Last week, Goldman Sachs’ Portfolio Strategy Research team caused quite a stir when they evoked DeVotchka’s 2004 indie hit “How It Ends” (without lyrics the song is titled “The Winner Is” and provides the contemplative backdrop for the dysfunctional and endearing indie film Little Miss Sunshine. Take this as a sign to go ahead and eat the ice cream.)
The Weekly Edge
Famous Last Words
If there is a GOAT (Greatest of All Time) title for “Famous Last Words” in financial market valuations, it has to go to Irving Fisher, who infamously quipped in 1929 that “stock prices have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau.” Of course, we know what happened after this not-so-reassuring statement: the Dow plunged 89% and took 25 years to make a new high.
Light My Fire: U.S. Equity Third Quarter Earnings Preview
The time to hesitate is through “Light My Fire” – The Doors As equity markets enter the final quarter of 2024, treading cautiously and digesting the best start to an election year on record, investors are hoping third-quarter earnings results will, as Jim Morrison...
Waiting for November: How Long Can the U.S. Labor Market Stay Resilient?
The first Friday of each month brings with it new information about the single most important piece of economic data anywhere in the world: the state of the U.S. labor market.
Livin’ on the Edge: Implications of Election 2024
In this piece, we’ll assess the state of the race, discuss the U.S. federal debt and deficit in the context of different political power sharing arrangements, and evaluate the candidates’ economic platforms.
Bound for the Floor: Recalibrating Fed Policy
Powell’s kick off to the recalibration cutting cycle and the questions that it raises highlight the incredibly Strange characteristics of this cycle overall. To begin a cutting cycle with a supersized, emergency-like cut when equity markets are at all-time highs, financial conditions are broadly easy, and total employment is at a record is a backdrop so unique that it is consistent with our Strange Landing expectations.
Hey, Old Friends: Bonds are Working Again
Something is stirring. Shifting ground. It’s just begun. This month, investors seem to have finally cast aside their inflation worries as they focus more on risks to global growth. Commodities prices have plunged, bonds are rallying, and central banks are cutting interest rates.
Do the Evolution
In many ways, recent macro and market data resembles Pearl Jam’s cooling of energy, whether we are looking at labor data or equity market leadership and returns. Of course, the biggest question facing investors is if this slowing and cooling of data “does the evolution” into outright weakness for the economy and markets.
A New Hope? Economic and Policy Considerations into Year End
The unofficial end of summer is upon us, and save for a few fleeting days of volatility, it was a fruitful season for diversified investors. Even so, a few storm clouds have begun to descend, with unemployment rising and earnings revisions turning mildly negative.
There’s No Place Like the U.S. Housing Market
Poor affordability is a large part of the story of poor home sales growth this year. But it’s not the whole story. No other segment of the U.S. economy has experienced a stranger landing than the U.S. housing market. So, let’s fly over the rainbow and explore what’s happening and how it informs our outlook.