Monday, April 20, 2026

Monday Morning Chartology

 

The Morning Call

 

4/20/26

 

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

Another spectacular week for the S&P. It has now made a new all-time high resetting all three DMAs to support. As you know, I approached this upside move cautiously---which couldn’t have been more wrong. Nonetheless, I am loath to chase this upswing, especially with (now) three gap up opens sitting below. The only good news in this trading error is that a number of stocks on my Buy List have remained within buying parameters. So with any retreat, I can make a delayed entry.

 

Mean reversion is faster now.

https://trendlabs.com/volatility-mean-reverts/

 

Insiders have stopped buying.

https://talkmarkets.com/article/when-insiders-stop-buying-should-you-worry-1776386275

 

Risk is back on.

https://www.stockmarketmedia.com/2026-04-17/risk-back-offense

 

We overshot the mark.

(3) We've Overshot The Mark: QTR With Michelle Makori

 

Summary: There’s a growing sense that we’ve moved past the major risks—that geopolitical tensions will fade, growth will hold up, and central banks will remain supportive—but I don’t think that confidence is grounded in reality.

 

 


 

 

TLT was up slightly on the week and appears to have found at least a temporary bottom at the lower boundary of its very short term trading range. However, it remains below all DMAs and in downtrends across all major timeframes. With stagflation the likely result of the destruction wrought on the oil infrastructure, I am hard pressed to think that bond prices are going to improve markedly.

 

           

 

 


 

 

 

Gold continued its comeback. But it still in a very short term downtrend marked by the top and the lower high. The good news is that (1) it has reestablished its 100 DMA as support, (2) it remains in uptrends across all time frames and (3) still has one gap down open overhead that needs to be filled. I will likely rebuild my GDX position when it breaks through that very short term downtrend.

 


 

 

 

The dollar broke that very short term uptrend marked by series of higher lows. In addition, it is now reset all its DMAs to resistance. But as you can see there is near in support lower at the lower boundary of its short term trading range and the lower boundary of its intermediate term uptrend. Still, the macroeconomic backdrop of the US economy (slow growth and rising inflation) suggests a low to lower dollar.

 

 


 

 

            Friday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/strait-new-record-highs-hormuz-hopes-sparks-risk-wrecking-ball-across-markets

 

Summary: Today reminded us of the days of yore when politicians and policymakers did (or said) "whatever it takes" to keep the dream alive and "baffle 'em with bullshit" was the methodology. Despite, conflicting/confusing headlines around opening the Strait and de-nuclearization (Trump extremely enthusiastic that a deal is imminent), markets moved first before thinking with oil crashing (dragging bond yields and the dollar down) while stocks, gold, and bitcoin all ripped higher and rate-cut odds improved. The first green Friday since the start of the war. The betting folk don't seem so enthused...

 

 

                Friday in the technical stats.

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/momentum

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/market-performance

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/sectors/rankings

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/signals/new-recommendations

 

Monday morning setup: Futures are lower, but well off session lows, after a weekend of chaos in the Strait of Hormuz cast doubt over US-Iran peace talks ahead of Tuesday’s ceasefire expiration. On Saturday, Iran said the Strait will be closed until the US blockade is lifted, with ships reporting attacks. The US then fired and seized an Iranian-flagged ship on Sunday. Both headlines point to a re-escalation, as Iran military has now vowed to retaliate. It remains unclear whether the peace talks will continue ahead of the April 22nd deadline: POLITICO yesterday reported that Trump will continue peace talks with Iran in Pakistan on Monday, while Iran said in a news conference that they have “no plan” for next round of negotiation (here), although subsequent reports from AP indicated the opposite. There’s a big earnings week ahead, and top Wall Street strategists expect resilient numbers to support equities. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures are down 0.5% following a succession of record highs; the Nasdaq is down 0.4% and set to end a near-record stretch of 13 consecutive gains. Pre-market, Mag 7 are all lower with NVDA (-1.2%), MSFT (-1.0%) and META (-1.0%) being the notable laggards. European stocks slid 1.1% while Asian stocks rose in a delayed catch up to the Friday melt up in the US. Bond yields rose sharply in Europe, whereas the moves in Treasuries were more modest. The dollar was little changed, erasing an earlier gain. WTI crude oil jumped $4.6 (or 5.5%) to $88.5; both base metals and precious metals are lower with gold briefly dropping below $4,800 an ounce, before recovering. The US session is quiet for scheduled data, while Fed’s external communications blackout period has now begun ahead of the April 29 policy announcement. 

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

The US stats were balanced last week with one positive (inflation) and one negative primary indicator. Overseas, the data was also balanced including two downbeat inflation readings.

 

We still aren’t seeing any economic effects of the Iran war and the turmoil in the private credit market in the data but it takes time for their inflationary impact to work its way into the system.

 

With respect to the dramatic rise in oil prices, it has been six weeks since the war began and even assuming a positive outcome to Iran negotiations, we have a couple more to go. Frankly, I don’t’ see how we escape the fallout from the massive destruction of the Mideast oil production infrastructure. And while we are seeing it real time at the pump, higher oil prices have yet to work their way into the macroeconomic numbers; although the anecdotal evidence pointing to higher inflation is arriving with increased frequency. Clearly, it will have some effect, but it is way beyond my level of expertise to forecast its magnitude.

https://www.capitalspectator.com/crisis-in-transit-wars-economic-fallout-is-only-beginning/

 

The private credit problem just keeps getting worse. However, several new studies pointed out that (1) while magnitude of the ultimate damage is still an unknown, we do know that private credit has produced no ancillary derivatives securities/markets and (2) during the great financial crisis, derivatives risk was sixfold greater than that of the underlying securities. So whatever the risk today, it is considerably less than it was during that episode. Which eases my concern with regard to the viability of our financial system.

 

Who said that there were no derivative contracts?

https://giftarticle.ft.com/giftarticle/actions/redeem/29418ab1-3d35-4fa4-9c80-6e0fb840d6c7

 

As I noted last week, I am feeling a little more optimistic about the economy. However, I am becoming more convinced that we are facing an inflation problem that could be worse than ‘inflation is as good as its going to get’. Which means my focus is starting to shift from worries about recession to those of stagflation.

https://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/2026/04/17/chart-ing-the-economy-week-of-april-6-10th-2026

 

                        US

 

                        International

 

  February EU construction output fell 1.9% versus forecasts of -1.2%.

 

  March German PPI was up 2.5% versus expectations of up 1.4%.

           

                        Other

           

                          Update on business cycle indicators.

                          https://econbrowser.com/archives/2026/04/industrial-and-manufacturing-production-and-other-business-cycle-indicators

 

                          The housing bubble in major US cities.

                          https://wolfstreet.com/2026/04/16/the-most-splendid-housing-bubbles-in-america-price-drops-gains-in-33-big-expensive-cities-march-2026/

 

                Fiscal Policy

 

                  Tax myths that won’t die.

                   https://reason.com/2026/04/16/the-rich-dont-pay-their-fair-share-and-4-other-tax-myths-that-wont-die/

                       

            Investing

                 

                  Yield curve rolldown.

              https://bondvigilantes.com/blog/2026/04/a-dispatch-from-the-number-crunchers-yield-curve-rolldown/

 

                  The latest from BofA.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/hartnett-its-bull-trap

 

Summary: Sell US Dollar: tariffs, threats end NATO, OPEC petrodollar recycling - there is a US dollar buyers strike as low appetite for more US assets (foreigners own $20tn US stocks, $10tn US Treasuries, $5tn US corporate bonds) to fund $39tn of US debt and its $1.2tn annual debt servicing cost; Fed pressure to cut grow; in sum, US policymakers will trade weaker dollar rather than higher bond yields to attract foreign capital.

Buy Commodities (picking up where he ended last week): commodities > stocks > bonds U S$ secular asset return pecking  order... commodities…risk hedge for allocators, inflation hedge for allocators, US$ bear market hedge for allocators, plus geopolitics now driven by need to monopolize commodities, or as Hartnett put it, "who owns the chips, rare earths, minerals, oil, wins the AI war."

Buy China: biggest equity winners since Trump inauguration are US-China AI war winners (US semis, Asia tech, Canada/LatAm materials), and here the China tech stocks are catching up bigly: the ChiNext index is breaking out.

Buy Consumer: US consumer discretionary at Lehman 2008 & COVID 2020 relative lows (equal-weighted); global consumer discretionary at 3-year lows vs energy stocks; this suggests that the consumer has priced in stagflation more than any other sector, which is why it is Hartnett's favorite contrarian long to trade Trump post-war pivot to address affordability & slump in approval ratings, and a great way to hedge H2'2020s electoral shift from "populist capitalism" to "populist socialism".

 

What I am reading today

 

 

Visit Investing for Survival’s website (http://investingforsurvival.com/home) to learn more about our Investment Strategy, Prices Disciplines and Subscriber Service.

 

 

 

Friday, April 17, 2026

The Morning Call---Cash for nukes?

 

The Morning Call

 

4/17/26

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

            Thursday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/ceasefire-squeeze-morphs-spot-vol-panic-buying-stocks-bonds-credit-crude-aint-buying-it

 

Summary: Dramatic decoupling between oil and bond yields (both up) and stocks (up notably, led by tech) as stocks broadly shrugged off ceasefire-deal-timeline doubts and the 'spot up, vol up' chase into OpEx accelerated. The dollar (unch), gold (unch), and bitcoin (unch) all moved in a tight range on the day. and remember, as we detailed earlier, tomorrow brings with it a big 'gamma unclench' which could threaten the stability of this meltup in stocks.

 

            Thursday in the technical stats.

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/momentum

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/market-performance

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/sectors/rankings

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/signals/new-recommendations

 

            Whiplash rally.

            https://www.capitalspectator.com/whiplash-rally-stocks-hit-new-high-just-days-after-sharp-drop/

 

            Warning signs building.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/nothing-matters-until-it-suddenly-does

 

Summary: The market has been quick to dismiss macro signals, with flows and positioning continuing to dominate the tape. What looks like a strong move higher is increasingly being driven by mechanical buying, not fundamentals. At the same time, several warning signs are starting to build beneath the surface, with narrow leadership, stretched positioning, and cheap hedging standing out.

 

            Upside grab faces major ‘gamma unclench’ today.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/spot-vol-upside-grab-faces-major-gamma-unclench-hurdle-tomorrow

 

 

Summary: The dealer gamma position is currently an extreme long. This is the single biggest signal change this week. Into OpEx tomorrow, dealers are now massively long gamma, which means they sell into strength and buy into weakness - the market is blanketed in a dampening effect. This sets up a grind/pin scenario into Friday's expiration. The base case is SPX stays in the 7,000–7,040 range unless today's data or geopolitics delivers a shock. Stay with the index vol sell / single stock vol buy structure - this is the last 24 hours where that trade has maximum gamma tailwind. Into next week we think there will be an equity correction as the index vol support goes away, and positive gamma tumbles.

 

 

            Goldman trader not chasing upside.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/im-not-chasing-upside-here-goldman-delta-one-desk-heads-suggests-caution-narrow-breakout

 

                        Summary: Lessons learned...1.) everything is technical in the short term… fundamentals are a crutch. And…2.) being early = being wrong.

From here...key risk is that CTA + expiry demand fades after this week. Watching PB data for evidence of re-risking. One clear signal… massive SPX call delta buying this week. I’m still cautious… not chasing upside here… but waiting to see if flows exhaust and fundamentals reassert.

 

            However, retail is chasing the upside.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/after-panicking-bottom-retail-now-chasing-meltup

 

Summary: Retail flows improved to $6.6B this week, just below the 12-month avg of $6.7B/week. Retail investors continued to favor ETFs (+$4.7B) over Single Stocks (+$1.9B). Outside of Broad Based Equity ETFs (+$1.8B), retail ETF buying was influenced by Equity Sector Technology (+$344M, 2.1z), Equity Style Call/ Put Writing (+$198M), Fixed Income — Multi Sector (+198M) and Equity Style Dividend (+$196M). Conversely, retail investors sold Fixed Income — Money Market (-$263M, -2.6z) and Short-Term Treasuries (-$167M, -3.8z). This week, and in line with prior weeks, retail investors continued to buy AI datacenters and electrification (JPAMAIDE), Top 30 AI/Datacenter Beneficiaries, Mag 7, along with Growth and AI Software/Product/Monetization. Activity in Mag7 this week: Retail investors bought: MSFT (+$611M, 2.3z), TSLA (+ $517M), META (+$193M), GOOGL/GOOG (+$113M), AAPL (+$25M), and sold: AMZN (-$70M), NVDA (-$94M). Outside of Mag7, retail investors favored Tech (+$704M), Industrials (+$242M) and Financials (+$140M) and were net sellers of Energy (-377M), Health Care (-$89M) and Consumer Discretionary (-$74M). Top 5 retail stocks last week: MSFT (+$611M, 2.3z), TSLA (+$517M), SNDK (+ $246M, 3.0z), META (+$193M) and TSM (+$159M). Bottom 5 retail stocks: NVDA (-$94M), AMD (-$90M), NBIS (-$89M, -3.2z), XOM (-$82M) and AMZN (-$70M).

 

            And so are CTAs.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/ctas-bought-86bn-last-week-they-have-another-70bn-next-five-sessions

               

Summary: And what is even more remarkable is that the bank's futures strategists have this cohort modelled to purchase an additional $70 billion of the next 5 sessions... and that's in a flat tape. As a reminder, CTAs buy VWAP style, and on days like yesterday and today, with little news out an a constant grind higher of the S&P, shows just how impactful they are in the market. What happens next? While past performance is not indicative of future returns, Garrett writes that previous episodes of accelerated CTA demand have seen short term consolidation, followed by medium term strength for S&P500 (t+1 month =+ 2.19% avg return, t+3m = +8.18% avg return).

 

Friday morning setup: Stocks are pushing higher again on the same old regurgitated news: namely speculation that a deal to end the war between the US and Iran is getting closer, the same exact "speculation" that has pushed the Nasdaq higher for what will now be 13 days in a row, and the same speculation that may keep pushing stocks even higher until the reality of no ceasefire sends risk plunging in a few days. For now however, it is sufficient to lift markets thanks to the relentless CTA VWAP grind higher, and as of 8:15am, S&P futures are 0.4% higher, with Spoos trading above 7100 while Nasdaq futs gain 0.3% after both gauges hit record highs Thursday, with all Mag 7 stocks trading higher in the premarket (MSFT +1.1%, AAPL +0.8%). Netflix tumbled 10% after it gave a disappointing Q2 forecast and Reed Hastings announced he is stepping down as Chairman. The dollar was down 10 bps and headed for a February low. Global bonds were mixed, with the 10-year Treasury yield down two basis points at 4.30%. Overnight, headlines were largely quiet: while the date of the second round of US-Iran talk has not yet been determined, Trump signaled that talks could resume this weekend. Oil prices are extending their decline: WTI is down $4 below $88 with both Brent and WTI are both down around 4% for the session as traders await details of talks between the US and Iran following optimistic comments from President Trump. Base metals are all higher led by aluminum (+0.6%); Ags are mostly lower. No economic releases are expected today. Fed’s Daly, Barkin and Waller are scheduled to speak at events. Fed’s blackout period begins Saturday.

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

                        International

 

The February EU trade balance was +E11.5 billion versus consensus of +E11.7 billion.

 

                        Other

 

                          Americans using tax refunds to pay down debt.

  https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-16/higher-2026-tax-refunds-help-us-households-pay-down-credit-card-student-debt?utm_source=website&utm_medium=share&utm_campaign=copy

 

                          Jobless claims continue to be the most positive economic indicator.

                          https://bonddad.blogspot.com/2026/04/jobless-claims-continue-to-be-most.html

                       

            Iran

 

              Overnight: Cash for nukes?

              https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/three-page-plan-end-war-oil-tumbles-us-reportedly-mulls-20bn-cash-nukes-deal

 

              What the blockade means for Iran’s economy.

              https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/16/business/economy/iran-oil-blockade.html?unlocked_article_code=1.bVA._yFi.SSedDrZBHZeJ&smid=url-share

 

            Monetary Policy

 

              The Fed chair showdown.

              https://www.wsj.com/economy/central-banking/the-decades-old-legal-question-at-the-heart-of-the-fed-chair-showdown-416f6fc8

 

                           ECB minutes confirm hawkish pivot.

              https://talkmarkets.com/article/ecb-minutes-from-march-meeting-confirm-hawkish-pivot-1776345607

 

            Inflation

 

              Drought affecting 60% of US farmers.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/weather/drought-engulfs-60-us-farmers-begin-spring-planting

 

              Aluminum market descends into supply black hole.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/aluminum-market-descends-supply-black-hole

 

              Gulf war leaves $58 billion repair bill.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/gulf-war-leaves-58-billion-repair-bill-and-global-equipment-crunch

 

                  Critical shortage of jet fuel.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/critical-shortage-jet-fuel-eu-airlines-have-just-6-weeks-supply-left

 

              Gulf war may spark shortage of critical industrial chemical.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/gulf-shock-may-spark-shortage-worlds-most-critical-industrial-chemical-used-heavily

 

            The Financial System

 

The private credit problem says more about Washington than it does about finance.

https://www.wsj.com/economy/central-banking/the-decades-old-legal-question-at-the-heart-of-the-fed-chair-showdown-416f6fc8?st=CxNRVt&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

 

              Banks increasing exposure to trading firms increase ‘inherent fragility’.

              https://giftarticle.ft.com/giftarticle/actions/redeem/14e0c0fb-2c0b-4b6a-a57f-07e3b1df1122

 

            The Dollar

 

              The dollar is not dead nor dying.

              https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2026/04/16/on-mind-dollar-dead-long-live-dollar

 

     Investing

 

            Understanding volatility.

            https://larryswedroe.substack.com/p/understanding-market-volatility-what

 

            April outlook for dividends.

            https://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2026/04/the-outlook-for-s-500-dividends-in.html

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

 

What I am reading today

 

            The regulatory battle to make gold a bank asset.

            https://talkmarkets.com/article/the-regulatory-battle-to-make-gold-a-bank-asset-just-hit-a-major-turning-point-1776359399

 

 

Visit Investing for Survival’s website (http://investingforsurvival.com/home) to learn more about our Investment Strategy, Prices Disciplines and Subscriber Service.

 

 

 

Thursday, April 16, 2026

The Morning Call: seven myths about the war in Iran

 

The Morning Call

 

4/16/26

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

            Wednesday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/tax-day-triggers-stocks-oil-vix-bears-get-bird

 

Summary: Markets charge to new all-time highs (but big divergence between NDX and INDU) as optimism of a conclusion to the war persists. 'Spot Up, VIX Up' signals a major (panic) chase is on as equities decouple from oil and bonds continue to underperform. The dollar dipped modestly, gold also down, while bitcoin was flat.

 

            Wednesday in the technical stats.

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/momentum

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/market-performance

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/sectors/rankings

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/signals/new-recommendations

 

            Four reasons the lows are likely in.

            https://www.carsongroup.com/insights/blog/four-reasons-the-lows-are-likely-in/

 

                Wall of capital waits on the sidelines.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/wall-capital-waits-sidelines

 

Summary: This is not a short-term market call, but a broader observation. There is an enormous amount of dry powder sidelined. Record money market balances, muted equity positioning, and large private market reserves point to a system flush with liquidity, yet hesitant to deploy it aggressively—at least for now.

 

                Hedge funds panic.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/hedge-funds-panic-they-badly-lag-market-surge

 

Summary: the ratio of hedge fund longs to shorts is below the peak Liberation Day panic, while stocks are back to record highs. This means that hedge funds are now scrambling and chasing stocks in an almost blind panic, which explains why yesterday saw the biggest call volumes of 2026. 

 

                        Time to fade the rally.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/time-fade-rally-goldman-lists-6-trades-hedge-while-you-still-can

 

Summary: With risk assets back at record new highs, Goldman trader Tom Shea thinks the market has moved too far, too fast and is providing a good entry point for cross-asset hedges for 2 different shock scenarios:

1.         Re-escalation in geopolitical tensions causes a renewed selloff – for this risk shock a) buy SPY put spreads, b) own CDX IG protection, c) short HY cash (rate hedged to isolate for spreads), and d) buy front-end receiver spreads.

2.         De-escalation continues, but investor concerns turn to growth weakness & higher inflation – for this risk shock a) buy GBPUSD binary puts, or b) buy upside on the BCOM grains index.

 

What could go wrong?

https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/997-melt-meets-12-stock-breadth-collapse-what-could-go-wrong

 

Summary: The market just printed a 99.7th percentile melt-up, historically a green light for bulls. But here’s the problem: only a handful of stocks are actually driving the move.

 

Gold consolidates.

            https://talkmarkets.com/article/gold-consolidates-losses-as-traders-weigh-fed-outlook-and-us-iran-talks-hopes-1776273219

 

Thursday morning setup: Stock futures are edging higher on continued optimism about an extended truce in the Middle East, while Taiwan Semi's solid results have sparked another leg higher in AI trade. As of 8:15 am ET, S&P 500 futures rose 0.1%, while Nasdaq 100 contracts +0.2%, and on pace for a 12th day of gains. The early hours of the session saw a sharp rally in technology stocks after TSMC's upbeat revenue outlook highlighted the resilience of AI chip demand. In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks were mostly higher led by MSFT +1.8% and TSLA +1.3%.  On geopolitical headlines, the White House remains optimistic on the second round of talk (key Pakistani negotiator visits Tehran); Israel’s security cabinet met to discuss a possible ceasefire. Bond yields are 0-2bp lower with a modest gain in the dollar. Brent rose toward $96 a barrel as movements through the Strait of Hormuz remained all but paralyzed. Bonds rose, led by gains in Europe where central bank policymakers signaled they’re in no rush to raise interest rates. The dollar snapped an eight-day losing streak while gold rose above $4,800 an ounce. April’s strong stock rebound is being driven by a new kind of FOMO, according to Ed Yardeni, with Goldman saying that "despite the sharp market rebound, positioning has not fully caught up."  Still, while equities are “definitely pricing” the end of the war, we are “not there yet,” cautioned HSBC’s Patrick George while the IMF and World Bank are also worried that markets are underestimating the war’s economic damage. Today's US economic data calendar includes April New York Fed services business activity, Philadelphia Fed business outlook, weekly jobless claims (8:30am) and March industrial production (9:15am). Fed speaker slate includes Williams (8:35am) and Miran (10:35am)

 

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

Weekly initial jobless claims totaled 207,000 versus expectations of 215,000.

 

The April housing market index was reported at 34 versus consensus of 37.

 

The April Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index was 26.7 versus projections of 10.3.

                         

                        International

 

Q1 Chinese GDP grew 1.3%, in line; Q1 YoY industrial production was up 5.7% versus +5.5%; Q1 YoY retail sales were up 1.7% versus +2.3%; Q1 YoY fixed asset investment rose 1.7% versus +1.9%.

 

February UK GDP increased 0.5% versus estimates of +0.1%; the February trade balance was -L18.8 billion versus -L20.2 billion; February industrial production was up 0.5% versus +0.2%; February YoY construction output fell 1.0% versus -0.5%.

 

March EU CPI came in at 1.3% versus predictions of 1.2%.

 

                        Other

 

                           Update on GDP nowcasts.

                           https://econbrowser.com/archives/2026/04/gdp-projections-one-of-these-is-not-like-the-others

 

                          Against all odds.

                          https://www.capitalspectator.com/against-the-odds-us-is-relatively-resilient-despite-global-turmoil/

                       

                          The petrodollar theory is dead.

                          https://mishtalk.com/economics/petrodollar-nonsense-yet-again-this-time-in-two-opposing-directions/

 

                                  The US is at risk of an oil shock too.

                          https://giftarticle.ft.com/giftarticle/actions/redeem/eebe10d2-8661-4710-945a-0fa52c15694b

 

                                  Glass more than half full.

                          The Champagne Glass Is More Than Half Full

 

                         

            Iran

 

              Overnight News:

   https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/hegseth-vows-hormuz-blockade-continue-long-it-takes-ships-now-subject-search-outright

 

              Seven myths about the war with Iran.

              https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/seven-myths-iran-war-michael-doran

 

            Monetary Policy                    

 

              Latest Fed Beige Book confirms economic uncertainty.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/beige-book-confirms-uncertainty-fuel-costs-surged-iran-war-economy-grew-slight-modest-pace

 

            The Financial System

 

More on the significant differences between the private credit market today and   the securitized debt market in the great financial crisis.

https://talkmarkets.com/article/will-private-credit-cause-the-next-financial-crisis-1776246125

 

     Investing

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

 

What I am reading today

 

            The myth that won’t die: war is good for the economy.

            (3) The Myth that Won’t Die: “War is Good for the Economy”

 

 

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