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S&P 500655.83+0.09%
Dow 30465.06-0.09%
Nasdaq584.98+0.11%
VIX33.53-0.12%
10-Yr Yield4.31%-0.46%
2-Yr Yield3.79%-0.52%
2s/10s Spread+0.52%
Crude Oil137.92+11.15%
Gold429.41-1.92%
Silver65.79-3.45%
USD Index27.86+0.47%
EUR/USD1.1520+0.00%
USD/JPY159.65+0.01%
Bitcoin$66,804-0.72%
S&P 500655.83+0.09%
Dow 30465.06-0.09%
Nasdaq584.98+0.11%
VIX33.53-0.12%
10-Yr Yield4.31%-0.46%
2-Yr Yield3.79%-0.52%
2s/10s Spread+0.52%
Crude Oil137.92+11.15%
Gold429.41-1.92%
Silver65.79-3.45%
USD Index27.86+0.47%
EUR/USD1.1520+0.00%
USD/JPY159.65+0.01%
Bitcoin$66,804-0.72%
S&P 500655.83+0.09%
Dow 30465.06-0.09%
Nasdaq584.98+0.11%
VIX33.53-0.12%
10-Yr Yield4.31%-0.46%
2-Yr Yield3.79%-0.52%
2s/10s Spread+0.52%
Crude Oil137.92+11.15%
Gold429.41-1.92%
Silver65.79-3.45%
USD Index27.86+0.47%
EUR/USD1.1520+0.00%
USD/JPY159.65+0.01%
Bitcoin$66,804-0.72%

Independent Financial Research & Analysis

Since 2007

Daily briefings, 6,700+ real-time charts, and macro insights from Dr. Ed Yardeni and his research team.

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Morning Briefing

The Impact Of The Oil Shock On Germany, Canada, And India

The global economy is currently grappling with a "polycrisis" driven by the war in Iran and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which has triggered a massive energy price shock and forced central banks into a "stagflation" trap. William and Toby team up to review the situation in Germany, Canada, and India. …In Europe, the ECB is pivoting toward aggressive tightening as German inflation spiked to 2.8% in March, threatening to push the 10-year Bund yield higher. Canada is facing a similar dilemma; while elevated oil prices at $110 per barrel theoretically benefit the net exporter, the immediate reality for Prime Minister Mark Carney and BoC Governor Tiff Macklem is a contracting services sector, a 6.7% unemployment rate, and a "wholesale repricing" of inflation forecasts that has moved the BoC toward potential rate hikes. …Meanwhile, India’s "Goldilocks" narrative is unraveling as the rupee slides toward a psychologically fraught 100 level, exacerbated by a $12 billion equity outflow in March and a 13% ytd drop in the Sensex, signaling that the structural failures in manufacturing and chronic deficits have left the economy uniquely vulnerable to this global risk-off pivot.

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QuickTakes

Apocalypse Now, Not! Lowering Recession Odds.

Two hours before his latest deadline, President Donald Trump canceled Obliteration Day. He agreed tonight to a two-week ceasefire with Iran. The deal was brokered by Pakistan. Trump confirmed the US had received a 10-point proposal from Iran as a basis for negotiating a permanent peace agreement. Israel separately agreed to suspend its bombing during negotiations. The market reaction was swift. Crude oil prices tumbled, while S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures climbed. Bond yields edged lower. The dollar weakened, and gold moved higher. The ceasefire confirms our call last week on Tuesday night that the S&P 500 had bottomed on Monday. Our favorite stock market sentiment indicator remained bearish this week, which is bullish from a contrarian perspective (chart). However, a two-week pause is not a resolution. Financial markets will remain sensitive to any breakdown in talks. Let's consider the consequences on the home front. As we signaled last week, we are lowering the risk of a recession back down to 20% from 35%. Recently released data suggest the US economy was on a resilient growth path heading into the latest oil price shock and even through March when the war was raging. The labor market seems to be improving by some measures. Inflation, however, remained stuck above the Fed's inflation target before the war. The supply shocks from the war will undoubtedly boost inflation over the next few months. We remain in the none-and-done camp for Fed rate moves over the rest of this year. We are still targeting 7700 for the S&P 500 by the end of this year. Let's review the latest US economic data: (1) GDP. The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model has tracked Q1-2026 real GDP growth down to 1.3% as of April 7, from 3.1% in late February (chart). The sequential downgrades were driven by incoming Q1 data releases: weaker-than-expected personal consumption expenditures, a pullback in private domestic investment growth, disappointing construction spending, and slowing retail sales. Each release nudged the model lower. We blame the weather for weighing on economic growth during December, January, and February when the winter weather was worse than usual (chart). There should be a good rebound in Q2's real GDP growth rate. (2) Employment. The ADP NER Pulse—a weekly tracker of private employment based on a four-week moving average of payroll data from more than 26 million workers—shows a clear recovery in hiring momentum through March. The four-week average bottomed at 6,500 jobs per week in late January, at the height of the winter disruptions, before climbing to 12,750 by February 7, 15,500 by February 21, and 26,000 per week for the four weeks ending March 21—the third consecutive week of acceleration. (3) Durable goods. February durable goods orders fell 1.4% at the headline level, but this is almost entirely a Boeing story. Non-defense aircraft orders plunged 28.6% as the company reported fewer new plane orders than in January. Aircraft orders are very important, but are randomly volatile month to month. Nondefense capital goods orders and shipments, excluding aircraft, remain on solid uptrends (chart). (4) Inflation expectations. For the Fed to look through an energy price shock and treat the resulting inflation as transitory, long-run inflation expectations must remain well anchored. The NY Fed's March Survey of Consumer Expectations, released today, should give Fed officials some comfort as long-term inflation expectations remained low during March despite the sharp increase in gasoline prices (chart). (5) Consumers. The Redbook Retail Sales index rose 7.6% y/y during the week of April 3 (chart). The remarkable strength of consumer spending is impressive and consistent with our upbeat economic forecast.

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Morning Briefing

Anatomy Of The US Labor Market

Last week’s employment report was widely interpreted as good because jobs growth rebounded and the unemployment rate dropped. Dr Ed and Elias disagree. Our inflation-adjusted Earned Income Proxy fell as inflation surged, a bad sign for real disposable income. The drop in the unemployment rate is good news, of course. Both labor supply and labor demand have contracted in recent months but remain roughly in balance. … Also noteworthy: Retiring Baby Boomers are weighing on real disposable income while simultaneously bolstering consumer spending. … And: Dr Ed reviews “Project Hail Mary” (+).

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COLGATE-PALMOLIVE: FORWARD OPERATING EARNINGS PER SHARE

COLGATE-PALMOLIVE: FORWARD OPERATING EARNINGS PER SHARE

S&P 500 TOTAL RETURN STOCK PRICE INDEX

S&P 500 TOTAL RETURN STOCK PRICE INDEX

TARGET: FORWARD LTEG, STRG & STEG

TARGET: FORWARD LTEG, STRG & STEG

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GENERAL MOTORS: FORWARD OPERATING EARNINGS PER SHARE

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