AJA Weekly Recap

2024 | February 20

John,

Here is your weekly market commentary. We hope you enjoy receiving our newsletters. If you have any questions about the following content, please let us know!

- The AJA Team

This Week….

  • Upcoming Events
  • The Markets
  • Social Security Zoom
  • Cash Payments

The Weekly Focus


Think About It

“We do not receive wisdom, we must discover it for ourselves, after a journey through the wilderness which no one else can make for us, which no one can spare us, for our wisdom is the point of view from which we come at last to regard the world.”

 

Marcel Proust, Novelist 






Upcoming Firm Events

Social Security Webinar

February 22nd 12:00pm-1:00 pm CT | Via Zoom


Have questions about Social Security? Andrew and John will be hosting an engaging webinar with investment management company, Nuveen, to answer all your questions. Click here to register!

The Markets

Stocks Gain



The S&P 500 posted a fractional decline, snapping a five-week string of positive results that had left the index at a record high. Despite the setback, the S&P 500 remained nearly 22% above a recent low in late October. The Dow finished the week essentially flat while the NASDAQ slipped more than 1%.


Stocks fell and bond yields rose on Tuesday after a monthly inflation report showed that U.S. consumer prices rose more than most economists had expected in January, with the Consumer Price Index’s annual rate coming in at 3.1%. A separate report on Friday reinforced the narrative of continuing inflationary pressures, as wholesale prices rose at the fastest pace in five months. 


The latest inflation data dampened investors’ expectations for any interest-rate cuts over the short term, and government bond yields rose for the second week in a row. The yield of the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond closed at 4.30% on Friday, up sharply from a recent intraday low of 3.82% on February 1.


U.S. consumers trimmed their spending more than expected after the holiday shopping season. In January, retail sales fell 0.8% on a seasonally adjusted basis compared with the previous month. In addition, sales figures for December and November were revised lower than the initially reported numbers.


Initial estimates from Japan and the United Kingdom indicated that their economies fell into recessions in late 2023, as they recorded negative growth for the second quarter in a row. In Japan, fourth-quarter GDP fell at an annual rate of 0.4%; in the U.K., the economy contracted 0.3%.


With earnings season nearing an end, expectations for overall performance improved slightly. Net income was expected to rise an average 3.2% compared with the same quarter a year earlier, based on the four-fifths of the S&P 500 companies that had reported results as of Friday plus forecasts for those that hadn’t released results. At the end of the previous week, the growth rate was projected to be 2.8%.


A survey of U.S. consumers’ sentiment about the economy rose for the third month in a row, climbing to the highest level since July 2021. The University of Michigan said its preliminary February sentiment reading rose to 79.6. The figure is up sharply from a recent low of 61.3 in November. 


After underperforming large caps in January, U.S. small-cap stocks outperformed their bigger peers by a wide margin for the second week in a row. A small-cap benchmark rose more than 1% for the week; over two weeks, the index was up nearly 4%.


Source: John Hancock Investment Management

Social Security Zoom on Thursday!

A final reminder – please join John, Andrew, and Social Security expert Robert Kron for a presentation on Social Security. Robert is a professional with Nuveen Investments who focuses on Social Security and maximizing benefits under the system.

 

The webinar will be held via Zoom on Thursday, February 22nd @ 12pm CT. The Zoom invitation link will be sent out Wednesday.

  

If you have any questions that you would like us to answer, please submit in the box posted within the RSVP link.

 

Feel free to forward this invite to any friends and family that may be interested. We look forward to a great presentation and hope you can join us! 

 

Click here to Register!

When Was the Last Time You Paid with Cash?

Paper money and coins may follow the telephone landline and the film camera into obscurity. About 60 percent of people who participated in a 2022 Gallup poll said they almost never use cash, and just 13 percent said they always paid in cash. No matter where you fall on the spectrum, see what you know about currency by taking this brief quiz:


1. What do most people do with coins they receive as change?

a. Drop them into coin jars at home.

b. Spend them on laundry and parking. 

c. Deposit them at the bank.

d. Leave them in “take a penny, leave a penny” trays.


2. How much money did airline passengers leave behind at screening checkpoints in 2022? 

a. $236,000

b. $523,000

c. $835,000

d. $1,467,000


3. What is the oldest currency still in use today?

a. Russian ruble

b. British pound 

c. Haitian gourde

d. Japanese yen


4. The original American penny, known as the Fugio cent, was designed by Ben Franklin. On one side, it had the motto: We are one. What was written on the other side of the penny?

a. When In Doubt, Don’t

b. A Penny Earned

c. Mind Your Business

d. Industry And Frugality


Answers: 1) a; 2) c; 3) b; 4) c

AJ Advisors
www.ajadvice.com

Phone: (615) 709-8709

Fax: (615) 505-3306

eMoney

Charles Schwab

Advyzon

John Stauffer, CFP®
Partner

Andrew Quinn, CFP®
Partner

Emily Triano

Operations Manager


emily@ajadvice.com

Maya Laws

Operations Associate


maya@ajadvice.com

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