Author: Consultant

  • Biden warns of ‘real’ food shortage following sanctions on Russia

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-warns-americans-food-shortage-gonna-be-real-following-sanctions-russia

    President Biden said Thursday that a food shortage is “gonna be real” following the sanctions that were placed on Russia by the U.S. government as a result of Russian President Vladimir Putin‘s invasion into Ukraine.

    “With regard to food shortage, yes we did talk about food shortages, and it’s gonna be real,” Biden said during a press conference at a NATO summit in Brussels, Belgium, following a meeting with other world leaders.

  • Erdoğan: Ukraine and Russia nearing ‘consensus’ on 4 of 6 key issues to ending the war

    https://www.foxnews.com/world/erdogan-ukraine-and-russia-nearing-consensus-on-4-of-6-key-issues-to-ending-the-war

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan claimed on Thursday that Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy are nearing “consensus” on key issues to resolve the Russia-Ukraine war. Turkey has been hosting diplomatic talks between the nations.

    “We will continue our talks with both Mr. Putin and Mr. Zelensky from now on as well,” Erdoğan said, according to his presidential office. “All our efforts aim to create an atmosphere of peace by bringing together the two leaders.”

  • EU strikes gas deal with the U.S. as it seeks to cut its reliance on Russia

    https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/25/eu-strikes-gas-deal-with-the-us-as-it-seeks-to-cut-its-reliance-on-russia.html

    • U.S. President Joe Biden and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced the formation of a joint task force to bolster energy security for Ukraine and the EU for next winter and the following one.
    • The primary goals of the task force, the U.S. and EU said in a joint statement, would be to diversify LNG supplies in alignment with climate objectives and reduce demand for natural gas.
    • It comes amid heightened concern that energy-importing countries continue to top up President Vladimir Putin’s war chest with oil and gas revenue on a daily basis.
  • Stock futures bounce Thursday as investors shake off Russia-Ukraine, Fed concerns

    Stock futures bounce Thursday as investors shake off Russia-Ukraine, Fed concerns

    Stock futures rose early Thursday morning as investors tried to recover from declines in Wednesday’s regular trading session.

    Dow Jones Industrial Average futures rose about 120 points, or 0.3%. S&P 500 added 0.5% and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.5%.

    Investors are continuing to monitor the war in Ukraine and weigh the Federal Reserve’s rate hikes amid persistent inflation.

    NATO leaders met in Brussels Thursday to discuss increasing pressure on Russia, as Ukraine appears to be retaking ground in the war.

    Last week, the Fed raised interest rates for the first time since 2018. Chair Jerome Powell on Monday vowed to be tough on inflation and opened the door for more aggressive half-percentage-point rate hikes.

    “The idea of having a soft landing was always going to be really challenging, and when you think about the additional wrinkle of a complication of Russia invasion of the past month, and the surge in commodity prices, it makes it super difficult for Fed to calibrate,” Michael Schumacher, head of macro strategy at Wells Fargo Securities, said on CNBC’s “Fast Money” on Wednesday.

    The S&P 500 fell into correction territory late February, but is now 7.5% off its highs. The Dow is also 7% from its intraday record and the Nasdaq Composite is off by 14%.

    The indexes posted a big rally last week, notching their best weekly performance since 2020.

    Stocks have seesawed this week, alternating between up and down days. The Dow is about 1% lower on the week while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite are little changed.

    All three major averages are on track to close the month at least 1% higher.

    On Thursday, Spotify rose 3.7% in early morning trading, as Google said it will allow the streaming platform to offer its own billing on Android devices.

    Uber gained more than 5% after the company reached a deal to list all New York City taxis on its app, the Wall Street Journal reported.

    Olive Garden parent company Darden Restaurants saw shares dip 2% in premarket trading after a weaker-than-expected earnings report before the bell Thursday. KB Home dropped 3.8% after an earnings miss Wednesday.

    On the data front, initial jobless claims last week totaled 187,000, the lowest level since 1969, the Labor Department reported Thursday.

  • Can a hot stock get hotter? The bullish case for Nutrien

    Can a hot stock get hotter? The bullish case for Nutrien

    Many analysts are convinced that the blistering rally in the share price of Saskatoon-based Nutrien Ltd., NTR-T +0.88%increase the world’s largest potash producer, has further to run – even if there is a resolution to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Jacob Bout, at CIBC World Markets, is the latest analyst to ratchet up his enthusiasm for the stock.

    He raised his target price (or where he sees the stock trading within 12 months) by 35 per cent this week, to US$120, which lines up with targets from analysts at RBC Dominion Securities and BMO Capital Markets.

    The rationale: The typical threats to commodity rallies – supply rises as producers ramp-up output; and demand falls as consumers recoil from soaring prices – will not hurt the fundamentally bullish underpinnings for the fertilizer market.

    “North American producers should benefit from strong pricing, while incrementally ramping up production levels to the extent possible,” Mr. Bout said in a note.

    It’s a persuasive take for anyone who missed the rally in fertilizer stocks or is wondering whether the impressive gains will hold, given the volatile nature of most commodities.

    Nutrien’s share price has soared 38 per cent over the past month, making it one of the top performers within the S&P/TSX Composite Index.

    The gains come as Western sanctions against Russia have driven skyward a huge array of commodity prices, from crude oil and natural gas, to wheat and copper.

    Russia and Belarus, which is also subject to sanctions, together control about 40 per cent of the global supply of potash, Nutrien’s mainstay. Uncertainty over exports from these two countries has driven global fertilizer prices, in some cases, to record highs.

    The decision to stick with a hot stock comes with risks, of course. In particular, Western fertilizer producers can increase production and a resolution to the war in Ukraine could relax sanctions, potentially easing supply concerns and pushing down fertilizer prices.

    But analysts expect that these risks aren’t enough to hold back Nutrien’s share price, even over the longer term, for a number of reasons.

    For one, the supply of fertilizer will likely remain diminished regardless of the geopolitical backdrop.

    Belarus lost access to Lithuanian ports on Feb. 1 – weeks before Russia invaded Ukraine – hampering the landlocked country’s ability to export 90 per cent of its potash. Access to the ports is unlikely to be reinstated if Russia calls off its invasion, given that sanctions against Belarus relate to its crackdown on protesters following a disputed presidential election last year.

    What’s more, Mr. Bout expects that the geopolitical turmoil will push global buyers to shy away from Eastern Europe and embrace more stable North American producers, suggesting that exports from Belarus and Russia will remain diminished regardless of whether the war ends.

    Can Nutrien fill the gap? The company announced last week that it will increase its potash production by nearly one million tonnes in the second half of the year, bringing output to a total of 15 million tonnes.

    But analysts said that the increase can’t make up for the 13 million tonnes at risk from curtailed exports from Russia and Belarus, even if some of this potash makes its way to India or China.

    “The scale of these potential losses is almost unfathomable, in our view, with little-to-no ability to backfill this cavernous gap,” Steve Hansen, an analyst at Raymond James, said in a note last week.

    Strong demand for fertilizer should also support Nutrien’s share price.

    Robust crop prices give farmers an incentive to use fertilizer to increase yields – and crop prices are soaring. U.S. corn futures are near 10-year highs and wheat futures have risen more than 40 per cent since the start of February.

    In some parts of the world, such as Brazil, higher fertilizer prices are pushing farmers to cut back on use. However, Ben Isaacson, an analyst at Bank of Nova Scotia, noted this week that Nutrien’s chief executive officer has seen no so-called demand destruction yet.

    And Mr. Bout said that profits generated by North American fertilizer producers get a bigger lift from higher prices than from greater sales volume. In any case, he added, supply lost from Eastern Europe producers is more important than volume lost to demand destruction.

    That, he believes, makes Nutrien look like a solid bet in an uncertain world.