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Feb 18
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SHORT
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Unknown Speaker
Financial Commentator/Analyst
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The speaker notes Toll Brothers is "suffering" with "quarterly orders missing expectations" and that aggressive incentives to lure buyers are "weighing on margins." High prices and 6% mortgage rates have hit a breaking point, even for the luxury demographic. If builders must subsidize rates (buy-downs) and give away freebies just to sign fewer contracts than expected, profitability is being squeezed from both the top line (volume) and bottom line (margin). This signals a sector-wide deterioration in earnings quality. SHORT. The "luxury" defense has failed, and margin compression is now the dominant narrative for the group. A rapid decline in the 10-year Treasury yield could quickly lower mortgage rates, reigniting demand before earnings deteriorate further. |
Bloomberg Markets
Toll Brothers Signs Fewer Contracts Than Expe...
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Feb 17
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LONG
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CME Group Presenter
Host/Narrator
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"AI appears to be boosting construction jobs, as there was a 33,000 uptick in construction jobs." The speaker explicitly links the construction boom to AI. This implies massive capital expenditure on physical infrastructure (Data Centers, Power Grids) is trickling down to the labor market. If jobs are growing here, the demand for heavy machinery (Caterpillar) and raw materials (Nucor/Steel) remains robust. Long the physical infrastructure enablers of the AI revolution. High interest rates slowing down project financing; supply chain bottlenecks. |
Bloomberg Markets
AI Job Freeze? January Data Says No | Present...
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Feb 17
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WATCH
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Austan Goolsbee
President, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
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"We've seen progress on the shelter side. But there's little statistical pollution still going through that." Shelter is the largest component of inflation. If the "progress" Goolsbee sees continues, it unlocks the rate cuts mentioned above. Lower rates are the primary catalyst for homebuilder valuations and mortgage demand. WATCH. Wait for confirmation that shelter inflation is actually clearing the "statistical pollution" before aggressively adding exposure. Services inflation (which includes housing services) remains "not tamed," keeping mortgage rates high. |
CNBC
Chicago Fed President Goolsbee: Several more ...
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Feb 14
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LONG
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Steve Rattner
Economic Analyst / CEO of Willett Advisors
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"There's obviously a huge boom in construction going on in data centers... but I don't have any sign... that the number of car plants in this country is increasing." While general manufacturing (factories) is in secular decline, the build-out of AI/Cloud infrastructure is the singular bright spot in US capital investment. This concentrates demand on construction machinery, power management, and HVAC specific to data centers. LONG. This is the only sub-sector of "manufacturing/construction" with actual momentum. Regulatory pauses on power consumption or AI capex spending cuts. |
Bloomberg Markets
Is Trump’s Manufacturing Comeback Real?
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Feb 13
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LONG
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David Sacks
Craft Ventures / General Partner
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"You're seeing a lot of jobs being created in construction, especially non-residential construction. Has to do with the data centers, the AI boom that's going on." The $600B capex spend requires physical infrastructure. This directly benefits engineering, construction, and industrial firms that build the shells and power systems for AI data centers. Long Industrial and Construction sectors exposed to data center build-outs. Regulatory halts on power consumption or a slowdown in AI scaling laws. |
All-In Podcast
Debt Spiral or NEW Golden Age? Super Bowl Ins...
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Feb 13
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LONG
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Donald Trump
President of the United States
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"We'll also be investing over a billion dollars to improve on-base housing and a lot more than that at Fort Bragg... We're going to get that done." The administration is prioritizing physical infrastructure upgrades on domestic bases. This creates direct government contracts for construction firms and materials suppliers operating near major military hubs like Fort Bragg. Long Construction and Engineering firms with government exposure. Bureaucratic delays in contract awarding. |
CNBC
President Trump delivers remarks to the troop...
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Feb 13
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LONG
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Jonathan Golub
Chief US Equity Strategist, UBS
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"In order for Republicans to hold both houses of Congress... there's going to be a lot of effort to ease the burden on consumers... The conduit for that is the financials. You have to prop up the banking sector... Housing stocks, homebuilders like are going to be a focus." This is a political-economy trade. The speaker infers that to win the midterms, the government must artificially stimulate the economy to combat the "affordability" crisis. This requires utilizing banks to distribute liquidity and supporting the housing market (via GSEs buying paper) to lower costs, directly benefiting banks, builders, and consumer stocks. Long Banks, Consumer Discretionary, and Homebuilders as beneficiaries of pre-election fiscal/monetary support. Inflation re-accelerating prevents policy easing; Republicans fail to enact supportive measures. |
Bloomberg Markets
The Tech Basket of Stocks Is 'Incredibly Attr...
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Feb 13
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LONG
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Max Kettner
Chief Multi-Asset Strategist, HSBC
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Tax reimbursements are hitting US households in February and April. Data shows the "lower end of the K-shaped economy" is ramping up consumption. This liquidity injection specifically benefits mass-market retail, homebuilders, and transport sectors. Rotate into cyclical consumer sectors that benefit from lower-income spending power. Persistent inflation eroding the real value of tax refunds. |
Bloomberg Markets
Trump Team Plans Metals Tariff Rollback; NASA...
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Feb 13
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LONG
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Saurabh
Secretary of the Statistics Ministry, India
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"We increase the weightage for housing, which is great representative of the higher rents that we all pay... utilities like water, electricity." The increased weighting of housing in the CPI basket acknowledges that urbanization and housing costs are becoming a larger chunk of the Indian wallet. This signals robust demand for residential real estate and the construction materials required to build it. LONG. Higher interest rates (if inflation spikes) could dampen mortgage demand. |
Bloomberg Markets
India’s New Inflation Basket Explains India’s...
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Feb 13
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LONG
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Raja Chakravorti
Professor of Economics, University of California, Berkeley
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Foreign investor GQG is betting $24 billion on India, specifically targeting banking, infrastructure, and telecom, while avoiding IT. These sectors are "domestically oriented" and insulated from the global AI disruption narrative affecting IT exports. They benefit from India's internal economic recovery and earnings growth. LONG India's domestic cyclical economy. Global risk-off sentiment dragging down all emerging market equities. |
Bloomberg Markets
How AI Is Proving to Be a Double-Edged Sword ...
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Feb 12
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LONG
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Ryan Serhant
Founder and CEO of Serhant Real Estate
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"I think supply needs to meaningfully increase... It's not a housing crisis. I think that's a solid headline. I think it's a housing stalemate." Serhant identifies that existing homeowners are "locked in" and not selling ("punishes mobility"). Therefore, the *only* source of inventory to break the stalemate and meet demand is new construction. Large builders face less competition from the resale market than ever before. LONG. The "stalemate" in resale is a monopoly for new construction. Interest rates rising further could crush affordability to the point where even new builds cannot sell. |
CNBC
Housing not in crisis but first-time buyers a...
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Feb 12
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LONG
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UK Government Official
Cabinet Member / Representative
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The speaker explicitly highlights "six cuts in interest rates" and reforms to the "planning system so we can get things built again," citing a doubling of investment growth in 2025. Lower financing costs (6 rate cuts) combined with deregulation (planning reform) and forced capital flows (pension reform) create a "triple tailwind" for physical asset developers. If the government is successfully unlocking pension cash for domestic projects, the construction and real estate sectors are the direct beneficiaries of this liquidity. LONG UK-exposed construction and development assets to capture the capex cycle. The headline GDP growth remains "disappointing," suggesting the broader economy is weak; if demand falters, supply-side reforms may not be enough to sustain asset prices. |
Bloomberg Markets
Disappointing UK Growth Adds Pressure on Star...
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Feb 12
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LONG
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Rep. Schneider
Congressman (D-IL), Chair of New Democrat Coalition
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"We want to see more than 4 million homes built in the near future... We need to lower the cost to build a home... reduce home building regulations." The coalition's "Affordability Agenda" focuses on supply expansion rather than just demand subsidies. Federal efforts to "clear obstacles" and incentivize local zoning reform favor large-scale homebuilders capable of delivering volume (4M target) efficiently. LONG Homebuilders (e.g., DHI, LEN) as beneficiaries of supply-side policy support. Interest rates remaining high; local municipalities resisting federal pressure on zoning. |
CNBC
Rep. Schneider: Affordability agenda ensures ...
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Feb 12
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LONG
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Jonah Van Bourg
Global Head of Trading at Cumberland
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Jonah argues against buying raw commodities (like Nat Gas) due to supply gluts, stating one should focus on the "manufactured commodity" or the "machine." Data centers don't need raw gas; they need *electricity* (the manufactured commodity) and physical structures. The alpha is not in the fuel (which is abundant), but in the conversion (Utilities) and the build-out (Construction/Industrials) of the data centers themselves. Long the "Pick and Shovel" plays of the AI build-out (Utilities, Grid, Construction). High interest rates slowing down physical construction projects. |
1000x Podcast
What Does AI Mean For Your Future?
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Feb 11
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LONG
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Joseph Lavorgna
Former Chief Economist, National Economic Council
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"Real goods output is running over 9% annualized rate, which is a real, boom... You mentioned construction. Very good. You mentioned manufacturing up." Lavorgna argues that the economy is undergoing a structural shift led by the "goods sector" rather than services. With goods output growing at 9% and temporary hiring (a leading indicator for manufacturing) turning positive, capital is likely to rotate into industrial and construction stocks which are the direct beneficiaries of this "boom." Long Industrials and Homebuilders to capture the outperformance in the goods-producing economy. If the labor supply constraints mentioned by the host (due to immigration policy) eventually choke off growth, or if the manufacturing data is revised downward like previous jobs reports. |
CNBC
Job market impact from immigration policy 'do...
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Feb 10
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LONG
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Scott Rechler
Chairman & CEO, RXR (Real Estate Developer / Fed Board Director)
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"The regional banks... are not lending today to the regional builders. So, the regional builders are somewhat paralyzed... The top 20 home builders, they don't need regional banks, right? They got their own balance sheet." A credit crunch at the regional bank level specifically hurts small, private competitors. Large public builders (DR Horton, Lennar, Pulte) have access to capital markets (corporate bonds/stock) and cash. They will absorb the market share of the paralyzed private builders who cannot get construction loans. Long the large incumbents who can build through the credit cycle. If interest rates stay historically high for too long, demand destruction could eventually hit the large builders despite their supply-side advantage. |
CNBC
Squawk Pod: Kalshi CEO on Super Bowl wins & N...
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Feb 10
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AVOID
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Senator Coons
Senator
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Senator Coons cites tariffs on lumber, drywall, and cabinets raising the cost of a new home by "$17,000." Lutnick responds that to have domestic industry, "you have to protect furniture makers." The administration is prioritizing protectionist tariffs over lowering construction costs. This creates a margin squeeze for homebuilders who face higher input costs but may not be able to pass them on to consumers already stretched by rates/prices. AVOID Homebuilders due to persistent input cost inflation driven by trade policy. Housing shortage demand overwhelms cost concerns. |
CNBC
Commerce Sec. Lutnick testifies before lawmak...
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Feb 10
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LONG
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Scott Rechler
Chairman & CEO, RXR (Real Estate Developer / Fed Board Director)
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Rechler states there is a "supply gap" of 4-7 million homes, but "regional banks... are not lending today to the regional builders." Homebuilding is capital intensive. Small, private builders rely almost exclusively on regional bank construction loans. If that capital spigot is turned off, small builders cannot build. Large public builders (D.R. Horton, Lennar) do not rely on regional banks; they have investment-grade balance sheets and access to public debt markets. Therefore, the "broken" regional banking system forces market share consolidation into the hands of the large public builders. Long large-cap builders as they are the only ones capable of bridging the supply gap in a credit-constrained environment. A severe recession that crushes overall housing demand regardless of supply constraints; persistent high rates locking up buyers. |
CNBC
RXR CEO Scott Rechler on housing affordabilit...
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Feb 10
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LONG
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Mark Rayfield
CEO, Saint-Gobain North America
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The company is aggressively expanding in North America (plants in Montreal, Florida, Georgia) because the region is "underbuilt." There is a structural shortage of 4 million homes. Whether the market is fluid (people moving) or frozen (people locked into 3% mortgages), demand for materials persists. If people move, they renovate the new house; if they stay, they renovate their existing home to add office space/bedrooms. 50% of the company's business is renovation/remodeling. Current build rate is 1.3 million homes, which is better than 2019 but still lagging behind the 4 million needed. Labor shortages in construction and manufacturing; potential for "overshooting" the cycle in specific sub-sectors. |
CNBC
Property Play: Saint-Gobain North America's c...
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