

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

Aug 20, 2020 • 13min
Daily Covid and Markets - Thursday August 20
The market was up ~50 points today with the S&P and Nasdaq up higher than the Dow on a percentage basis. Markets had been down last night in very late night futures ~200 points, allegedly on Fed comments regarding yield curve control (please). Then markets evened up, allegedly on reports that China trade talks were re-scheduled (please). Then markets dropped a bit after the weekly jobless claims came in worse than expected (maybe). And by the end of the trading day, markets had grinded out an up day, and big tech led the way.
The weekly jobless claims number came in at 1.1 million, far higher than the 960k we got down to last week and the 925k expected this week. Continuing claims, though, declined by another 636,000 though, bringing that number below 15 million.
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Aug 18, 2020 • 17min
Daily Covid and Markets - Tuesday August 18
The market was down about 65 points today, but the S&P and the Nasdaq were up, and in fact, the S&P closed at a new all-time high today.
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Aug 14, 2020 • 19min
The Kamala Cafe
• Market Recap of the week that just was
• A little reality check on interest rates
• A report card for earnings season for Q2
• Anyone remember China?
• Commercial real estate lending
• Restaurants looking for some help – and possibly going to get it
• Is our monetary system working?
• Economic report card for the week (jobs, retail sales, consumer credit, and more)
• Politics and Money – a bit more of a look at Kamala Harris as the VP pick and what it means to markets and policy (and so, so, so much more)
• Chart of the Week
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Aug 13, 2020 • 11min
Daily Covid and Markets - Thursday August 13
The market dropped 80 points today though at one point was down ~200 points before rallying over half of the ddrop back in the final hour of trading.
The weekly jobless claims came in below one million (963,000 to be precise), below the symbolic million mark for the first time since the COVID moment began, and well below the 1.1 million expectation. Continuing claims came in at 15.5 million, down 604,000 from last week.
The numbers aren’t “good” – but they are “getting better” – and they are “getting better more than expected” …
COVID Health Information
• It certainly is reasonable that there are differing opinions as to “where” the herd immunity threshold may be reached, and whether one believes it is a lower number or higher number, the “variable” that sits in the middle is T-cell immunity which is a somewhat unknown component in getting to the total number. Nobel laureate and Stanford Professor, Michael Levitt, has been an incredible resource throughout this whole affair, and has provided the most reliable forecasts thus far about “excess mortalities” and other key measures. He has placed the herd immunity threshold at 15-20% (though again, others place it much higher, with varying differences as to where the T-cell immunity level sits in the equation). The University of Oxford study has placed the number closer to 25%, again, because of exposures many have already had to other coronaviruses, as well as what immunity exists from natural (t-cell) resistance.
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Aug 12, 2020 • 11min
Daily Covid and Markets - Wednesday August 12
Market futures were up another 250 points at 3:45am this morning and I immediately thought, “Oh, does Iran have a working vaccine now?” (If you are missing my joke, see yesterday’s missive on Russia). But in all seriousness, markets continue to be trading with very positive sentiment, and with no regard for a stimulus deal (more on that below). The markets ended up today nearly 300 points, and the S&P and Nasdaq each did even better. I simply do not believe the market cares (right now) about a stimulus deal, and the markets digestion (all summer) of the COVID reality has been remarkable.
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Aug 11, 2020 • 13min
Daily Covid and Markets - Tuesday August 11
Market futures were screaming higher yet again when I woke up at 3:30am PT this morning, and if the headlines were to be believed (they often aren’t in financial media), it was because the market was reacting to Russia’s claim to have a working vaccine for COVID-19. The market opened 300 points or so, stayed up most of the day, but then sold off late in the day (dropping from +300 to -100).
The Nasdaq and Big Tech were actually down all day today, even when the Dow was up 300, and the Nasdaq ended off 1.7% today. Energy, Financials, and REIT’s were still positive on the day. The market was not rallying on Russia vaccine news, in case you were wondering, and today was an extremely mixed bag of conflicting signals and confusions.
COVID Health Information
• So speaking of that Russian vaccine registration, here are the facts. First, we are talking about Putin and Russia. Let’s just leave that out there as the fact on which all other facts sit. Second, the registration is conditional; trials are actually still ongoing. Third, production has not yet begun. Fourth, no trial details or doctor/scientist reports have been released, let alone peer-reviewed. Fifth, would you take this vaccine?
• The total number of Americans hospitalized WITH COVID-19 (which is categorically different from being hospitalized BECAUSE OF COVID-19) has dropped to below 50,000 people nationwide.
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Aug 10, 2020 • 47min
Replay - National Conference Call on Market Outlook August 10, 2020
This is the replay of the Market Outlook National Video Call with David L. Bahnsen and Scott Gamm from August 10, 2020.
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Aug 7, 2020 • 24min
Price Discovery and the Human Spirit
In this week’s Dividend Cafe we will:
Summarize this week’s action in the market, with a summary of the better-than-expected July jobs report
Look at the intense pursuit for a COVID vaccine and what that means for markets
Add a little detail and caveat to the current market rally, and big tech’s role within it!
Discuss what it will taken to energize midstream energy
Correct the record on Q2 GDP growth
Think through the growing tensions with China
Simulate the stimulus
Look under the hood of the current state of the economy (pretty extensively), covering manufacturing, auto sales, hotel traffic, restaurant traffic, and all the things …
Politics & Money – the polls are tightening, and we look at a long-held theory about predicting the Presidential winner …
Chart of the Week – our cup runneth over with optimism for dividend growth, thanks to present conditions, and past lessons
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Aug 6, 2020 • 14min
Daily Covid and Markets - Thursday August 6
The market was pointing down over 100 points in the morning futures this morning, but reversed into positive territory when the weekly initial jobless claims came in at 1.18 million vs. the 1.42 million expected (the lowest weekly claims number since the March lockdowns began). After a grind throughout the day, and this time led by technology, the market closed up 185 points.
COVID Health Information
• New cases were down 25% week over week and, once again, all the talk is around what data may be missing with various weather and tech challenges around the country. Testing itself is down 20% and I am now in both camps as to why that is – that the decreased testing is both a reflection of improved conditions (less symptoms means less test demand), and some glitches and delays around weather and capacity, etc.
• One analyst I adore postulated that less people are getting tested because they have seen media reports how long lines and delays to get tested (and get results). I am not sure what to make of that, but I can’t rule it out.
• With a h/t to the reader who turned me on to this, I am shocked that the Clark County, Nevada data (i.e. Las Vegas) is not getting any kind of national attention (okay, I am not actually shocked).
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com

Aug 5, 2020 • 17min
Daily Covid and Markets - Wednesday August 5
The market rallied 375 points today, again closing at its highest point of the day as late trading added momentum to the market. Clearly expectations are high for a stimulus deal, there was a bit of curve widening helping banks today, and earnings season was substantially better than had been anticipated. I would love to credit the vastly improving COVID picture with some of the Dow move higher, but the COVID challenges this summer didn’t do much to harm the market, so I don’t think one can have it both ways.
(Note the time ledger on the Dow chart; I started today on the eastern time zone but closed the day on pacific)
The ADP jobs report did show 167,000 new jobs month over month, but one would think the number would be higher given the losses of the lockdown. The strong comeback number in June versus this more tepid comeback number in July seems to indicate a slowdown in re-hiring, not surprising given the policy measures taken in July.
As is often the case, I can’t explain why but today’s missive has been one of my favorite to prepare.
Links mentioned in this episode:
DividendCafe.com
TheBahnsenGroup.com


