Too Much Good Economic News?
Investors have decided that the Greenland issue will be resolved now that there is a framework for resolving it. So far this year, they seem to be looking for greener pastures, as evidenced by the broadening of the bull
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Investors have decided that the Greenland issue will be resolved now that there is a framework for resolving it. So far this year, they seem to be looking for greener pastures, as evidenced by the broadening of the bull
Just yesterday, we wrote that “the latest [stock market] pullback won’t last long,” partly because we “expect the Greenland issue will be resolved.” It seemed resolved this afternoon when President Donald Trump said that he and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte “formed
What do Tokyo and Nuuk have in common? They are the capital cities of Japan and Greenland. They are the two epicenters of the shocks that hit stock and bond markets worldwide today. In Tokyo, bond yields are soaring,
This is one of those be-ready-for-anything weeks as wildcards abound for both US and global markets—most of them POTUS-related. Investors will be glued to screens for any news involving the Justice Department’s investigation of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
Last year, in the December 7 QT, we wrote: “It no longer makes much sense for us to continue recommending overweighting the Information Technology and Communication Services sectors in an S&P 500 portfolio …. The same can be said about
Denmark (responsible for Greenland’s defense), Germany, France, Sweden, and Norway have confirmed plans to deploy military personnel to the sparsely populated island this week for a joint military exercise. These NATO members are preparing to repel a US invasion
Oil prices fell more than 1% today after President Donald Trump signaled he might not attack Iran. Late in the day, Trump told reporters in the Oval Office that “we’ve been told that the killing in Iran is stopping.
It’s only January 13, but the year has already been jam-packed with lots of head-spinning events. President Donald Trump’s administration captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in a US military operation on January 3, 2026, taking him from his home in
The stock prices of banks and credit card companies fell today after President Donald Trump announced late Friday that credit card companies would be subject to a 10% cap on the interest rates they can charge customers. The President proposed
The Q4-2025 earnings reporting season starts with the big banks this week. They are likely to deliver solid earnings, as loan demand is growing, net interest margins are widening, loan losses are manageable, and investment banking is booming. Other
If economists did weather reports, this week’s forecast would call for a data blizzard. Yet visibility should improve as the markets get much-anticipated readings on inflation, retail sales, and industrial production ahead of the Fed’s next policy meeting on January 28. Few economists
Relax: The AI bubble is the cover story in the latest BloombergBusinessweek (image). From a contrarian perspective, that’s bullish because it signals that the bubble won’t burst, if it even exists. We have AI Fatigue. We recently recommended underweighting
n the movie “Forrest Gump,” Forrest is a long-distance runner. He crosses the United States five times before he finally decides he is “pretty tired” and stops. Forrest’s run lasted 3 years, 2 months, 14 days, and 16 hours. In the US,
Will the S&P 400 MidCaps and the S&P 600 SmallCaps (i.e., SMidCaps) finally outperform the S&P 500 LargeCaps this year? Maybe. They’re overdue to do so. However, we think investors would be better off focusing on select SMidCaps sectors rather than the broad indexes. We would
It’s been a good year so far, even though only two trading days have gone by in 2026. The S&P 500, DJIA, and Nasdaq all rose today despite the crisis in Venezuela over the weekend. The DJIA hit a record high. We’ve
We expected the first half of 2026 to be volatile for stocks. It’s only January 4, and we can add Venezuela to our list of unsettling developments. Nicolás Maduro, the Venezuelan president captured by the United States on Saturday, is
With the holidays behind us, the first full trading week of the year is a busy one on the data front. The big focus, naturally, is on the December employment report. It’s the first “full” release since the government
Goldman Sachs has been pushing the view that the stock market’s return over the next 10 years is likely to be very low, at only around 3% per year. We disagree. Admittedly, there’s logic to that forecast: The forward
Happy 2026! It should be the seventh year of our Roaring 2020s scenario, with three more to go. We first wrote about this scenario on August 11, 2020, in our Morning Briefing titled “Another Roaring Twenties May Still Be Ahead.” We predicted,
The Emerging Markets (EM) MSCI stock price index may outperform both the US MSCI stock price index and the Developed Countries ex-US MSCI stock price index in 2026. It outperformed the former in 2025 but underperformed the latter and many of its constituents. The broader EM outperformance we
The AI plot thickens: Chinese scientists have unveiled an optical computing chip that outperformed Nvidia’s top GPU by over a hundredfold in speed and energy efficiency—particularly for generative tasks such as video production and image synthesis. (Incidentally, YRI is working with a Korean
Productivity must be booming. Real GDP jumped 4.3% (saar) in Q3, following a 3.8% increase in Q2. Over the same period, aggregate hours worked in private industry was flat (saar). Productivity must have increased by more than 3.5% over
Mistletoe is relevant to several cultures. In the advent of the Christian era, mistletoe in the Western world became associated with Christmas as a decoration under which lovers are expected to kiss, as well as with protection from witches and demons. Let’s hope its
Are the soaring prices of precious metals a warning sign that the Roaring 2020s might end in 2026? We don’t think so. However, we have been considering what might be driving the recent spike in precious metals prices. On
This looks to be a mercifully quiet holiday week that nonetheless offers a smattering of key data releases. Chief among them will be Q3’s GDP and December’s Consumer Confidence Index survey. Clearly, the economic fog caused by the government
We believe the S&P 500 has been in a Santa Claus rally since it bottomed on November 20 at 6538 (chart). It is up 4.5% since then through Friday’s close. Over the past 10 years, the average increase in
Now that the government shutdown is over, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) is releasing economic indicators again. However, the quality of the latest releases is an issue. Today’s lower-than-expected November CPI inflation report boosted stock and bond prices
We are declaring “Mission Accomplished” on our 7000-year-end target for the S&P 500. The index rose to a record high of 6901 on December 11. That’s close enough for us and might be the high for this year. We aren’t ruling
The economy is growing despite anemic payroll employment gains. That can only happen if productivity growth accelerates and raises real wages enough to offset the weakness in employment. The question is whether productivity growth will continue to do so.
All eyes will be on tomorrow’s US employment report for November. That will obviously be our focus too. However, we will also be monitoring the price of a barrel of Brent crude oil regularly tomorrow and in coming days.