MV Weekly Market Flash: Correction for Large, Near-Bear for Small
Read More From MVThe economic uncertainty we talked about in last week’s commentary has led to a turn for the worse in financial markets this week, and for one asset class, in particular. Small cap US stocks last set a record high in late November last year, as unbridled optimism among small businesses in the immediate post-election environment led to a burst of outperformance against their large cap counterparts. But the optimism quickly dissipated in the waning days of 2024, and never recovered. As of Thursday’s close, the S&P Small Cap 600 index was down -19.2 percent from the November 25 high, just...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The Cost of Uncertainty
Read More From MVIt’s Friday morning. Do you know where your tariffs are? Of course you don’t, because nobody really knows what is going on with all the pinballing decrees on which tariffs apply to which countries, with exceptions and deferrals and audibles called at the line of scrimmage and then reversed for whatever combination of reasons or no reason at all. It has been a strange week. In the midst of all the weirdness markets have been doing what markets normally do when nobody has a clue about anything – selling out of risk assets, especially those with pricier valuations, and buying...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: What’s In An Index? CPI Versus PCE
Read More From MVInflation is back at the top of the list of economic concerns felt by everyone from the voting members of the Federal Open Market Committee, to portfolio managers trying to figure out target maturities for their bond allocations, and to families dreading the next trip to the grocery store. A couple weeks ago, those concerns heated up with the publication of the January Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, a function of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which showed inflation coming in hotter than expected. This morning, though, we got a second take on the subject with the Personal Income and...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The German Stock Market’s Strange Exuberance
Read More From MVThis Sunday, the good citizens of Germany will go to the polls to vote for the country’s next government. The composition of that government will likely not be known for some time, since no party is on track to win an outright majority. But it will almost certainly not be led by Olaf Scholz, the current chancellor who set this whole snap election thing in motion last November by dismissing one of his own partners from the fragile coalition of the Social Democrats (Scholz’s party), Greens and Free Democrats. More likely will be a yet-to-be-identified coalition led by the Christian...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Eggs, And A Whole Lot More
Read More From MVEvery election cycle has its own peculiar trope at the center of the narrative, the very tangible thing that brings swirling abstract narratives into recognizably defined three-dimensional space. For the 2024 campaign, that thing was the price of eggs. The complexities of global supply chains, the arcane accounting practices for billions of dollars of government expenditure, the extreme distortions of consumer demand trends during and after the Covid pandemic – all the many variables involved in the highest levels of inflation experienced since the 1970s boiled down to one simple formulation: Have you seen the price of eggs lately? Yes...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: A Whole Lot of Nowhere
Read More From MVThree months ago, to the day, we wrote our first post-election commentary entitled “The Markets Are The Guardrails,” the idea being that whatever craziness might be going on elsewhere in the new administration, on the economic front at least their wildest ideas would likely be tempered by the reaction of stock and bond markets, about which these people, to a person, care deeply. So far, we would say that our prognostication back in November has been validated. There is plenty of crazy stuff going on elsewhere, and because our weekly commentary is about economics, not politics, we will leave it...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: The AI Story’s Next Chapter
Read More From MVOver the past two years, as advances in artificial intelligence turned into a massive tailwind for the US stock market – carried aloft by a relatively small number of companies with a credible claim to be at the center of the AI story – skeptical observers compared the phenomenon to the Internet boom of the late 1990s. That boom, as anyone around at the time will no doubt recall, ended with a spectacular crash at the turn of the millennium. So long to Pets.com and its ilk, popped into weightless effervescence as the dot-com bubble burst. So too, the AI...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: Bond Vigilantes Hold Fire, For Now
Read More From MVThe 1980s was a colorful decade for many reasons, and not just limited to the cultural icons of the day like Boy George or Max Headroom. The economic arena had its own personalities. There was Michael Milken, the swaggering Drexel Burnham Lambert bond trader perched at his X-shaped desk in Beverly Hills, king of the junk bond market. And Ivan Boesky, merger arbitrageur extraordinaire and coiner of the “greed is good” mantra later immortalized by his fictitious avatar Gordon Gekko in the 1987 movie “Wall Street” (by which time Boesky himself was cooling his heels in the Lompoc Federal Correction...
Read More2025: The Year Ahead
Read More From 2025:It is never easy to predict what is going to happen in the next twelve months, and very rarely do the best efforts of economists, sociologists and market pundits of all stripes get it all right (you can generally toss away all those specific numbers the big banks and securities firms come up with about where the S&P 500 or Nikkei 225 will be come New Year’s Eve 2025, and they will all be revised multiple times anyway between now and then). It is especially hard this year, because the world is in a profound state of transition. What we...
Read MoreMV Weekly Market Flash: China Fast Out of the Gate
Read More From MVThere is a lot going on in China right now. Talk of punitive tariffs against the Middle Kingdom swirled through the halls of Congress during a week of hearings for cabinet nominees. China’s trade surplus with the rest of the world hit an all-time high of $992 billion, probably giving even more grist to the tough-tariff mill. Its population fell by 1.4 million souls, declining for a third year in a row. Though China did, apparently, manage to gain several hundred thousand-odd virtual humans as TikTok aficionados the world over, in a fit of pique over the potential loss of...
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