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S&P 500720.65+0.28%
Dow 30495.02-0.33%
Nasdaq674.15+0.96%
VIX27.43+0.77%
10-Yr Yield4.40%-0.45%
2-Yr Yield3.88%-1.02%
2s/10s Spread+0.52%
Gold$4,560-1.17%
Silver$73.40-2.68%
USD Index27.41+0.18%
EUR/USD1.1710-0.19%
USD/JPY157.07+0.12%
Bitcoin$78,967+0.52%
S&P 500720.65+0.28%
Dow 30495.02-0.33%
Nasdaq674.15+0.96%
VIX27.43+0.77%
10-Yr Yield4.40%-0.45%
2-Yr Yield3.88%-1.02%
2s/10s Spread+0.52%
Gold$4,560-1.17%
Silver$73.40-2.68%
USD Index27.41+0.18%
EUR/USD1.1710-0.19%
USD/JPY157.07+0.12%
Bitcoin$78,967+0.52%
S&P 500720.65+0.28%
Dow 30495.02-0.33%
Nasdaq674.15+0.96%
VIX27.43+0.77%
10-Yr Yield4.40%-0.45%
2-Yr Yield3.88%-1.02%
2s/10s Spread+0.52%
Gold$4,560-1.17%
Silver$73.40-2.68%
USD Index27.41+0.18%
EUR/USD1.1710-0.19%
USD/JPY157.07+0.12%
Bitcoin$78,967+0.52%

Independent Financial Research & Analysis

Since 2007

Daily briefings, 7,300+ real-time charts, and macro insights from Dr. Ed Yardeni and his research team.

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Recent insights from our research team

Morning Briefing

Consumers Still Doing What They Do Best

Consumer spending is the single biggest driver of US GDP growth, and its remarkable resilience despite lackluster income growth contributes mightily to the resilience of the US economy broadly. Today, Ed and Elias explain why consumer spending has seemed to defy economic gravity and why it should continue to do so. The short answer: our “gen-shaped economy,” shaped by generational dynamics as the Baby Boomers move through life’s phases. As retired Boomers chip away at their massive nest eggs while not earning a paycheck, they’re keeping consumption aloft and the saving rate falling. … Also: Three other consumption tailwinds are worth noting. So is one potential risk to our optimistic spending outlook: a prolonged period of triple-digit oil prices. … And: Dr Ed reviews “Mr. Burton” (+ +).

QuickTakes

MARKET CALL: Up, Up & Away

The stock market balloon is climbing higher, and the burners are firing. It isn't all hot air that is lifting stock prices. It's also earnings revisions, which are increasing for 2026 and 2027. Growth stocks and the Magnificent-7 have reasserted leadership over the past month. Small caps and the Russell 2000 are at fresh record highs too. Investor sentiment remains surprisingly lackluster, leaving plenty of upside for the balloon. Even the soft spot in private credit is showing signs of stabilizing. The question is whether the balloon is actually a bubble. We don't think so. Consider the following: (1) Stock prices. The S&P 500 market-cap-weighted and equal-weighted indexes have rebounded significantly since they bottomed on March 30 (chart). The former has risen to a record high, and we expect the latter to follow suit. Both of their 200-day moving averages (dma) are trending higher. The Russell 2000 closed at a fresh record high on Friday, and its 200-dma is trending higher (chart). Small-cap stocks’ participation in the new-high record-setting is a positive confirmation of the sustainability of the rally. The performance derby shows the leaders and laggards since the March 30 low in the S&P 500 (chart). Value's early-year bounce has faded as Growth has decisively reasserted itself, driven by renewed conviction in the AI theme. Investors are starting to nibble on private credit ETFs (chart). The Virtus Private Credit ETF (VPC) and VanEck BDC Income ETF (BIZD) both have rebounded off their recent lows (chart). Commercial bank loans and leases continue to rise, reinforcing our Financials thesis that the stress in the credit market is localized rather than systemic. (2) Earnings. S&P 500 forward operating earnings has hit a fresh record high of $346.19 per share (chart). Consensus EPS estimates now stand at $327.87 for 2026 and $380.79 for 2027, and both appear still to be rising. Forward earnings is the single best leading indicator of stock prices, and it continues to point higher. Q1's blended EPS growth rate jumped to 18.5% during the week of April 30 from 13.4% just a week earlier, with roughly 44% of S&P 500 companies reporting last week and broadly beating expectations (chart). This "earnings hook" is truly remarkable because analysts didn't turn as pessimistic about the quarter as they often have in the past just before earnings seasons, setting the stage for frequent upside hooks. Revenue breadth is leading earnings breadth higher at 87.0% versus 82.6% (chart). There is still more upside for both. The S&P 500 LargeCap index is doing the heavy lifting in terms of absolute forward earnings, but the forward earnings of the S&P 400 MidCap and S&P 600 SmallCap indexes are also at record highs (chart). The earnings tailwind is broadening down the cap stack. The global bull market in stocks continues to be fueled by the record-setting forward earnings of the All Country World ex US MSCI and of the US MSCI (chart). (3) Valuation. US stocks are still cheaper than they were at the end of last year. The forward P/E of the S&P 500 is at 20.9, well below the 23.0 peak at year-end 2025. MidCap’s forward P/E is at 16.3, and SmallCap’s is at 15.9. Both are still cheap relative to their own histories. Even the Magnificent-7’s forward P/E of 26.1 is well off its peak of last October (chart). Sector multiples confirm the valuation compression. Information Technology’s forward P/E has de-rated from 26.5 to 23.7 since year-end 2025, with Financials’ down from 16.4 to 14.8 (chart). Real Estate at 37.8 and Consumer Discretionary at 28.2 are relatively expensive. Financials and Energy at 14.8 and 15.3 remain relatively cheap. The IT sector’s forward P/E remains a long way from dot-com-era territory. The S&P 500 IT sector trades at 23.5 versus the S&P 500’s 21.0, a modest 2.5pt premium (chart). Investors are pricing the AI thesis with discipline that was absent during the tech bubble of the late 1990s. (4) Sentiment. Our two favorite Bull/Bear Ratios (BBR) have recovered sharply from the depressed readings that informed our March 30 bottom call the evening of March 31 (chart). Investors Intelligence’s BBR is at 2.37 versus its 2.60 long-term average, and AAII’s is at 0.96 versus 1.19. Both have lifted well off the lows, but neither is anywhere near readings that would flash a contrarian sentiment top. Rising-but-still-below-average sentiment is exactly the profile of a bull market with room to run.

QuickTakes

ECONOMIC WEEK AHEAD: May 4-8

The week ahead is chock-full of labor market indicators. In addition, nine Talking Fed Heads on the Federal Open Mouth Committee are on the speaking circuit, with Williams, Bowman, and Goolsbee coming up twice. Despite the elevated oil prices, the stock market continues to levitate to new highs. The price of a barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude hit $110.10 intraweek and closed on Friday at $102.48. Brent crude hit as high as $120.65 during the week and closed at $108.72. The S&P 500 finished the week at another record high regardless. The Q1 earnings reporting season is going strong. Roughly 44% of S&P 500 companies reported results last week. Big names scheduled to report this week include Palantir, AMD, McDonald's, and Arm. The industry analysts' consensus forecast for S&P 500 companies’ aggregate earnings growth in 2026 has climbed to 19.8%, well above the 11.7% and 13.6% figures posted in 2024 and 2025 (chart). The double-digit marathon should continue in 2027, with the analysts collectively forecasting a 17.5% gain. They certainly are in sync with our Roaring 2020s narrative! With that said, let's take a look at the key releases most likely to shape investors' thinking on business activity, the state of the consumer, the labor market, and inflation this week: (1) Employment. April's employment report (Fri) is the headliner for the week. The unemployment rate is likely to tick down to 4.2% based on its relationship with initial unemployment claims (Thu), which have been falling in recent weeks (chart). Jobless claims also suggest that the Challenger measure of layoffs (Thu) remained low in April (chart). The ADP weekly employment report suggests that the monthly report (Wed) for April will show a solid increase in private industry payrolls (chart). March JOLTS data (Tue) are unlikely to differ much from February's results (chart). We do expect to see more job openings and hiring activity in April based on the recent decline in jobless claims and increase in ADP weekly payrolls. (2) ISM NM-PMI. April's ISM NM-PMI (Tue) should remain solidly above 50.0, confirming the strength posted during February and March. Real services GDP grew 2.1% y/y in Q1, and the recent NM-PMI readings are consistent with continued expansion (chart). (3) Consumer credit. March consumer credit (Thu) data are likely to show a strong increase in revolving credit, based on comparable weekly data for commercial banks (chart). (4) Productivity and unit labor costs. Q1-2026 nonfarm productivity (Thu) should show a weak increase close to the 1.8% q/q (saar) gain during Q4-2025 (chart). Real GDP rose 2.0% during Q1, while labor hours worked increased by much less (chart). That implies that productivity rose by less than 2.0%. (5) NY Fed inflation expectations. The NY Fed's Inflation Expectations release (Thu) for April is likely to show a jump in the year-ahead measure closer to 4.0%, up from 3.4% in March (chart). That should reflect higher gasoline prices.

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