MV Weekly Market Flash: What’s Driving the Pullback?
Read More From MVIn the second half of October, the financial chattering class seized onto what seemed like a throwaway comment by OpenAI head Sam Altman during an interview. Responding to a question, Altman acknowledged that the AI space in the stock market was probably in bubble territory, though adding that while the space would probably go through some short-term pain, as generally happens with new technologies, the long-term use case remained extremely robust (it would be hard to imagine Altman, arguably the world’s leading evangelist for the bright shiny future of AI, to say otherwise). In any event, financial pundits seized onto...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Data Fog Envelopes Jobs, Prices…and Tariffs
Read More From MVThis has been a week, one full of news related to politics, the economy and much else in between. But it is also a week in which absences loom large. Today is supposed to be Jobs Friday, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes its monthly report on the state of the US labor market, and we get to chew over the raw total of nonfarm payrolls created, the unemployment rate, labor force participation, number of people with part-time jobs who would rather work full time…all the fun stuff that helps us figure out where the economy is today and...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Big Tech Goes into Overdrive (Again)
Read More From MVWell, it’s the last day of October (Happy Halloween!), and unless something really freaky and ghoulish happens between now and 4:00 pm today Eastern daylight time (don’t forget to turn the clocks back on Sunday), we will have managed yet again to avoid an October Scare, that creepy phantasm given to showing up every now and then in years otherwise unconnected – 1929, 1987, 2008 to name a few – with a bag full of tricks and no treats. This year, despite the inescapable return of bubble banter among the financial chattering class, the S&P 500 has added 2.3 percent...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Gold Hits a Speedbump
Read More From MVIt has been a strange year in so many ways, but one of this year’s odder bedfellows has been the tandem duo of US stocks and gold. These two asset classes don’t normally tango together. In 1979, gold was just about the only thing that was working for portfolios, while the S&P 500 was in the dumps and bond markets were roiled by the Volcker shock of ultra-tight monetary policy. Two decades later, 1999 was a go-go year for any stock with even the flimsiest connection to the Internet, while gold had nothing to offer other than being pretty to...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Good Bubble, Bad Bubble
Read More From MVIs it going to be one of “those” Octobers? If you tuned into pretty much any financial media this week, you would have heard “bubble” spout forth from the mouths of many a money pundit. Luminaries from JPMorgan Chase head Jamie Dimon to OpenAI maven Sam Altman have weighed in on the frothy state of the market. It’s not a hard call to make – the US stock market is undoubtedly expensive. According to Yale economist Robert Shiller’s vaunted CAPE (cyclically adjusted price to earnings) ratio, the S&P 500 is more expensive today than at any time in the history...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Japan Gives Traders the Head Spins
Read More From MVJapan jumped into an already frothy geopolitical moment last weekend when the Liberal Democratic Party, the country’s ruling party for all but a very brief time since the end of the Second World War, selected Sanae Takaichi as the new head of the party and thus the person likely to succeed outgoing prime minister Shigeru Ishiba. Takaichi, who would thus become Japan’s first female prime minister, is known as a hardline conservative with an economic agenda modeled on the pro-stimulus policies of Shinzo Abe, the former prime minister whose “Abenomics” plan was all the rage back in the mid-2010s. Deer...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: No News Is…No News
Read More From MVOn Wall Street, traders and other denizens of the market have their own way of processing the daily news feed. Generally, every news item gets processed through the prism of what it might mean for interest rates, taxes and (maybe) one or two other things that markets care about. When you wonder why the pundits on CNBC are all excited about a bad jobs report, it means that the Street is abuzz with hopes for a looming Fed funds rate cut. Bad news is good news, in other words. Throw in a few bad macroeconomic reports, and there might be...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: It’s Shutdown Time Again
Read More From MVStop us if you’ve heard this one before. The US government shuts down for some defined span of time, markets barely notice, and for everyone who doesn’t work for the federal government, life goes on more or less as normal. Well, there might be some disgruntled folks at closed national parks, if it gets that far. But that’s about it. So it looks like the government will be shutting down again next week, on September 30, unless some completely unexpected series of talks emerge between the parties, where currently none exist. So, more of the same, right? Or is this...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Confusion in the Jobs Market
Read More From MVPick a number, any number. That was, more or less, how Fed chairman Jay Powell responded to a question posed by a journalist in this week’s post-FOMC press conference about the current state of the labor market. Specifically, the journalist was asking about the breakeven rate – the number of jobs employers have to create every month to keep the unemployment rate from going up as new job seekers come into the market. NFP Roulette “If you said between zero and 50,000 you’d be right” was Powell’s wry response to the question, referring to the quantity of nonfarm payroll (NFP)...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Melt-Up Ahead?
Read More From MVIf you had told anyone following financial market trends on April 2 this year that by September just about any asset class under the sun would be basking in positive returns for the year, they would have called you crazy. But the doom and gloom of the “liberation day” tariff announcement quickly dissipated, and since then the markets have learned to take each and every curve ball thrown their way in stride, shrugging off any longer-term implications while reveling in the joys of a short-term sugar rush. Everything from gold to emerging market and European equities to our own S&P...
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