Let's get down to the heart of the matter: investors are waiting around to see earnings estimates drop. I don't care about some junior analyst caught like deer in headlights with their young unprofitable firm - unable to revise revenue. I'm talking about the whole market.

Sure, we have built in slower growth since last year going into 2023, but there hasn't been a massive shift down in expectations. Is everyone on vacation? Maybe. But you also have to consider 2 trillion in government stimulus, strong balance sheets with cheap debt, and a US consumer that despite high gas prices isn't going through an energy crisis like Europe.

Earning revisions are important since this market won't move forward until peak inflation is behind us or the Fed signals a policy change. I make some comments about what I hate - young unprofitable firms that may not come back - and what I like, bit cheap firms that have a future and can make both cash flow and profits.

Then Dagen tells a story about money losing Casper and her experience. Another example of firms that can't hit the market even in good time. The Millennial corporate subsidy of money losing firms is coming to a close.

Munson on CNBCs Power Lunch talking stocks with a past

All three names today were stocks with a past - and not in a good way. Boeing, Wells Fargo, and Bausch Health.

I simply point out what the catalyst for a company that is fighting to overcome bad PR, sins of the past, poor governance issues. One has supply chain issues and has to deliver their planes to market. If they can do that, great. Then another has to shrink its low profit margin business and invest in growth areas as their handcuffs from regulators come off. The last one is just a dumpster fire behind a dive bar at the end of the street of broken dreams...

Enjoy!

3 Stock Lunch - growth, value, and crap

Great segment fro CNBC were I comment on the three core stocks Oppenheimer selected as their best restaurant stocks for a recession. They based their analysis on same store sales back in 2008-2009 recession. Here is my quick take. And for the record, I’m not suggesting anyone buy these stocks - they are just a great example of how different types of stocks act in various environments.

Chipotle is just a growth stock that has taken a hit, lost over 70% in the GFC 14 year ago, but has a few things going for it. Much different mix of customers, not the lowest wage earnings who are being squeezed, and ability to raise prices over a place with a 99 cent menu. I see them like homebuilders - volatile and you buy here because you think it's cheap, not recession proof.

McDonalds is the ultimate recession stock. It made money in 2008 along with Wal-Mart and Dollar General. It's a poverty play. They are huge, control their suppliers not the other way around, and have been able to capture the market of those that downscale spending - remember the premium salads that took business from places like Chipotle years ago?

Papa John's, in my humble opinion is just a trading stock for the Covid lockdowns. they don't have an edge, their customers are running out of money - and this time around customers have a choice on where to eat and how it's delivered. I like to avoid prior hyped up stocks.

Memorial Day Market Thoughts with Charles Payne

I love this video for so many reasons. First off, I love Charles Payne. I can't help retell how I used to pay for his earnings tip sheet back in the 1990s - he would fax it to us each day. Second, I was planning to be at a BBQ at a friends house down in Las Cruces, so when the produces asked if I could do it, I said "hell yeah, let's do a full on remote hit." Kudos to them to trust me to pull it off. My wife was not impressed and thought it would be a disaster - but disaster it was not! The best part was telling people what I was sharing at the party - just some straight talk on my off hours as people corner me at the BBQ to ask my thoughts on the market.

Munson and Maria talk retail earnings

Let me tell you - you don't need to trade every situation just because it exists. More often than not you want to observe the crowds reaction. Case in point. This week we will see everything from Gap, Macy's, Dicks Sporting - and all of them will tell us what we already know. The consumer is holding back, they ordered too much inventory, gas prices are high, supply chains are an issue. Yeah, I already know last week from the Target/WalMart 25%+ drop fiasco, worst since 1987. Some of these retail stocks have already sold off expecting this news.

So, let's see how the crowd reacts before and after the earnings. Simply stated, do investors buy the bad news or continue to throw in the towel? That's all you need to know. No need to buy anything, trade anything, or get worked up.

In a nutshell, if investors take the bad news we know and bid up the stocks, it suggest people are looking past the current peak inflation. This means there is a shot of a rally between now and the end of the year. If not, we may not be done with this bearish correction, regardless if we see new lows on the broad indexes or not.

This knowledge helps me make allocation decisions, clues on how and when I want to rebalance, and more importantly how to set expectations with clients when they want to know the impossible: when will the volatility end or do we want to buy the bearish correction or do we just sell low and buy high later. Let's avoid that last thought.

Three Stock Lunch with Lee Munson on CNBCs Power Lunch

Having a blast on Three Stock Lunch, a cool segment on CNBC's Power Lunch where Tyler Mathisen and Kelly Evans let me loose on a few stocks.

This time I commented on the some of the cheapest stocks in the SP500. Disney, Darden, and DR Horton. Let's just say I have some strong opinions.

More than just my comments on these particular stocks, I'm talking about how to think about certain sectors and how to position size based on volatility.

Munson Returns to CNBCs Power Lunch

What a way to come back to CNBC than with a three stock lunch - a fun segment where I more casually lay down what is really driving the big stock movements of the day.

Today the focus was on WBD - a streaming stock that has one too many legacy cable channels that steal the thunder of HBO Max. Oh, how I wish I could just own that single streamer, and not the other stuff.

Then there is Tesla. It hasn't made new highs since last November. Perhaps a few Tesla Bulls are wondering if the commodity shortages in lithium will catch up? Didn't stop the stock from popping - because people love to hear how easy it is to pass along higher prices. It's an example of what investors want, which is an inflation hedge. Just unsure the valuation isn't pricing in car sales from the next next century.

Then Carvana - what a dog! It's overpriced, not a new idea, and inflation for their average customer is going up faster than wages. Total opposite of Tesla. Then add to that higher auto loan defaults and you can see why this stock hit the bricks.

Recession in 2023? Maria asks Lee

I enjoyed this hit where I'm asked to unpack the question of a recession in 2023, the direction of rates in the face of more rate hikes, and how I'm invested through the end of the year - fun stuff!

Munson on First Fed Hike, Gold, Oil - I spill the beans

You get my reaction to the Fed hike, why China has bottomed out but not out of the woods. I explain where I'm overweight, and where I want to be at the end of the year.

Let's put it this way, the Nasdaq is like the Fed - it's got a lot of work to do.

I also got to muse a little on my gold positions, and my thoughts on oil. Just remember the OPEC can't meet their targets, so don't think that part of the inflation story will go away.

Overall I had a great time, love the new hosts, and got the space to really light it up. Enjoy!

 

Munson on Fed Meeting And Trading This Year

I lay out my thesis on the major Fed meeting in March. For months I've been vocal that the Fed will raise, but not the 9 hikes some on Wall Street believe. The situation in Ukraine just brings that point home.

The bottom line: the Fed Chairman said we should expect 25 bps. Stop trying to second guess their action, and think about the different ways the market and frazzled so-called investors may react.

My last point from this interview is that many traders see this as a trading year. That is a red flag for me. While I've been busy in portfolios moving small bits around - the broad strokes of continued inflation, continued supply constraints, and continued demand for everything on top of a Fed that will raise - I'm working on a portfolio that should be pretty similar to what I see holding at the end of the year. Everything else is just managing volatility.

In other words - just walk things forward and tell yourself what you see.