Skip to main content
Yardeni Research
Menu
Theme
Sign In
S&P 500754.73-0.64%
Dow 30509.76-0.83%
Nasdaq742.63-0.47%
VIX23.60+0.60%
10-Yr Yield4.47%+0.45%
Gold$4,446-0.96%
Silver$73.57-2.08%
USD Index27.87+0.40%
EUR/USD1.1601-0.26%
USD/JPY159.98+0.03%
Bitcoin$65,688-1.46%
S&P 500754.73-0.64%
Dow 30509.76-0.83%
Nasdaq742.63-0.47%
VIX23.60+0.60%
10-Yr Yield4.47%+0.45%
Gold$4,446-0.96%
Silver$73.57-2.08%
USD Index27.87+0.40%
EUR/USD1.1601-0.26%
USD/JPY159.98+0.03%
Bitcoin$65,688-1.46%
S&P 500754.73-0.64%
Dow 30509.76-0.83%
Nasdaq742.63-0.47%
VIX23.60+0.60%
10-Yr Yield4.47%+0.45%
Gold$4,446-0.96%
Silver$73.57-2.08%
USD Index27.87+0.40%
EUR/USD1.1601-0.26%
USD/JPY159.98+0.03%
Bitcoin$65,688-1.46%

Independent Financial Research & Analysis

Since 2007

Daily briefings, 7,400+ real-time charts, and macro insights from Dr. Ed Yardeni and his research team.

Yardeni Research chart search interface showing real-time market data visualizations
Morning Briefings and QuickTakes on mobile devices showing market analysis

Research

Latest Research

Recent insights from our research team

Morning Briefing

On Q1 Earnings, AI Investors & China's Latest Clampdown

An accounting rule inflated the S&P 500 companies’ aggregate Q1 EPS to a record high and catapulted their collective y/y EPS growth to nearly 30%. Without the non-operating gains, Joe reports, the index’s EPS still grew 20% y/y but not to a record high. Several Mag-7 companies’ earnings were boosted as a result. Joe backs out the paper gains. … Also: Melissa discusses AI use in investment decision-making. It’s not just a research support tool anymore. … And: William discusses how China stifles the innovation it hopes to foster.

QuickTakes

Is Wall Street's AI Boom Spreading To Main Street? Nothing To Fear But FOMO?

The S&P 500 rose to yet another record high today, rising above 7600 for the first time. On May 11, we raised our year-end S&P 500 target from 7700 to 8250, still the highest forecast on Wall Street. We did so because of the strength and breadth of S&P 500 earnings during the Q1 earnings reporting season. That led us to conclude that the rally in the stock market since this year's low on March 30 (which we called the next evening on March 31) was driven by Fabulous Earnings Momentum (FEMO) rather than FOMO. A FEMO-led stock market meltup should be more sustainable than a FOMO-led one. Nevertheless, we are turning cautious about the prospects for the stock market in the coming weeks. The war in the Middle East isn't over. Executives at Exxon and Chevron are warning that global oil inventories are dangerously low and that oil prices could soon spike to $150 a barrel or higher. We've explained why the FOMC might possibly shift from an easing bias to a tightening bias this month, followed by a rate hike in July. Three gigantic IPOs might also increase market volatility in the coming weeks, as we discussed yesterday. On the other hand, the price of oil remains remarkably subdued at around $100 a barrel. The Strait of Hormuz is no longer completely closed. Oil tankers are reportedly passing through by paying a "toll" to Iran. The Fed might postpone a rate hike for later this year, as widely expected. SpaceX might have a very successful IPO. Maybe. Meanwhile, the AI boom may be spreading to Main Street, which has certainly benefited from Wall Street's AI-led bull market. Now there are signs confirming our view that AI is providing a tailwind rather than a headwind for the economy in general and the labor market in particular. Consider the following: (1) JOLTS. April job openings surged to 7.62 million, the highest reading since May 2024. The 10.6% m/m increase was the strongest monthly gain since May 2020! The rise is consistent with the upward trend we have been tracking in INDEED's weekly job postings (chart). Job openings now stand roughly equal to the number of unemployed workers (chart). This is the first time the ratio has been above parity since mid-2025. The composition of the April increase in job openings is striking. A 69% m/m surge in openings at establishments with 1-9 employees was the strongest on record. The sector contributing most to the increase was Professional and Business Services, which posted a 64% m/m rise in job openings, also the strongest on record (chart). We think these two facts could be connected to AI, which may be stimulating the formation of new AI-driven businesses, as evidenced by the ongoing rise in new business applications (chart). (2) Purchasing managers. The ISM M-PMI jumped to 54.0 in May, the highest reading since May 2022, marking the fifth consecutive month of expansion in the sector. New orders remain firmly in expansionary territory at 56.8%, and production has been expanding for seven consecutive months (chart). The prices-paid index remained very high at 82.1% in May's M-PMI survey (chart). The average of the prices-paid indexes across five Fed regional business surveys corroborates the ISM reading. Both show that inflationary pressures remained elevated in May. (3) Construction spending. Total construction spending in April rose 0.4% m/m, beating the consensus estimate and marking the second consecutive monthly gain (chart). A powerful driver of construction spending remains the AI buildout, as evidenced by the rapid increase in spending on data center structures. (4) Consumer Spending. The Redbook same-store retail sales index rose 8.9% y/y for the week ending May 29, pushing the four-week moving average to its highest level since October 2022. Importantly, this index excludes food services, gasoline, and autos. Consumer spending remains robust according to this indicator. (5) GDP. The Atlanta Fed GDPNow model estimate for Q2-2026 real GDP growth was revised lower on Monday, from 3.8% to 3.0% (chart). The “nowcast” for real consumption growth was trimmed from 2.6% to 2.4%, and real gross private domestic investment from 10.4% to 9.3%. Even after the revision, these numbers are consistent with an economy growing at a solid pace, driven by robust consumer spending and the AI investment boom.

Morning Briefing

On Tumbling Asian Currencies & Stagflating Australia

Today, William discusses how a more hawkish US central bank and stronger US dollar hammer Asian economies. Besides driving down the value of their currencies, it makes them more vulnerable to excessive inflation and poses problems for their monetary and fiscal policymakers. … Also: He explains how the Australian economy, resilient for 30 years, was “undone by its own success” as structural advantages became liabilities over time. Stagflation now looms, putting the central bank in a tough spot. … And Toby gives a “boots on the ground” assessment of the stock market in his native Australia.

Charts

Find Any Chart in Seconds

Search across 7,402+ real-time charts with instant visual previews

Popular:
unemployment
inflation
S&P 500
GDP
interest rates
TARGET: FORWARD LTEG, STRG & STEG

TARGET: FORWARD LTEG, STRG & STEG

SOUTHERN COMPANY: FORWARD P/E

SOUTHERN COMPANY: FORWARD P/E

GENERAL MOTORS: FORWARD LTEG, STRG & STEG

GENERAL MOTORS: FORWARD LTEG, STRG & STEG

GENERAL MOTORS: PRICE, FORWARD EARNINGS & VALUATION

GENERAL MOTORS: PRICE, FORWARD EARNINGS & VALUATION

Sample charts from our collection of 7,402+ visualizations

Try Yardeni Research free for four weeks.

Full access to everything we publish. No credit card, no obligation.

Daily Morning Briefings7,400+ Real-Time ChartsSame-Day QuickTakes