The New York Knickerbockers are just two games away from their first NBA championship in 53 years after just edging out the Spurs 105-104 in a thrilling Game 2 at San Antonio. The Knicks survived a dramatic 14-point swing late in the game to win their 13th consecutive post-season game. It's the second longest (single-season) streak in the history of the NBA Playoffs, passing the Spurs’ 12-game streak in 1999… against the Knicks! Here's the last 5 minutes:
Mantabye
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Knicks Mania!
Friday, June 5, 2026
The Mag 7 Turns to the Dynamic Duo
Since OpenAI debuted ChatGPT on November 30, 2022, the technology sector has been on a historic AI-driven rally, with the NASDAQ-100 Index gaining over 145% (through June 5, 2026). But within tech, the Magnificent 7 (Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla) has generated even more eyeing popping returns, as a group gaining 379% (assume an equal-weighted basket that is not rebalanced). These seven stocks have a collective market capitalization of $23.8 trillion, approximately 35.2% of the entire S&P 500 market cap.
But since the start of 2025, five of the seven stocks in the Magnificent 7 have started to fade. After gaining 106% in 2023 and 79% in 2024, the above Magnificent 7 basket rose a 'modest' 26% in 2025 and is up just 3% YTD. Only Alphabet and Nvidia are outperforming the S&P 500 over the past 17 months, 5 days. In fact, Meta, Microsoft, and Tesla are barely holding on, either flat or actually negative since 2024, as shown below.
Saturday, May 16, 2026
The 100 Baggers Club
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Iran War Pressuring U.S. Workers
The consumer price index rose 3.8% year over year in April 2026, up from 3.3% in March, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The inflation rate is now at a three-year high. The main driver was surging energy prices driven by the war in Iran. In particular, gasoline prices jumped over 28% y-o-y! The chart below shows all the components of CPI and their changes annual % change.
Polls show rising bipartisan frustration with the rising cost of living and deep dissatisfaction with President Trump's policies. 70% of Americans now disapprove of his handling of the economy, which is significant given that Trump’s 2024 victory rested heavily on a promise he could better manage the U.S. economy than Biden/Harris, particularly with respect to the cost of living. But President doesn't seem to have gotten the message yet:
Monday, May 11, 2026
What's In the Price of a Gallon of Gas?
According to AAA, the national average for the price of a gallon of gasoline in the U.S. was $4.55 on May 7, 2026, up 25 cents for the second week in a row. Tensions in the Middle East and the closure of the Straits of Hormuz continue to drive prices up. Pump prices are now $1.40 higher than they were a year ago and at their highest level since 2022, when a combination of a supply shock from Russia's invasion of Ukraine and a demand surge in the form revenge travel among Americans caused gasoline prices to briefly hit $5 a gallon during peak driving season.
The chart below compares gas prices over the past few years. While we're still a little way yet from the $5.00 a gallon milestone, prices were also higher coming into 2022 at $3.28 a gallon. So, by June of that year when prices hit $5 a gallon, the cost of gasoline had risen by 53%. Coming into 2026 gas prices were substantially lower at $2.81 a gallon. That means the cost of gasoline has risen over 60% YTD, even before we get into the peak driving season (June-August). Yikes!
So, what contributes to gas prices? The Naked Capitalism blog had good piece by energy economist Robert Harris that breaks down the components of gas prices and their drivers. As shown below, just over half of the cost of a gallon of gas/diesel is driven by the price of crude oil, which can fluctuate substantially. Oil is a global commodity, so when prices rise in one place, they rise everywhere--even if the U.S. produces most its own oil today. The rest of the costs (refining, marketing, and taxes) are more stable.
From Harris: "Because the price of crude oil is the largest element, most of the price at the pump is derived from the global oil market. Usually, big swings in crude prices come mainly from shifts in global demand...But what is happening [today] with the war in Iran is one of the exceptions: a classic supply shock. Severe disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and attacks on Middle East oil infrastructure have taken millions of barrels a day off the global market..."
Since most people can’t quickly reduce how much they drive or how much gas they use when prices change, gasoline demand doesn’t change much in the short run. That means a jump in crude costs tends to result in people paying more rather than driving less...
El Barça, Campeón de Liga
Felicidades Barcelona!!!
Barça shut out archrivals Real Madrid 2-0 to clinch the LaLiga title yesterday in another memorable El Clasico! It was Catalan team's third league title in four years (2022-23, 2024-25 and 2025-26 campaigns). For Real it was a disappointing week and year. The venerable club has now gone two consecutive years without any trophies (in Spain or Europe). The last time this happened was the 2004-06 period and before that 1983-85...so every 20 years or so; I'm sure they'll bounce back. But this was truly Barcelona's year once again. The team won 42 of 53 games, including 100% of all home games and a remarkable stretch of 11 consecutive victories. Under Hansi Flick Barça has dominated Spanish football of late winning 5/6 domestic trophies over the past two years. Hopefully more to come! Highlights of the Clasico here:
Saturday, May 9, 2026
Avis: To the Moon...and Back
Remember Melvin Capital during the pandemic? When day traders, leveraging social media, took down a massive $12.5 billion hedge fund. (They even made a decent movie about it). Meme stocks--those struggling, but nostalgic, small cap companies that suddenly surge in value because...(insert arbitrary reason here)--helped democratized the stock market and gave power to retail investors to compete with big institutions (sort of). So, we love them. Well, a couple of weeks ago, there was another meme stock rise and fall frenzy involving the 80-year old car rental company Avis that's also a cogent tutorial on the mechanics of 'short squeeze'.
The Avis Budget Group, which lost nearly $1 billion last year and carried more than $6 billion in debt on a market cap of $4.5 billion, soared more than 740% in April...before plummeting ~70% in 26 hours. It wasn't the first time Avis stock has gone parabolic. As Business Insider reminds us "in 2021, in the early days of the meme stock phenomenon, shares soared more than 200% from September to their peak in early November, before tumbling almost 50% in the following months." At the heart of the latest swing were two hedge funds: SRS Investment Management, founded by Karthik Sarma and Pentwater Capital Management run by Matthew Halbower. SRS has been a long-term investor in Avis (since 2010) and controls two board seats, while Pentwater had only begun building its stake in the company earlier this year. Per Matt Levine (Bloomberg Money Stuff, Apr 15), the two hedge funds together owned 69.3% of Avis shares: SRS (49.3%) and Pentwater (~20.0%).
But that's not all, Levin also notes that both funds also had other bets on Avis stock, including cash-settled total return swaps ("TRS") with Wall Street banks. TRS are financial derivatives that allow investors to gain economic exposure to an asset without actually owning it. In this case, SRS and Pentwater had contracts with investment banks that paid them any increase in the price of Avis stock, while the hedge funds would pay the banks any decrease in the price of the same. But because banks can’t/ won’t take on that much risk, they’ll hedge their position by purchasing an equivalent amount of shares. So, the banks own Avis stock but SRS and Pentwater gain/ lose based on the price action (of course the banks collect a nice fee for structuring the arrangement). The hedge funds do have to put up collateral (margin) to make sure they are good for the money if stock moves against them. Another way of thinking these swaps is that they are a leverage tool for hedge funds. The bank(s) "buys the stock and holds it on behalf of the hedge fund, which post collateral for part of the value of the stock." Based on Levin's calculations, SRS and Pentwater owned ~2.8M (8.1%) and ~10.1M (28.8%) Avis shares on swap. So, SRS and Pentwater owned ~106% of Avis stock? But, again, that's not all...because Avis is a public stock in various stock indexes (e.g., the Nasdaq GS) it has other institutional (e.g., BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street, etc.) and retail investors. In fact, Levin estimates just SRS, Pentwater, and those big three index investors owned at least 119% of Avis stock.
1. A company issues 100 shares. Four investors — call them A, B, C and D — each buy 25 shares.
2. Investor X wants to bet against the stock, so she borrows 20 shares from A and sells them to B.
3. Now A still owns 25 shares (she loaned 20 out to X, but expects them back), as do C and D, while B now owns 45 shares (25 she bought from the company and 20 she bought from X). Thus, people own a total of 120 shares.
4. But the books balance, because X owns negative 20 shares. There are 100 shares outstanding, and people are long a total of 120 and short a total of 20.
5. Investor Y can borrow 40 shares from B and sell them to C, etc., creating just as many shares as you want.
In the above example, the percentage the stock’s shares that have been sold short but not yet repurchased (aka short interest) in step 3 is 20%. In step 5 it would be 60% and so on. Short interest can rise substantially when investors are very bearish on a stock--data from MLQ.ai shows short interest on Avis stock reaching 86.2% on April 21. That's when things can get really exciting/risky depending on which side of the trade you're on. That's because stock borrowing "is usually open term, meaning that the owner can demand that you return it any time."
Typically, hedge funds or even retail investors will short a stock by borrowing it from a bank or broker, who will probably borrow it from an institutional investor (e.g., BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street, etc. or a pension fund). Who the end owner is matters...because if SRS and Pentwater own a disproportionate amount of Avis stock, then there is a good possibility some/a lot/ most of the Avis shares that were sold short were ultimately borrowed from them? In which case, if they demand those shares back, who would you buy it from? Them! Because they own (economically speaking) 108% of the company's stock! What would they charge you to allow to you meet your legal obligation to them? A lot!
It may not have happened exactly like that, but after Pentwater converted some of their derivative exposure to direct ownership and publicly updated stake in Avis at the beginning of April, it quickly became very difficult to continue borrowing the stock. Short sellers began cut their losses and buy back the stock, fanning a giant short squeeze. Per the WSJ, "at its peak on April 22, Avis’s shares reached $847.70 in intraday trading—nearly seven times higher than where the roughly $128 price at which stock started the year. Then just as quickly...it started to fall as Pentwater unloaded shares, with Avis’s stock losing 68% in just two trading days." Momentum/ retail interest also intensified in the run-up to the peak, which means a lot of day traders bought at or near the top once again...oops!
So, how much did Pentwater and SRS make and short sellers lose? Well, Pentwater sold 4.3M Avis shares on April 22–23 at an average price of $404, generating $1.75 billion in gross proceeds and leaving it with roughly 3.5M direct shares, representing 9.9% of Avis’ outstanding shares. But that's only small percentage of their total exposure. Per Octus, Pentwater also held a 29% synthetic stake via TRS, referencing ~10.2M shares with reference prices between $57 and $204. These swaps would have presumably generated very large mark‑to‑market gains during the April spike (though we don't have any profit figures). Similarly, SRS is estimated to have had ~$8.0 billion in mark-to-market gains by April 21 but may have gave back ~$5.6 billion of they held their positions. Sure, you win some, lose some...but it's always nice when you can ahead by ~$2.5 billion. Avis short sellers lost ~$4.1 billion in April, but retail investors did not suffer meaningful aggregate losses since they were net long Avis and benefited from the short squeeze. However, the surge in retailing volume in the days before the top suggests those who piled in late lost quite a bit. Oh well, you win some, you lose some.
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