

The Dividend Cafe
The Bahnsen Group
The Dividend Cafe is your portal for market perspective that is virtually conflict-free, rooted in deep philosophical commitments about how capital should be managed, and understandable for all sorts of investors. Host David L. Bahnsen is a frequent guest on CNBC, Bloomberg, and Fox Business. He is the author of the books, Crisis of Responsibility: Our Cultural Addiction to Blame and How You Can Cure It (Post Hill Press), The Case for Dividend Growth: Investing in a Post-Crisis World (Post Hill Press), and Full-Time: Work and the Meaning of Life (Post Hill Press).
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jul 7, 2023 • 31min
So Many Questions, So Much Time
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3NJ2dO3
I hope you all had a wonderful Fourth of July holiday. I love Independence Day, and I love celebrating America’s independence. I love the Declaration of Independence (and I should add, it has quite a bit of economic messaging in it). And of course, having the time to celebrate summer, family, friends, and all the traditions and customs that go with the Fourth of July is time well-spent.
I devote this week’s Dividend Cafe to your questions for us – the top inquiries, questions, and inquiries that have hit our inbox over the last week or so. The topics cover the whole gamut this week and I think you will find it fruitful and edifying.
So jump on in to the Dividend Cafe, and let’s answer your questions!
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Jul 6, 2023 • 11min
The DC Today - Thursday, July 6, 2023
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3NJs88A
One of my least favorite things I see analysts do on Wall Street is take various historical incidents and attempt to extract likely future market behavior from it. “7 out of the last 9 times a team from California won the World Series, the market was up over the next 120 days” (or something like that – I made that one up to make a point; actually, that example there would be significantly more logical than some of the nonsense I routinely see).
This morning I read a report that said “nine of the last nine times the real Fed Funds rate was rising, the S&P 500 was up.” Okay, fair enough. Not super helpful predictively, though, since one only knows what the period of time the real Fed Funds rate is rising in hindsight (from a start to an end), and periods within it can be quite negative (see: 2022). But then this report went on to say: “in the 12 months following a period of a rising fed funds rate the market was up double digits four of the nine times and down in the remaining five.”
Crystal clear. Now who won the World Series last year?
The ADP jobs number came out showing explosive June private sector job creation (+497k, double expectations). Leisure and Hospitality was nearly half of that, so it does seem a bit lumpy. Of course, we also know weekly initial jobless claims have been rising, so there is a bit of a mixed bag in the labor data with the skew still being to the positive side. We shall see what the BLS report generates for June tomorrow. Bond yields went up and stock futures went down after the ADP report.
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Jul 5, 2023 • 7min
The DC Today - Wednesday, July 5, 2023
Today's Post -https://bahnsen.co/3ricXf2
I am hopeful all had a wonderful Independence Day spent with family and friends in celebration of the 247th year of the greatest country to ever inhabit the Earth. The biggest news on the day was the Fed minutes that were released, indicating the rationale behind their decision to pause and hold rates steady last meeting while leaving the door open to raising again in the near future. While the decision was unanimous, the discussion revealed a debate by some on moving rates up 25 bps last week. The next FOMC meeting is out on 7/25 and 7/26, and while we do get some employment data this week, I think it will be less relevant than the consumer price data we will get a week from today that will ultimately drive their next decision on rates. It does appear the Fed is erring on the risk of recession over the risk of having to repeat the 1970s style stop and go on Fed policy. All said, it was a low-volume trading day following the holiday and the first full trading day in the second half of the year that was modestly negative in stock and bond prices throughout. All discussed and more in today's video podcast link below.
Brian Szytel
Source: https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2023/07/05/ups-teamsters-negotiations-end-as-strike-looms/70382580007/
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Jun 30, 2023 • 26min
The Halfway Point of 2023
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3JFT7AK
By the time you are reading this, the first half of 2023 will be complete. I can't put exact market figures here because I am writing this middle of the market day, Thursday the 29th, so the precise finality is a day and a half away. But the general themes that made the first half of 2023 what it was are quite clear, and I think you will find this "2023 halftime report" Dividend Cafe to be quite provocative. And what else do you hope you find in the Dividend Cafe if not "provocative" ...
So let's jump into the Dividend Cafe and see what 2023 has delivered thus far and what might be on the horizon for the second half!
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Jun 29, 2023 • 7min
The DC Today Thursday, June 29, 2023
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3prCOAq
An upward revision in Q1 GDP fueled by stronger consumer spending and exports, jobless claims figures that came in better than expected, and a passing grade for all US banks in Fed stress test results were what fueled today’s market rally and run-up in short-term rates.
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Jun 28, 2023 • 9min
The DC Today - Wednesday, June 28, 2023
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3XrRlJ6
At the ECB Forum in Sintra Portugal – Powell, Lagarde, and Baily all had hawkish comments on inflation and tighter central bank policy needed to contain it. However, all three felt that could be done without inevitably causing a recession.
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Jun 27, 2023 • 12min
The DC Today - Tuesday, June 27, 2023
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3pr9HgK
So another day gone by and I don’t think the world knows much more than it has 24 hours ago about Putin and the weekend coup threat.
Natural gas prices have jumped from $2 to $2.80 BTU in just 15 days or so (+40%) and not surprisingly energy stocks with a natural gas focus have done much better than those exclusively focused on crude oil. One of the energy bear arguments seems to have really dissipated, and that was the idea that exposure to higher rates would be catastrophic for the highly levered energy sector (in 2020 it was often said that the debt cliffs these companies have would usher in a wave of bankruptcies). A new survey from the Dallas Fed of 150 oil and gas companies indicated that less than 20% see tighter credit conditions having a significant impact on their business.
New home sales were up +12.2% in May (volume) with supply down to 6.7 months (had been 7.6 months). My study is starting to indicate a worthlessness to national supply data when some markets are so substantially under-supplied and some suffering from big over-supply (making the aggregate number like the guy whose “average temperature” is found with one arm in the freezer and one in the oven). But what I would point out is that median sales prices have dropped -16.2% (for new homes) since their peak, right in the middle spot of that 10-20% drop I predicted (though this is just new homes, not existing, yet).
Seattle and San Francisco, by the way, have seen double-digit median price drops of existing homes. Hmmmmm
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Jun 26, 2023 • 13min
The DC Today - Monday, June 26, 2023
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3NMJ3bk
Top News Stories
Friday night the absolutely fascinating news hit that a coup d’etat was underway in Russia, or at least an attempted one, with mercenary chief, Yevgeny Prigozhin, leading troops out of Ukraine and into a city south of Moscow with significant military headquarters for Russia. Putin, of course, called the act a treasonous betrayal and vowed revenge. As the day went on Saturday it was announced that a truce had been reached and Prigozhin had called off the march on Moscow, and would be allowed to peacefully enter Belarus. But then over the next 24 hours more and more news and analysis came that seemed to indicate that, ummmm, maybe that wasn’t going to prove an entirely safe exit plan for Prigozhin.
The entire question comes down to whether or not this indicates the beginning of the end of the Ukraine war, and it is too early to tell. If nothing else, it still indicates a vulnerability for Putin, especially if reports are true that other Russian generals and oligarchs were actually favorable (quietly or out loud) to what Prigozhin was doing. I wouldn’t read too much into kneejerk responses from anyone, but it all does seem reasonable enough to say that (a) Putin’s position seems weaker than at any time since he took power, and (b) An internal Russian move may be a more likely end to Putin and the aggression against Ukraine than anything else we have seen so far.
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Jun 23, 2023 • 32min
The Impact of Debt on Growth in the Economy
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3CKX1o6
I gave a speech this week at a large economic symposium where I am blessed to lecture every summer. My talk tackled many of the themes I write about all the time in the Dividend Cafe – the impact of excessive indebtedness on macroeconomic conditions, the comparison of pre-GFC Japan with post-GFC America, the diminishing return of fiscal and monetary policy to impact the business cycle, etc.
This week’s Dividend Cafe takes all these themes and lessons of so many Dividend Cafe bulletins and puts them together the way I presented them at my speech this week.
And most of all, I have tried to incorporate some suggestions of what could change it all – not what will change it all, but what could.
So jump on into the Dividend Cafe. From Grand Rapids, Michigan, to the Big Apple, Japanification is real. And the impact of debt on growth is the most misunderstood or ignored economic
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Jun 22, 2023 • 8min
The DC Today - Thursday, June 22, 2023
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3NqpaFA
The Bank of England surprised markets by hiking rates a half point this morning (a quarter point had been expected).
Chairman Powell did his very best in front of the House yesterday to basically swear they have more rate hikes left in them (all the while swearing they are data dependent, with the apparent contradiction between promising something six weeks in advance of the data coming in that you are promising to be led by never really being explained).
But then … Atlanta Fed President, Raphael Bostic, came out and said he believes the Fed should hold rates where they are now for the rest of the year …
So if you don’t know what the Fed will do next, join the club. The futures market is up to a 77% implied probability that the Fed will hike at the late July meeting. I remain skeptical but not adamant. And the Fed remains content with ambiguity and public mixed messaging, with “trial ballooning” apparently a new policy tool in the toolbox.
Links mentioned in this episode:
TheDCToday.com
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com


