Is the Market “Euphoric”?

It’s that time of year… where “Sell in May and Go Away” makes its typically annual appearance. Personally I don’t give it much weight… basically none. Who invests with the timeframe a few months? Not many that consistently make money. But therein lies the rub – this saying is only relevant as a function of how you choose to invest. Your time horizons are likely very different to mine. This post will offer background where the adage comes from. From there, I will try and answer the question of whether the market is “euphoric”. And finally, I’ll share some names that I’ve been adding to…. it’s not NVDA.

“Heads I Win and Tails You Lose”

After almost three decades at this game – something you learn is not to fight the tape. Trade against momentum at your own peril. Consider the news today… it was both bad and good. I will start with the (perceived) ‘good’. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) was slightly cooler than expected. And whilst it’s still a long way above the Fed’s target of 2.0% – the market was thrilled it was only up 0.3% MoM and 3.4% YoY. Bond yields plunged and stocks ripped. Sure… 3.4% isn’t great… but that’s Main Street’s problem… Wall Street doesn’t care. However, the bad news was retail sales plunged. But wait a minute – that’s also “good news” – as it could mean a more accommodative Fed. Heads I win and tails you lose.

Powell Appeases the Market… Or Does He?

For me, there were two (big) questions for the Powell this week: (1) are rate hikes off the table – given faster-than-expected inflation and continuing economic strength? and (2) when will the Fed commence QT tapering (and by how much)? Powell was unequivocal on possible rate hikes… forghedaboudit. Equities cheered. But why remove optionality? Why Powell is so convinced we don’t see a re-acceleration in inflation? Admittedly it’s a lower probability outcome… but we can’t rule it out. But he apparently can…

‘AI’ Trumps the Fed, Inflation and the Economy

The Artificial Intelligence (AI) narrative continues to dominate sentiment. Whether it was Google, Meta or Microsoft… the (AI) earnings script was similar. Mega-cap tech companies so far have reported impressive earnings and revenue growth with respect to their AI strategies (across online ads, cloud and search). It was music to investor’s ears. However, strength in tech earnings isn’t necessary conflating to strength elsewhere. To that end, there is a strong bifurcation with earnings… and that raises some questions.

For a full list of posts from 2017…