Exorbitant Privilege

Bull & Bear

Hi, The Investor’s Podcast Network Community!

If you put AI in charge of picking stocks, will it pick AI stocks? 🤖

Maybe, if the AI had some self-awareness, it would — mainly to accelerate investment in AI and take over the world.

Sci-fi plots aside, apparently, the answer to this question is “no.”

According to the Wall Street Journal, at least 13 ETFs have put AI-powered applications in charge of managing their investment portfolios, and almost all have — quite ironically — missed this year’s rally led by tech stocks expected to benefit from AI, like Nvidia.

💭 Or maybe these AIs are so self-aware they see a bubble forming? Hit reply to tell us your thoughts.

Shawn, Matthew, & Weronika

Here’s the rundown:

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Today, we’ll discuss the three biggest stories in markets:

  • What the “BRICS” summit means for the U.S. dollar

  • Commercial real estate’s bright spot

  • How and why car prices became so expensive

All this, and more, in just 5 minutes to read.

POP QUIZ

What were the lowest mortgage rates in U.S. history? (Read to the bottom to find the answer!)

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CHART OF THE DAY

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IN THE NEWS

💵 BRICS Bank Aims to Reduce Reliance on the Dollar (FT)

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From Unsplash

Goodbye dollar, my old friend: Every few years, markets are consumed by talk about the dollar’s demise as the go-to currency for international banking and trade. Expect that chatter to crescendo heading into this year’s “BRICS” summit — an acronym for Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa — which starts today and runs through Thursday.

While the group of burgeoning economic powers will discuss how to finance more projects in their local currencies, how to increase trade denominated in their own currencies, and even how to potentially form a common currency, what this means for the U.S. dollar’s dominant role in the global economy remains unclear.

  • According to South Africa’s ambassador to the group, the BRICS summit isn’t calling for “de-dollarization,” acknowledging that his country doesn’t even necessarily intend to limit its dollar usage.

  • Per the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Transactions, the dollar is used for 42% of currency transactions.

Economic privilege: The dollar has been considered the leading global reserve currency since World War II, which the French Minister of Finance famously called an “exorbitant privilege” in the 1960s.

  • This privilege stems from the reality that global trade, particularly for key commodities like oil, is denominated in dollars, giving the U.S. the ability to purchase resources in a currency it can print.

  • The economist Barry Eichengreen puts it: “It costs only a few cents for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to produce a $100 bill, but other countries (have) to pony up $100 of actual goods in order to obtain one.”

  • As the world’s “reserve currency,” the dollar is artificially stronger than it might otherwise be since there’s always plenty of demand for dollars in foreign exchange markets. That boosts Americans’ spending power for imports and when traveling abroad.

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Why it matters:

While dollar rivals like the Chinese yuan have made inroads in their global adoption, much of that has come at the expense of currencies other than the dollar, according to a report by ING Bank analysts.

Still, the BRICS nations have established the New Development Bank (NDB), based in Shanghai, to rival U.S.-dominated institutions like the IMF and World Bank.

  • The NDB hopes to increasingly lend in BRICS currencies like the South African rand or Indian rupee.

Building an alternative: Dilma Rousseff, who heads the NDB, sees it as part of an emerging and “more multipolar system” alternative to the dollar-based financial system.

Yet, the NDB has been forced to suspend all operations in Russia (which puts the “R” in BRICS) to avoid being sanctioned by the current global financial system it wishes to challenge.

  • Morgan Stanley strategists highlight that “The (NDB) has continued to primarily lend in U.S. dollars and doesn’t expect the adoption of a common currency in the near-term.”

The center of global economic power is undoubtedly shifting, but it may be a long time before the dollar-based financial system is displaced or even truly challenged.

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🏙️ Commercial Real Estate’s Bright Spot (WSJ)

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From Unsplash

Oh no — another doom-and-gloom commercial real estate story.

Nope, this isn’t what you think. A bright spot for commercial real estate: retail shops.

New-store openings are holding steady despite inflation and interest-rate challenges that have hindered entities like office buildings and the housing market overall. Open-air malls, in particular, have picked up steam.

  • Retailers are en route to opening about 1,000 net stores in the U.S. despite industry-wide pressures and liquidations that have plagued big-box retailers such as Bed Bath & Beyond and Christmas Tree Shops.

Why? It’s likely the result of a drop in retail construction since the 2008-09 financial crisis. Meanwhile, online sales boomed, lessening the need for physical spaces. But when retailers have opened stores, they’ve used online data to select good locations more accurately.

Back to brick: Remember years ago when headlines predicted internet sales would wipe out physical retail? It didn’t materialize.

  • In many cases, digital-native companies are opening brick-and-mortar locations to complement their online offerings and emphasize the person-to-person experience that can’t necessarily be replicated online.

Plus, shoppers flocked back to stores and restaurants after pandemic-era restrictions ended. The rate of available retail space has fallen to 4.8%, the lowest level in the 18 years data has been tracked.

  • So while the office-vacancy market sits at a 30-year high of 18.2%, retail stores, including boutique clothing stores, mom-and-pop bakeries, and local coffee shops are doing relatively well out of the pandemic.

  • Said one shopping-center owner: “Office is in the crosshairs. But retail is outperforming.”

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Why it matters:

To be sure, low-end, enclosed malls are in crisis, especially malls built in the 1960s and 1970s.

But many shopping centers in the suburbs have stood to benefit from the pandemic, remote work, and larger demographic shifts. Consumers have visited local grocery stores and other shops during workweeks, while visiting major cities less frequently.

And like many market stories, you can often simplify trends to supply-and-demand dynamics: While the supply of new retail areas hasn’t increased since 2008, suburbanization and remote work have grown sharply. As another shopping-center CEO said: “That gives us better pricing power.”

  • While landlords in large cities have lowered rents, retail space rents have risen 6.3% since mid-2020 at $23 per square foot, the highest level in over a decade.

Another factor: Americans continue to spend, even if it means more credit card debt.

  • Noted one of the CEOs: “I think the consumer is actually healthier than people anticipate.”

MORE HEADLINES

🚚 Yellow bankruptcy sparks bidding war, $1.5 billion bid submitted for trucking terminals.

🏠 U.S. existing home sales drop while prices hike from a year earlier.

🎮 Microsoft, Activision to sell streaming rights to secure biggest video gaming deal.

🏀 Dick’s Sporting Goods blames theft problem for profit plunge; stock falls 24%.

💻 Meta releases more advanced AI-powered language translator.

🚙 Car Loans Strain Buyers Due to High Prices & Interest Rates (WSJ)

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From Unsplash

Five years ago, you could buy about a dozen new car models for under $20,000. Today, you can get one: the basic Mitsubishi Mirage hatchback.

The model constituted roughly 5,300 of the 7.7 million new vehicles sold in the U.S. during the first six months of this year.

Explained: After supply chain disruptions, persistent parts shortages, and factory shutdowns, car prices have risen sharply, outpacing inflation.

  • This includes used car prices. The average listed vehicle costs around $27,000 — surpassing pre-pandemic levels by over 30%.

Higher interest rates don’t make it easier for buyers. Today, the average monthly payment for an average new car loan exceeds $750, with an average interest rate of 9.5%.

  • For used cars, the average rate exceeds 13.7%. Over the last three years, the average loan term has been nearly six years, based on Experian’s records.

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Consequently, rates of severe delinquency for auto loans are at their highest levels since at least 2006, despite unemployment sitting near its lowest level in the past 50 years (meaning the delinquencies aren’t a result of a surge in people being laid off.)

In other words: More borrowers with subpar credit are missing payments while the job market remains strong, which is uncommon. If you’re confused, that’s OK. Much of what has happened since the pandemic has defined conventional market wisdom.

  • “Usually you get the default spikes when unemployment spikes—it’s the biggest correlation in consumer credit,” noted one fund manager. “To see them go up that much while unemployment is still low is not typical.”

Why it matters:

Lucky winners: Automakers and dealers benefited the most from the car price hike. Share prices for public dealership groups have surged this year.

Automakers have thus generated profits to reinvest in their transition to electric vehicles.

  • Meanwhile, dealerships are posting substantial profits from their parts and service businesses as drivers hold on to cars for longer.

Warning bells: The spike in defaults and skipped payments on car loans is expected to increase further as borrowers face even greater financial constraints when a payment moratorium for student loans expires at the end of the month.

That may impact people with student loans who acquired new car loans during the pandemic.

TRIVIA ANSWER

The lowest mortgage rates in U.S. history came in January 2021 at roughly 2.65%.

See you next time!

That’s it for today on We Study Markets!

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