The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

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THE DAILY EDGE: 29 JANUARY 2021

U.S. Initial Jobless Claims Decrease, but Sustain Recent Range

Initial claims for unemployment insurance decreased to 847,000 in the week ended January 23 from 914,000 the week before, which was revised from 900,000. While this was the second consecutive decline in initial claims, they remain well within the range that has prevailed for the last five months. The latest week was again very close to the Action Economics Forecast Survey estimate which was 875,000 for the week.

Initial claims for the federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) program were 426,856 in this latest week, down modestly from 447,328 the prior week; that number was revised from 423,734. The PUA program covers individuals such as the self-employed who are not included in regular state unemployment insurance.

Continuing claims for regular state unemployment insurance decreased 203,000 in the week ended January 16 to 4.771 million from 4.974 million the week before; that previous week was revised down from 5.054 million. Continuing PUA claims, which are lagged an additional week and not seasonally adjusted, rose markedly to 7.334 million in the January 9 week. Despite this sizable weekly increase, it does not offset the decline the week before, and these claims are thus the second lowest since May 2, 2020. Similarly, the Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC) claims also rose in the January 9 week, reaching 3.864 million from 3.027 million the prior week. This program covers people who were unemployed before COVID but exhausted their state benefits and are now eligible to receive benefits through March 14, 2021.

The total number of all state, federal and PUA and PEUC continuing claims rose 2.293 million in the January 9 week to 18.282 million. Again, the specialized pandemic-related programs and much smaller federal government and veteran programs are not seasonally adjusted, so this latest increase can reflect a return to regular schedules after the holiday period and not necessarily a deterioration in economic conditions.

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Another look thanks to Bespoke:

(Bespoke)

U.S. Economy Faces Uphill Climb at Start of Year The fourth quarter’s growth was concentrated at the start of the quarter, leaving the economy in a weak position now.

The Commerce Department on Thursday reported that gross domestic product grew at a 4% annual rate in the fourth quarter from the previous, after growing at a 33.4% rate in the second quarter. These annualized figures show what would happen if the quarterly change lasted full a year. In actual terms, GDP grew 1% in the fourth quarter and 7.5% in the third—not enough to take the economy out of the hole the Covid-19 crisis put it into in the first half of the year. GDP last quarter was 2.5% lower than a year earlier. (…)

Monthly GDP estimates from IHS Markit show that GDP in October was up about 0.6% from September, and was 1.4% higher than its third quarter average. But November was worse, with rising Covid-19 cases stifling consumer spending. And though Thursday’s report suggests that the economy recovered a bit of ground in December (IHS’s December estimates aren’t available yet), it looks as though GDP was below its October level. (…)

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Source: St. Louis Fed; Billions of chained 2012 dollars; Chart: Axios Visuals

U.S. New Home Sales Up 1.6% in December, Mixed by Region

Sales of new single-family homes edged upward in December to 842,000 (SAAR), +1.6% m/m and 15.2% y/y, from 829,000 in November; the earlier month was revised down from 841,000. October is now reported at 949,000, up from 945,000 and September’s 965,000 is unrevised from the prior report. The December sales results yielded total new home sales for 2020 of 811,000, up 18.8% from 2019. (…)

Sales performance was mixed by region in December. The Midwest and West had gains while the Northeast and South saw declines. Midwest sales rose 22,000, a surge of 30.6% from November’s 72,000, reaching 94,000; that made the y/y increase 13.3%. In the West, sales gained 19,000 to 234,000, an 8.8% rise m/m and 10.4% y/y. By contrast, sales in South dropped 26,000, or -5.1% m/m to 483,000, up 21.7% y/y. In the Northeast, sales decreased 2,000 or 6.1% m/m to 31,000 and 20.5% y/y.

The median price of a new home advanced 3.5% in December to $355,900 (8.0% y/y). The average price of a new home, though, edged up just 0.4% in the month to $394,900 (4.6% y/y).

The supply of new homes on the market in December represented 4.3 months of sales, slightly more than November’s 4.2 months. The preceding four months saw inventories of 3.5 or 3.6 months of sales. As was noted here last month, though, the recent increase in months’ supply is still notably less than in prior periods; over the last five years, in fact, the average has been 5.5 months and in December 2018, it was 7.4 months. The median number of months a new home stayed on the market after completion was 3.1 in December, down from 4.0 months in November, from an upwardly revised 4.1 months in October. These figures were down from a high of 4.5 months in both August and September.

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Positive Scarring

(…) A recent survey from the World Economic Forum found that more than 80% of employers are accelerating their automation of work processes and expanding their use of remote work. A significant 50% also indicate they are set to accelerate the automation of jobs in their companies (see figure 5). Additional evidence within the report suggested a significant increase in the number of firms expecting to adopt robots and artificial intelligence and a continued high priority toward investment in cloud computing , big data and ecommerce. While all this will undoubtedly generate workforce disruption it ought to also help drive up productivity growth as well as to increase the demand for new job roles and new skill sets. (Andrew Cates, Haver Analytics)

Figure 5: Planned business adaptation in response to COVID-19

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Source: Future of Jobs Survey 2020, World Economic Forum

Hedge Funds Stung by Turmoil The pain that has afflicted Melvin Capital Management and Maplelane in recent days is spreading

(…) as an increasing number of stocks with significant short interest surge and as funds dealing with losses pull back their exposure to the stock market on both the long and short sides of their portfolios.

That means funds are getting hurt even on previously profitable bets on companies as other funds exit their investments in the same firms. The pain is largely being caused by the broad market turmoil and not one specific stock. (…)

Some funds that have sustained severe losses are seeking influxes of cash to help stabilize their firms. (…)

A sign of the stresses some hedge funds are dealing with: Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s basket of the 50 stocks with the highest short interest as a share of market capitalization was up a total 52.1% for the year through Wednesday, while the S&P 500 was down 0.14% for the period. Meanwhile, Goldman’s basket of 50 stocks that most frequently appear among the largest 10 holdings of hedge funds was down 3% for the period, with the basket starting to fall sharply this week. (…)

Funds have also had to fund margin calls by banks, traders say. (…)

Money Losses top $70-billion on short positions in U.S. firms: Ortex data

Wall Street investors are sitting on estimated year-to-date losses of $70.87-billion on their bets against U.S. companies following massive surges in some of the heavily shorted shares, data from analytics firm Ortex showed on Thursday. (…)

Ortex data showed that as of Wednesday, there were loss-making short positions on more than 5,000 U.S. firms.

Shorting GameStop may have cost $1.03-billion year-to-date, Ortex estimates, while those shorting Bed, Bath & Beyond were looking at a $600 million loss. (…)

The trend of retail traders dueling with hedge funds has rippled out into Europe and Asia. Heavily shorted Australian shares Webjet and Tassal Group rose more than 5% on Thursday, bucking falls in the broader index. (…)

What’s a hedge again?

Barry Ritholtz posts this table today. What’s a hedge again? 2-20%!!

Source: American Enterprise Institute

Surge Tests SEC Manipulation Rules Wild rally fueled by day traders draws comparisons to pump-and-dump schemes

The frenzy has played out on public websites such as Reddit’s WallStreetBets, where small investors brag about their gains and exhort others to buy more shares and options. That transparency could make it easier for regulators to levy claims of manipulation, which historically has been a difficult offense for regulators to prove.

“If they are all egging each other on using a social-media platform, they are effectively engaged in a crowdsourced pump-and-dump scheme,” said Daniel Hawke, a partner at Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP.

The traders “are making no effort to conceal their apparent intent to manipulate the price of the stock,” added Mr. Hawke, a former chief of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s market abuse unit. (…)

An investigation would take time and require regulators to dig into who bought and sold and who made statements on websites such as Reddit, where users are anonymous. Suing hundreds of defendants who likely traded in small increments probably isn’t practical for the agency, according to securities lawyers, while a case that alleged a few key individuals instigated any problematic trading could be feasible. (…)

Some investors, though, said the trading talked about in Reddit’s WallStreetBets forum isn’t manipulative and reflects an earnest effort by individual investors to seize on opportunities that have always been available to establishment players. A Reddit spokeswoman said the company prohibits content that facilitates illegal transactions, and the company would “cooperate with valid law enforcement investigations or actions as needed.” (…)

Reddit’s WallStreetBets forum is full of brash amateur traders using foul-language commentary and positioning themselves as little guys beating up big investors who normally control the market.

“This is the ultimate triumph of the newbies over the old pros,” said Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers. “But what’s frustrating to the old pros is that they can’t engage in the sort of behavior that the newbies can do.”

DTCC asked brokerages for $33.5 billion in collateral Thursday

One key consideration for brokers, particularly around high-flying and volatile stocks like GameStop, is in the money they must put up with the DTCC while waiting a few days for stock transactions to settle. Those outlays, which behave like margin in a brokerage account, can create a cash crunch on volatile days, say when GameStop falls from $483 to $112 like it did at one point during Thursday’s session.

“It’s not really Robinhood doing nefarious stuff,” said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Larry Tabb. “It’s the DTCC saying ‘This stuff is just too risky. We don’t trust that these guys have the cash to be able to withstand settling these things two days from now, because in two days, who knows what the price could be, it could be zero.’” (Bloomberg)

BTW: Webull, which has expanded during the pandemic, saw new accounts soar 16-fold over the seven-day average, according to CEO Anthony Denier. Its app ranked as the second-most-popular free iPhone app in the U.S. on Thursday, up from No. 60 a day earlier, according to SensorTower, which gathers data on mobile apps. (Robinhood was still No. 1.) (Bloomberg)

COVID-19

Goldman Sachs updates us on the effects of vaccinations. This is for Israel but they see similar trends in the U.K. and the U.S..

(…) the left panel of Exhibit 3 plots the positivity rate for over and under 60s since November. After tracking each other quite closely for two months, the two lines diverge from the second week of January with the positivity rate now roughly 40% lower among the elderly. On the right, we present results from a large Israeli Health Maintenance Organization study which tracks their first 50,000 over 60 members to be vaccinated. As in Phase 3 trials, protection begins roughly two weeks after the first dose while the relative reduction in infections is near 60% at the time of the second dose.

Exhibit 3: Israeli Infections Have Fallen Among the Elderly and Vaccinated

3. Israeli Infections Have Fallen Among the Elderly and Vaccinated. Data available on request.

Source: KSM – Maccabi Research and Innovation Center, Israeli Health Ministry, Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research

Taken together, these early patterns from three countries suggest that targeted vaccinations are likely already improving health outcomes. Over the coming weeks, we would expect improvements to speed up in these three countries reflecting the acceleration in vaccinations. Similarly, we would expect other countries which have vaccinated a relatively large share of their vulnerable groups, such as Germany, to soon see tentative signs of improvement in these groups. While population-wide health outcomes will also critically depend on spread of the new strains, the vaccine-driven improvements should rise quickly in the US

imageand several European countries as the 20% highest vaccine priority citizens typically account for roughly 50-60% of hospitalizations and 65-90% of fatalities.

China’s HNA Says Creditors Filed Petition for Its Bankruptcy Embattled Chinese conglomerate HNA Group said it was notified that some of its creditors filed a court petition for its bankruptcy and reorganization after it failed to repay its debts on time.

THE DAILY EDGE: 28 JANUARY 2021

Demand for U.S. Durable Goods Eased in December Orders for long-lasting products rose for eighth straight month in U.S., though the 0.2% rise was the smallest since the summer

(…) New orders for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft—or so-called core capital-goods orders, a closely watched proxy for business investment—increased 0.6% in December from the previous month, to $71.8 billion. The gain was also smaller than in recent months. (…)

New orders for transportation equipment weighed on last month, falling 1%. Orders for commercial aircraft and parts dropped sharply, driven primarily by a decline in net orders at Boeing Co. , according to economists. (…)

Excluding transportation, a category that can be particularly volatile, overall durable-goods orders increased 0.7%. (…)

Core orders are up 8.4% YoY, +13.9% annualized in Q4 (table from Haver Analytics):

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This is a lot more than a pandemic rebound. The last 3 quarters, including the Q2 drop, are up 10.4%.

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Fed Holds Policy Steady as Economy Stumbles ‘The pandemic still provides considerable downside risks,’ Fed Chairman Powell says

(…) The central bankers hope the setback is temporary and have signaled they have no intention of pulling back from their policies until the economy—and in particular the job market—recover. “There are people out there who have lost their jobs. It is essential that we get them back to work as quickly as possible,” Mr. Powell said. (…)

“We think it’s going to be a struggle,” Mr. Powell said. “The pandemic still provides considerable downside risks to the economy.” (…)

Mr. Powell signaled tacit support for additional spending measures from Congress, saying they would “help households and businesses weather the downturn as well as limit lasting damage to the economy that could otherwise impede the recovery.” (…)

The central bank estimates U.S. economic output will grow 4.2% in 2021 and the unemployment rate will drop to 5% by year’s end from 6.7% in December. The Fed sees the jobless rate falling further to 4.2% by the end of 2022. (…)

Mr. Powell also played down the risk of a dangerous asset bubble. The home-price rise, for example, was in part a one-time event associated with the pandemic, he said. “There was a lot of pent up demand,” he added. “The price increases are unlikely to be sustained.” (…)

True, but not necessarily because the pandemic will end. House prices have increased at twice the rate of growth in average earnings since 2015 and only lower mortgage rates have kept affordability manageable. Current home prices are 3-4% above trend which is 15% above the trend in wages (recent average wage data is distorted by the disproportionate decline in the number of low wage employees).

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Here’s one way of looking at pent-up demand:

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WSJ’s Justin Lahart:

In his post-meeting press conference Wednesday, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said the central bank isn’t close to countenancing tapering yet, and that when it is ready to talk about it, it will do so well in advance of “a pretty gradual taper.” It is an easy thing to say now, but if in the months ahead things really start looking better, figuring out how to get its taper messaging right could be one of the Fed’s biggest challenges.

NBF tells us that rising home prices are a global phenomenon:

As today’s Hot chart shows, over the four quarters leading to Q3, housing prices in OECD countries have risen at a rate of 6.4%. That’s the biggest increase in 15 years despite a very challenging economic context. Among the 32 countries for which data is available, only two experienced price declines (Colombia and Ireland) and those pullbacks were less than 1%. Income support programs put in place by governments combined with interest rate cuts have allowed real estate prices to swell during this recession. This development signals a positive wealth effect for homeowners that has spared the banking system from losses. These unique conditions bode well for the economic recovery if the pandemic can indeed be brought under control this year.

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GameStop Mania Reveals Power Shift on Wall Street—and the Pros Are Reeling Internet-fueled amateurs, on platforms like Reddit and Discord, are piling into stocks, bragging about gains and banding together to intensify moves

(…) Long-held strategies such as evaluating company fundamentals have gone out the window in favor of momentum. War has broken out between professionals losing billions and the individual investors jeering at them on social media. Meanwhile, the frenzy of activity is stirring regulatory and legal concerns, as well as the attention of the Biden administration. (…)

Bearish investors who took short positions have lost $23.6 billion this year through the close of trading Wednesday on GameStop alone, according to financial analytics company S3 Partners, including $14.3 billion on Wednesday when the stock price jumped 135%, its largest percentage increase in history, to a record $347.51. (…)

“They never have in the movies some guy sitting on a hill in Brisbane sitting in his pajamas. That’s how I’m trading. I’m trading sometimes at Safeway buying groceries. I’ve traded at a traffic light.” (…)

He said if he had realized how lucrative trading could be, he wouldn’t have sprung for his online law or undergraduate degree. “Please tell the wolf of Wall Street that the pigeon of San Francisco is gonna eat your lunch,” he said.

Noah Williams, a 36-year-old Atlanta resident, said he has earned close to $150,000 in cash from his GameStop options positions over the past two weeks, allowing him to pay off more than $43,500 of outstanding student loan debt. He currently holds about 1,100 shares of GameStop, he said, after starting to buy shares at $16 in the fall. He has continued purchasing shares in the months since with profits from his GameStop trades.

I think the big takeaway is, fundamentals do not apply to retail traders,” said Mr. Williams. “It’s all about sentiment. The only reason why Tesla is worth what it is is because people believe in that company.” (…)

Some brokerages, including Charles Schwab & Co., TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. and Robinhood Markets Inc. have also been increasing margin requirements—or the amount that investors can borrow to execute trades—for GameStop and AMC, a move typically done when volatility or risk for a security changes. (…)

On Jan. 19, a Twitter account identifying itself as moderators for WallStreetBets posted that the forum had long been dismissed, but “we are also now a powerful force to be taken seriously.” Some users have expressed concern that the Securities and Exchange Commission would act if users appeared organized. On Discord, in a chat room linked to WallStreetBets, a user on Tuesday posted, “Guys, we need to pump $GME. Everyone buy 1000 shares in exactly 60 seconds.” [That was more than $100k] (…)

“When [short seller] Citron got involved, that’s when I think I wanted more involvement,” said Danny Faiella, a 33-year-old house painter in Hilo, Hawaii, who trades between jobs and has poured about $3,500 into GameStop stocks and options. He has been buying calls tied to GameStop since November—positions that rapidly jumped in value as the stock soared—and ramped up the trade after Mr. Left revealed his position. “I find value in the stocks that he now shorts.” (…)

The volume of trading and the high number of outstanding, short-dated call options in GameStop has astonished Wall Street veterans. More than 2 million options contracts tied to GameStop changed hands Friday, the most on record. Options volumes for AMC hit a high on Monday. (…)

On Jan. 27, more than 39 million bullish calls changed hands, making it the most active day for such bets in history. (…)

Many traders have been questioning whether users who have been posting about the company and urging others to buy shares and calls could be considered a “group” by the SEC’s definition. That designation could require regulatory disclosures for investors acting together on a particular stock and at certain thresholds restrict trading and require a return of some short-term profits.

Hedge funds and their clients also have been asking whether the activity could be considered market manipulation. (…)

“If it is just folks whipping each other into a frenzy on the internet, it is hard to find a violation,” Mr. Bennett [a former enforcement chief at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority] said. “But if you have people putting information out on a website, and these are stock pickers selling into the frenzy and they are not disclosing that, it can be fraud.” (…)

Securities and regulatory lawyers say neither market manipulation nor group cases, particularly in the context of anonymous internet posters, are easy to make. The former raises the question of whether the SEC has the will to go after individual investors or require a short seller to file suit and open up its own books for discovery, they say. (…)

And there is Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.):

For years, the same hedge funds, private equity firms, and wealthy investors dismayed by the GameStop trades have treated the stock market like their own personal casino while everyone else pays the price,” she said. “It’s long past time for the SEC and other financial regulators to wake up and do their jobs — and with a new administration and Democrats running Congress, I intend to make sure they do.

FYI: $GME short int is $10.64B; 71.88M shs shorted; 139.73% of Float; 58.29% S3 SI% Flt; 38% fee & rising. Shs shorted up +1.61M shs, +2.30%, over last 30 days & up +787K shs, +1.11%, last week. Shorts down -$23.82B in 2021 mark-to-market losses; down -$14.52B on today’s +137% move. (Ihor Dusaniwsky, head of S3 Partners which provides daily short interest tracking in real-time notes)

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Bloomberg’s John Authers:

  • The following chart, provided by Societe Generale SA’s chief quantitative strategist Andrew Lapthorne, shows volumes in the most-shorted stocks going back a decade. The explosion in the past year is remarkable:

relates to Outside the GameStop Bubble, Stocks Have Concerns

  • The following chart compares the performance of small-caps in the Russell 2000 index, depending on how heavily they have been short-sold. The 5% that have the least short interest have actually fallen slightly for the year. The 5% with the greatest short interest are up more than 50%. This is unprecedented:

relates to Outside the GameStop Bubble, Stocks Have Concerns

(…) Warren Buffett attributed to his mentor, Ben Graham, the line that “in the short run, the market is a voting machine—reflecting a voter-registration test that requires only money, not intelligence or emotional stability—but in the long run, the market is a weighing machine.”

The absence of emotional stability on r/WSB is obvious and has worked out beautifully for buyers of GameStop so far. But when the stock is weighed, many will be found wanting, as they always are in bubbles.

As to Noah Williams’ assertion that “fundamentals do not apply to retail traders”, he may well be right for now but his thinking carries low odds when considering the last 100 years. The sad reality is that fundamentals tend to carry on longer than retail traders do.

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The new retail traders will also need to get smarter about what they actually buy and sell. Many frenzied traders seeking to squeeze the shorts on AMC Entertainment, the troubled cinema chain, mistook it for AMC Networks, a streaming company, which saw its stock go viral during 3 days before coming back to earth. Ouch! Nobody’s bragging about that!

THE RETAIL MANIA IS HERE

US households’ equity allocation has risen to record highs, surpassing its previous high seen at the beginning of 2000 at the peak of the dotcom bubble. The picture points to an overextension with US households. This “picture” is needless to say re-enforced about the latest actions in terms of increased small-lot call volume and aggressive buying of loss-making companies. This implies that assessing the behavior of the household sector is important for the equity market outlook from here. Signs that US retail investors are stepping back from their recent equity buying could point to peaking of their equity allocation and thus have negative implications for the equity market going forward. (The Market Ear)

Goldman Strategist Joins Chorus Saying Buy the Dip in Stocks Strategists are lining up to recommend buying the dip in stocks, anticipating that more stimulus and a global economic recovery from the pandemic will bolster equities.

(…) “This should be seen as a correction in a new equity cycle, and it’s likely that recovery when it comes back again will be led by more cyclical and value parts of the market,” Peter Oppenheimer, chief global equity strategist at Goldman Sachs, said on Bloomberg Television. Markets will climb on a strong economic and profits recovery, he added. (…)

One concern is that a lot of hedge funds are getting burned by their shorts and may be face margin calls, forcing them to sell some of their long positions. Axios reports that “Hedge funds are shedding billions, with losses suffered over the past few days possibly ranking as career worsts for some. Point 72 is down as much as 15% this month, while D1 Capital is down 20%, people familiar said.”

Bloomberg’s Joe Weisenthal:

Maybe something will change with the price of call options going forward. Maybe something will change with the nature of shorting. Whatever it is, the possibility that such a thing can happen — and the awareness among individual traders that they can possibly make something like this happen again, especially with smaller or less-liquid securities — is now always with us, and could leave a permanent mark, as investors fear the possibility of getting GameStopped.

John Authers: Outside the GameStop Bubble, Stocks Have Concerns

(…) Doubts are deepening over the “reflation trade,” which took hold after the successful vaccine results were announced last November, and stepped up after Democrats won back control of the Senate in early January. This isn’t a big reversal, but on a number of measures it appears investors need more confirmation that reflation is actually happening before they move further. (…)

The reason can be given in one word: coronavirus. With new variants crossing the world, and growing understanding of the difficulties involved in vaccinating the population, there is a growing understanding that we need to wait to be sure that reflation is here. If virus mutations take hold before enough people can be vaccinated, then hopes of a return to normal by summer will be dashed. Powell made clear that nothing mattered more than the virus and the vaccine; it is impossible to disagree.

TECHNICALS WATCH

Technicians say that yesterday’s selling was not intense with down volume only 47% of total Up/Down volume. But that may be because the mob kept buying:

The S&P 600 Small-Cap Index lost only 0.3% yesterday, supported by the mob. BTW, GME is now bigger than more than 200 companies in the S&P 500.

As of yesterday, charts courtesy of CMG Wealth:

  • 13/34–Week EMA Trend still intact even though extended:

  • S&P 500 Index vs. 50-Day & 200-Day Moving Average Cross:

COVID-19
Pfizer Study Suggests Shot Will Work Against Variants The study found that coronavirus mutations identified in the U.K. and South Africa had only small impacts on the effectiveness of antibodies generated by Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine.

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Data: The COVID Tracking Project, state health departments. Map: Andrew Witherspoon/Axios

  • But the U.S. is still averaging roughly 165,000 new cases per day, meaning the virus is still spreading largely unchecked.
  • Nationwide, new cases are now at about the same level they were at in mid-December — down from their peak, but still a lot. (Axios)