestic real estate index rose 9.9% and has risen 40% in the past four weeks. Analysts generally believe that the government wants to support this industry, but does not want to over-stimulate it, so it is still looking forward to more policy support.

  • Gold (historical high), silver (+ 11%), cryptocurrencies, copper, and crude oil all rose. The main background for the rise in copper prices is the expectation that the wave of electrification will drive the growth of copper demand, including electric vehicles, artificial intelligence data centers, or the expansion of power grid facilities to meet the surge in electricity demand. At the same time, as the production capacity of new copper mines decreases, the West sanctions Russia's supply.

  • The V-shaped trend of U.S. Treasury yields fell only slightly throughout the week. Judging from the timing of the abnormal trend, this is related to the release of several leading indicators of the U.S. economy suggesting that growth is facing serious resistance, although it is considered to be good for the stock market:

  • While it seems that goldiloc conditions are back in the stock and commodity markets (the economy is doing well and the Fed can keep inflation under control, though not necessarily back to 2%), there is some concern in the bond market.

Q1 results

Sofar, 93% of S&P 500 companies have reported results, with 78% beating EPS expectations. The earnings growth rate of 5.7% is the highest year-over-year earnings growth rate since the second quarter of 2022 (5.8%). For the second quarter of 2024, 54 S&P 500 companies issued negative EPS guidance and 37 S&P 500 companies issued positive EPS guidance. Analysts expect the second quarter EPS growth rate to reach 9.2%. In addition, analysts also expect earnings growth rates of 8.2% and 17.4% in the third and fourth quarters of 2024, respectively.

Optimistic expectations support high valuations: the S&P 500's forward 12-month P/E ratio is 20.7. This P/E ratio is higher than its 5-year average of 19.2 and its 10-year average of 17.8:

Price data

Last week, the much-anticipated April CPI (Consumer Price Index) report was released. The results were in line with market expectations, with inflation seemingly returning to a milder trend after months of reports exceeding expectations that caused market anxiety.

The fundamental trends in the CPI report are encouraging. The headline core CPI fell year-over-year to 3.6%, the lowest level in three years. Month-over-month it rose 0.3%, below the expected 0.4% and below the 0.4% in the previous month. While these numbers alone are not particularly optimistic, this is the first CPI report this year that is not higher than expected, so it is enough to make the long-term sentiment of the bulls explode after the FOMC.

Among them, commodity prices continued to fall, and the decline in the cost of automobiles and household goods played a boosting role. In the past 6 months, the core commodity side has been falling except for February, echoing Powell’s recent statement that commodity inflation has basically returned to the pre-epidemic level, and continued deflation is suppressing inflation. Core services rose by 0.4% month-on-month and 5.3% year-on-year, and it is still the most problematic part of the CPI. The biggest of them is housing, which rose by 0.4% month-on-month and 5.5% year-on-year. Rent inflation and owner’s equivalent rent (OER) both rose by 0.4%. Housing and gasoline contributed more than 70% of the nominal CPI increase this time. Other services including transportation, auto insurance, and medical care fell slightly, and education unexpectedly rose by 0.2% (additional disturbance caused by the student movement?)

Rents lag for about a year, and house price increases are also expected to slow, so why do officials believe that inflation will continue to decline? Zillow's new rental price year-on-year growth rate bottomed out in September at +3.27%, but then stagnated. Coupled with rising commodity prices, this makes people wonder whether future inflation data will continue to be better than expected:

Zillow expects home prices to peak this summer and turn downward. It now expects a 0.6% increase in 2024, down from the 1.9% increase in 2024 it forecast last month and well below the average annual appreciation rate of around 5% before the pandemic. Zillow predicts home prices will fall 0.9% over the next 12 months. The main reason is a surge in listings as the market shifts in favor of buyers:

Nick, the "new Fed mouthpiece," pointed out that after the April report, two more CPI reports are needed to boost the Fed's confidence. The Fed may still not cut interest rates before September. The significance of the April CPI data is that it retains the possibility of a rate cut later this year and calms some concerns that the Fed may need to further open the door to rate hikes.

The PPI data released on Tuesday is quite interesting. Driven by energy prices and service costs, the nominal PPI rose by 0.5% month-on-month in April, significantly higher than the expected 0.3% and 0.2% last month. The annual increase was 2.2%, in line with expectations, but a new high so far this year. The core PPI excluding food and energy also rose by 0.5%, significantly higher than the expected 0.2%, and the annual increase was 2.4%, also in line with expectations.

These inflation figures are obviously not good news, but the market did not fall much before the opening. The reason is that the government revised the previous month. The nominal and core month-on-month growth in March changed from the original increase of 0.2% to a decrease of 0.1%. This completely changed the interpretation, from inflation to deflation. The market was confused all of a sudden. Should it be nervous about the PPI's significantly higher expectations, or happy about the timely deflation last month? Judging from the final trend, the market chose the latter, and the three major stock indexes all rose at the opening.

CN sells off record US debt

As of March, China sold U.S. Treasuries for the fifth consecutive month, with a total of $53.3 billion sold in the first quarter, setting a record. Even during the 2008 financial crisis, such a sustained reduction in holdings of government and agency bonds was not observed.

Bloomberg analysis points out that despite being close to the Fed's rate cut cycle, China is still selling dollars and the US dollar, so there should be a clear intention... As the Sino-US trade war restarts, China's selling of US securities may accelerate, especially if Trump is re-elected as president.

While selling dollar assets, official gold holdings are rising again. According to PBOC data, the share of gold in reserves climbed to 4.9% in April. This is the highest level since 2015. The IMF mentioned that since 2015, China and countries in close relations have increased their gold holdings in foreign exchange reserves, while countries in the US camp have remained basically stable, which seems to mean that their central banks may buy gold out of concerns about the risk of sanctions.

On the other hand, Japan is buying. According to the Ministry of Finance, overseas holdings of U.S. Treasuries reached $8.09 trillion in March, up from $7.97 trillion the previous month, setting a new record high. U.S. Treasuries have performed strongly this month, with the most foreign buying in three months. The volume of U.S. Treasuries held by Japan has also risen sharply, now at a record high of $1.19 trillion.

MEME is booming, the company immediately cashes out and suppresses the stock price

From Monday to Wednesday, Roaring Kitty's return to X after three years triggered a massive short squeeze on heavily shorted Gamestop and AMC Entertainment Holdings, and the company's market value rose to $19.8 billion. The rally lasted only two days before entering a correction. Then on Friday, GME announced that it would use this MEME hype to issue 45 million shares, which severely suppressed the hype enthusiasm (retail is fuel, not people), but the stock has still nearly doubled so far in May (AMC also announced an additional $250 million in shares this week). In addition, GameStop also predicted that net sales in the first quarter will fall from $1.24 billion in the same period last year to between $872 million and $892 million.

It seems that the MEME concept token in cryptocurrency has not been affected by the negative impact of the stock market. It has strengthened significantly in the past 7 days. Among them, PEPE’s 10% increase has brought its market value to 4 billion US dollars, a new record high, and its market value has entered the top 30 of cryptocurrency (including stable currency), is the only one among the top 100 tokens in terms of market capitalization that has rebounded to a new high

The GME meme coin on Solana rose 40 times last week, with a high synchronization rate with the GME stock trend:

GPT 4 o One step closer to AGI

OpenAI launched a new AI model last week, called GPT 4 o, which will be open to all users. It can perform reasoning across text, audio, and vision (images and videos) in real time, and is twice as fast as GPT 4 Turbo, but at half the cost. The new model can observe your emotions and can handle situations where you interrupt it. The new audio model can respond in an average of 320 milliseconds, which is almost the same as the response time of human communication. In the food video, 4 o can have video conversations with users to help users analyze the surrounding environment. OpenAI also demonstrated that 4 o can help guide children to learn mathematics in real time on an iPad.

Microsoft's stock price and AI-based cryptocurrency did not react much to this. Apple, on the other hand, is said to have finalized the details of integrating some GPT technologies into the iPhone. If Siri can use these technologies, its interaction quality and user experience will achieve a huge leap, so it was Apple that reacted the most last week.

Tesla has rehired the laid-off supercharger team

According to Bloomberg, one of the people who returned is Max De Zegher, the former director of North American charging business, second only to Rebecca Tinuity, the company's previous general manager of charging business. It is not clear how many people have been called back. Last Friday, Musk wrote on x that Tesla would spend more than $500 million to expand its supercharging network, and emphasized that these are just new sites and do not include the original operating expenses, trying to dispel market doubts. As for Musk's erratic behavior, some supporters quoted what he said before, saying that if you want to simplify the steps, the easiest way is to delete it. If you don't add back at least 10% in the end, then it means that you haven't deleted it thoroughly enough. But others said that the best talents will definitely be snatched away immediately, and even if Tesla recruits them back, it will be a little worse, which is not a good thing.

Retail investor sentiment is high

Rising OTC volumes are often seen as an indicator of rising retail trading activity, and Friday's OTC volume accounted for 51.6% of all U.S. stock trading yesterday, the highest level on record. Goldman Sachs analyst Scott Rubner said he heard more talk of "FOMU" (fear of missing out on a big performance) this week. In addition, the hashtag #DOW40K" is trending on social media, indicating that retail traders are excited about the recent performance of the Dow Jones Index.

liquidity

Money market funds saw inflows for the fourth week in a row (+$16.4 billion), returning to all-time highs above $6 trillion to their highest level in a month following a seasonal tax-related decline:

The abundance of cash is also reflected globally, with foreign central banks' use of the Fed's reverse repurchase agreements (earning interest on deposited cash) rising to the highest level in a year:

Inflows into the Ut and Infra sectors were the largest in more than a year:

13F shows Bitcoin ETFs were extremely popular in the first quarter

Nearly 1,500 holding records worth $10.7 billion were reported, accounting for 20% of the total value of ETFs, of which 929 institutions own at least 1 Bitcoin ETF. Among them, 44% of companies hold IBIT, 65% of companies own Grayscale GBTC (it should be the shares converted after the listing, not the increase in holdings), 99% of which are located in the United States, and Hong Kong companies rank second.

The largest owner, MILLENNIUM, is worth $1.9 billion. Bracebridge Capital, a hedge fund that manages the endowments of Yale and Princeton universities, holds more than $400 million. The Wisconsin Investment Board (a public pension fund) reports that it has more than $160 million in Bitcoin funds. JPMorgan Chase, which has been critical of Bitcoin, also reports owning a small amount of spot Bitcoin ETF shares.

Bloomberg analysts commented, “Typically, these big fish institutions don’t show up in the 13 F for a year or so (when the ETFs get more liquidity) but as we’ve seen, these are not ordinary good signs because institutions tend to act en masse.”

IBIT also stands out for breaking the previous record of $10 billion set by a traditional ETF, crossing the threshold in 49 days. The JPMorgan Nasdaq Equity Premium Yield ETF (JEPQ) previously held the record, which took about three years.

Highlights of Big Fish’s actions in the first quarter

Shift in AI investment: Although Nvidia has been dominant in the field of artificial intelligence, many investors have turned their attention to other companies in the first quarter. For example, Druckenmiller cut his holdings in Nvidia, believing that it is overvalued in the short term. At the same time, some investors began to pay attention to other stocks that are expected to benefit from the AI ​​revolution, such as Apple, Meta Platforms, and Microsoft.

Focus on Chinese companies: The Chinese stock market has had a rough time due to concerns about the country's economic slowdown. However, some well-known investors have seen investment opportunities and have increased their holdings of Chinese retail and technology companies. For example, David Tepper has significantly increased his holdings in companies such as Alibaba, Baidu and Pinduoduo. Big short Michael Burry has significantly increased his holdings in JD.com and Alibaba.

Buffett's Secret Stock Revealed: Berkshire Hathaway has been keeping one of its portfolio stocks a secret. In its latest 13-F filing, the mystery is finally revealed: the stock is Swiss-domiciled insurance company Chubb.

CME intends to trade Bitcoin, Coinbase plummets upon hearing the news

On Thursday local time, according to media reports, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange plans to launch spot Bitcoin trading to meet the needs of Wall Street. CME declined to comment on this. After the news came out, the US crypto asset trading platform Coinbase fell 9.4% in the overnight market. However, CME mainly provides services to institutions, while Coinbase mainly serves retail investors - in Q1, Coinbase's retail trading revenue was US$935 million, far higher than the institutional revenue of US$85 million.

This week’s focus

If there were still disagreements about inflation signals last week, the next major catalyst is Nvidia's report this week. Consensus estimates that Nvidia's revenue for the first quarter of fiscal 2025 is expected to reach $24.65 billion, more than double the year-on-year growth. The company previously provided revenue guidance of $24 billion, with a fluctuation of 2%; net profit for the same period is expected to be $12.87 billion, a year-on-year increase of more than 530%.

Nvidia has exceeded expectations for five consecutive quarters since the third quarter of 2022. You know, ChatGPT had not yet appeared at that time. The real explosion was in the spring of 2023, and then NV's profits began to soar due to the hot sales of artificial intelligence GPU chips. One problem is that the percentage of exceeding expectations in the last three quarters has gradually narrowed, from 2x% to single digits, but there is no need to worry too much. After all, this is much stronger than before. Many institutions have raised Nvidia's new target price range, ranging from US$1,100 to US$1,350.

There are several factors driving NV's upward performance guidance. The first is that the announcements of four technology companies, Microsoft, Google, Amazon's AWS, and Meta, show that capital investment in cloud computing this year is as high as $177 billion, far higher than last year's $119 billion, and will continue to increase to $195 billion in 2025. These investments will provide impetus for Nvidia's continued growth in data center revenue and profits, especially in the next generation.

Blackwell AI chip will be released later this year. NV data center revenue has soared from 50% to 80%, and AI remains Nvidia's main growth driver.

Analysts' high confidence in Nvidia's future performance growth potential is mainly based on: First, product supply and market demand. Better supply of H 100 GPUs (shortened delivery time) and strong demand for H 200 GPUs in China provide strong support for Nvidia's current quarter performance. The upcoming Blackwell series of GPUs (B 100 and B 200) are expected to be sold from the third quarter and occupy most of the market share in the fourth quarter. The average selling price of these two GPUs is about 40% higher than existing products, indicating higher revenue potential.

AMD and Intel are catching up with Nvidia. However, in the GPU market, NV firmly controls about 92% of the market share. As we have analyzed before, NV's barriers are not only the chip itself, but also the software and community ecology, which comprehensively reduce the cost of customers and make it impossible for competitors to surpass it in the short term.

In terms of valuation, NV has entered the 2 trillion club. Apple's revenue is more than 7 times that of NV, so NV needs to maintain high growth to maintain its stock price. However, in order to invalidate the growth story, it will take several consecutive quarters of poor financial performance to change the market's view and cause the stock price to fall sharply. Therefore, even if this financial report disappoints everyone, the market position will not be shaken by an unsatisfactory financial report, and a rebound in the short term is expected in the absence of alternatives.

In recent weeks, we have seen technology companies that have exploded, including ASML, Inter, AMD, SMCI and ARM. After the earnings reports that were lower than expected, the stock prices of all of them fell by 10-30%, but as of now, they have basically recovered more than half of the losses.

In addition, several senior Fed officials will make speeches this week, including Board members Barr and Waller, as well as regional Fed presidents Williams and Bostic. The focus will be on the statement of Waller, the next successor to the Fed. Last week, he did not make any comments on the economic and monetary policy outlook in his speech. The minutes of the last FOMC meeting will also be released on Thursday.