INTELRUNNER
The map shows the gross household income required to join the top 10%, counting all earnings from members aged 15+.
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INTELRUNNER
Netflix, Inc. has been having a bad time. It's down 32.8% since October 21st. Something to watch because the move to the downside is starting to look exhausted.
I think it's a little overkill.
Q4 net income jumped 46.2% year over year, and ROE is at 15.27% with a debt-to-equity of 0.74%. Earnings slightly beat; revenue was up 13.4% YoY.
Insiders have been selling $NDAQ a bit, but institutions just snap the shares up. The former owns 10.8%. The latter owns 81.9%. Vanguard owns 10.5% itself.
Operating margin of 28.4%? The market's being a bit hysterical.
This is not financial advice, sir. This is Telegram.
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INTELRUNNER
The percent of students aged 13-15 who reported being bullied at least once in the past 30 days is 24%.
Look how squishy soft some of these countries have gotten. That explains a lot.
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INTELRUNNER
It's up significantly even from the end of 2025.
One would guess that this downtrend will end with a squeeze of a crowded short...whenever it ends.
Obviously this chart precedes the recent down trend in $XLK.
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INTELRUNNER
Inflation continues to hit the lowest incomes hardest as essentials & necessities see the biggest price increases.
Headline inflation was up 2.4% year over year and 0.2% month over month. That's a beat by 0.1% and 0.06% respectively.
Core inflation was up 2.5% YoY and 0.3% MoM. The latter is a beat (by 0.04%), but the former is right on target.
Overall, a positive if not optimal outcome. The 0.3% MoM for core is what worries. How sticky will it turn out?
In my opinion, this suggests we're likely to get more of the same, from markets and from the Fed.
Next week, we'll get the Fed's preferred inflation index, Personal Consumption Expenditure. PCE will give us greater insight into how the Fed wants to handle sticky inflation plus advancing unemployment.
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INTELRUNNER
Analysts had expected between 0.3% and 0.4%.
This is the sort of reading the Fed will point to when next refusing to cut rates, especially given one element of the acceleration.
Stay tuned for breakdowns of all 3 versions of CPI as we attempt to parse the details here...
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INTELRUNNER
Headline inflation was up 2.4% year over year and 0.2% month over month. That's a beat by 0.1% and 0.06% respectively.
This is a breakdown of headline inflation (+0.2% MoM, +2.4% YoY), which is the lowest it's been in four years.
Food inflation is slowing dramatically. Energy is in outright deflation.
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INTELRUNNER
Core inflation was up 2.5% YoY and 0.3% MoM. The latter is a beat (by 0.04%), but the former is right on target.
The Core numbers are the lowest since March 2021. Inflation in core goods has all but disintegrated.
Indexes that increased over the month include airline fares, personal care, recreation, medical care, and communication. The indexes for used cars and trucks, household furnishings and operations, and motor vehicle insurance were among the major indexes that decreased in January
Which is interesting because I was assured by many investment banks and professional economists that, while they may have been wrong about 4% inflation by the start of last summer, they definitely would be right about 4% inflation by the end of last year...
Cause, you know, the tariffs.
Throw this one up on the "experts are mere mortals with abundantly obvious biases and a severe case of cowardice & groupthink" board.
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INTELRUNNER
Analysts had expected between 0.3% and 0.4%.
Throw in some random goods and toss out whatever goods have inflated most, and you have Paul Krugman's favorite inflation indicator du jour.
As you can see, the story of Supercore is really in transportation services. This was also the biggest category of increase in the CPI overall, but it has an outsized influence on Supercore. 0.32 of that 0.59% MoM increase was transportation.
The prime driver was airline fare, which came in at 6.5% MoM, likely an annual increase. Motor vehicle fees also got their CPI-indexed bump this January. Motor vehicle insurance, on the hand, fell 0.4%, correcting for serious price inflation over the past few years. Maintenance & repair of vehicles was essentially flat at +0.1% (but 4.9% YoY).
Supercore is very much tied to wage inflation, and Supercore being where the Fed tries to avoid stickiness, one would expect Powell to point to this while refusing to cut further. Wage-price spirals, and all that nonsense; you'll probably hear the phrase if present trends continue into the February numbers.
They're up 1.9% YoY (stemming from a 1.2% increase in pay and a 0.6% increase in the average work week), but that pales in comparison to the damage that was done this decade.
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INTELRUNNER
So the big red flag was supposed to be in Supercore CPI, otherwise known as Core services exempting shelter.
That 1.2% raw increase in wages and salaries doesn't look so hot in this context, does it?
The pattern is clear: consumer spending is shifting away from the elective motor fuel (driving less, fuel efficiency) and toward the unavoidable (electricity, heating). This isn't the best sign amidst the otherwise positive 1.6% YoY decline in energy broadly.
Shelter was up 0.2% month over month, both in Rent of Primary Address and Owners' Equivalent, and 3% year over year. That's not good but it's not bad. We're still cooling off the 8%+ peak in early 2023.
In a nutshell, it's more of the same. The worst hit categories are the ones the Fed contrives reasons to pay the least attention: necessities. And thus the regressivity of inflation continues to bite the least amongst us most...
If you ask me, that's the red flag.
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INTELRUNNER
Interestingly, the more likely you were to go to church, the more skeptical you were likely to be about the paranormal...
The last Gallup poll was more about traditionally paranormal things. Psychic or spiritual healing and ghosts found the most acceptance; Americans are skeptical about witches, astrology, and reincarnation.
Now we get into a more creature-oriented pocket, and aliens are the clear winner. 56% of Americans believe intelligent life probably or definitely exists beyond Earth. Only 31% say they probably or definitely don't.
Bigfoot and the Chupacabra, on the other hand, are the inverse. Only 28% and 16% respectively report any belief in them. 60% of Americans say Bigfoot and the Chupacabra probably or definitely don't exist.
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INTELRUNNER
Real Estate is only up 3.5%. I would wager that's changing soon, but it's probably due for correction in the near-term. More on that later...
Media is too big
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Utilities & Real Estate looked solid. Industrials, Healthcare, Staples, and Energy were mostly up.
Technology, Communication and to a lesser degree, Financials and Discretionary, continue to struggle.
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INTELRUNNER
CPI has prescription drugs coming in flat at 0.0% MoM. Medicinal drugs, a subset, actually dropped 0.15%.
This is hopefully a sign of things to come.
And it is, if Bloomberg's Price Tracker is to be believed (above). That shows drugs pulling back 2.5% year over year (vs. maybe a 0.5% pullback in CPI).
You should defer to the Price Tracker, as CPI is lagged, heavily adjusted, and differentially sampled. It is increasingly useless for anything beyond saving the Feds money and manipulating politics.
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INTELRUNNER
This is the largest revision in the past decade.
55% of job categories have added jobs to their rosters.
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INTELRUNNER
I presume there's a whole lot of peripheral mental disability being counted here.
I also assume it's the exact same population group that fills up Democratic Socialists of America chapters.
Prove me wrong.
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INTELRUNNER
Beginning with 2025, which was the worst non-recessionary year for hiring since 2003.
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Nonfarm payroll employment was up 130K, beating the expectation of 50K. It also dwarfs the pathetic 2025 average of 15K.
This is the largest increase since the summer of 2020 (when state-sanctioned riots showed everyone just how serious the virus actually was).
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