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10-Yr Yield4.57%+0.00%
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USD Index27.77+0.14%
EUR/USD1.1644+0.24%
USD/JPY158.89-0.03%
Bitcoin$77,569+0.77%
S&P 500745.64+0.39%
Dow 30506.12+0.60%
Nasdaq717.54+0.42%
VIX25.43+0.55%
10-Yr Yield4.57%+0.00%
2-Yr Yield4.08%+0.99%
2s/10s Spread+0.49%
Gold$4,570+1.42%
Silver$78.07+3.49%
USD Index27.77+0.14%
EUR/USD1.1644+0.24%
USD/JPY158.89-0.03%
Bitcoin$77,569+0.77%
S&P 500745.64+0.39%
Dow 30506.12+0.60%
Nasdaq717.54+0.42%
VIX25.43+0.55%
10-Yr Yield4.57%+0.00%
2-Yr Yield4.08%+0.99%
2s/10s Spread+0.49%
Gold$4,570+1.42%
Silver$78.07+3.49%
USD Index27.77+0.14%
EUR/USD1.1644+0.24%
USD/JPY158.89-0.03%
Bitcoin$77,569+0.77%

Independent Financial Research & Analysis

Since 2007

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QuickTakes

GLOBAL MARKET CALL: US-Iran Deal Would Boost Go Global Investment Strategy

On Sunday night, Reuters reported that oil prices slipped to a two-week low as US-Iran talks seemed to be moving closer to a peace deal. Then again, the news service also reported that President Donald Trump is in no rush to make a deal and that the US will continue to blockade Iran. If so, then Iran will continue to blockade the Strait of Hormuz. Nevertheless, Japan's Nikkei 225 rose above 65,000 for the first time on Monday because oil prices fell. The All Country World (ACW) ex-US MSCI outperformed the US MSCI last year and early this year for the first time since the 2000s (chart). Since the start of the latest Middle East war, the US has outperformed the ACW ex-US MSCI because it is more energy-independent than most of the rest of the world. The rest of the world might soon start outperforming the US again on expectations that the end of the war is in sight. Falling oil prices would clearly benefit the rest of the world more than the US. The US MSCI’s market-cap share of the ACW MSCI remains very high at 63.9% (chart). It is down from a record high of 67.4% during January 2025. Much of that market-cap share was gained by the Emerging Markets MSCI, which rose from 9.6% in early 2025 to 12.2% currently. Interestingly, the only major regional MSCI index to gain a share of the ACW forward earnings so far this year has been Emerging Markets (chart). Consider the following: (1) AI has boosted ACW forward earnings. The recent rapid increase in forward earnings per share of the US MSCI has been matched by the ACW ex-US MSCI (chart). That's because the AI boom has boosted earnings not only in the US but also in South Korea and Taiwan, which are categorized as Emerging Markets. (2) Lower P/Es can be found overseas. Foreign stock markets, on average, remain much cheaper than the US stock market. The forward P/E is currently 21.3 in the US and 13.7 in the rest of the world (chart). (3) US is still underperforming EMs and Japan ytd. On December 7 of last year, we recommended a Go Global investment strategy rather than a Stay Home strategy. We no longer felt comfortable overweighting the US, given that it already had such a large share of global stock market capitalization. We were particularly keen on the Emerging Markets ex-China MSCI. Its ETF, i.e., EMXC, is up 31.5% ytd versus 20.4% for EEM, which includes China. The US SPY ETF is up 9.3% ytd. The Japan MSCI ETF is up 13.5% through the end of last week (chart). (4) AI has boosted EM forward earnings. The outperformance of Emerging Markets has been led by South Korea and Taiwan, which are up 87.2% and 52.4% ytd. They have been propelled higher by the AI trade. They've boosted the forward earnings of the Emerging Markets MSCI since late last year (chart). The forward earnings of the Developed World ex-US MSCI has also risen more rapidly over the past year, though at a more subdued pace than for Emerging Markets (chart). (5) Europe's weak fundamentals could be offset by lower energy prices. Europe's economy remains stressed by high oil prices. The Eurozone's Citigroup Economic Surprise Index is at −78.8 versus +45.0 for the US (chart). European data have been missing expectations badly, while US data have been beating them. A surprise index this negative is a low bar, and low bars are easy to clear once conditions improve. The Eurozone's weakness is not uniform. The region's flash M-PMI came in at 51.4 in May, while services fell to 46.4, deep in contraction (chart). Manufacturing is the sector most exposed to energy costs, and it is already the firmer of the two. Cheaper energy would extend that strength. The Eurozone consumer confidence index was −19.0 in May, deep in negative territory (chart). Europeans have been downbeat for years. Sentiment this low has more room to recover than to fall. Germany shows the damage most clearly. Its industrial production stood at 90.4 in March, far below its prior peak and still grinding lower (chart). The 2022 energy shock never fully reversed, in part because Germany had not diversified away from Russian gas in time. As the most energy-intensive economy in Europe, it has borne the brunt of the latest energy shock. Germany stands to be the most direct beneficiary of lower energy prices once the war is over. We are sticking with our advice of December 7 last year: Go Global. If a deal ends the war and oil prices continue to fall, the economies and stock markets of the rest of the world should benefit more than those of the US.

QuickTakes

CONSUMER DISCRETIONARY: Another Concentrated Sector

We recommend a market-weight position in the S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary sector. At first glance, the sector looks strong. Its stock price index is near a record high, forward earnings is rising, and the forward P/E has held in the mid-20s (chart). The surface-level fundamentals are attractive. Look closer, and the strength narrows. Consumer Discretionary is up just 2.3% ytd, ninth among the 11 S&P 500 sectors. Only the sector’s retail industries are positive so far this year. The rest of its industries are down ytd by various amounts running from Automobile Manufacturers, down 4.4%, to Other Specialty Retail, down 25.7% (chart). A handful of names has carried the index’s performance while most of the sector trades lower. Consider the following: (1) Concentration. The sector accounts for just 9.8% of the S&P 500's market capitalization and 7.6% of the index's forward earnings (chart). Amazon and Tesla together account for 62.0% of the sector's market capitalization and 39.9% of its forward earnings (chart). That share has surged in recent weeks. Any call on the sector is mostly a call on these two. (2) Weak breadth. The S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary stock price index is near a record high, while its S&P 400 MidCap and S&P 600 SmallCap counterparts remain well below their 2021 peaks (chart). The smaller discretionary names, closer to the everyday consumer, are lagging the market. This is the K-shaped consumer showing up in the tape, with higher-end spending feeding the LargeCaps while the rest lag. (3) Earnings and revenues growth. Sector earnings growth is set to almost double to 14.6% in 2026, up from 7.7% in 2025 (chart). Revenue growth is far more subdued, ticking up to just 7.5% in 2026 from 5.7% in 2025. (4) Profit margin. At 10.0%, the sector's forward profit margin is the third-lowest of the 11 sectors’ margins, ahead of only Health Care’s and Consumer Staples’ (chart). Retail and autos are inherently low-margin businesses. The margin has climbed to a record over the past decade but off a low base. (5) Valuation. The sector's forward P/E is 26.7, well above the S&P 500's 21.1 (chart). That premium of more than five points partly reflects Tesla's 194.8 multiple, which lifts the sector reading, much as its market cap distorts the sector weight. Strip out that distortion, and the rest of the sector is cheaper than the headline implies. The multiple has been re-rated higher since 2020 and sits near the middle of that range today, neither cheap nor at a peak. (6) Risk appetite. The ratio of the Consumer Discretionary to the Consumer Staples stock price index is 2.07, near a record high (chart). Investors still favor the cyclical consumer over the defensive one. A strong stock price index resting on two stocks, with thin breadth, and a full multiple, is a sector to hold, not to chase. We stay market-weight. It could briefly outperform if ol prices fall in response to the end of the war in the Middle East.

QuickTakes

US MARKET CALL: FOMO vs FEMO (Fabulous Earnings Momentum)

The stock market has had an exuberant stretch since the S&P 500 bottomed on March 30. The index is up 17.8% since then through Friday, after hitting a record high on May 14. The DJIA rose to a record high this past Friday. The bears say the exuberance is irrational, driven by lots of excitement about AI. We say it is rational, based on our Buzz Lightyear Theory (BLT) of "To Infinity and Beyond!" According to our BLT, there’s a fourth factor or production, not just the historically recognized three. In addition to land, labor, and capital, which are relatively scarce, there’s now data, the supply of which is unlimited. The Digital Revolution, which began in the 1960s, is all about processing as much information as possible, as quickly as possible and as cheaply as possible. Today's AI technologies can certainly do all that much better than IBM mainframes back in the mid-1960s. Instead of focusing on rational versus irrational exuberance, let's compare FOMO to FEMO. The former stands for “Fear Of Missing Out.” Investors pile into stocks, bidding up their price-to-earnings multiples. FEMO is “Fabulous Earnings Momentum.” Analysts raise their earnings estimates because hard data and company guidance give them reason to do so. We would rather see FEMO than FOMO every time. This year has been all about FEMO. Through Friday, the S&P 500 is up 9.2% ytd, forward earnings is up 14.4%, and the forward P/E is down 4.6% (chart). The entire rally has been driven by forward earnings. The multiple has contracted. FOMO inflates the P/E. This market did the opposite. That is why we are not in the bubble camp. FOMO is based on hope and hype. FEMO is based on fundamentals. At 21.1 times forward earnings, the S&P 500 is not irrationally valued unless a recession is coming in the foreseeable future. We don't see one. Now consider the following: (1) Record forward earnings. The S&P 500's forward EPS rose further to a record $358.82 last week. The 2026 and 2027 consensus earnings estimates are both at new highs of $337.11 and $390.86, respectively (chart). Analysts keep raising their estimates as the AI compute buildout struggles to keep pace with the exploding demand for processing ever more data. Forward earnings is a leading indicator of the actual quarterly earnings of the S&P 500 (chart). We have rarely seen forward earnings rise so quickly at this stage of an earnings cycle. That's FEMO. (2) Record profit margins. Profit margins have been on fire since mid-2023, approximately seven months after ChatGPT was released. The forward profit margin reached a record 15.5% last week, and the current 2027 consensus margin is 16.1%, up from 14.8% currently this year (chart). This is consistent with the productivity gains at the heart of our Roaring 2020s narrative. (3) Broadening earnings breadth. Across the S&P 500, 85.6% of companies report rising forward earnings, and 89.0% report rising forward revenues, both on a y/y basis (chart). That's more FEMO. (4) Mag-7 vs Impressive 493. FEMO has been led by the Mag-7 since ChatGPT was released in late 2022. Their combined forward earnings has increased sharply since mid-2023 (chart). There is one caveat: A few of these companies booked mark-to-market gains on their AI investments in Q1-2026, which boosted reported earnings. Strip those out, and the underlying growth rate remains solid. Meanwhile, the forward earnings of the Impressive 493 has also been rising faster in recent months, to record-high territory. (5) FEMO and LTEG. Fabulous Earnings Momentum has been driven by the rising consensus of long-term earnings growth (LTEG) expectations of industry analysts. Information Technology alone is the biggest contributor to the S&P 500's LTEG. It is the only sector above the S&P 500's LTEG, at 34.9% versus the index's 21.9% (chart). That 34.9% is a record high, above its dot-com peak (chart). Information Technology's growth expectations may be bordering on irrational, and we flag it. But this is analysts raising LTEG, not investors bidding up stock prices. Optimistic earnings forecasts get revised. They do not crash the market the way that a stretched valuation multiple can. (6) Valuation and FOMO. The multiple is where FOMO resides, but it is nowhere to be found. The S&P 500 trades at 21.1 times forward earnings per share, and the Information Technology sector at 24.4 (chart). In 2000, the multiple ran up while earnings lagged behind. This year, it is the reverse: Earnings is doing the running, and the multiple has backtracked. That is the better setup. That is FEMO, not FOMO. (7) Case study. Semiconductors make the case. The industry's share of Information Technology's forward earnings has risen to 46.9%, only slightly above its 45.1% share of the sector's market cap (chart). The market is signaling that semiconductor makers are growth companies, not the cyclicals they once were. That conviction would normally inflate their stocks’ P/E multiples. It hasn't. The rally in the semis has been led by E, not P/E. That is FEMO, not FOMO.

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