October 17, 2024, Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents: Happy Friday Eve.  Full moon tonight – it’s going to be the biggest of the year.

Just back from a couple of investment conferences back to back in the US.  Mood is pretty optimistic overall. In my opinion, it can’t be underestimated how adeptly the Biden administration and Federal Reserve Chairman Jay Powell have steered the US economy to recovery after the pandemic, avoiding a recession and posting economic growth that is the envy of the world.  I was astounded to see how  ubiquitous autonomous vehicles are in San Francisco.  I was there not that long ago, and it wasn’t the case, but this time, it seems everywhere that you look, there is a self driving Waymo vehicle buzzing by.  Seems like they’re about to surpass Uber as the preferred ride in the downtown core anyway.

Catch a glimpse of October’s supermoon today
Need a little space? Take a moment to pause and enjoy the closest supermoon of the year. It’s set to peak at its fullest around 7:26 a.m. ET, but the silvery orb will loom large through Friday morning, according to NASA.

October 17, 1777: British General John Burgoyne surrenders at Saratoga, a pivotal American Revolutionary War victory that convinced France to support the American cause.
On Oct. 17, 1931, mobster Al Capone was convicted of income tax evasion and sentenced to 11 years in prison. He was released in 1939.  Go to article >>.
October 17,1989: San Francisco earthquake.

Museum unveils artifacts from century-old time capsule
A World War I Museum in Kansas City excavated a century-old time capsule, revealing a cornucopia of early 20th-century relics, artifacts and documents.

Most complete Tasmanian tiger genome yet pieced together from 110-year-old pickled head
Researchers working with Colossal Biosciences have assembled a near-complete Tasmanian tiger genome and developed artificial reproductive technologies that could help de-extinct the species. Read more.

Orionid meteor shower 2024: When to see ‘shooting stars’ from Halley’s comet next week
The Orionid meteor shower will peak this week as Earth busts through a stream of meteoroids left in the inner solar system by the famous Halley’s comet. Read more.

Malfunctioning mitochondria may drive Crohn’s disease, early study hints
A new study in mice suggests that dysfunctional mitochondria may change the gut microbiome and thus drive Crohn’s disease. Read more.

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Guazhou, China
A tourist at the huge sleeping baby sculpture Son of the Earth in Gansu province, the Gobi desert.
Photograph: Tingshu Wang/Reuters

Bankgkok, Thailand
Pedestrians use a skywalk bridge between shopping centres as BTS elevated trains pass above them
Photograph: Lillian Suwanrumpha/AFP/Getty Images

The Azorean government allowed this project under authorisation 02/orac/24/judithvandegriendt. Precautions are taken by professionals in order to avoid disturbing the animals. According to regional legislation, swimming with whales and other cetaceans that are not dolphins is forbidden
Photographs by Jeroen Hoekendijk
Market Closes for October 17th, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
43239.05 +161.35
+0.37%
S&P 500  5841.47 -1.00
-0.02%
NASDAQ  18373.61 +6.53
+0.04%
TSX  24690.48 +129.28
+0.53%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  38911.19 -269.11
-0.69%
HANG
SENG
20079.10 -207.75
-1.02%
SENSEX  81006.61 -494.75
-0.61%
FTSE 100* 8385.13 +56.06
+0.67%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
3.159 3.098
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.313 3.242
U.S.
10 Year Bond
4.0906 4.0122
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.3895 4.2955

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7249 0.7255
US
$
1.3796 1.3783

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.4943 0.6692
US
$
1.0831 0.9232

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2675.25 2649.05
Oil
WTI Crude Future  70.39 70.58

Market Commentary:
📈 On this day in 1919, Radio Corp. of America was formed by combining radio assets and patents of companies including General Electric and Westinghouse.
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite rose for the second day, climbing 0.5%, or 129.28 to 24,690.48 in Toronto.
Royal Bank of Canada contributed the most to the index gain, increasing 0.7%. K92 Mining Inc. had the largest increase, rising 6.7%.
Today, 154 of 223 shares rose, while 69 fell; 8 of 11 sectors were higher, led by financials stocks.

Insights
* This year, the index rose 18%, heading for the best year since 2021
* So far this week, the index rose 0.9%
* The index advanced 25% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 33% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is at its 52-week high and 32.1% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* The S&P/TSX Composite is up 1.9% in the past 5 days and rose 4.3% in the past 30 days
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.7 on a trailing basis and 17.1 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.8% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.89t
* 30-day price volatility fell to 8.12% compared with 8.19% in the previous session and the average of 9.64% over the past month
================================================================
|Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Financials | 47.6716| 0.6| 24/3
Energy | 42.0684| 1.0| 33/8
Materials | 22.4171| 0.7| 34/18
Information Technology | 7.4630| 0.4| 6/4
Communication Services | 5.3881| 0.7| 4/1
Utilities | 5.2586| 0.5| 10/5
Consumer Discretionary | 2.0690| 0.3| 8/3
Health Care | 0.0977| 0.1| 3/1
Real Estate | -0.0243| 0.0| 9/11
Industrials | -0.8860| 0.0| 18/9
Consumer Staples | -2.2363| -0.2| 5/6
================================================================
| | |Volume VS |
| Index | | 20D AVG |YTD Change
Top Contributors |Points Move| % Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
RBC | 11.7700| 0.7| 112.4| 30.3
Canadian Natural
Resources | 11.4500| 1.6| -56.6| 13.5
Brookfield Corp | 11.3700| 1.5| -28.7| 43.7
Restaurant Brands | -2.4350| -1.1| 34.6| -5.3
Canadian Pacific Kansas | -4.3680| -0.6| 4.0| 6.9
Canadian National | -5.3410| -0.9| -13.2| -5.2

US
By Rita Nazareth
(Bloomberg) — The world’s biggest bond market got hit as a solid retail sales report had traders trimming their bets on Federal Reserve rate cuts this year.
Treasury yields climbed as the economic figures fanned doubts over how quickly the central bank will ease policy.
Swap contracts priced in a total of 42 basis points of rate reductions over the November and December meetings.
An advance in equities fizzled out after the S&P 500 hit fresh all-time highs.
In late trading, Netflix Inc. rallied as subscriber additions beat estimates.
US retail sales strengthened in September by more than forecast in a broad advance, illustrating resilient consumer spending that continues to power the economy.
The data followed a blowout jobs report and a hotter-than-estimated consumer inflation print released earlier this month that only reinforced the view the economy is nowhere near a recession.
“There’s a narrow path toward a Fed pause in November, but it would likely require every notable economic report between now and then indicating a stronger-than-assumed US economy,” said Matthew Weller at Forex.com and City Index.
“Regardless of what the Fed does in November though, the projected path for interest rates looking out into 2025 and beyond is higher than it’s been in weeks.”
The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 were little changed.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.4%.
Nvidia Corp. gained after a bullish outlook from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.
Travelers Cos. surged 9% on profit that tripled to $1.3 billion from a year earlier.
Elevance Health Inc. tumbled 11% as the insurer cut its annual outlook.
Treasury 10-year yields advanced seven basis points to 4.09%.
The euro fell as traders added to bets the European Central Bank will need a bumper rate cut in December.
The yen slid to touch the key psychological level of 150 per dollar, bringing the risk of intervention by Japan back into focus.
“This morning’s data highlight undeniable strength across the economy,” said Ellen Zentner at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management.
“Strong data will encourage some pushback from Fed participants to cutting again in November, but Chair Jerome Powell is unlikely to be swayed from forging ahead with steady, quarter-point moves.”
Jeff Roach at LPL Research says strong consumer spending in September suggests economic growth in the previous quarter was solidly above trend.
Looking ahead, investors need to monitor any signs that the unemployed are finding it more difficult to earn a paycheck.
“Retail sales came in well above expectations and continue to defy the weak economy thesis,” said Quincy Krosby at LPL Financial. “The implications for monetary policy center on whether the Fed worries that the renewed strength in the economy fuels an uptick in inflation, although expectations remain that there will be a 25 basis-point cut at the next meeting.”
A string of stronger-than-estimated data points sent the US version of Citigroup’s Economic Surprise Index to the highest since April.
The gauge measures the difference between actual releases and analyst expectations.
To Bret Kenwell at eToro, if the data continues to come in strong, it could force investors to lower their expectations of Fed rate cuts going forward.
“While rate cuts do matter for the market, they’re not the only thing that matters. Consider how well the market has done this year despite wild fluctuations in interest rate expectations, as earnings and the economy have powered stocks higher,” he noted.
“So long as these pillars remain in place, it should bode well for equities.”
While US stocks are hovering near a record, at least one group of investors — systematic funds — is reducing its equity exposure amid rising price swings. But if history is any guide, the trend will reverse after the election.
The CBOE Volatility Index, or the VIX, is trading near 20, up from its average reading of 15 this year through September.
That’s created selling pressure for rules-based systematic funds that typically take cues from the market direction.
Historically, price swings tend to rise leading up to the US Presidential Election as political uncertainty gets on traders’ nerves, before subsiding shortly after, says Tanvir Sandhu, Bloomberg Intelligence’s chief global derivatives strategist.

Corporate Highlights:
* Allstate Corp. posted $630 million in catastrophe losses in September related to Hurricane Helene.
* Amazon.com Inc.’s Amazon Web Services said that new systems running Nvidia Corp.’s Blackwell chips probably won’t be online until early next year.
* Boeing Co. filed to sell as much as $25 billion of equity and bonds this week, but the plane maker is still awaiting what is typically immediate clearance from regulators.
* CSX Corp. received a subpoena from the US Securities and Exchange Commission focused on previously disclosed accounting errors and certain non-financial performance metrics.
* The US Federal Trade Commission is investigating tractor giant Deere & Co. over whether its agricultural equipment repair practices violate antitrust or consumer protection laws.
* Expedia Group Inc. rallied after the Financial Times reported that Uber Technologies Inc. explored a possible bid for the online travel-booking company.
* Blackstone Inc. posted an increase in profit as its credit arm was boosted by an influx of investor cash and became the firm’s biggest business by assets.

Key events this week:
* China GDP, Friday
* US housing starts, Friday
* Fed’s Christopher Waller, Neel Kashkari speak, Friday

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 was little changed as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 was little changed
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.4%
* The MSCI World Index was little changed

Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.1%
* The euro fell 0.3% to $1.0828
* The British pound rose 0.2% to $1.3013
* The Japanese yen fell 0.4% to 150.21 per dollar

Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin fell 1.2% to $66,821.87
* Ether fell 0.9% to $2,595.23

Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced seven basis points to 4.09%
* Germany’s 10-year yield advanced two basis points to 2.21%
* Britain’s 10-year yield advanced two basis points to 4.09%

Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude rose 0.5% to $70.76 a barrel
* Spot gold rose 0.7% to $2,692.07 an ounce

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
Have a lovely evening.

Be magnificent!
As ever,

Carolann
It is the duty of every human being to look carefully within and see himself as he is, and spare no pains to improve himself in body, mind and soul. –Gandhi, 1869-1948.

Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP®, CIM, CIWM
Senior Investment Advisor

Queensbury Securities Inc.,
St. Andrew’s Square,
Suite 340A, 730 View St.,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7

Tel: 778.430.5808
(C): 250.881.0801 (Text Only)
Toll Free: 1.877.430.5895
Fax: 778.430.5828
www.carolannsteinhoff.com

October 16th, 2024, Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents:
Carolann is away from the office for a conference, I will be writing the newsletter on her behalf.

October 16, 1847: Charlotte Brontë’s book “Jane Eyre” published
October 16, 1987: Dow Jones Industrial Average falls more than 100 points for the 1st time (108.35)
October 16, 2016: Ed Whitlock (85) becomes oldest person to complete a marathon under 4 hours, at Toronto Waterfront Marathon in 3 hours 56 minutes

Gaia space telescope discovers 55 ‘runaway’ careening away from stellar cluster at 80 times the speed of sound
Using the Gaia space telescope, astronomers have observed 55 massive stars ejected from their home star cluster in the Large Magellanic Cloud at speeds equivalent to 80 times the speed of sound.

Are we wrong about the age of the universe? The James Webb telescope is raising big questions.
Some of the earliest galaxies found with JWST are also the brightest. That’s a problem for our ideas about the universe.

Drug inspired by spider venom aims to reverse heart attack damage
A clinical trial will test whether a lab-made version of a molecule found in spider venom can reverse tissue damage after a heart attack.

Scientists finally confirm that solar maximum is well underway — and the worst could still be to come
A surprise announcement from scientists involved in monitoring the solar cycle has finally confirmed that the sun’s most active and dangerous phase — solar maximum — is already well underway, and could continue for at least a year.

2,000-year-old tomb holding 12 skeletons found at Petra where ‘Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade’ was filmed
Archaeologists have discovered a 2,000-year-old tomb containing the remains of 12 individuals at Petra in Jordan.

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Chantilly, France
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, his wifem Brigitte Macron, and Belgium’s King Philippe and Queen Mathilde on a visit to the Château de Chantilly, where they saw an exhibition about Louise of Orléans, the French princess who became the first queen of Belgium
Photograph: Yoan Valat/Reuters

Dubai
Morning view of the skyline including the Burj Khalifa
Photograph: Fadel Senna/AFP/Getty Images

​​​​​​​Sperm whales can be very active at the surface. This adult was lobbing its tail up and down – and defecating in the water. ‘It shows the sheer force of the animal,’ says Hoekendijk. ‘Sperm whales are highly manoeuvrable and can even swim backwards – they wriggle like a snake’
Photograph: Jeroen Hoekendijk
Market Closes for October 16th, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
43077.70 +337.28
+0.79%
S&P 500  5842.47 +27.21
+0.47%
NASDAQ  18367.08 +51.49
+0.28%
TSX  24561.20 +122.12
+0.50%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  39180.30 -730.25
-1.83%
HANG
SENG
20286.85 -31.94
-0.16%
SENSEX  81501.36 -318.76
-0.39%
FTSE 100* 8329.07 +79.79
+0.97%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
3.098 3.145
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.242 3.293
U.S.
10 Year Bond
4.0122 4.0317
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.2955 4.3200

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7255 0.7255
US
$
1.3783 1.3783

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.4939 0.6694
US
$
1.0859 0.9209

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2649.05 2654.90
Oil
WTI Crude Future  70.58 73.83

Market Commentary:
📈 On this day in 1973, OPEC’s Gulf members said they would immediately lift crude oil prices to $5.12 a barrel, “to exercise their sovereign right to determine the price of their natural resources.”
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite rose 0.5% at 24,561.20 in Toronto.
The move follows the previous session’s decrease of 0.1%.
Today, financials stocks led the market higher, as 10 of 11 sectors gained; 128 of 223 shares rose, while 94 fell.
Royal Bank of Canada contributed the most to the index gain, increasing 1.1%.
Energy Fuels Inc/Canada had the largest increase, rising 14.9%.
Insights
* This year, the index rose 17%, heading for the best year since 2021
* The index advanced 25% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 33% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is at its 52-week high and 31.4% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* The S&P/TSX Composite is up 2% in the past 5 days and rose 3.6% in the past 30 days
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.6 on a trailing basis and 17 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.8% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.87t
* 30-day price volatility rose to 8.19% compared with 8.17% in the previous session and the average of 9.80% over the past month
================================================================
|Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Financials | 58.0151| 0.7| 17/10
Energy | 29.5756| 0.7| 19/22
Utilities | 20.6669| 2.2| 15/0
Materials | 9.2051| 0.3| 24/27
Consumer Staples | 7.6197| 0.8| 8/3
Industrials | 1.8170| 0.1| 14/13
Real Estate | 1.7742| 0.3| 15/5
Consumer Discretionary | 1.3060| 0.2| 6/5
Health Care | 0.7573| 1.0| 3/1
Communication Services | 0.4267| 0.1| 3/2
Information Technology | -9.0328| -0.4| 4/6
================================================================
| | |Volume VS |
| Index | | 20D AVG |YTD Change
Top Contributors |Points Move| % Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
RBC | 18.1900| 1.1| 7.9| 29.4
Cameco | 16.3600| 7.6| 59.7| 34.2
Brookfield Corp | 15.0900| 2.0| -19.5| 41.6
Shopify | -3.8910| -0.4| -35.2| 9.1
Canadian Natural Resources | -4.0140| -0.6| -59.8| 11.7
Barrick Gold | -5.7560| -1.7| 22.4| 14.5
US
By Rita Nazareth
(Bloomberg) — Stock traders kept driving a rotation out of the megacaps that have powered the bull market into other corners of Wall Street.
Economically sensitive shares outperformed, with the Russell 2000 of smaller firms hitting the highest in almost three years.
Most big techs fell, though Nvidia Corp. jumped 3.1%.
An equal-weighted version of the S&P 500 — where the likes of Apple Inc. carry the same heft as Dollar Tree Inc. — beat the US benchmark.
That gauge is less impacted by the largest companies — providing a glimpse of hope the rally will broaden out.
“Investors may be looking to rotate away from large technology companies, which are widely owned and may have fewer clear catalysts going forward,” said David Russell at TradeStation.
“With the election coming and the economy returning to balance, the long-awaited rotation away from megacaps to everything else could finally be at hand.”
Traders also continued to wade through a raft of corporate earnings.
Morgan Stanley climbed 6.5% as traders and bankers joined the rest of their Wall Street rivals in posting better- than-expected revenue, fueling a 32% profit jump for the third quarter.
United Airlines Holdings Inc. jumped 12% as earnings beat estimates.
Billionaire Stan Druckenmiller said markets are pricing in a Donald Trump victory ahead of next month’s presidential election.
In a Bloomberg Television interview, he said “you can see it in the bank stocks, you can see it in crypto.”
The S&P 500 rose 0.5% to around 5,840.
The Nasdaq 100 was little changed.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.8%.
The Russell 2000 rallied 1.6%.
The Bloomberg “Magnificent Seven” gauge was little changed.
Treasury 10-year yields declined two basis points to 4.01%.
Bitcoin rose 1.9% to $67,728.77.
“We recently upgraded small caps to neutral vs large caps after a persistent 3 1/2 year period of underperformance,” according to Nicholas Lentini at Morgan Stanley and his colleagues. “This decision came on the back of the strong September jobs report and the Fed’s decision to deliver a 50 basis-point rate cut at last month’s meeting.”
For them to get outright bullish on small caps, leading macro indicators would likely need to reflect a clear acceleration in growth.
To Adam Turnquist at LPL Financial, small caps have been stuck in a consolidation range over the last few months as investors questioned the likelihood of a soft-landing scenario and path of monetary policy.
“With the growth outlook recently improving — underpinned by better-than-feared labor market conditions — and increased visibility into Fed rate cuts, the Russell 2000 has rallied off the lower end of its rising price channel,” he noted. “Recent strength in the banking space has further supported small caps.”
The S&P 500 has already set 46 closing records this year, and according to the trading desk at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., that rally is primed to extend into the final months of 2024.
Scott Rubner, a managing director for global markets and tactical specialist at the bank, estimates the US stock benchmark can finish the year “well north of 6,000.”
According to his calculations of data going back to 1928, the historical median of S&P 500 returns from Oct. 15 to Dec. 31 is 5.17%.
In election years median returns are even higher, just over 7%, implying a year-end level of 6,270.
“The equity market selloff is canceled, and a year-end rally is starting to resonate with clients shifting from hedging from the left-tail to the right-tail as institutional investors are getting forced into the market right now,” Rubner wrote in a note to clients Tuesday. Professional investors are growing concerned about materially underperforming their benchmarks, he added.

Corporate Highlights:
* Boeing Co. is considering raising about $15 billion in a sale of shares and a mandatory convertible bond, Reuters reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
* J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc.’s third-quarter profit topped the average analyst estimate. Revenue fell less than analysts expected.
* ASML Holding NV Chief Executive Officer Christophe Fouquet said he expects the chip market’s long-awaited recovery will extend “well into 2025,” following disappointing third-quarter earnings that sparked a broad selloff across the semiconductor industry.
* Qualcomm Inc. is likely to wait until after the US presidential election in November before deciding whether to pursue an offer to buy Intel Corp., people familiar with the matter said.
* U.S. Bancorp raked in net interest income that topped analyst estimates as fixed-rate assets in its portfolio benefited from higher borrowing costs.
* Novavax Inc. tumbled after US regulators placed a hold on the company’s experimental influenza and Covid-19 combination vaccines because a study volunteer developed a serious nerve disorder.
* Abbott Laboratories narrowed its full-year profit outlook, raising the midpoint slightly, as strong demand for its diabetes devices continued driving growth.
* Airbus SE plans to eliminate as many as 2,500 positions at its defense and space division as the European aircraft manufacturer seeks to streamline a business that’s consistently racked up charges and suffered from stiff competition.
* Warburg Pincus is weighing a possible buyout of German IT services company Nagarro SE, people familiar with the matter said, potentially adding to the strong momentum of dealmaking in the country.

Key events this week:
* ECB rate decision, Thursday
* US retail sales, jobless claims, industrial production, Thursday
* Fed’s Austan Goolsbee speaks, Thursday
* China GDP, Friday
* US housing starts, Friday
* Fed’s Christopher Waller, Neel Kashkari speak, Friday

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 rose 0.5% as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 was little changed
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.8%
* The MSCI World Index rose 0.2%
* S&P 500 Equal Weighted Index rose 0.7%
* The Russell 2000 Index rose 1.6%
* Bloomberg Magnificent 7 Total Return Index was little changed
Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.3%
* The euro fell 0.3% to $1.0858
* The British pound fell 0.7% to $1.2982
* The Japanese yen fell 0.3% to 149.69 per dollar
Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin rose 1.9% to $67,728.77
* Ether rose 1.7% to $2,615.18
Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined two basis points to 4.01%
* Germany’s 10-year yield declined four basis points to 2.18%
* Britain’s 10-year yield declined 10 basis points to 4.06%
Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude was little changed
* Spot gold rose 0.5% to $2,674.72 an ounce

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.

Have a lovely evening everyone.

Be magnificent!

Shab
” Do not seek to follow in the footsteps of the wise; seek what they sought.”– Matsuo Chuemon Munefusa

Shab Mohammadpour
Assistant to Carolann Steinhoff
Queensbury Securities Inc.

340A – 730 View Street
Victoria BC  V8W 3Y7
Tel: 778-430-5851
Fax: 778-430-5828

October 15, 2024, Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents:
Carolann is away from the office for a conference, I will be writing the newsletter on her behalf.

October 15, 1581: Commissioned by Catherine de’ Medici, the first ballet “Ballet Comique de la Reine” is staged in Paris
October 15, 1789: 1st US presidential tour by George Washington in New England
October 15, 1924: US President Calvin Coolidge declares Statue of Liberty a national monument

The biggest supermoon of the year is about to rise: When to see the ‘Hunter’s Moon’ at its best and brightest
The Hunter’s Moon will be the first full moon of autumn when it rises on Oct. 17. It will also be the third and closest supermoon of the year.

Phaistos Disk: 3,000-year-old inscriptions from Crete that have never been deciphered
None of the many interpretations of the Phaistos Disk’s inscriptions are universally accepted.

5,000-year-old cemetery in Spain has twice as many females as males, and nobody knows why
There are more than twice as many females as males buried in an ancient cemetery in Spain, a new study finds — but no one knows why.

Record-breaking ancient spinning galaxy challenges cosmic evolution theories
Astronomers have discovered the earliest strongly rotating galaxy ever seen that’s well-organized rather than chaotic, challenging theories of cosmic evolution.

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Ohrid, North Macedonia
A satellite leaves a trail of light near the tail of the comet, known as the comet of the century, after sunset
Photograph: Ognen Teofilovski/Reuters

Vienna, Austria
Photographers prepare to capture Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan–Atlas) in the night sky
Photograph: Georg Hochmuth/APA/AFP/Getty Images

​​​​​​​‘A pod of Atlantic spotted dolphins rushed in on our first day out, and bow-rode in front of the boat. It was a sign of how lucky we were going to be,’ says Hoekendijk. The species, with their paint-spattered appearance, prefer these subtropical waters, warmed by the Gulf Stream
Photograph: Jeroen Hoekendijk
Market Closes for October 15th, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
42740.42 -324.80
-0.75%
S&P 500  5815.26 -44.59
-0.76%
NASDAQ  18315.59 -187.10
-1.01%
TSX  24439.08 -32.09
-0.13%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  39910.55 +304.75
+0.77%
HANG
SENG
20318.79 -774.08
-3.67%
SENSEX  81820.12 -152.93
-0.19%
FTSE 100* 8249.28 -43.38
-0.52%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
3.145 N.A
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.293 N.A
U.S.
10 Year Bond
4.0317 4.1003
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.3200 4.4106

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7255 0.7267
US
$
1.3783 1.3761

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.5008 0.6663
US
$
1.0889 0.9184

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2654.90 2648.80
Oil
WTI Crude Future  73.83 75.85

Market Commentary:
📈 On this day in 1878, Thomas Edison founded the Edison Electric Light Co. to research and develop the incandescent light bulb. It issued 3,000 shares of stock at $100 apiece. In 1889 the company, funded largely by J.P. Morgan, was renamed Edison General Electric.
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite fell 0.1% at 24,439.08 in Toronto.
The move was the biggest since falling 0.2% on Oct.7 and follows the previous session’s increase of 0.7%.

Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. contributed the most to the index decline, decreasing 5.7%.
Baytex Energy Corp. had the largest drop, falling 6.3%.

Today, 87 of 223 shares fell, while 136 rose; 3 of 11 sectors were lower, led by energy stocks.
Insights
* This year, the index rose 17%, heading for the best year since 2021
* The index advanced 26% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 34% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is 0.3% below its 52-week high on Oct. 11, 2024 and 30.7% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* The S&P/TSX Composite is up 1.4% in the past 5 days and rose 3.7% in the past 30 days
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.5 on a trailing basis and 16.9 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.8% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.88t
* 30-day price volatility fell to 8.17% compared with 9.30% in the previous session and the average of 9.88% over the past month
================================================================
| Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Energy | -90.7806| -2.1| 9/32
Information Technology | -14.7887| -0.7| 4/6
Consumer Discretionary | -1.0875| -0.1| 4/7
Health Care | 1.9693| 2.7| 3/1
Industrials | 3.8879| 0.1| 17/10
Communication Services | 4.6335| 0.6| 4/1
Consumer Staples | 4.6815| 0.5| 7/4
Real Estate | 7.3234| 1.4| 20/0
Materials | 9.2520| 0.3| 36/16
Utilities | 17.1975| 1.9| 12/3
Financials | 25.6186| 0.3| 20/7
================================================================
| | |Volume VS| YTD
|Index Points | | 20D AVG | Change
Top Contributors | Move | % Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
Canadian Natural Resources | -44.0100| -5.7| 16.0| 12.3
Suncor | -25.2100| -5.1| -15.1| 24.3
Shopify | -13.6200| -1.4| -28.8| 9.5
RBC | 11.3700| 0.7| 126.0| 28.0
TC Energy | 12.5400| 2.8| -44.9| 36.9
Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd | 13.6100| 3.6| -9.2| 55.8
US
By Rita Nazareth
(Bloomberg) — Stocks got hit as a disappointing outlook from Europe’s most-valuable tech company and concern about tighter US restrictions on chip sales spurred a selloff in the industry that has powered the bull market.
Equities dropped from all-time highs, with the S&P 500 down lmost 1%. The Nasdaq 100 slipped 1.4%.

A closely watched gauge of semiconductor firms saw its worst plunge since early September.
US-traded shares of ASML Holding NV plummeted 16% after the Dutch giant cut its guidance for 2025.
Nvidia Corp. sank 4.5% on news US officials have discussed capping sales of advanced AI chips from the company and other American firms to some countries.
Allocations to equities surged, while bond exposure sank and cash levels in global portfolios fell to 3.9% in October from 4.2% last month, triggering a “sell signal”, strategists led by Michael Hartnett wrote.
“US equity markets, skewed more toward large-cap leadership, are seeing profit-taking today as earnings season ramps up against overbought/extended charts,” said Dan Wantrobski at Janney Montgomery Scott.
The S&P 500 slipped to around 5,815.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 0.8%.
UnitedHealth Group Inc. sank 8.1% on a disappointing outlook.
Bank of America Corp. rose as earnings beat estimates.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. was little changed and Citigroup Inc. sank despite solid results.
Treasury 10-year yields declined seven basis points to 4.03%.

The dollar rose.
Oil plunged as a report that Israel may avoid targeting Iran’s crude infrastructure eased concerns about a potential supply disruption.
Weekly flows for the S&P 500 were near the largest observed this year, according to Citigroup strategists led by Chris Montagu.

Positioning is very extended and sits at 98th percentile.
“We worry that valuations are getting stretched, as stocks are near ‘priced to perfection’,” said Lamar Villere, portfolio manager at Villere & Co.
With the S&P 500 holding over 5,800, UBS Group AG’s Jonathan Golub and Patrick Palfrey were the latest to raise their year-end call for the gauge.

They boosted it to 5,850 from 5,600 — while lifting their 2025 forecast to 6,400 from 6,000.
“Fiscal and monetary policy uncertainty, and potential election outcomes, make 2025 returns far from certain,” Golub wrote.

That didn’t prevent him from betting that the stock market can keep powering on, noting that risks are skewed to the upside, with moderating inflation, rate cuts, improvement in low-end consumer and business activity and broad-based profit strength.
To Scott Rubner at Goldman Sachs, US stocks are set to extend their rally into the final months of the year, pushing the S&P 500 past 6,000, as corporate buyers re-enter the market and institutional investors drop their hedges.

Corporate Highlights:
* Johnson & Johnson reported stronger-than-expected third- quarter earnings, driven by surging sales of the cancer medicine Darzalex.
* Charles Schwab Corp. reported earnings per share that topped analyst estimates and curbing some of its expensive debt — a sign the firm has moved past a bout of turbulence last year.
* PNC Financial Services Group Inc. pulled in more net interest income than analysts expected in the third quarter, another period of sequential growth for the bank’s biggest source of revenue as the firm continues to predict a record haul next year.
* Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. plans to close 14% of its US stores to cut costs as consumers pull back spending.
* PG&E Corp. said it may need to cut power to homes and businesses across a large portion of California starting later this week when dry, gusty winds are expected to sweep across the state.
* LVMH’s sales of fashion and leather goods fell for the first time since the pandemic as the industry’s biggest player was hammered by a slump in demand from Chinese consumers whose appetite for high-end purchases once seemed insatiable.
* Adidas AG raised its annual profit target for the third quarter in a row amid the sustained boom for retro sneakers like the Samba and more sales from its shrinking stockpile of Yeezy footwear.

Key events this week:
* Morgan Stanley earnings, Wednesday
* ECB rate decision, Thursday
* US retail sales, jobless claims, industrial production, Thursday
* Fed’s Austan Goolsbee speaks, Thursday
* China GDP, Friday
* US housing starts, Friday
* Fed’s Christopher Waller, Neel Kashkari speak, Friday

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 fell 0.8% as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 fell 1.4%
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.8%
* The MSCI World Index fell 0.7%

Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.2%
* The euro fell 0.2% to $1.0887
* The British pound was little changed at $1.3069
* The Japanese yen rose 0.4% to 149.21 per dollar

Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin rose 1.6% to $66,979.55
* Ether fell 1.1% to $2,591.82

Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined seven basis points to 4.03%
* Germany’s 10-year yield declined five basis points to 2.22%
* Britain’s 10-year yield declined eight basis points to 4.16%

Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude fell 3.9% to $70.92 a barrel
* Spot gold rose 0.5% to $2,662.01 an ounce

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.

Have a lovely evening everyone.

Be magnificent!

Shab
” If a little dreaming is dangerous, the cure for it is not to dream less, but to dream more, to dream all the time.” — Marcel Proust

Shab Mohammadpour
Assistant to Carolann Steinhoff
Queensbury Securities Inc.

340A – 730 View Street
Victoria BC  V8W 3Y7
Tel: 778-430-5851
Fax: 778-430-5828

October 11, 2024 Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents: Happy Friday! Wishing you a Happy Canadian Thanksgiving as well!
Carolann is away from the office for a conference, I will be writing the newsletter on her behalf.

October 11, 1726: Benjamin Franklin returns to Philadelphia from England
October 11, 1852: Australia’s oldest university, the University of Sydney, is inaugurated in Sydney
October 11, 2001: Nobel Prize for Economic Sciences jointly awarded to George Akerlof, Joseph E. Stiglitz and A. Michael Spence for “their analyses of markets with asymmetric information”

‘Future You’ AI lets you speak to a 60-year-old version of yourself — and it has surprising wellbeing benefits
An MIT-led project asked young users to talk to an AI-powered simulation of their 60-year-old selves through a chatbot interface. The experience led to decreased anxiety and a boost in optimism.

New DNA findings shed light on Tsavo’s infamous man-eating lions
Scientists extract DNA from hair embedded in the Tsavo lions’ jaws that reveals the species of prey they ate while they were alive. Read more.

British explorer Sandy Irvine’s foot discovered 100 years after he vanished on Everest
The foot, boot and sock thought to belong to Sandy Irvine, who disappeared during George Mallory’s 1924 expedition to climb Mount Everest, have likely been found. They could be a vital clue in unraveling an even bigger mystery. Read more.

Thanksgiving (Canada)

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Fife, UK
The northern lights, also known as aurora borealis, illuminate the sky over the ‘kissing trees’ near Kinghorn in Scotland
Photograph: Jane Barlow/PA

Kent, UK
The gardener Janice Ackerley trims the topiary hedge of the yew chess set that was planted at Hever Castle in Edenbridge nearly 120 years ago
Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

Frankfurt, Germany
Geese are reflected in a puddle as they walk past the skyline of the financial district
Photograph: Michael Probst/AP
Market Closes for October 11th, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
42863.86 +409.74
+0.97%
S&P 500  5815.03 +34.98
+0.61%
NASDAQ  18342.94 +60.89
+0.33%
TSX  24471.17 +168.91
+0.69%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  39605.80 +224.91
+0.57%
HANG
SENG
21251.98 +614.74
+2.98%
SENSEX  81381.36 -230.05
-0.28%
FTSE 100* 8253.65 +15.92
+0.19%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
3.220 3.226
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.357 3.357
U.S.
10 Year Bond
4.1003 4.0608
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.4106 4.3588

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7267 0.7274
US
$
1.3761 1.3747

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.5059 0.6641
US
$
1.0943 0.9138

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2648.80 2628.95
Oil
WTI Crude Future  75.85 75.85

Market Commentary:
📈 On this day in 1817, the New York Stock Exchange formally banned negotiated fees, compelling all its members to charge fixed commission rates to the investing public, including members of the brokers’ own families.
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite rose for the third day, climbing 0.7%, or 168.91 to 24,471.17 in Toronto.
Royal Bank of Canada contributed the most to the index gain, increasing 2.0%.

Brookfield Business Partners LP had the largest increase, rising 4.0%.
Today, 170 of 223 shares rose, while 47 fell; 9 of 11 sectors were higher, led by financials stocks.

Insights
* This year, the index rose 17%, heading for the best year since 2021
* So far this week, the index rose 1.3%
* The index advanced 24% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 32% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is at its 52-week high and 30.9% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.5 on a trailing basis and 17 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.8% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.85t
* 30-day price volatility rose to 9.30% compared with 9.22% in the previous session and the average of 10.53% over the past month
================================================================
| Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Financials | 60.6438| 0.8| 23/3
Industrials | 35.1112| 1.1| 23/3
Energy | 24.8198| 0.6| 33/6
Information Technology | 23.3453| 1.1| 8/2
Materials | 12.7462| 0.4| 34/18
Consumer Discretionary | 11.0308| 1.4| 9/2
Utilities | 4.7699| 0.5| 10/5
Real Estate | 3.6656| 0.7| 14/4
Communication Services | 3.5195| 0.5| 4/1
Health Care | -0.1672| -0.2| 2/2
Consumer Staples | -10.5801| -1.1| 10/1
================================================================
| | |Volume VS| YTD
|Index Points | | 20D AVG | Change
Top Contributors | Move | % Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
RBC | 33.1200| 2.0| 25.1| 27.1
CIBC | 12.7800| 2.4| 52.7| 31.5
Bank of Montreal | 11.2100| 1.8| 67.2| -2.7
Aritzia | -1.6280| -5.6| 320.8| 71.6
Couche-Tard | -13.8700| -3.4| 16.9| -7.4
TD Bank | -40.0300| -4.0| 107.4| -8.3

US
By Rita Nazareth
(Bloomberg) — Wall Street kicked off the earnings season with stocks hitting all-time highs as big banks rallied after posting solid results.
The S&P 500 topped 5,800, notching its 45th record in 2024.

Equity traders worried that the start of Federal Reserve rate cuts would sap bank profits saw things weren’t that bad, with JPMorgan Chase & Co. churning out a surprise increase in net interest income.
At Wells Fargo & Co., NII slumped — but the firm expects that drop to be less steep in the last quarter.
Each stock rose at least 4.4%, pushing the KBW Bank Index to the highest since April 2022.
“We expect earnings season to be solid, including the big banks,” said Michael Landsberg, chief investment officer at Landsberg Bennett Private Wealth Management. “Credit card delinquencies are still very low and increased economic activity should drive bank revenues.”
The S&P 500 rose 0.6%, extending gains into a fifth straight week — its longest winning run since May.

The Nasdaq 100 added 0.1%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 1%.
The Russell 2000 climbed 2.1%.
Tesla Inc. dropped 8.8% after the unveiling of its Robotaxi was light on specifics.
Uber Technologies Inc. and Lyft Inc. jumped over 9.5%.
Treasuries saw small moves, with shorter maturities outperforming.

A Bloomberg gauge of US bonds posted a fourth straight week of declines.
The dollar barely budged, while capping a second consecutive week of gains in anticipation of a slower pace of rate cuts.
West Texas Intermediate oil settled below $76 a barrel.
“Now that the Fed has started its rate-cutting cycle, the economy should get a further boost from lower interest rates on things like credit card debt and business loans,” said David Lefkowitz at UBS Global Wealth Management. “As a result, we expect third-quarter earnings results will be consistent with recent, healthy trends.”
In non-recessionary scenarios, the S&P 500 rises 17% on average in the 12 months after the Fed starts to cut rates, Lefkowitz noted.

He reiterated his S&P 500 price targets of 5,900 and 6,200 for December 2024 and June 2025.
Apollo’s Torsten Slok noted that financials have been among top outperformers during the Fed’s rate cutting cycles that end with a “soft landing.”
Slok looked at total returns of each sector during the two rate cut cycles that didn’t overlap with a recession, from July 1995 to January 1996 and from September 1998 to November 1998.
In the run-up to the third-quarter earnings season, an unusually large dichotomy took shape, according to Gina Martin Adams, Michael Casper and Wendy Soong at Bloomberg Intelligence.
Analysts kept lowering the bar for S&P 500 companies while management guidance implied a significantly stronger outlook — suggesting that companies should easily beat expectations, they noted.
S&P 500 net income growth is now forecast to rise a mere 4.2% in the third quarter, down from more than 7% growth expected in mid-July, thanks mostly to the energy sector.
Analysts’ souring outlook is not exclusive to energy, however,  as estimates for all sectors except for communication services fell, they said.
Currently, 37% of S&P 500 companies are expected to report lower earnings per share than the previous year this quarter, compared to 26.6% last quarter, BI concluded.

Corporate Highlights:
* BlackRock Inc. pulled in a record $221 billion of total client cash last quarter, pushing the world’s largest money manager to an all-time high of $11.5 trillion of assets as it seeks to become a one-stop shop for stocks, bonds and, increasingly, private assets.
* Bank of New York Mellon Corp.’s third-quarter profit topped expectations after a jump in asset values fueled a 5% increase in fee revenue.
* With the paralyzing labor strike now running for a full four weeks, Boeing Co. is taking a harder line with union representatives by filing unfair labor practice charges, saying the other side has bargained in bad faith and undermined its own deal.
* Humana Inc. released final quality ratings for private Medicare Advantage health plans.
* BP Plc expects its net debt to have risen in the third quarter due to lower refining margins and changes to the timing of asset sales.

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 rose 0.6% as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.1%
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1%
* The MSCI World Index rose 0.6%
* The Russell 2000 Index rose 2.1%
* Bloomberg Magnificent 7 Total Return Index fell 1%

Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed
* The euro was unchanged at $1.0934
* The British pound was little changed at $1.3066
* The Japanese yen fell 0.4% to 149.15 per dollar

Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin rose 5.5% to $63,022.34
* Ether rose 3.8% to $2,457.29

Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced three basis points to 4.09%
* Germany’s 10-year yield was little changed at 2.27%
* Britain’s 10-year yield was little changed at 4.21%

Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude fell 0.4% to $75.58 a barrel
* Spot gold rose 1% to $2,656.29 an ounce

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.

Have a lovely weekend everyone.

Be magnificent!

Shab
” You will never win if you never begin.”– Helen Rowland

Shab Mohammadpour
Assistant to Carolann Steinhoff
Queensbury Securities Inc.

340A – 730 View Street
Victoria BC  V8W 3Y7
Tel: 778-430-5851
Fax: 778-430-5828

October 10, 2024, Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents:
Carolann is away from the office for a conference, I will be writing the newsletter on her behalf.

October 10, 1845: The United States Naval Academy was founded in Annapolis, Maryland
October 10,1889: Barnard College is founded in New York City after Columbia University refuses to accept women
October 10, 1963: American chemist and anti-nuclear weapons campaigner Linus Pauling wins the Nobel Peace Prize the same day the first nuclear test treaty comes into effect

Watch atoms fuse into world’s ‘smallest bubble’ of water in 1st-of-its-kind ‘nanoscale’ video
A new study captured never-before-seen footage of hydrogen and oxygen atoms combining to form a miniature water droplet out of “thin air.” The newly improved reaction could one day help astronauts make water in space.

‘Severe’ solar storm that hit Earth Thursday could be ‘global phenomenon’ with auroras as far south as California
A powerful solar outburst hit Earth Thursday, triggering a “severe” geomagnetic storm. Auroras could be visible as far south as California and Alabama, NOAA predicts. Read more.

Google’s Sycamore quantum computer chip can now outperform the fastest supercomputers, new study suggests
Experiments on Google’s 67-qubit Sycamore processor showed operations entering a new “weak noise phase” in which calculations were complex enough to outperform supercomputers, based on benchmark testing. Read more.

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Dublin, Ireland
A male fallow deer in Dublin’s Phoenix park
Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA

Free as a Bird by Alberto Román Gómez (Spain)
The winner of the 10 years and under category contrasts a delicate stonechat bird with a hefty chain. Watching from the window of his father’s car at the edge of the Sierra de Grazalema nature park, Alberto found this young bird tricky to photograph as it was quickly flying back and forth, gathering insects. To Alberto, the stonechat displayed a sense of ownership, as if it were a young guardian overseeing its territory
Photograph: Alberto Román Góme/2024 Wildlife Photographer of the Year

​​​​​​​Old Man of the Glen by Fortunato Gatto (Italy)
The winner of the plants and fungi category focuses on a gnarled old birch tree adorned with pale ‘old man’s beard’ lichens. Gatto often visits the Glen Affric ancient pinewoods alone to lose himself in its intricate, chaotic, timeless beauty. The pale ‘old man’s beard’ lichens indicate that it’s an area of minimal air pollution. Analysis of pollen preserved in the layered sediments shows that the forest has stood here for at least 8,300 years
Photograph: Fortunato Gatto/2024 Wildlife Photographer of the Year
Market Closes for October 10th, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
42454.12 -57.88
-0.14%
S&P 500  5780.05 -11.99
-0.21%
NASDAQ  18282.05 -9.57
-0.05%
TSX  24302.26 +77.36
+0.32%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  39380.89 +102.93
+0.26%
HANG
SENG
21251.98 +614.74
+2.98%
SENSEX  81611.41 +144.31
+0.18%
FTSE 100* 8237.73 -6.01
-0.07%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
3.226 3.258
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.357 3.369
U.S.
10 Year Bond
4.0608 4.0726
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.3588 4.3408

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7274 0.7293
US
$
1.3747 1.3712

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.5030 0.6653
US
$
1.0933 0.9147

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2628.95 2639.90
Oil
WTI Crude Future  75.85 73.24

Market Commentary:
📈 On this day in 1962, the Self-Employed Individual Retirement Tax Act of 1962 became federal law, creating the Keogh plan, the first retirement account that an individual could control and determine for themself.
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite rose for the second day, climbing 0.3%, or 77.36 to 24,302.26 in Toronto.
Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. contributed the most to the index gain, increasing 2.7%.
K92 Mining Inc. had the largest increase, rising 16.6%.

Today, 122 of 223 shares rose, while 99 fell; 5 of 11 sectors were higher, led by materials stocks.
Insights
* This year, the index rose 16%, heading for the best year since 2021
* So far this week, the index rose 0.6%
* The index advanced 25% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 32% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is at its 52-week high and 30% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* The S&P/TSX Composite is up 1.4% in the past 5 days and rose 5.6% in the past 30 days
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.4 on a trailing basis and 16.9 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.8% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.84t
* 30-day price volatility fell to 9.22% compared with 9.24% in the previous session and the average of 10.76% over the past month
================================================================
| Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Materials | 63.5098| 2.1| 44/7
Energy | 51.8787| 1.2| 34/7
Industrials | 11.5766| 0.4| 11/16
Consumer Staples | 3.7414| 0.4| 2/8
Health Care | 0.0168| 0.0| 1/3
Consumer Discretionary | -0.9257| -0.1| 3/8
Utilities | -2.7006| -0.3| 3/12
Communication Services | -3.2847| -0.5| 2/3
Real Estate | -4.9712| -0.9| 0/20
Information Technology | -8.7754| -0.4| 3/7
Financials | -32.7106| -0.4| 19/8
================================================================
| | |Volume VS |
| Index | | 20D AVG |YTD Change
Top Contributors |Points Move| % Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
Canadian Natural Resources | 20.2200| 2.7| -56.4| 18.6
Suncor | 12.6000| 2.6| 6.1| 31.0
Bank of Montreal | 11.2600| 1.8| 86.1| -4.4
CIBC | -4.8760| -0.9| -24.8| 28.4
Shopify | -4.9900| -0.5| -48.0| 10.3
RBC | -6.9210| -0.4| 47.4| 24.6
US
By Rita Nazareth
(Bloomberg) — Stocks fell after data showed hotter-than-expected inflation and a slowdown in the labor market, amplifying the debate on whether the Federal Reserve will opt for a smaller rate cut next month or a pause after a large September reduction.
Following a rally to all-time highs, the S&P 500 took a breather.
While Thursday’s economic figures were not perceived by Wall Street as catastrophic, they certainly highlighted the Fed’s challenge of bringing inflation back to the 2% target without cooling the jobs market too much.
And that has added to the debate about the Fed’s next steps.
For now, bond traders continued to bet the central bank will reduce the pace of cuts to 25 basis points in November.

Three Fed policymakers — John Williams, Austan Goolsbee and Thomas Barkin were unfazed by a higher-than-forecast consumer price index, suggesting officials can continue lowering rates.
The outlier was Raphael Bostic of the Atlanta Fed.
In an interview with the Wall Street Journal he revealed that, in projections released in September, he had called for one additional quarter-point cut this year.
The Fed has two remaining meetings in 2024.

“One slightly hotter-than-expected CPI reading doesn’t mean a new wave of inflation has been unleashed, but the fact that it accompanied a jump in weekly jobless claims may add to short-term market uncertainty,” said Chris Larkin at E*Trade from Morgan Stanley. “These weren’t good numbers — but that doesn’t mean they upended the larger outlook for solid economic growth and moderate inflation.”
In a note titled “The Fed’s quandary as inflation warmer while labor cooler,” Quincy Krosby at LPL Financial says the latest economic numbers were not the combination the Fed wants to see.
“If inflation data continues to indicate that prices are generally rising amid a backdrop of a cooler labor market, the Fed’s next meeting will undoubtedly involve a more heated discussion of which of the Fed’s mandates takes precedence,” she noted.
The S&P 500 fell 0.2%.
Most major groups retreated, though energy shares joined oil higher as the market awaited Israel’s response to Iran’s missile attack.
Megacaps were mixed, with Nvidia Corp. up and Apple Inc. down.
Tesla Inc. edged lower ahead of the launch of the company’s fully self-driving vehicle.
The yield on 10-year Treasuries was little changed at 4.07%.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index wavered.

Wall Street’s Reaction:
* Bret Kenwell at eToro:
Today’s CPI report will lower enthusiasm around rate cuts next month, and if some of these other catalysts increase uncertainty, it could act as a short-term excuse for markets to pull back — particularly with the S&P 500 at all-time highs.
* David Donabedian at CIBC Private Wealth US:
The Fed said the last mile getting toward their inflation target is going to be tough, and that is what we are seeing. But we still expect the Fed to cut rates by a quarter point in November, and likely a similar cut at the December meeting.
* Jim Baird at Plante Moran Financial Advisors:
If anything, the report was good enough to solidify the case for another quarter-point cut. Inflation hasn’t receded so rapidly to justify an accelerated pace of policy easing, but the upside surprise also wasn’t sufficient to raise serious questions about the underlying disinflationary trend.
* Mark Hamrick at Bankrate:
The Federal Reserve isn’t yet in position to declare ‘mission accomplished’ in the battle against inflation, and the ride to the 2% target continues to be bumpy at times. Mindful of its dual mandate prioritizing maximum employment and stable prices, it will be eager to see the next monthly jobs report in early November before the next announcement on rates. A safe bet for now is rate reductions of one-quarter of 1% at the final two meetings of the year.
* Will Compernolle at FHN Financial:
The CPI surprised to the upside in September, rising faster than the consensus expectation in both the headline index and the core. The core increase wasn’t hot enough to rule out a November rate cut, however.
* Skyler Weinand at Regan Capital:
The Fed has shown that they’re willing to let inflation potentially run hotter than normal in favor of full employment.
Only a rise towards 4% inflation or a few hot inflation prints in a row would alter the Fed’s course of continued rate cuts over the next year.
* Chris Zaccarelli at Independent Advisor Alliance:
Given that the most recent jobs report was so strong, it was possible that a big upside surprise to inflation could have caused the Fed to pause at the next meeting and leave rates unchanged. However, given that this month’s report was a little higher than expected it is still likely that the Fed will go ahead and cut by 25 bps next month and – if nothing in the labor market or inflation readings materially changes by the end of the year –another 25 bps in December.
* Richard Flynn at Charles Schwab UK:
The market reacted negatively to recent indications from policymakers that the next cut would be 0.25%, however, history tells us that consecutive dramatic rate cuts tend to come about when the economy is in distress, so while we expect a cut next month, investors may be wise to hope for a gradual drop.

Corporate Highlights:
* Delta Air Lines Inc. forecast profit and sales short of Wall Street’s estimates for the final months of the year, suggesting a slow recovery from a challenging summer travel season.
* Domino’s Pizza Inc. trimmed its 2024 projection for sales growth and new locations as slower consumer spending hits the restaurant industry.
* Pfizer Inc. company officials threatened legal action against two former top executives who had been working with Starboard Value to push for changes at the drugmaker, the activist investor alleged Thursday in a letter to the company’s board.
* GXO Logistics Inc., the supply-chain services provider that spun off from trucking company XPO Inc. in 2021, is exploring a sale, according to people familiar with the matter.
* Eli Lilly & Co. is ramping up its legal campaign against companies that were temporarily allowed to make and sell copycat versions of its blockbuster drugs used for weight loss until a US shortage ended last week.
* Toronto-Dominion Bank will pay almost $3.1 billion in fines and other penalties and face a cap on its US retail banking assets, after pleading guilty to failing to prevent money laundering by drug cartels and other criminals.

Key events this week:
* JPMorgan, Wells Fargo kick off earnings season for the big Wall Street banks, Friday
* US PPI, University of Michigan consumer sentiment, Friday
* Fed’s Lorie Logan, Austan Goolsbee and Michelle Bowman speak, Friday

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 fell 0.2% as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 fell 0.1%
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.1%
* The MSCI World Index fell 0.1%
Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed
* The euro was little changed at $1.0936
* The British pound was little changed at $1.3058
* The Japanese yen rose 0.5% to 148.55 per dollar
Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin fell 1.1% to $59,720.89
* Ether rose 0.5% to $2,365.4
Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries was little changed at 4.07%
* Germany’s 10-year yield was little changed at 2.26%
* Britain’s 10-year yield advanced three basis points to 4.21%
Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude rose 3.6% to $75.91 a barrel
* Spot gold rose 0.8% to $2,629.53 an ounce

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.

Have a lovely evening everyone.

Be magnificent!

Shab
” There is only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that’s your own self.”– Aldous Huxley

Shab Mohammadpour
Assistant to Carolann Steinhoff
Queensbury Securities Inc.

340A – 730 View Street
Victoria BC  V8W 3Y7
Tel: 778-430-5851
Fax: 778-430-5828

October 9, 2024, Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents:
Carolann is away from the office for a conference, I will be writing the newsletter on her behalf.

October 9, 1865: First US underground pipeline for carrying oil is laid in Pennsylvania
October 9, 1870: Rome is incorporated into Italy by royal decree
October 9, In 1874: the Universal Postal Union was created by the Treaty of Bern, revolutionizing international mail services
October 9, 1941: US President Franklin D. Roosevelt approves an atomic program that would become the Manhattan Project

Ancient piece of driftwood hidden for thousands of years could hold secrets for combating climate change
A 3,775-year-old log found in Canada had barely lost any of its carbon content since being buried, indicating “wood vaulting” is a viable means of carbon storage.

New ‘biological aging’ test predicts your odds of dying within the next 12 months
A new test uses a cheek swab to predict your risk of death within one year — how does it work?

How strong can hurricanes get?
There’s a theoretical limit to the maximum sustained wind speeds of hurricanes, but climate change may increase that “speed limit.”

World’s most powerful X-ray laser set for massive upgrade that will help us better understand the atomic world
Researchers will be able to analyze chemical compounds and atoms in greater detail than ever before using the brightest, clearest laser of its kind anywhere in the world

‘Every volcano has its own personality’: Mystery Mount Adams earthquake surge under investigation
Scientists are installing multiple temporary seismic monitoring stations to get a better understanding of the sharp increase in earthquakes recorded at Mount Adams. Read more.

Never-before-seen head of prehistoric, car-size ‘millipede’ solves evolutionary mystery
The fossil showed unique stalked eyes and centipede-like characteristics.

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Bangkok, Thailand
Dancers perform a dragon dance during the vegetarian festival celebration at Yaowarat, Bangkok’s Chinatown
Photograph: Peerapon Boonyakiat/Sopa Images/Rex/Shutterstock

London, UK
Three Studies for a Portrait of Isabel Rawsthorne during a preview for the National Portrait Gallery’s Francis Bacon: Human Presence exhibition
Photograph: Lucy North/PA

​​​​​​​Durham, UK
An art installation called Space by Luxmuralis is projected on to the interior of Durham Cathedral. This year projections will include original footage of a rocket launch and an image of Earth under a galaxy of stars
Photograph: Ian Forsyth/Getty
Market Closes for October 9th, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
42512.00 +431.63
+1.03%
S&P 500  5792.04 +40.91
+0.71%
NASDAQ  18291.62 +108.70
+0.60%
TSX  24224.90 +152.39
+0.63%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  39277.96 +340.42
+0.87%
HANG
SENG
20637.24 -289.55
-1.38%
SENSEX  81467.10 -167.71
-0.21%
FTSE 100* 8243.74 +53.13
+0.65%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
3.258 3.236
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.369 3.346
U.S.
10 Year Bond
4.0726 4.0119
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.3408 4.2936

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7293 0.7341
US
$
1.3712 1.3622

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.5001 0.6666
US
$
1.0940 0.9141

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2639.90 2640.95
Oil
WTI Crude Future  73.24 73.57

Market Commentary:
📈 On  this day in 1998, Japan’s Nikkei 225 index, formerly the measure of the mightiest stock market in the world, closed at 12879.97. That was down nearly 67% from the then-record high it had notched in late 1989. 
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite rose 0.6% at 24,224.90 in Toronto.
The move follows the previous session’s decrease of 0.1%.
Shopify Inc. contributed the most to the index gain, increasing 1.5%. 
Bird Construction Inc. had the largest increase, rising 11.9%.
Today, 148 of 223 shares rose, while 71 fell; 10 of 11 sectors were higher, led by information technology stocks.
Insights
* This year, the index rose 16%, heading for the best year since 2021
* The index advanced 26% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 33% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is at its 52-week high and 29.6% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* The S&P/TSX Composite is up 0.9% in the past 5 days and rose 5.2% in the past 30 days
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.3 on a trailing basis and 16.8 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.9% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.82t
* 30-day price volatility fell to 9.24% compared with 9.38% in the previous session and the average of 10.99% over the past month
================================================================
|Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Information Technology | 33.1000| 1.6| 9/1
Financials | 31.8292| 0.4| 20/7
Energy | 27.6583| 0.7| 18/22
Industrials | 26.0876| 0.8| 24/3
Materials | 19.3077| 0.7| 35/15
Consumer Discretionary | 8.2149| 1.0| 10/1
Utilities | 2.3643| 0.3| 9/6
Real Estate | 2.3103| 0.4| 9/10
Consumer Staples | 1.6795| 0.2| 9/2
Health Care | 0.1003| 0.1| 2/2
Communication Services | -0.2453| 0.0| 3/2
===============================================================
| | |Volume VS |
| Index | | 20D AVG |YTD Change
Top Contributors |Points Move| % Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
Shopify | 13.8700| 1.5| -8.9| 10.9
RBC | 12.7500| 0.8| 1.7| 25.2
Brookfield Corp | 9.6580| 1.3| -9.0| 36.5
Couche-Tard | -3.3430| -0.8| -28.3| -5.4
Bank of Nova Scotia| -3.4360| -0.6| -33.1| 10.2
Fairfax Financial | -6.2150| -2.4| 92.8| 35.6
US
By Rita Nazareth
(Bloomberg) — Wall Street traders gearing up for key inflation data sent stocks to fresh all-time highs.
Treasuries retreated while the dollar notched its longest winning run in more than two years.
On the eve of a report expected to show consumer prices continued to moderate, the S&P 500 approached 5,800.
The gauge hit its 44th record in 2024, with tech shares once again leading the charge.
Apple Inc. climbed 1.7%.
Nvidia Corp. halted a five-day rally.
Tesla Inc. edged lower ahead of the Robotaxi launch.
Alphabet Inc. fell 1.5% on news the US is weighing a Google breakup in a historic big-tech antitrust case.
Major technology stocks have undergone volatility in both directions of late, but weakness represents an attractive buying opportunity, according to Solita Marcelli, chief investment officer Americas at UBS Global Wealth Management.
“We remain positive on the tech sector as well as the outlook for artificial intelligence,” and “against this backdrop, we believe volatility should be utilized to build long-term AI exposure,” she said.
Markets barely budged after minutes of the latest Federal Reserve gathering, which showed Jerome Powell received some pushback on a half-point rate cut in September, as some officials preferred a smaller reduction.
“Today’s Fed minutes were pretty ‘ho-hum,’ which could actually be a good thing for stock investors,” said David Russell at TradeStation. “Policymakers agree inflation is fading and they see potential weakness in job growth.
That keeps rate cuts on the table if needed.
The bottom line is that Powell might have the market’s back headed into the year end.”
The S&P 500 rose 0.7%.
The Nasdaq 100 added 0.8%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 1%.
The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced five basis points to 4.06%.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.4% — up for an eighth straight session.
Oil held steady as US crude inventories swelled and traders monitored China’s plans for fiscal policy.
US inflation probably moderated at the end of the third quarter, reassuring a Fed that’s shifting more of its policy focus toward shielding the labor market.
The consumer price index is seen rising 0.1% in September, its smallest gain in three months.
Compared with a year earlier, the CPI probably rose 2.3%, the sixth-straight slowdown and the tamest since early 2021.
The gauge excluding the volatile food and energy categories, which provides a better view of underlying inflation, is projected to rise 0.2% from a month earlier and 3.2% from September 2023.
“The Fed’s decision to shift its focus from inflation to the labor market means that inflation data, including tomorrow’s CPI, is likely to become less market-moving than it had been,” said Matthew Weller at Forex.com and City Index. “Despite that logical observation, this month’s CPI report may still drive market volatility coming on the back of Friday’s stellar jobs report, a reading that hints at the potential for renewed upside risks to inflation.”
A survey conducted by 22V Research shows that 42% of investors expect the market reaction to CPI to be “mixed/negligible,” 32% said “risk-off” and only 25% think “risk-on.”
“There is optimism about inflation generally,” said Dennis DeBusschere, founder of 22V. He also noted that the share of investors expecting a recession has fallen while the percentage of those who believe financial conditions need to tighten hit the highest since June.
For the bull run in stocks to continue, inflation needs to continue to ebb, the economy needs to make a soft landing and Corporate America’s earnings growth needs to remain strong and broaden, according to Ed Clissold at Ned Davis Research.
While Saturday marks the two-year anniversary of the bull-market, a crucial piece of the current rally that’s been missing for much of the past few years — broader breadth — may juice the next leg higher for share gains.
Large caps and growth shares have historically outperformed in the third year of a bull market, but they are currently overbought versus small-cap companies and value equities, Clissold noted.
Meantime, billionaire investor Bill Gross says the rally that’s helped US stocks almost double in value over the past five years is tapering off, and investors should expect low but positive returns on their investments.
He recommends keeping exposure to the stock market at average levels, while focusing portfolios more on defensive stocks with a small position in bonds.
“No bear market, but it’s not the same bull market anymore,” Gross, the co-founder and former chief investment officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., wrote.

Corporate Highlights:
* Tesla Inc. enjoyed its best-ever quarter for China shipments, as vehicles delivered from its Shanghai factory rose for a third consecutive month.
* Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. posted a better-than-expected 39% rise in quarterly revenue, assuaging concerns that AI hardware spending is beginning to taper off.
* Rio Tinto Group has agreed to buy Arcadium Lithium Plc in an all-cash deal valuing the US-listed miner at $6.7 billion, expanding its grip on the battery metal and stepping back into the M&A fray with its biggest deal in 17 years.
* B. Riley Financial Inc.’s lenders are getting more oversight of the company’s finances, including weekly updates on its liquidity and some of its dealmaking amid efforts to pull the money-losing investment firm out of its tailspin.
* Generac Holdings Inc. is running low on portable backup generators after Hurricane Helene and other recent storms knocked out power for millions of Americans.
* GSK Plc said it will pay as much as $2.2 billion to resolve about 80,000 US court cases related to allegations that its old reflux medication Zantac was contaminated with a suspected carcinogen.

Key events this week:
* US CPI, initial jobless claims, Thursday
* Fed’s John Williams and Thomas Barkin speak, Thursday
* JPMorgan, Wells Fargo kick off earnings season for the big Wall Street banks, Friday
* US PPI, University of Michigan consumer sentiment, Friday
* Fed’s Lorie Logan, Austan Goolsbee and Michelle Bowman speak, Friday

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 rose 0.7% as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.8%
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1%
* The MSCI World Index rose 0.6%
* Bloomberg Magnificent 7 Total Return Index was little changed
* The Russell 2000 Index rose 0.3%
Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.4%
* The euro fell 0.4% to $1.0939
* The British pound fell 0.3% to $1.3065
* The Japanese yen fell 0.8% to 149.32 per dollar
Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin fell 2.2% to $60,966.5
* Ether fell 1.1% to $2,415.64
Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced five basis points to 4.06%
* Germany’s 10-year yield advanced one basis point to 2.26%
* Britain’s 10-year yield was little changed at 4.18%
Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude fell 0.2% to $73.44 a barrel
* Spot gold fell 0.5% to $2,609.26 an ounce

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
–With assistance from Denitsa Tsekova.

Have a lovely evening everyone.

Be magnificent!

Shab
“What do we live for, if it is not to make life less difficult for each other?”– Mary Ann Evans “George Eliot”

Shab Mohammadpour
Assistant to Carolann Steinhoff
Queensbury Securities Inc.

340A – 730 View Street
Victoria BC  V8W 3Y7
Tel: 778-430-5851
Fax: 778-430-5828

October 7, 2024, Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents: Happy Monday.

October 7, 2001: Triggered by the September 11th attacks, the Afghanistan War began, as the U.S. and British warplanes started bombing Taliban targets.
October 7, 2008: The Federal Reserve announced a radical plan to buy massive amounts of short-term debt, known as commercial paper, to get credit markets moving again. Go to article >>

Neils Bohr, mathematician, b.1885.
Desmond Tutu, S. African Leader, b.1931.
Yo-Yo Ma, cellist, b. 1955.
Vladmir Putin, Russian Dictator, b. 1952

‘Many more ancient structures waiting to be discovered’: Lost chunk of seafloor hidden in Earth’s mantle found off Easter Island
Researchers created a seismic map of Earth’s interior beneath the southeastern Pacific Ocean and discovered an ancient slab of oceanic crust that appears to be stuck midway through the mantle. Read More.

Draconid meteor shower 2024: How to see dozens of ‘shooting stars’ fall from the dragon’s tail this week
How to watch the Draconid meteor shower peak on Oct. 8 and 9 in the tail of a cosmic dragon. Read More.

Alligator gar: The ‘living fossil’ that has barely evolved for 100 million years
This living fossil can grow as large as an alligator, has two rows of needle-sharp teeth, and such strong armor that it survived predatory dinosaurs. Read More.

Did we kill the Neanderthals? New research may finally answer an age-old question.
About 37,000 years ago, Neanderthals clustered in small groups in what is now southern Spain. They may have gone about their daily life: Crafting stone tools, eating birds and mushrooms, engraving symbols on rocks, and creating jewelry out of feathers and shells. They likely never realized they were among the last of their kind.

But the story of their extinction actually begins tens of thousands of years earlier, when the Neanderthals became isolated and dispersed, eventually ending nearly half a million years of successful existence in some of the most forbidding regions of Eurasia.

By 34,000 years ago, our closest relatives had effectively gone extinct. But because modern humans and Neanderthals overlapped in time and space for thousands of years, archaeologists have long wondered whether our species wiped out our closest relatives. This may have occurred directly, such as through violence and warfare, or indirectly, through disease or competition for resources.

Now, researchers are solving the mystery of how the Neanderthals died out — and what role our species played in their demise. Read More.

Inside the world’s best new skyscraper
A Singaporean high-rise named the best new tall building in the world features a lagoon-like swimming pool and a series of soaring sky terraces.

Madonna remembers her brother Christopher Ciccone
Pop icon Madonna is mourning the loss of her younger brother. “There will never be anyone like him,” she said in a moving tribute.

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Charyn, Kazakhstan
An aerial view of Charyn Canyon
Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Kolkata, India
An artisan gives a finishing touch to a temporary place for worship to create awareness about mother nature next to an idol of the Hindu Goddess Durga for the Durga Puja festival
Photograph: Dibyangshu Sarkar/AFP/Getty Images

​​​​​​​Hull, England
Fun fair rides and stalls of the Hull fair are illuminated. Hull fair has been in existence for more than 700 years, first appearing in 1278
Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Market Closes for October 7th, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
41954.24 -398.51
-0.94%
S&P 500  5695.94 -55.13
-0.96%
NASDAQ  17923.91 -213.94
-1.18%
TSX  24102.71 -60.12
-0.25%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  39332.74 +697.12
+1.80%
HANG
SENG
23099.78 +362.91
+1.60%
SENSEX  81050.00 -638.45
-0.78%
FTSE 100* 8303.62 +22.99
+0.28%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
3.240 3.198
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.355 3.327
U.S.
10 Year Bond
4.0197 3.9672
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.3011 4.2497

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7341 0.7371
US
$
1.3622 1.3567

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.4950 0.6689
US
$
1.0975 0.9112

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2640.95 2647.65
Oil
WTI Crude Future  77.14 74.38

Market Commentary:
📈 On this day in 2016, the British pound tumbled dramatically in chaotic trading as jitters continued to reverberate through markets more than three months after the Brexit vote.
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite fell 0.2% at 24,102.71 in Toronto.
The move was the biggest since falling 0.3% on Sept.27 and follows the previous session’s increase of 0.8%.
Today, financials stocks led the market lower, as 10 of 11 sectors lost; 137 of 223 shares fell, while 84 rose.
Shopify Inc. contributed the most to the index decline, decreasing 1.5%.
Iamgold Corp. had the largest drop, falling 9.5%.

Insights
* This year, the index rose 15%, heading for the best year since 2021
* The index advanced 25% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 32% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is 0.3% below its 52-week high on Oct. 4, 2024 and 28.9% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* The S&P/TSX Composite is up 0.4% in the past 5 days and rose 5.8% in the past 30 days
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.3 on a trailing basis and 16.8 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.9% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.83t
* 30-day price volatility rose to 9.47% compared with 9.41% in the previous session and the average of 11.15% over the past month
================================================================
| Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Financials | -29.7539| -0.4| 6/21
Materials | -20.8221| -0.7| 15/35
Information Technology | -20.4286| -1.0| 2/8
Utilities | -15.4474| -1.6| 2/13
Consumer Discretionary | -5.9214| -0.7| 4/7
Industrials | -5.8364| -0.2| 14/13
Real Estate | -1.7165| -0.3| 5/15
Communication Services | -1.2746| -0.2| 2/3
Consumer Staples | -1.0481| -0.1| 2/9
Health Care | -0.9565| -1.3| 0/4
Energy | 43.0756| 1.0| 32/9
================================================================
| | |Volume VS| YTD
|Index Points | | 20D AVG | Change
Top Contributors | Move | % Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
Shopify | -14.5500| -1.5| 44.8| 6.8
Canadian Pacific Kansas | -7.8880| -1.1| -42.4| 5.5
Fairfax Financial | -5.9030| -2.3| -29.3| 39.6
TD Bank | 5.1250| 0.5| 89.0| 1.5
Suncor | 8.3440| 1.7| -56.7| 30.0
Canadian Natural Resources | 23.6400| 3.3| 1.3| 14.8

US
By Rita Nazareth
(Bloomberg) — A selloff in some of the world’s largest technology companies dragged down stocks, extending a slide that was also driven by geopolitical angst and bets the Federal Reserve will opt for a smaller rate cut next month.
The S&P 500 fell 1% after notching a four-week winning run.
Alphabet Inc. sank 2.4% as a judge ruled it must lift restrictions that prevent developers from setting up rival marketplaces that compete with its Google Play Store.
Brent crude jumped above $80 a barrel amid mounting tensions in the Middle East.
In the wake of Friday’s solid jobs data, Treasuries continued to drop — with the 10-year yield topping 4%.
“Friday’s strong jobs report not only appeared to kill any chance of a 50-basis-point rate cut in November, it kickstarted chatter about the Fed leaving rates unchanged if economic data continues to come in hotter than expected,” said Chris Larkin at E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley. “But as last week showed, geopolitics can’t be ignored.”
To Dave Sekera at Morningstar, if there is any further geopolitical escalation, that would potentially spur the risk- off trade — with growth shares underperforming value ones.
“Typically, in a risk-off trade, you’re going to see rotation into defense stocks, but I’d be careful if you’re an investor today,” he said. “Some of the defensive sectors today are already overvalued. Unlike a typical risk-off trade, I think oil stocks would go up.”
With the exception of energy shares, every major sector in the S&P 500 dropped Monday.
A gauge of the “Magnificent Seven” mega caps slipped 1.9%.
Amazon.com Inc. sank 3.1% after Wells Fargo Securities downgraded the shares.
Apple Inc. slid 2.3% as a Jefferies analyst said investors have overly optimistic expectations for the latest iPhones.
Nvidia Corp. gained.
Wall Street’s favorite volatility gauge – the VIX – jumped to a two-month high.
Treasury 10-year yields rose six basis points to 4.02%.
West Texas Intermediate crude climbed 3.9% to $77.30 a barrel.
Despite the drop in stocks, two of Wall Street’s top strategists have turned more optimistic on signs of a robust labor market, economic resilience and easing interest rates.
Morgan Stanley’s Michael Wilson raised his view on so-called cyclical stocks relative to safer defensive peers, noting Friday’s blowout payrolls data and expectations of more cuts from the Fed.
His peer at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., David Kostin, upgraded his 12-month target for the benchmark to 6,300 points from 6,000.
The gauge closed at 5,695.94 Monday.
Despite recent market volatility, strategists at BlackRock Investment Institute are reiterating their overweight to US equities and urging to lean into risk, citing cooling inflation and falling interest rates.
“The increasing probability that US economic performance will continue to be ‘hot’ going into 2025 and that the Fed will tolerate this heat, provided inflation isn’t reaccelerating, bodes well for risk assets,” said Jason Draho at UBS Global Wealth Management.
But navigating such an environment is not without challenges, he noted.
“The week ahead is a pivotal one for markets, with key CPI data and the start of earnings season, and we expect these events to confirm our bullish stance on markets and justify our expectations for the S&P 500 to reach 6,150 by year-end,” said James Demmert at Main Street Research. “The strong jobs numbers from Friday are a reminder to investors that the economy is vibrant, and recession risk is not a factor.”
Aside from the macroeconomic picture, traders will be wading through corporate results this week.
The third-quarter earnings season is expected to be fertile ground for investors who take an active approach to managing money, according to strategists at Bank of America Corp.
Options market is pricing in biggest post-earnings implied move at the single stock level in BofA data history since 2021, while S&P 500 Index volatility remains low, team led by Ohsung Kwon said Monday in a note to clients.
“This upcoming earnings season is set to be a great environment for stock pickers,” he noted.
Financial sector earnings kick off Friday — with reports from JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co. and Blackrock Inc.
Their net interest income outlook and capital markets revenue are in focus following September’s Fed rate cut, Bloomberg Intelligence said.
Delta Air Lines Inc., the first major US airline to report this quarter, should provide further insight into travel demand following reports from Airbnb Inc. and Booking Holdings Inc. that flagged a pullback in vacation spending.

Corporate Highlights:
* Amazon.com Inc. must face an antitrust suit filed by the US Federal Trade Commission over its online marketplace, but a federal judge dismissed some of the agency’s claims tied to state consumer protection laws.
* Activist investor Starboard Value has taken a stake of about $1 billion in Pfizer Inc. and is seeking to spur a turnaround of the struggling pharmaceuticals giant, according to a person familiar with the matter.
* Chevron Corp. agreed to sell stakes in oil sands and shale assets in Western Canada to Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. for $6.5 billion.
* Air Products and Chemicals Inc. rallied after a round of positive analyst commentary on the chemical company, including upgrades. The news follows a report that activist investor Mantle Ridge took a stake.
* Apollo Global Management Inc. agreed to buy Barnes Group Inc. in an all-cash transaction that values the technology and aerospace manufacturer at about $3.6 billion.
* Rivus Pharmaceuticals Inc., a drug developer focused on obesity treatments, is considering a US initial public offering as soon as 2024, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
* Continental AG has lined up banks to help with the separation of its struggling car parts business, according to people familiar with the matter, moving ahead with the plans despite recalls related to faulty braking systems it supplied.

Key events this week:
* Fed’s Raphael Bostic, Susan Collins, Philip Jefferson and Adriana Kugler speak, Tuesday
* Fed minutes, Wednesday
* Fed’s Lorie Logan, Raphael Bostic, Austan Goolsbee and Mary Daly speak, Wednesday
* US initial jobless claims, CPI, Thursday
* Fed’s John Williams and Thomas Barkin speak, Thursday
* JPMorgan, Wells Fargo kick off earnings season for the big Wall Street banks, Friday
* US PPI, University of Michigan consumer sentiment, Friday
* Fed’s Lorie Logan, Austan Goolsbee and Michelle Bowman speak, Friday

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 fell 1% as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 fell 1.2%
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.9%
* The MSCI World Index fell 0.5%
* Bloomberg Magnificent 7 Total Return Index fell 1.9%
* The Russell 2000 Index fell 0.9%

Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed
* The euro was little changed at $1.0973
* The British pound fell 0.3% to $1.3083
* The Japanese yen rose 0.4% to 148.08 per dollar

Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin rose 1.2% to $63,390.23
* Ether rose 0.3% to $2,445.65

Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced six basis points to 4.02%
* Germany’s 10-year yield advanced five basis points to 2.26%
* Britain’s 10-year yield advanced eight basis points to 4.21%

Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude rose 3.9% to $77.30 a barrel
* Spot gold fell 0.4% to $2,643.60 an ounce

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
Have a lovely evening everyone.

Be magnificent!

Carolann
A somebody was once a nobody who wanted to and did. –John Burroughs, 1837-1921.

Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP®, CIM, CIWM
Senior Investment Advisor

Queensbury Securities Inc.,
St. Andrew’s Square,
Suite 340A, 730 View St.,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7

Tel: 778.430.5808
(C): 250.881.0801 (Text Only)
Toll Free: 1.877.430.5895
Fax: 778.430.5828
www.carolannsteinhoff.com

October 4, 2024, Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents: Happy Friday.

October 4, 1675: Dutch mathematician Christiaan Huygens patents the pocket watch.
On Oct. 4, 1957, the Space Age began as the Soviet Union launched Sputnik, the first man-made satellite, into orbit. Go to article >>
October 4, 1965: Pope Paul VI holds mass at Yankee Stadium during a fourteen-hour visit to New York City.

St. Francis of Assisi, b. 1181.

Costco is now selling platinum bars for $1,089
Costco is expanding its collection of precious metals. But if shoppers aren’t interested in platinum and silver, it could potentially tarnish the company’s recent success with gold.

Caitlin Clark caps remarkable season with near-unanimous WNBA Rookie of the Year honor
After an outstanding season in which she undoubtedly exceeded lofty expectations following a historic career at the University of Iowa, Caitlin Clark was named the 2024 WNBA Rookie of the Year in a near-unanimous vote.

Eminem is going to be a grandpa
Eminem, or Slim Shady, will soon have another nickname: Grandpa! The rapper announced via a new music video that his daughter Hailie Jade, 28, is expecting her first child.

‘Ghost Ship of the Pacific,’ which fought on both sides in WWII, discovered near San Francisco
The newfound wreck could help maritime archaeologists better understand how 20th-century warships were designed. Read More.

Medieval walrus ivory may reveal trade between Norse and Indigenous Americans hundreds of years before Columbus, study finds
The Thule Inuit people and Norse both hunted walrus in the High Arctic in the 13th century, according to a new study.
Full Story: Live Science (10/3)

We’re one step closer to finding out why Siberia is riddled with exploding craters
A new physical model suggests meltwater from thawing permafrost on Russia’s Yamal Peninsula can unlock methane sources at depth, triggering explosions that open enormous craters at the surface.
Read More.

‘Ring of fire’ solar eclipse blazes over Easter Island in incredible new image
On Oct. 2, a partial “ring of fire” solar eclipse was visible from the remote island of Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island, where around 1,000 stone moai statues stand. You can see the whole celestial event play out in this incredible composite image. Read More.

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Pelican crossing … A girl shares a bench with a pelican in the beautiful sunshine in St James’s Park, London, UK. The water birds have lived in and around the park since 1664
Photograph: Jill Mead/The Guardian

Dortmund, Germany
Visitors watch the audiovisual presentation Ocean Odyssey, projected on the walls of a former steelworks at the Phoenix des Lumieres exhibition
Photograph: Martin Meissner/AP

​​​​​​​London, UK
An art handler holds Andy Warhol’s Self-Portrait in front of Bridget Riley’s Gaillard 2
Photograph: James Manning/PA
Market Closes for October 4th, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
42352.75 +341.16
+0.81%
S&P 500  5751.07 +51.13
+0.90%
NASDAQ  18137.85 +219.38
+1.22%
TSX  24162.83 +194.33
+0.81%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  38635.62 +83.56
+0.22%
HANG
SENG
22736.87 +623.36
+2.82%
SENSEX  81688.45 -808.65
-0.98%
FTSE 100* 8280.63 -1.89
-0.02%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
3.198 3.095
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.327 3.264
U.S.
10 Year Bond
3.9672 3.8458
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.2497 4.1779

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7371 0.7382
US
$
1.3567 1.3546

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.4904 0.6710
US
$
1.0979 0.9108

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2647.65 2660.95
Oil
WTI Crude Future  74.38 73.71

Market Commentary:
📈 On this day in 1957, the U.S.S.R. launched Sputnik 1, the world’s first orbiting satellite, taking an early lead in the space race. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 9.1% over. the next 12 trading days
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite rose 0.8% at 24,162.83 in Toronto.
The move was the biggest since rising 1.2% on Sept. 19 and follows the previous session’s decrease of 0.1%.
Today, financials stocks led the market higher, as 8 of 11 sectors gained; 143 of 223 shares rose, while 77 fell.
Shopify Inc. contributed the most to the index gain, increasing 5.6%.
Silver Crest Metals Inc. had the largest increase, rising 9.7%.

Insights
* This year, the index rose 15%, heading for the best year since 2021
* So far this week, the index rose 0.9%
* The index advanced 27% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 34% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is at its 52-week high and 29.3% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.3 on a trailing basis and 16.7 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.9% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.79t
* 30-day price volatility fell to 9.41% compared with 9.62% in the previous session and the average of 11.63% over the past month
================================================================
|Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Financials | 68.5615| 0.9| 24/3
Information Technology | 58.8813| 2.9| 8/2
Energy | 57.3540| 1.4| 34/7
Materials | 9.1013| 0.3| 29/23
Consumer Discretionary | 5.7843| 0.7| 9/2
Industrials | 2.6609| 0.1| 19/8
Utilities | 1.3466| 0.1| 7/8
Health Care | 0.2850| 0.4| 2/2
Communication Services | -1.9814| -0.3| 2/3
Real Estate | -3.0167| -0.6| 5/12
Consumer Staples | -4.6310| -0.5| 4/7
================================================================
| | |Volume VS |
| Index | | 20D AVG |YTD Change
Top Contributors |Points Move| % Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
Shopify | 50.1700| 5.6| 23.1| 8.5
RBC | 16.4200| 1.0| 61.6| 24.0
Manulife Financial | 10.8100| 2.2| -4.1| 40.1
Waste Connections | -3.4990| -0.8| -42.0| 21.1
Thomson Reuters | -3.5170| -1.6| -43.4| 16.3
Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd | -5.0050| -1.3| -22.8| 47.2

US
By Rheaa Rao and Isabelle Lee
(Bloomberg) — Treasuries sank after a stronger-than- expected jobs report forced traders to rethink their bets on the size of the Federal Reserve’s next rate cut.
Stocks ended the day near session highs as the data underlined the resilience of the US economy and boosted soft-landing hopes.
The policy-sensitive two-year US Treasury yield touched 3.93% after employers added 254,000 jobs in September — the most in six months — and the unemployment rate unexpectedly declined.
The dollar had its best week in two years.
Traders are now pricing in less than a quarter-point worth of easing in November.
The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 rose the most since Sept. 19. Both eked out a small gain for the week.
Apart from Friday’s labor-market report, a slew of other economic data this week — including private-sector job numbers and a measure of the services sector — painted a picture of a strong US economy.
“Coming off a string of relatively weak jobs data over the summer months, the September jobs report was just what the doctor – or in this case the Fed – ordered,” Jim Baird, chief investment officer at Plante Moran Financial Advisors.
It “broke the recent trend and provided reason for optimism in the underlying resiliency of the labor economy.”
He added that while the report doesn’t change the economic outlook, it should assuage any concerns investors or the Fed had about the jobs market.
Earlier this week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said he wouldn’t want to see the labor market weaken further.
One of the main reasons the central bank decided to cut rates by a half a percentage point last month was softer hiring and a rise in the unemployment rate earlier this year.
Not all investors were positive about the report. Mohamed El-Erian warned that it means the Fed’s fight against inflation isn’t over.
“This is not just a solid labor market, but if you take these numbers at face value, it’s a strong labor market late in the cycle,” El-Erian, the president of Queens’ College, Cambridge, told Bloomberg Television.
The wage increases reflected in the report will likely remind the central bank that inflation will remain sticky, said Lindsey Bell, chief investment strategist of 248 Ventures.
Still, overall, Friday’s data boosted hopes that the Fed will be able to pull off a soft landing.
“Today’s report should give the Fed more flexibility as it looks to continue lowering rates and it should help counter arguments that the Fed acted too late,” said Eric Merlis, managing director and co-head of global markets at Citizens.
Policymakers will get one more jobs report — along with inflation data — ahead of its meeting next month.
Meanwhile, oil posted its biggest weekly advance since March 2023.
Geopolitical concerns persist as Israel carried out bombing raids in the suburbs of Beirut alongside ground attacks in southern Lebanon, while Iran said it would support a conditional cease-fire in the conflicts involving its allied groups Hezbollah and Hamas.

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 rose 0.9% as of 4:04 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 rose 1.2%
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.8%
* The MSCI World Index rose 0.6%

Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.4%
* The euro fell 0.5% to $1.0977
* The British pound was little changed at $1.3128
* The Japanese yen fell 1.2% to 148.73 per dollar

Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin rose 2.7% to $62,388.71
* Ether rose 3.7% to $2,428.88

Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced 12 basis points to 3.97%
* Germany’s 10-year yield advanced seven basis points to 2.21%
* Britain’s 10-year yield advanced 11 basis points to 4.13%

Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude rose 1% to $74.44 a barrel
* Spot gold fell 0.2% to $2,650.87 an ounce

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
–With assistance from Emily Graffeo, Sid Verma and Sydney Maki.
Have  a wonderful weekend everyone.

Be magnificent!

As ever,

Carolann
Do not let your fire go out, spark by irreplaceable spark in the hopeless swamps of the not-quite, the not-yet, and the not-at-all. -Ayn Rand, 1905-1982.

Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP®, CIM, CIWM
Senior Investment Advisor

Queensbury Securities Inc.,
St. Andrew’s Square,
Suite 340A, 730 View St.,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7

Tel: 778.430.5808
(C): 250.881.0801 (Text Only)
Toll Free: 1.877.430.5895
Fax: 778.430.5828
www.carolannsteinhoff.com

October 3, 2024, Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents: Happy Friday Eve.  Happy Rosh Hoshana.  Shanah Tovah um’tukah.  Happy New Year!

October 3, 1932: Iraq gains independence from the United Kingdom.  The country had been under British control for 12 years.
October 3, 1941: The Maltese Falcon premieres in New York City.
1990: German Reunification: On Oct. 3, 1990, West Germany and East Germany ended 45 years of postwar division, declaring the creation of a new unified country.  Go to article >>

Certain college grads can now be air traffic controllers immediately
The FAA says that graduates from two schools can now bypass the agency’s backlogged training academy. Officials hope it will help tackle air traffic controller shortages.

Meet SpaceHopper, a three-legged hopping asteroid explorer
A bouncy device created by students in Switzerland is designed for exploring microgravity environments, like the surface of asteroids. It could help humanity push further into the cosmos, experts say.

This little robot is helping sick children attend school
For children with long-term illness or struggling with mental health issues, the AV1 robot (pictured below) can take their place in classes and help them stay connected with friends. Here’s how it works.

Monster X-class flare launches massive solar storm towards Earth — and could trigger auroras this weekend
The sun just unleashed one of its largest solar explosions in recent years, temporarily causing a radio blackout on Earth and spitting out a coronal mass ejection that will likely collide with our planet this weekend.
Read More.

More people are surviving avalanches than decades ago — here’s why
A study of avalanche survival data shows that survival rates have increased and rescues are faster, but time is still critical for buried victims. Read More.

James Webb telescope watches ancient supernova replay 3 times — and confirms something is seriously wrong in our understanding of the universe
The James Webb Space Telescope has zoomed in on an ancient supernova, revealing fresh evidence that a crisis in cosmology called the Hubble tension isn’t going anywhere soon. Read More.

Flu shots have changed this year — here’s why
Unlike past flu shots, flu vaccines for the 2024-2025 season don’t contain the “Yamagata lineage” of influenza viruses because evidence suggests that type of flu no longer exists. Read More.
PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Leiden, Netherlands
King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands at celebrations for the 450th anniversary of the ‘Leidens Ontzet’, the liberation of the city in 1574
Photograph: Robin Utrecht/dana press/Rex/Shutterstock

London, UK
Henri De Toulouse-Lautrec’s La Femme Tatouée, on display at Christie’s in London before its 20th/21st Century London Evening Sale
Photograph: Lucy North/PA

​​​​​​​İzmir, Turkey
Flamingos rest at the Çakalburnu Lagoon which hosts many migratory bird species, baby fish and other creatures at the Balçova district. Flamingos rest on one leg and use less muscle strength to maintain more heat and balance
Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
Market Closes for October 3rd, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
42011.59 -184.93
-0.44%
S&P 500  5699.94 -9.60
-0.17%
NASDAQ  17918.47 -6.65
-0.04%
TSX  23968.50 -33.05
-0.14%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  38552.06 +743.30
+1.97%
HANG
SENG
22113.51 -330.22
-1.47%
SENSEX  82497.13 -1769.16
-2.10%
FTSE 100* 8282.52 -8.34
-0.10%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
3.095 3.026
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.264 3.206
U.S.
10 Year Bond
3.8458 3.7809
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.1779 4.1299

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7382 0.7405
US
$
1.3546 1.3505

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.4952 0.6688
US
$
1.1038 0.9059

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2660.95 2667.55
Oil
WTI Crude Future  73.71 70.10

Market Commentary:
💸 On this day in 1913, less than 20 years after federal income tax was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, it came back from the dead as the Underwood-Simons bill was signed into law by President Woodrow Wilson.
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite fell for the second day, dropping 0.1%, or 33.05 to 23,968.50 in Toronto.
Today, materials stocks led the market lower, as 8 of 11 sectors lost; 117 of 223 shares fell, while 105 rose.
Royal Bank of Canada contributed the most to the index decline, decreasing 0.8%.
Novagold Resources Inc. had the largest drop, falling 12.7%.

Insights
* This year, the index rose 14%, heading for the best year since 2021
* So far this week, the index was little changed
* The index advanced 26% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 34% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is 0.6% below its 52-week high on Oct. 2, 2024 and 28.2% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* The S&P/TSX Composite is down 0.3% in the past 5 days and rose 4% in the past 30 days
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.1 on a trailing basis and 16.6 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.9% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.8t
* 30-day price volatility fell to 9.62% compared with 9.71% in the previous session and the average of 11.84% over the past month
================================================================
| Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Materials | -35.3686| -1.2| 20/31
Financials | -18.2979| -0.2| 12/15
Information Technology | -12.8929| -0.6| 3/7
Utilities | -12.2811| -1.3| 3/12
Real Estate | -8.8418| -1.6| 1/19
Communication Services | -6.7184| -0.9| 1/4
Industrials | -6.7093| -0.2| 17/10
Consumer Discretionary | -4.7534| -0.6| 5/6
Health Care | 0.5430| 0.7| 2/2
Consumer Staples | 3.5113| 0.4| 4/7
Energy | 68.7568| 1.7| 37/4
================================================================
| | |Volume VS| YTD
|Index Points| | 20D AVG | Change
Top Contributors | Move |% Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
RBC | -13.4500| -0.8| -4.4| 22.8
Canadian Pacific Kansas | -10.7600| -1.5| -44.0| 5.9
Constellation Software | -8.7330| -1.5| -12.3| 31.3
Cenovus Energy | 8.3560| 4.0| -39.6| 10.0
Suncor | 12.4300| 2.7| -50.2| 26.2
Canadian Natural Resources | 15.3200| 2.2| -78.5| 10.2

US
By Cristin Flanagan
(Bloomberg) — US stocks churned as traders weighed the prospect of escalating conflict in the Middle East against positive economic data.
Crude and the dollar extended advances.
The S&P 500 fell 0.2% and Nasdaq 100 ended the day marginally lower after choppy trading for much of the morning.
The mood on Wall Street soured after puzzling comments from President Joe Biden on if he would support Israel striking Iran’s oil facilities.
Oil benchmarks surged.
Brent crude climbed above $77 a barrel for the longest run of daily gains since August, while West Texas Intermediate passed $73.
Investors are concerned that, should Israel strike critical Iranian assets, the Islamic Republic will lash out and escalate the conflict, dragging in more countries and potentially disrupting global energy shipments.
That’s left mainstay US equity benchmarks on course for their first weekly loss in four as the world awaits an Israeli response to Iran’s missile strike.
Israel’s warplanes bombed Beirut overnight, after eight of its soldiers were killed in southern Lebanon in battles against Hezbollah.
Wall Street’s fear gauge, the VIX, resumed its climb, flashing a warning sign that more stocks volatility lies ahead.
“The VIX is signaling that we are still in the midst of the ‘iffy October’ period,” Fundstrat’s Thomas Lee said.
But, he added, with multiple historical factors in the S&P 500’s favor, “we ultimately expect investors to buy this dip.”
Earlier in the session, equities briefly erased losses after a readout showed the US services sector in September expanded at the fastest pace since February 2023.
The Institute for Supply Management’s index of services jumped to 54.9, beating estimates.
Readings above 50 indicate expansion.
Other data showed applications for US unemployment benefits rose slightly last week to a level that is consistent with limited number of layoffs.
Continuing claims, a proxy for the number of people receiving benefits, were little changed at 1.83 million in the previous week, according to Labor Department data released Thursday.
The readouts “were both solid in September,” according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Abiel Reinhart.
Initial jobless claims “on balance continue to look quite low, which is a good sign for the job market,” he wrote in a research note.
To Michael Metcalfe, head of macro strategy at State Street Global Markets, international conflict has returned as a driver for markets.
“There might be a pressure to rebalance, because markets are stretched and I don’t see that as being particularly positive for US equities,” he said.
Amid all the geopolitical uncertainty, investors are looking for further signals on the health of the US economy, with the monthly payrolls report due on Friday.
The unemployment rate is forecast to hold steady at 4.2% in September while payrolls are expected to rise by 150,000.
“I am of course nervous heading into tomorrow’s jobs report,” Kallum Pickering, chief economist at Peel Hunt, said on Bloomberg Television. “If the unemployment rate ticks up, I wouldn’t be surprised that markets would shift back toward expecting 50 basis points and then it is a question of how the Fed may react.”
BMO’s Vail Hartman expects Friday’s data to leave the Fed’s next move up in the air; “NFP will do no more than raise or lower the bar for the remaining pre-Fed data to justify supersizing the next rate cut.”
On the labor front, investors are looking for progress in resolving the longshoremen’s strike that’s shuttered critical US ports.
According to a Cowen analyst Jason Seidl, who cited a call with a panelist “close to the port strike,” a resolution could be reach by Monday.
In corporate news, Tesla Inc. slid on the departure of a top executive ahead of the unveiling of its driverless robotaxi next week.
Levi Strauss shares slumped after the apparel company lowered its revenue growth outlook for the full year.
Bloomberg’s dollar index gained for a fourth day, bolstered by the rise in Treasury yields.
The British pound is on pace for its worst day since 2022 after a Bank of England official suggested the central bank could take a more aggressive approach to lowering interest rates. 

Key events this week:
* US nonfarm payrolls, Friday

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 fell 0.2% as of 4 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 was little changed
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.4%
* The MSCI World Index fell 0.3%

Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.3%
* The euro fell 0.2% to $1.1028
* The British pound fell 1.1% to $1.3122
* The Japanese yen fell 0.3% to 146.88 per dollar

Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin was little changed at $60,964.44
* Ether fell 1.4% to $2,352.11

Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced seven basis points to 3.85%
* Germany’s 10-year yield advanced five basis points to 2.14%
* Britain’s 10-year yield declined one basis point to 4.02%

Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude rose 5.4% to $73.87 a barrel
* Spot gold was little changed

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
–With assistance from Winnie Hsu, John Cheng, Chiranjivi Chakraborty, Robert Brand, Margaryta Kirakosian and Sujata Rao.
Have a lovely evening.

Be magnificent!
As ever,

Carolann
Your vision will become clear only when you can look into your own heart.  Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakens. –Carl Jung, 1875-1961.

Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP®, CIM, CIWM
Senior Investment Advisor

Queensbury Securities Inc.,
St. Andrew’s Square,
Suite 340A, 730 View St.,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7

Tel: 778.430.5808
(C): 250.881.0801 (Text Only)
Toll Free: 1.877.430.5895
Fax: 778.430.5828
www.carolannsteinhoff.com

October 2, 2024, Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents:

October2, 1608: Hans Lippershey applies for patent for first known early telescope in the Netherlands.
October 2, 1959: “The Twilight Zone” debuted on CBS. Go to article >>

1950: Peanuts comic strip debut.
1968: Redwood National Park established.

Mahatma Gandhi, b. 1869.
Groucho Marx, b. 1890.
Graham Greene, writer, b. 1904.
Sting, musician, b. 1951.

Who will see today’s annular solar eclipse?
An annular solar eclipse will create a “ring of fire” phenomenon in the sky over parts of South America today. A partial eclipse will also appear over Hawaii. Enjoy, sky-gazers!

Nintendo’s first museum offers a nostalgic trip back in video game time
Japan’s new Nintendo Museum takes visitors through the levels of the company’s 135-year history with an exhibition that includes rare consoles and prototypes. Take a look inside.

Humanity faces a ‘catastrophic’ future if we don’t regulate AI, ‘Godfather of AI’ Yoshua Bengio says
Yoshua Bengio played a crucial role in the development of the machine-learning systems we see today. Now, he says that they could pose an existential risk to humanity. Read More.

In a 1st, DNA analysis reveals identity of captain cannibalized during ill-fated Franklin expedition
Scientists have discovered the identity of a cannibalized victim who sailed on the doomed Northwest Passage expedition of 1845 to 1848. Read More

‘Secret teachings’ about ritual Samurai beheading revealed in newly translated Japanese texts
Four newly translated Japanese texts describe how ritual samurai beheadings were supposed to take place during the Edo period and later.
Full Story: Live Science (10/2)

32 alien planets that really exist
Beyond our solar system, countless alien worlds of lava, ice, water and noxious gas swirl through the cosmos. Here are some of the strangest exoplanets that scientists have discovered so far.
Read More.

32 alien planets that really exist
Beyond our solar system, countless alien worlds of lava, ice, water and noxious gas swirl through the cosmos. Here are some of the strangest exoplanets that scientists have discovered so far.
Read More.

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Hong Kong, China
Fireworks illuminate the sky over Victoria Harbour to celebrate the 75th anniversary of China’s National Day
Photograph: Lam Yik/Reuters

Bangkok, Thailand
People perform a lion dance at a shrine to honour Chinese deities on the eve of the annual vegetarian festival. During the nine-day period, people will abstain from consuming meat to cleanse their body and mind
Photograph: Rungroj Yongrit/EPA

​​​​​​​Hastings, UK
‘Leigh Dyer’s steel sculpture The Landing peering above the horizon after an early moonrise.’
Photograph: Martin Ruffin
Market Closes for October 2nd, 2024

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
Dow
Jones
42196.52 +39.55
+0.09%
S&P 500  5709.54 +0.79
+0.01%
NASDAQ  17925.13 +14.77
+0.08%
TSX  24001.55 -32.44
-0.14%

International Markets

Market
Index 
Close  Change 
NIKKEI  37808.76 -843.21
-2.18%
HANG
SENG
22443.73 +1310.05
+6.20%
SENSEX  84266.29 -33.49
-0.04%
FTSE 100* 8290.86 +14.21
+0.17%

Bonds

Bonds  % Yield  Previous % Yield
CND.
10 Year Bond 
2.026 2.945
CND.
30 Year
Bond 
3.206 3.119
U.S.
10 Year Bond
3.7809 3.7315
U.S.
30 Year Bond
4.1299 4.0716

Currencies

BOC Close  Today  Previous  
Canadian $   0.7405 0.7410
US
$
1.3505 1.3495

 

Euro Rate
1 Euro= 
  Inverse   
Canadian $   1.4918 0.6703
US
$
1.1047 0.9052

Commodities

Gold Close  Previous  
London Gold
Fix 
2667.55 2629.95
Oil
WTI Crude Future  70.10 69.83

Market Commentary:
📈 On this day in 1990, Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 surged by a then-record 13.2%, on rumors the government would intervene to stop the crashing market from falling further. The move proved to be a “dead-cat bounce.”
Canada
By Bloomberg Automation
(Bloomberg) — The S&P/TSX Composite fell 0.1% at 24,001.55 in Toronto.
The move follows the previous session’s increase of 0.1%.
Today, financials stocks led the market lower, as 7 of 11 sectors lost; 122 of 223 shares fell, while 100 rose.
Royal Bank of Canada contributed the most to the index decline, decreasing 0.7%.
Parex Resources Inc. had the largest drop, falling 2.4%.

Insights
* This year, the index rose 15%, heading for the best year since 2021
* The index advanced 25% in the past 52 weeks. The MSCI AC Americas Index gained 32% in the same period
* The S&P/TSX Composite is at its 52-week high and 28.4% above its low on Oct. 27, 2023
* The S&P/TSX Composite is up 0.4% in the past 5 days and rose 2.8% in the past 30 days
* S&P/TSX Composite is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 19.2 on a trailing basis and 16.7 times estimated earnings of its members for the coming year
* The index’s dividend yield is 2.9% on a trailing 12-month basis
* S&P/TSX Composite’s members have a total market capitalization of C$3.81t
* 30-day price volatility rose to 9.71% compared with 9.70% in the previous session and the average of 11.94% over the past month
================================================================
| Index Points | |
Sector Name | Move | % Change | Adv/Dec
================================================================
Financials | -22.9498| -0.3| 15/12
Consumer Staples | -13.5294| -1.4| 4/7
Industrials | -12.0554| -0.4| 12/15
Communication Services | -6.2439| -0.9| 0/5
Real Estate | -4.3011| -0.8| 4/16
Utilities | -3.9823| -0.4| 5/10
Health Care | -0.8194| -1.1| 0/4
Consumer Discretionary | 3.1521| 0.4| 5/6
Materials | 6.9780| 0.2| 25/26
Energy | 7.7972| 0.2| 23/18
Information Technology | 13.5173| 0.7| 7/3
================================================================
| | |Volume VS| YTD
|Index Points| | 20D AVG | Change
Top Contributors | Move |% Change | (%) | (%)
================================================================
RBC | -11.6700| -0.7| -32.8| 23.8
TD Bank | -8.0570| -0.8| 114.9| -0.5
Canadian Pacific Kansas | -5.9990| -0.8| -44.4| 7.4
Constellation Software | 3.9260| 0.7| -40.8| 33.3
CIBC | 4.5480| 0.9| -54.4| 29.0
Shopify | 7.1910| 0.8| -47.7| 3.6

US
By Cristin Flanagan
(Bloomberg) — Treasuries slid and the US dollar climbed after stronger-than-expected jobs numbers dampened Wall Street’s confidence that the Federal Reserve’s next interest-rate cut would be a big one.
Ten-year yields closed in on 3.8% after hitting a low of 3.69% in the prior session amid a flare-up of tensions in the Middle East.
The dollar reached nearly a two-week high after the labor readout as traders pondered the scope of the Fed’s next move.
Data Wednesday showed US companies added more jobs than expected last month, at odds with other indicators that show a cooling labor market.
Friday’s nonfarm payrolls numbers will be the next critical gut check on the health of the US economy.
“Today’s ADP employment number surprised to the upside, suggesting the labor market is bending but not breaking,” said Chris Larkin at E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley. “Friday’s monthly jobs report will have the final word on the current jobs picture, and more than likely, on near-term market sentiment.”
That left stocks struggling to buck the last of Tuesday’s risk-off mood as updates from the Mideast slowed.
The S&P 500 ended the day little changed while the Nasdaq 100 rose 0.1% as traders balanced the data against disruptions from a dockworkers’ strike at key US ports and the destruction of Hurricane Helene.
The jobs report won’t take a half point cut off the table, according to Bank of America Corp. strategists led by Meghan Swiber.
“Even if the labor market surprises to the strong side, pricing will still maintain optionality,” they wrote. To Marc Rowan, the chief executive officer of Apollo Global Management Inc., the Fed’s aggressive policy easing threatens to overstimulate the economy.
“It is not clear we need more rate cuts,” he said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, pointing to ready financing and rising real estate prices.
Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin took a different view, saying it was too early for the central bank to declare victor over rising prices. “While we have made real progress — there remains significant uncertainty on both inflation and employment,” he said.
Traders are hoping tensions in the Middle East will fade into the background — much as they did in April — even after
Israel vowed to retaliate against a missile barrage from Iran.
President Joe Biden urged Israel to hold off from attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Early gains for oil were trimmed by an unexpected rise in US inventories that counterbalanced the unrest.
WTI crude traded around $71 a barrel.
“Clearly there is a lot of uncertainty,” Anna Rosenberg, head of geopolitics at Amundi Asset Management, told Bloomberg Television. “The market is still very much operating in the base-case expectation that it remains more or less contained and doesn’t spiral out in an all-out war. And I think right now, that is the right thing to do.”
For stock bulls keeping crude costs in check will be key.
“As long as oil prices remain below $100 per barrel and corporate profits remain strong, that is supportive of higher stock prices,” according to Mary Ann Bartels, chief investment strategist at Sanctuary Wealth.  She expects the S&P 500 to reach 6,000 before the end of the year, “as interest rates continue to move lower and the consumer remains strong and is still spending.”
In company news, shares of Humana Inc. plunged after a drop in the health insurer’s Medicare quality ratings while Nike Inc.’s stock slid after the athletic wear company withdrew its
full-year sales guidance.
Tesla Inc. fell 3.5% after its quarterly vehicle sales disappointed.
A drop in the Japanese yen deepened in the US session as the dollar strengthened.
Comments from Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who said conditions weren’t right for the Bank of Japan to move again following two interest rate hikes earlier this year, sparked the move.
Chinese stocks listed in Hong Kong jumped the most in almost two years after Beijing followed other major cities in relaxing home purchase rules. The massive stimulus efforts announced by China’s leaders last week turbocharged local assets and helped lift markets overseas.

Key events this week:
* Fed speakers include Richmond’s Thomas Barkin, Cleveland’s Beth Hammack, St. Louis’s Alberto Musalem and Fed Governor Michelle Bowman on Wednesday
* US nonfarm payrolls, Friday

Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
* The S&P 500 was little changed as of 4:01 p.m. New York time
* The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.1%
* The Dow Jones Industrial Average was little changed
* The MSCI World Index fell 0.2%

Currencies
* The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.2%
* The euro fell 0.2% to $1.1051
* The British pound was little changed at $1.3273
* The Japanese yen fell 2% to 146.45 per dollar

Cryptocurrencies
* Bitcoin fell 0.8% to $60,278.13
* Ether fell 3.1% to $2,376.05

Bonds
* The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced five basis points to 3.78%
* Germany’s 10-year yield advanced six basis points to 2.09%
* Britain’s 10-year yield advanced eight basis points to 4.03%

Commodities
* West Texas Intermediate crude rose 1.6% to $70.98 a barrel
* Spot gold fell 0.2% to $2,658.86 an ounce

This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
–With assistance from Rob Verdonck, Winnie Hsu, Margaryta Kirakosian and Allison McNeely.
Have a lovely evening everyone.

Be magnificent!

As ever,

Carolann
Some things have to be believed to be seen. –Ralph Hodgson, 1871-1962.

Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP®, CIM, CIWM
Senior Investment Advisor

Queensbury Securities Inc.,
St. Andrew’s Square,
Suite 340A, 730 View St.,
Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7

Tel: 778.430.5808
(C): 250.881.0801 (Text Only)
Toll Free: 1.877.430.5895
Fax: 778.430.5828
www.carolannsteinhoff.com