Monday, August 28, 2023

The New RSV Vaccine(s) -- Scientific American -- August 28, 2023

Locator: 45495MEDICINE.

An incredibly good article, easy-to-read, and a tie-in with Covid.

Research began by a post-doc fellowship at the National Institutes of Health Vaccine Research Center, 2008 -- a decade before Covid-19 -- but led to the Covid-19 vaccines.

That researcher is now a molecular biologist at the University of Texas at Austin, Jason McLellan,

Two Big Pharma companies ran with the data were GSK and Pfizer. Each has come up with a vaccine, and each has been approved by the FDA.

GSK: Arexvy, already being advertised on televisionn.

Pfizer: Abrysvo, also already being advertised on television.

My wife got one of the two last week. Significant pain and swelling in arm following the shot, although she got the seasonal flu shot in the same arm at the same time. The latter has never been a problem for her so we assume the "reaction" was due to the RSV -- but at least we know it "took."



********************************
The Book Club

Oskar Schindler: The Untold Account of His Life, Wartime Activities, and the True Story Behind The List, David M. Crowe, c. 2004.

Notes.

Barron's Today -- August 28, 2023

Locator: 45494INV.

 Disclaimer: this is not an investment site.  Do not make any investment, financial, job, career, travel, or relationship decisions based on what you read here or think you may have read here. 

All my posts are done quickly: there will be content and typographical errors. If anything on any of my posts is important to you, go to the source. If/when I find typographical / content errors, I will correct them.  

Again, all my posts are done quickly. There will be typographical and content errors in all my posts. If any of my posts are important to you, go to the source.

Barron's this week:

Monster Energy: best stock in past 25 years.

American industry: to become less efficient, but investors are going to make a killing.


Fitness: most important number -- VO2max. And how do you measure that? With an Apple Watch. 



A Goldilocks Economy For Investors -- August 28, 2023

Locator: 45493INV.

NVDA: gains $8/share by the close. AAPL gains $1.60.

AMZN: raises free shipping minimum, link here. So incredibly right on so many levels. Amazon needs to remain focused on their "prime" customers.

 Disclaimer: this is not an investment site.  Do not make any investment, financial, job, career, travel, or relationship decisions based on what you read here or think you may have read here. 

All my posts are done quickly: there will be content and typographical errors. If anything on any of my posts is important to you, go to the source. If/when I find typographical / content errors, I will correct them.  

Again, all my posts are done quickly. There will be typographical and content errors in all my posts. If any of my posts are important to you, go to the source.

VIX below 16:

Truly a market for:

  • traders
  • stock pickers
  • long-term investors

The Goldilocks economy continues.

Ken Fisher's top 15 picks: link here.

Meanwhile, someone has come up with a list of "Buffett's can't lose" stocks. Link here.


Whispering
:
 

  • no more rate hikes this year, if no major changes in economic data; and,  
  • 50-50 bet on at least one rate cut in late 2024. 

Ken Fisher's list:

Ken Fisher

August, 2023

Billions

15

Visa

$2.00

14

AMEX

$2.00

13

Freeport-McMoRan

$2.20

12

Oracle

$2.21

11

Adobe

$2.40

10

Home Depot

$2.70

9

Salesforce (CRM)

$2.90

8

TSM

$2.99

7

AMD

$3.00

6

ASML

$3.50

5

NVDA

$3.60

4

GOOG

$5.11

3

AMZN

$5.30

2

MSFT

$8.32

1

AAPL

$10.24

Look at an analyst's take on AAPL (on the second page at this link).

Take Apple, Inc. for example. It is the largest stock by market cap, and fairly considered one of the best companies in the world. The company has been extraordinarily successful and improved standards of living everywhere in the process with their ubiquitous products. Along the way, shareholders have been richly rewarded, with shares increasing nearly fourteen-fold over the last ten years while generating an annualized total shareholder return of 31%, including dividends. 

On the back of another big quarter for large cap tech, it is now the first stock to surpass the $3T market cap threshold. This makes its weighting in the ~$37T market cap of the S&P 500, ~8%. It also means this one stock’s market cap is larger than that of the entire ~$2.98T market cap of the Russell 2000 index, the first time in history a single stock has outweighed the Russell 2000 – aside from two brief days in September 2020 when Apple’s market cap then accomplished the same.

Let’s have some fun with numbers for a second to put some context around how remarkable this feat is. To frame the implications of such continued success, let’s assume for a minute that Apple is able to duplicate this outstanding accomplishment and produce another decade of performance like the prior one. (Overlook for now how truly impressive this would be from a starting NTM PE multiple of 29x, a $3T market cap and topline revenues that are nearly $400B already).

At this rate of appreciation, the company’s market cap would be greater than the S&P 500’s current market cap. Even if the S&P 500 appreciated at 11% over the next ten years, it would still comprise nearly 40% of the market cap of the index, flying well past the prior record of ~8% it currently holds.

So, despite the company’s attractive attributes of which there are many, an encounter with the law of large numbers seems to be on the horizon.

Moving on from Apple, other megacap tech companies have received similar treatment. The press often refers to these top five companies with some updated version of FANG like FANMA, or the Magnificent 7 or the Megacap 8.

They include Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Meta and then Tesla, Nvidia and Netflix round out the group.

For the sake of easier comparisons to prior periods, we’ll focus this discussion on the top five holdings. Like Apple, they are wonderful companies, and their valuations convey the investing public recognizes them as such. Today, these five companies’ aggregate weighting in the S&P 500 is ~25%. They currently trade at ~30x NTM PE.

This level of concentration across the top five has only been seen a couple times in market history.

Though it is said history doesn’t repeat itself, it is also said it rhymes. So how might things rhyme this time? As an interesting thought experiment, let’s assume for a minute these companies traded down to the market multiple of 19x, not even the 17x where the S&P 493 trades (i.e. the S&P 500 minus these seven holdings). Should investors sell these stocks down to these multiples, the delta in those trading multiples alone would produce ~$3.7T worth of funds.

Monday Morning -- Auugust 28, 2023

Locator: 45492INV.

Education: why is this not surprising? Chromebooks have become an albatross for elementary schools across the country. Link to The WSJ. I twinge whenever I see an elementary student using a Chromebook. You get what you pay for. Costco sold a lot of Chromebooks when they first came out. I assume they still do.

NVDA: link here

ETFs, S&P 500: equal-weighted vs cap-weighted. Liz Sonders. Intuitively this seems to make sense during a period of economic uncertainty.


Equal weight investing
:  

Hurricane stats: link here.

Seven Wells Coming Off Confidential List -- August 28, 2023

Locator: 45491B.

Focus on fracking: pending.

*****************************
Back to the Bakken

WTI: $79.88.

Tuesday, August 29, 2023: 52 for the month; 254 for the quarter, 499 for the year
None.

Monday, August 28, 2023: 52 for the month; 254 for the quarter, 499 for the year
38994, conf, Hess, TI-Stenbak-158-95-2526H-9,
37613, conf, BR, Pullman 3A MBH-ULW,
35466, conf, Oasis, MHA 6-27-26H-150-92,

Sunday, August 27, 2023: 49 for the month; 251 for the quarter, 496 for the year
38996, conf, Hess, TI-Stenbak-LN-158-95-2526H-1,
37934, conf, BR, Boxer 3A TFH,

Saturday, August 26, 2023: 47 for the month; 249 for the quarter, 494 for the year
37933, conf, BR, Parrish 4A MBH,
35473, conf, Oasis, MHA 8-29-30H-150-92,

RBN Energy: exploring two potential paths for natural gas markets.

In the last 12 months, U.S. natural gas prices have touched highs not seen since the start of the Shale Revolution as well as depths previously plumbed only briefly during downturns in 2012, 2016 and 2020. Where will prices go next? Well, if we knew that, we wouldn’t be writing blogs. As we’ve seen in the past couple of years, there’s just too much going on in global markets to think you can know where gas prices will be 10 years, five years or even one year from now. But that never stopped us from trying. As we’ve done many times before, we’ll take a scenario approach — a high case and a low case. In today’s RBN blog, we’ll explore these scenarios for domestic natural gas prices and what sort of ramifications each would entail for other markets. 

Just over one year ago, on August 22, 2022, the prompt Henry Hub price settled at $9.68/MMBtu — it was the zenith of a five-month run in which the benchmark regularly settled in the $7-$9/MMBtu range. Henry averaged just over $6.50 in 2022 (dark green horizontal line to left in Figure 1), significantly higher than any single day’s settlement since 2008, when shale drilling first started making domestic gas abundant and cheap. (The highwater mark between those two eras was February 19, 2014, when Henry settled at $6.15/MMBtu.) While gas sellers in the U.S. likely have fond memories of that time, gas buyers, especially those on the other side of the pond, were having a far different experience.