MV 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...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Bonds Rebound (For Now) as Jobs Outlook Worsens
Read More From MVBonds were all anyone in financial circles could talk about as the post-Labor Day market cranked into gear. The US 30-year Treasury bond was nudging five percent, while UK gilt yields soared past levels last seen in the late 1990s. Stagflation-induced bond weakness was topic number one as the customary Brady Bunch-like panels of talking heads gabbed on CNBC and Bloomberg News. What was the Fed going to do – even if it were to manage to remain independent – when its two tasks of maintaining stable prices and promoting maximum employment were in direct conflict with each other? Labor...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Revenge of the Gold Bugs
Read More From MVThe gold bugs are one of the more colorful subcultures among the sprawling highways and byways of global financial markets. Mind you, investing in gold returns nothing to its buyers other than the hope that the price will go up as opposed to down. No dividends, no interest coupons to clip, no other sources of periodic cash flows delivered to your account. Just a promise based on the storied history of thousands of years as a sought-after decorative commodity and the lingering aura of the time, a century and more ago, when nearly all the principal national currencies of the...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: It’s AI Freak-Out Time Again
Read More From MVStop us if you’ve heard this one before. The whole investor world is piling into stocks with a hot AI story to tell, driving prices into the stratosphere. Then, out of nowhere, something comes along – a research piece, an offhand comment by someone at the center of the AI universe – that pours cold water over the bullish vibes. Suddenly, everyone is talking up “rotation” and “equal-weighted index” and running as fast as their little legs will take them away from all things AI. The Rotations That Weren’t Well, we have arrived at the midsummer-2025 version of this dance,...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Forecast for Jackson Hole Is Cloudy and Unpredictable
Read More From MVWell, it’s that time of the year again (seriously, how did it get to be the second half of August already?). The world’s great and good central bankers will meet, as they always do, amid the soaring peaks of the Grand Tetons that ring the posh ski resort town of Jackson Hole, Wyoming for their annual confab, ending with a much-anticipated valedictory by Fed chair Jerome Powell. The weather forecast for next week looks appropriately delightful for the bankers, with highs in the mid-80s and lows in the 40s and 50s. The intellectual atmospherics may be rather more unsettled, though....
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Eternal Debate Over Valuations
Read More From MVThe US stock market’s performance since the dark days of April has truly been something to behold. On April 8 the S&P 500 had fallen by 18.9 percent from its previous record high, set on February 19. On April 9, of course, the Trump administration punted its “Liberation Day” tariff plans three months down the road, and the markets took off. By the time that three-month pause came due, on August 1, the blue chip index had risen almost 28 percent from the April 8 low. Good times, if they can be maintained. What About the Denominator? But with that...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: More Data, Fewer Answers
Read More From MVThis week has been witness to a veritable inundation of data, including headline macroeconomic reports on jobs, inflation and GDP, another pause decision on interest rates by the Fed, and a bevy of corporate earnings reports of which the top-line message seems to be that nothing is going to stand in the way of the AI narrative and its attendant tsunami of capital spending. Financial markets have powered through this onslaught of numbers with their usual nonchalance – the S&P 500 and Nasdaq stock indexes adding to their record high count, and interest rates mostly staying put around recent averages....
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Interesting Case of the Hong Kong Bull Run
Read More From MVThere has been a decided thaw in the economic cold war between the US and China. Just last week, megatech chipmaker Nvidia, the first company to reach a $4 trillion market capitalization, got a boost to its already copious fortunes when the government lifted restrictions on its ability to sell its H20 chips to China. Those restrictions had previously forced the company into a $4.5 billion writedown from first quarter results. More broadly, the lifting of export restrictions for Nvidia reflects a growing sense among investors that the bellicose rhetoric of several months ago is turning into a softer cadence...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Fed Should Pause Again
Read More From MVThe Federal Open Market Committee meets again on July 29-30, and the consensus expectation is that the Committee will once again hold the target Fed funds rate at the current range of 4.0 – 4.25 percent. Unlike recent decisions, though, this one may not be unanimous. A small subset of the FOMC’s twelve voting members has been quite vocal in recent weeks about the desirability of a July rate cut. Perhaps unsurprisingly, this strain of Fedspeak has played out in the context of the increasingly strident rhetoric from the White House urging (inadvisably and inappropriately) for interest rates to be...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Growth and Interest Rates
Read More From MVFor as long as we have been working in the financial industry, which comprises more decades than we care to let on, people have been worrying about debt and deficits. Throughout this time, though, investors the world over, institutional and individual alike, have been reliable buyers of US government debt. Deficit hawks, fretting over irresponsible Washington spending, turned out to be Cassandras endlessly predicting a financial apocalypse that never happened. But the debt continued to grow, and so did the size of the deficit. In the 1980s the federal deficit was typically somewhere around one to two percent of GDP;...
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