Scrambled Please

A daily market update from FS Insight — what you need to know ahead of opening bell.


“We are stronger, gentler, more resilient, and more beautiful than any of us imagine.” — Mark Nepo

Overnight

Private payrolls expanded by 183,000 in January, topping expectations, ADP says CNBC

US begins deporting migrants to Guantanamo Bay SEM

Trump Campaigned on Ending Foreign Entanglements. Now He Wants to Own Gaza. WSJ 

Streaming giant Spotify turns an annual profit for first time SEM 

US Postal Service suspends China packages as tariff war heats up FT 

Disney tops quarterly profit estimates, but starts to lose Disney+ streaming subscribers CNBC 

Google’s Revenue Growth Slows, Sending Shares Down WSJ 

Options Traders Bet the Rally in Big Tech Stocks Has More Room to Run WSJ 

Nissan to Reject Honda Deal to Create World’s No. 3 Automaker WSJ 

US Treasury moves to quell fears of Elon Musk taking over payments system FT 

Are Eggs Safe to Eat as Bird Flu Spreads? NYT

It’s Tough Being a Buffalo Bills Fan, Especially in Antarctica NYT 

Chart of the Day

Scrambled Please
Overnight
S&P Futures -25 point(s) (-0.4% )
overnight range: -43 to -10 point(s)
 
APAC
Nikkei +0.09%
Topix +0.27%
China SHCOMP -0.65%
Hang Seng -0.93%
Korea +1.11%
Singapore -0.20%
Australia +0.51%
India -0.18%
Taiwan +1.61%
 
Europe
Stoxx 50 -0.11%
Stoxx 600 +0.18%
FTSE 100 +0.17%
DAX -0.03%
CAC 40 -0.18%
Italy -0.59%
IBEX +1.19%
 
FX
Dollar Index (DXY) -0.45% to 107.47
EUR/USD +0.39% to 1.0419
GBP/USD +0.48% to 1.2540
USD/JPY +0.97% to 152.86
USD/CNY -0.39% to 7.2728
USD/CNH +0.09% to 7.2801
USD/CHF +0.39% to 0.9017
USD/CAD +0.31% to 1.4279
AUD/USD +0.48% to 0.6284
 
UST Term Structure
2Y-3 M Spread narrowed -3.4bps to -13.7bps
10Y-2 Y Spread narrowed -2.9bps to 26.7bps
30Y-10 Y Spread widened 0.4bps to 23.5bps
 
Yesterday's Recap
SPX +0.72%
SPX Eq Wt +0.12%
NASDAQ 100 +1.26%
NASDAQ Comp +1.35%
Russell Midcap +0.56%
R2k +1.41%
R1k Value +0.17%
R1k Growth +1.18%
R2k Value +1.45%
R2k Growth +1.37%
FANG+ +1.51%
Semis +1.13%
Software +1.78%
Biotech +1.26%
Regional Banks +1.94% SPX GICS1 Sorted: Utes -0.88%
Cons Staples -0.51%
Fin -0.28%
Healthcare -0.27%
REITs +0.01%
Indu +0.07%
Materials +0.28%
SPX +0.72%
Cons Disc +1.43%
Tech +1.47%
Comm Srvcs +1.48%
Energy +2.18%
 
USD HY OaS
All Sectors +3.6bps to 308bps
All Sectors ex-Energy +3.2bps 292bps
Cons Disc +3.8bps 249bps
Indu +3.2bps 234bps
Tech +4.2bps 318bps
Comm Srvcs +3.0bps 499bps
Materials +4.4bps 284bps
Energy +3.5bps 289bps
Fin Snr +3.3bps 265bps
Fin Sub +0.2bps 188bps
Cons Staples +1.6bps 284bps
Healthcare +4.1bps 366bps
Utes +3.6bps 234bps *
DateTimeDescriptionEstimateLast
2/58:30 AMDec Trade Balance-96.8-78.193
2/59:45 AMJan F S&P Srvcs PMI52.952.8
2/510:00 AMJan ISM Srvcs PMI5454
2/68:30 AM4Q P Nonfarm Productivity1.22.2
2/68:30 AM4Q P Unit Labor Costs3.40.8
2/78:30 AMJan AHE m/m0.30.3
2/78:30 AMJan Unemployment Rate4.14.1
2/78:30 AMJan Non-farm Payrolls170256
2/710:00 AMFeb P UMich 1yr Inf Exp3.33.3
2/710:00 AMFeb P UMich Sentiment71.771.1
2/1011:00 AMJan NYFed 1yr Inf Expn/a3
2/116:00 AMJan Small Biz Optimisum104105.1

MORNING INSIGHT

Good morning!

Incoming data supports equity prices.  The ISM manufacturing also suggests small-cap EPS to accelerate in 2025.

Click HERE for more.

TECHNICAL

  • SPX looks close to a time when bears might need to “hibernate” again. 
  • GOOGL weakness should prove to be appealing for dip buyers. 
  • USDMXN looks to have pulled back into its range and is stabilizing.

Click HERE for more.

CRYPTO

We discuss some of the reasons we think it’s prudent to be somewhat risk averse and favor BTC over alts. We also explore why current trade tensions hint at a significant long-term upside for BTC.

Click HERE for more. 

First News

Eggs are struggling to keep it sunny side up. 

Near-record prices for this household item contributed to unraveling Biden’s presidency. If some reprieve doesn’t come soon, it risks threatening the new administration’s power, too. 

We won’t discuss which administration is or isn’t responsible for the prices, but instead focus on the impact to consumers and how they perceive inflation. Eggs are a great example for that because they are common across American households as a breakfast staple, ubiquitous to baking, and considered to be a cheaper source of animal protein. 

The average price for a dozen, large eggs in December was $4.146, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. While that is off 16% from all-time highs of $4.823 hit in early 2023, prices are almost double from a decade ago. 

There are reasons to believe egg prices extended their climb higher in January, as Avian flu rampaged. The situation is so dire that even the all-day breakfast chain Waffle House is placing a $0.50 surcharge on every egg it sells. 

The increase has made it cheaper to buy chicken over eggs. Here’s the explanation: The USDA recommends that the average person (165 pounds) consume 60 grams of protein per day. That’s about 10 large eggs or half a pound of boneless chicken breast.

Based on St. Louis Fed data, that means that as of December 2024, the average adult American would need to buy $2.05 worth of chicken breast ($4.104/lb) to meet the recommended daily protein requirement. Using eggs to fulfill that requirement would cost $3.46 ($4.146/dozen).

The December consumer inflation report showed eggs rose 3.2% from a month ago. In comparison, other food items like potatoes added 0.3%, ice cream fell 1.5%, and crackers, bread, and cracker products climbed 2% from a month ago. 

Under Biden’s presidency, the U.S. economy maintained a strong job market, but remained mired in higher inflation. Egg prices were just one of the many household items that shot up in price over that time. 

That matters because January’s University of Michigan survey signals that consumers’ inflation expectations are heavily influenced by their political beliefs—and Fundstrat Head of Research Tom Lee says the same. The survey rose 3.3% from 2.8% a month ago. Democratic respondents’ inflation expectations exploded three months ago, whereas Republican respondents’ forecast collapsed. The preliminary February inflation expectations’ survey is scheduled to come out on Friday at 10 a.m.

Consumers have been able to absorb most of the price increases over the past few years, albeit begrudgingly, and they haven’t sounded the alarm too much about the increases this time around. But how long they can continue to holdout is anyone’s guess — particularly because it involves the price of something most Americans believe should be widely affordable. 

It’s like Lee said on CNBC earlier this week, “consumers vote with their wallets.”

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