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USD Index27.86+0.47%
EUR/USD1.1520+0.00%
USD/JPY159.65+0.01%
Bitcoin$66,804-0.72%
S&P 500655.83+0.09%
Dow 30465.06-0.09%
Nasdaq584.98+0.11%
VIX33.53-0.12%
10-Yr Yield4.31%-0.46%
2-Yr Yield3.79%-0.52%
2s/10s Spread+0.52%
Crude Oil137.92+11.15%
Gold429.41-1.92%
Silver65.79-3.45%
USD Index27.86+0.47%
EUR/USD1.1520+0.00%
USD/JPY159.65+0.01%
Bitcoin$66,804-0.72%
S&P 500655.83+0.09%
Dow 30465.06-0.09%
Nasdaq584.98+0.11%
VIX33.53-0.12%
10-Yr Yield4.31%-0.46%
2-Yr Yield3.79%-0.52%
2s/10s Spread+0.52%
Crude Oil137.92+11.15%
Gold429.41-1.92%
Silver65.79-3.45%
USD Index27.86+0.47%
EUR/USD1.1520+0.00%
USD/JPY159.65+0.01%
Bitcoin$66,804-0.72%

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QuickTakes

Stock Market Highs Confirm US Economy Is A Winner

The message from the stock market is clear: The US economy is passing another stress test. Both domestic and foreign investors have shifted their attention from the risks of military escalation in the Middle East back to the remarkably consistent resilience of the US economy. The results are all-time highs in equities and a fresh wave of buying by both domestic and foreign investors. Even Michael Burry is reportedly buying the dip in software stocks after the AI-fueled sell-off (chart). Contrary to the popular view, foreign investors continue to be net buyers of US stocks and bonds. The monthly Treasury International Capital System (TICS) data show net capital inflows from abroad remain robust. Private and official accounts combined purchased $1.35 trillion in US securities during the 12 months ended with February (chart).  Over this same period, net purchases of US bonds and equities by private foreign investors totaled $828.9 billion and a near-record $716.7 billion, respectively (chart). Foreigners now hold a record $9.5 trillion in US Treasuries (chart). Foreign official holdings have remained flat at around $4.0 trillion since 2012, while private foreign holdings have surged to a record $5.5 trillion. This is a continued vote of confidence in US assets.  Earnings reports and economic data released today give investors little reason to change their minds. Consider the following:  (1) Initial jobless claims. Weekly initial unemployment insurance claims continue to confirm that layoffs remain historically low. For the week ended April 11, they fell 11,000 to 207,000. Continuing claims edged up slightly to 1,818,000, but the four-week moving average declined to its lowest reading since June 2024, suggesting that hiring activity may actually be improving (chart). That would not surprise us because corporate profits is at a record high. Profitable companies tend to increase their payrolls. (2) Industrial production. US industrial production fell 0.5% m/m in March, defying market expectations of a 0.1% increase. However, the decline is not as bad as the headline number suggests. First, we blame part of the weakness on the bad weather in February and the good weather in March. The result was a 2.3% m/m decline in utility output last month (chart). Second, auto production fell 3.7% m/m, while auto sales rose sharply in March. Third, February's industrial production was revised up from 0.2% m/m to 0.7% m/m. Last but not least, production has been in an uptrend over the past year and should continue to rise, led by energy infrastructure investment, the AI data center buildout, and ongoing reshoring and supply-chain diversification.   (3) Manufacturing surveys. Regional manufacturing surveys corroborate our view that March's factory output dip was transitory. The Philadelphia Fed's M-PMI jumped to its highest level since 2021, and the NY Fed index rose to 11 in April from -0.2 in March. The average of the two indexes closely tracks the y/y percent change in manufacturing output, and it rose to 18.8 in April, the highest reading since 2022 (chart).   (4) J.B. Hunt’s earnings. Logistics giant J.B. Hunt is a reliable barometer for the broader economy. Q1 EPS beat analysts’ estimates. The company reported that overall demand proved resilient across most segments, and March saw a record weekly load count. This provides yet another vote of confidence in the resilience of the US economy last quarter. 

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Morning Briefing

Oil, Financials & Slop

Equity investors, optimistic that the end of the Iran war is near, drove the S&P 500 to a record closing high yesterday. If only such optimism were reflected in oil prices. Jackie discusses the developments and expectations moving the two markets. … Also: The S&P Financials sector posted excellent Q1 results, but its ytd performance lags all other sectors’. Investors might be overlooking some tailwinds and overreacting to some headwinds. … And: Video disruptor YouTube is being disrupted by “AI slop” on its channels. So are its social media video platform peers. But prohibiting AI-generated content comes with a cost.

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QuickTakes

The Champagne Glass Is More Than Half Full

Happy days are here again! The S&P 500 and Nasdaq rose to record highs today, which just happens to be tax day. What's all the excitement about? The AI bubble hasn't burst, so far. Instead, hyperscaler stocks are leading the charge since the stock market bottomed on March 30 (chart). The private credit bubble may be losing some air, but it isn't bursting, while banks are still lending. Real GDP slowed during Q4-2025 and Q1-2026, but some of that was related to bad weather. As Chauncey Gardiner correctly predicted, "There will be growth in the Spring." In any event, S&P 500 earnings rose at a faster pace during the past two quarters to fresh record highs. And investors fear missing out on peace (FOMOOP) in the Middle East. Before the war started, we anticipated a stock market pullback because our two favorite Bull-Bear Ratios were too bullish (chart). At the end of the day on March 31, we said the market bottomed on March 30, partly because these two contrarian indicators had turned too bearish. They both rebounded over the past week, but remain relatively bearish, which is bullish, from a contrarian perspective. Nevertheless, it feels like the Roaring 2020s are back, given the strong V-shaped recovery in stock prices since March 30. So what could possibly go wrong? Obviously, the war could flare up again. Oil exports might remain blockaded in the Arabian Gulf, causing oil prices to rise again. Let's search for additional possible troubles in the economic reports of the past couple of days: I. Fed's Beige Book Is Beige The Fed's Beige Book was released today, covering data collected on or before April 6. The main message is that risks are skewed toward the inflation side of the Fed's dual mandate:  (1) Labor markets held steady, with employment flat to slightly up in most districts, a marginal improvement from March's more mixed picture. Wages remained modest to moderate across all districts, with no acceleration or deceleration reported.  (2) The most consequential shift from the March Beige Book is the energy price shock now hitting the economy. Higher energy costs are adding to residual tariff pressures, and an acceleration in input costs was universal across all districts. Selling price growth is lagging input cost increases, compressing margins. The short-term inflation picture has clearly worsened.  The Beige Book is broadly consistent with our view. The economy remains in good shape, but inflation risks have intensified. This supports our conviction that the Fed is unlikely to cut rates again this year.  II. Bankers Are Upbeat  Major US banks kicked off the Q1 earnings season this week. Their CEOs' commentary was uniformly upbeat about the US economy in Q1. Here is what they had to say, in brief:  (1) JPMorgan Chase. CEO Jamie Dimon described a resilient consumer and active spending environment: "The US economy remained resilient in the quarter, with consumers still earning and spending and businesses still healthy." He also flagged fiscal stimulus, deregulation, AI-driven capital investment, and the Fed's asset purchases as tailwinds.  (2) Goldman Sachs. CEO David Solomon pointed to a constructive soft-landing scenario, with economic activity holding up and credit stress remaining limited.  (3) Citigroup. CEO Jane Fraser called it an "exceptionally strong start" to 2026, with management highlighting a "constructive macroeconomic environment." (4) Bank of America. CEO Brian Moynihan cited healthy client activity, solid consumer spending, and stable asset quality as evidence of a resilient US economy. A resilient labor market, as indicated by low initial jobless claims, continues to support consumer spending.  III. NFIB Employment Indexes  The March NFIB survey of small business owners was released yesterday. It suggests that job openings may be bottoming (chart). Hiring intentions have moderated to their long-run average. These readings are consistent with our view that the labor market remains in good shape, with supply and demand roughly in balance.  IV. Retail Sales  The Redbook Retail Sales Index continues to run hot. During the week of April 10, it rose 7.0% y/y, well above the 2025 full-year average of 5.8% (chart). Redbook has now increased by more than 6% y/y for 12 consecutive weeks, the longest such streak since November 2022. The four-week moving average climbed to 7.1%, its highest since January 2023. The resilience of consumer spending is fully consistent with our upbeat economic outlook. Importantly, Redbook excludes gas station sales. V. Tax Refunds Just at the Right Time  Thanks to the 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the 2026 tax filing season is delivering a timely boost to consumers' purchasing power. Year-to-date tax refunds through the week ending March 27 are up 13.6% y/y, and the average refund is up 11.1% y/y. The larger refunds will help cushion the blow from higher gasoline prices. Gasoline prices would need to stay above $4 per gallon for quite some time to fully offset the refund tailwind. VI. Consumer Sentiment  April's preliminary Consumer Sentiment Index plunged to a record low, driven by mounting fears over rising energy prices and the Middle East conflict. The headline index dropped 10.7% m/m to 47.6, with both current conditions and expectations posting double-digit monthly declines. Short-term inflation expectations surged a full percentage point m/m to 4.8%, the highest since August 2025 (chart). If the post-pandemic period has taught us anything, it's that consumer confidence surveys are a poor leading indicator of actual spending.

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