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“I am in a charming state of confusion.” – Ada Lovelace

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

On a Fed day, we’d normally say that wherever the futures are in the pre-market, don’t expect the market to be there after the decision is announced, let alone after Powell talks.  Based on recent history, though, volatility on Fed days has been muted. As we noted in today’s Chart of the Day, the S&P 500’s average absolute daily change on the last five Fed days has been among the most muted relative to any other rolling five Fed day period since 1994. So, maybe the muted moves in futures markets are on to something!

Outside of equities, the 10-year yield is up 2 bps and back above 4.2% as part of a global move higher yields. Crude oil prices are also up fractionally but still below $58 per barrel, while the slide in natural gas continues as prices break below $4.50.  Metal prices are all over the map as gold prices are slightly lower, while silver rallies over 1% and platinum falls over 1%. In the crypto pace, it’s also a mixed but downwardly biased morning as bitcoin falls 1%.

International markets have also been quiet overnight and this morning ahead of the Fed, as most major benchmarks saw, or are seeing, modest declines. Chinese CPI was weaker than expected, falling 0.1% versus forecasts for an increase of 0.2% while PPI in Japan was right in line with forecasts.

Warren Buffett has famously said of gold that it “gets dug out of the ground in Africa, or someplace. Then we melt it down, dig another hole, bury it again, and pay people to stand around guarding it. It has no utility. Anyone watching from Mars would be scratching their head.” While other precious metals like platinum and silver have more industrial uses than gold, based on public records, it has been decades since Buffett has been active in them. The primary reason Buffett has generally avoided commodities is that they are essentially a bet on future supply and demand rather than income-generating assets.

While they don’t produce income, precious metals are commodities that have produced massive capital gains this year. Gold (GLD) has rallied 60%, and those gains look modest relative to the 86.3% gain in platinum (PLTM) and the massive 109.5% gain in Silver (SLV).

For all three precious metals, the YTD gains would be enough to rank near the top of the list in terms of YTD performance. With its 109.5% gain, SLV would be the tenth-best stock in the S&P 500 this year, ahead of Intel (INTC) and behind AppLovin (APP). Nothing against AppLovin and its prospects over the next several years, but 100 years from now, which do you think has a better chance of still being around in its current form? Silver or AppLovin?

While the gains in Platinum and Gold wouldn’t crack the top ten in terms of performance, the former’s 86.3% gain would rank as number 14 in the S&P 500, while Gold would rank number 34.

Looking at the ten best-performing stocks in the S&P 500 this year, all of them are up by at least 100%, and all but three are from the Technology sector. The top four performing stocks have not only had triple-digit returns, but they’ve also at least tripled! Sticking to the commodities theme, three of those stocks – Western Digital (WDC), Seagate Technology (STX), and Micron (MU) – all make data storage and memory products, which in the universe of the technology sector have for years been considered commodities as well.