Independent Financial Research & Analysis
Daily briefings, 7,400+ real-time charts, and macro insights from Dr. Ed Yardeni and his research team.


Research
Latest Research
Recent insights from our research team
On Chinese AI Competition & Poland As AI Play
Companies’ AI bills can quickly get out of control with token pricing and AI agents assigning themselves work. Increasingly, US firms are cutting ties with the likes of Claude in favor of vastly cheaper Chinese models. How much of the US AI market Chinese competitors capture could determine the fates of Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT, Melissa says. Today, she explains the decision calculus that has corporate America rethinking how to use AI most cost effectively and where to buy it from. … Also: Poland is an unlikely Silicon Valley, but its economy is fast becoming a tech powerhouse. William discusses how Poland’s AI ambitions could be just what its economy needs.
A Well-Balanced US Labor Market
The stock prices of ADP, Paychex, and ManpowerGroup sold off sharply last year as hiring cooled. Employers froze their headcounts as they assessed the impacts of Trump's tariffs and of AI technologies on their businesses (chart). On May 8, we wrote that the labor market was showing early signs of improvement and that employment-related stocks may have bottomed. So far, so good. Employers now seem to have a clearer, more optimistic sense of the economic outlook. As a result, payroll employment growth has improved in recent months and should continue to do so. Employment-related stocks still have room to run in this scenario. We expect the June employment report (released on Thursday) to show a gain of 188,000, matching the three-month average through May, with the unemployment rate remaining at 4.3%. The latest batch of employment stats shows that the labor market is in good shape: (1) JOLTS. Total job openings ticked up to 7.5 million in May, the highest since May 2024, signaling improving labor demand. Meanwhile, the share of small businesses with job openings fell to 29.0% in May, and the share of consumers describing jobs as plentiful edged down to 24.9% in June. We give more weight to hard data (e.g., today's JOLTS report) than to soft data from surveys. Supply and demand in the labor market are nearly in equilibrium (chart). The chronic labor shortages of the pandemic years are over. Notably, May was the first month since June 2025 that labor demand outpaced supply, albeit very modestly. Labor demand minus labor supply closely tracks job openings per unemployed worker. The latter edged up to 1.0 during May (chart). Contrary to the widely accepted "no-hires-no-fires" description of the labor market, hires totaled 5.2 million during May, slightly exceeding separations, i.e., layoffs and quits—both of which remain relatively subdued (chart). (2) Consumer Confidence. The percentage of respondents in June's Consumer Confidence Index survey describing jobs as hard to get rose to 22.5% (chart). That's still a relatively low reading. The share describing jobs as hard to get has historically tracked the unemployment rate and initial unemployment insurance claims closely (chart). The AI building boom requires highly specific skills, and unqualified workers are finding it harder to land new jobs, potentially lengthening their unemployment spells. (3) Redbook Retail Sales. The Redbook Retail Sales Index rose 9.7% y/y for the week of June 26 (chart). The four-week moving average climbed to its highest since September 2022! The World Cup is almost certainly providing a lift, attracting millions of domestic and international visitors who are spending on hotels, restaurants, apparel, and transportation. There could be a dip in consumer spending after they leave, but we expect that it will remain solid. (4) JOLTS by Industry. The World Cup footprint is visible in the labor data too. Robust hiring during May in leisure, hospitality, retail, and transportation likely reflects firms staffing up for the tournament (chart). Beyond the World Cup effect, solid hiring in construction and manufacturing is consistent with the AI building boom. In May, job openings remained broad-based, with particular strength in private education, health services, and professional and business services (chart). Healthcare job openings reflect the long-term structural tailwind of an aging population, while elevated retail trade vacancies signal that consumer-facing industries continue to expect robust spending. Job openings are scarce in the leisure & hospitality and information sectors.
On China’s Property Meltdown & Asia’s AI Meltup
China’s property market is spiraling again, William reports. Falling home prices and land-sale revenue are compounding three domestic headwinds: deflation, weak spending, and shaky local finances. A negative feedback loop is escalating the problems, and the government’s fixes don’t address them head on. … Also: The stock markets of South Korea and Taiwan are so concentrated in a few big AI exposed tech companies that they’ve been riding the roller coaster of investor sentiment toward AI. But Toby says they’re two of the world’s best performing stock markets ytd notwithstanding their volatility. And they’ve got the earnings growth outlooks to back their rallies up.
Archive
Our Research Library
19 years of daily research, charts, and analysis
Topics
QuickTakes Topics
Timely commentary covering the most important market themes
Charts
Find Any Chart in Seconds
Search across 7,432+ real-time charts with instant visual previews
PHILIP MORRIS INTERNATIONAL: FORWARD P/E
BNY MELLON: FORWARD REVENUES
GENERAL MOTORS: FORWARD PROFIT MARGIN
BNY MELLON: FORWARD PROFIT MARGIN
Sample charts from our collection of 7,432+ visualizations
Tools
Research Tools
Interactive dashboards for tracking economic conditions and market trends
Beige Book Monitor
Fed economic conditions across 12 districts with traffic-light signals.
FOMC Policy Meter
Dovish-to-hawkish policy stance tracker across FOMC meetings.
FOMC Minutes Monitor
Hawk/dove signal extraction across 10 economic themes.
FOMC SEP Monitor
Fed projections and dot plot distributions across meetings.
FOMC Statements
Every FOMC policy statement since 1997 — full text, rates, and voting records.
Private Credit Monitor
Auto-updating chronology of the private credit liquidity crisis.
Release Calendar
Major publications from the Fed, ECB, IMF, and 12 global institutions.
Try Yardeni Research free for four weeks.
Full access to everything we publish. No credit card, no obligation.