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  • The Investing Week Ahead: 6/6/22

The Investing Week Ahead: 6/6/22

Remembering D-Day, scratching our heads over Facebook, determining if Five Below is worth the investment, and praying that inflation comes in a bit tamer.

On this day in 1944, over 156,000 Allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy in Nazi-occupied France — the greatest seaborne invasion in history.

By the end of August that year, all of northern France was liberated from Nazi control. As Google investors, we find it reprehensible that their homepage today honors the creator of the espresso machine instead of D-Day. If you have a WWII veteran in your family, please give them our thanks.

Let’s jump into everything you need to know about the investing week ahead. But first…

What’s Going on at Facebook?

In the company’s most recent earnings report, Meta (which will have its stock ticker changed this week) reported that they’ve seen no drop in monthly active users (MAUs). In fact, monthly users on Facebook has reached a mind numbing size of 2.936 BILLION.

To our North American bias, this seems odd. Facebook is one of the last social media platforms I’d use and is never a part of my daily routine. The vast majority of folks in our network rarely use the platform and Sheryl Sandberg, the company’s COO & second-in-command, just announced that she’s stepping down.

All things considered, the lens through which Americans view Facebook would lead anyone to believe that the company is on a downward trajectory.

But check this out..

While growth in the US & Canada has pretty much flatlined, Facebook continues to add millions of users in the ‘Asia-Pacific’ and ‘Rest of World’ categories:

This is an easy company to be critical of and perhaps the best has already passed for the company in North America, but let’s keep an eye on the global moves that Mark Zuckerberg makes over the next year or so. I’m convinced that Facebook is far from dead, despite having little-to-no love for the platform.

The Investing Week Ahead - Too Long, Didn’t Read:

⚡ A calmer earnings week allows us to focus on Docusign, Five Below, and Nio.

⚡ Too many investor events to count — we’re eyeing AAPL, AMD, Spotify, and Target.

⚡ Hoping that the CPI (inflation) updates on Friday don’t ruin our weekend.

Key Earnings Announcements:

Nio is expected to touch on its newly-formed partnership with AMD, Docusign will address concerns over mounting competitors, and JM Smucker faces the fire on a massive product recall.

Monday (6/6): Coupa, Futu, GitLab, SAIC

Tuesday (6/7): Casey’s General Stores, Cracker Barrel, Dave & Buster’s, JM Smucker

Wednesday (6/8): ABM Industries, Campbell’s, Five Below, Ollie’s, Thor Industries, Vera Bradley

Thursday (6/9): Docusign, Nio, Rent the Runway, Stitch Fix, Vail Resorts

What We’re Watching:

Investor Events:

Everyone in the country decided to have an event for their shareholders this week.

Monday (6/6): Pear Therapeutics First-Ever Investor Day

Tuesday (6/7): MongoDB World 2022, Penn National Gaming Annual Meeting

Wednesday (6/8): eBay Annual Meeting, Hasbro Annual Meeting, Spotify Investor Day, Urban Outfitters Annual Meeting

Thursday (6/9): AMD Investor Day, Best Buy Annual Meeting, TJ Maxx Annual Meeting, Wendy’s Investor Day

Friday (6/10): Spirit Airlines Vote on Merger with Frontier Group

Saturday (6/11): Target Annual Meeting

Throughout the Week:

What We’re Watching:

Major Economic Updates:

You know the deal. It’s the all-important time of the month when we get our inflationary updates.

Tuesday (6/7): Consumer Credit, Foreign Trade Balance

Thursday (6/9): Real Household Net Worth

Friday (6/10): Consumer Price Index (+8.2% Expected), Federal Budget Balance, UMich Consumer Sentiment Index

As detailed in yesterday’s Week in Review, the May Jobs Report came back with good enough results to lead most to believe that the Fed will not be raising rates any higher than +0.5% this summer.

You may remember that last month’s inflation reading came in at +8.3% — higher than the +8.1% expected. As a result, the markets took a tumble:

Let’s hope that inflation can finally take a turn to the downside (at least according to how the government measures it), and prevent the FOMC from needing to raise rates at a more aggressive pace than already anticipated by the market.

If you’re starting your investing journey or want to change to a cleaner, social-focused investing platform, consider visiting Public.com.

Disclaimer: This is not financial advice or recommendation for any investment. The content is for informational purposes only, you should not construe any such information or other material as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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