Monday, June 15, 2026

Monday Morning Chartology

 

The Morning Call

 

6/15/26

 

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

The S&P eked out a small gain in an otherwise roller coaster week. Unless you are living under a rock, you know that you have Trump’s settlement deal language to thank for that. On the plus side, the index (1) bounced off its 50 DMA, remaining above all three DMAs and (2) is in uptrends across all timeframes. Further, the (1) economy continues to perform, (2) if 39 is a charm, the latest Trump claim that a deal with Iran is done could be happening [though it is still unclear exactly what $40 billion and a dozen US kids’ lives have bought us] and (3) there are three huge IPO’s coming [one down, two to go]---and I can’t believe that the Wall Street bankers are going to allow the Market to go down ahead of these offerings.

 

I will add an admonition to pay attention to the next new high---which is to say, if the average backtracks soon and heads down again, then one needs to stay on the sideline. I raise this word of caution because a great percentage of the technical analysis community has been howling about the weak Market internals. That is not to say that they are correct; it is to say, be careful; we don’t know yet that the worst is over.

 

Follow through.

 

                        This is what a broken Market looks like.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/what-broken-market-looks

 

Summary: Markets are going nowhere fast, but the journey has rarely been this violent. Semiconductors, Korea, leveraged ETFs and tech volatility are all flashing the same message: beneath the surface, market structure is becoming increasingly unstable. We are not calling for a crash. We are simply pointing out that volatility is behaving in ways usually associated with much later stages of a cycle. Volatility is the truth. Right now, it is screaming for attention. volatility changes behavior. Investors stop focusing on returns and start focusing on survival. Leverage amplifies every move, positioning becomes unstable, and small shocks create outsized reactions. High volatility is not just a symptom. It becomes the regime. The key point is that volatility is no longer just a function of positioning or market structure. It is increasingly a function of the underlying theme itself. The bigger the AI buildout becomes, the bigger the uncertainty around future earnings, capital allocation and competitive dynamics become The market is not simply becoming more volatile. The market's most important narrative is becoming more volatile.

 

 

                        Markets stay risk-on.

            https://www.capitalspectator.com/markets-stay-risk%e2%80%91on-despite-alarming-headlines/

 

 

 

 


 

 

Another reason for some caution is that the bond boys weren’t nearly as impressed with the likelihood of an Iran settlement as the stock jockeys. True, TLT was up on the week---but look at this chart and tell me that you see something positive. The only real plus that I see is that it managed to hold above the support level set last January (and bounced off of six prior times). Let’s see if it can hold. Meanwhile, it is below all DMAs (though it is testing its 50 DMA) and in downtrends across all major timeframes. Plus with mediocre economic growth and a high level of inflation---the most likely result of the destruction wrought on the oil infrastructure and a spendthrift government, I am hard pressed to think that bond prices are going to improve markedly.

 

           

 

 


 

 

 

Gold had another rotten week, remaining in a very short term downtrend marked by the January 29th top with four lower highs. And it has successfully challenged its 200 DMA (now resistance)---putting it below all three DMAs. The next support level is the lower boundary of its short term uptrend. If we are seeing a reversal in the growth of inflation (see below), gold’s poor pin action makes sense.

 

 


 

 

The dollar was strong again last week and appears to be trying to break out of a trading range. It just needs another strong week to do so. I am not convinced that the long term US fundamentals support a move higher but since we are the cleanest shirt in a dirty laundry (rest of the world) that could be the propellent.

 





Friday in the charts.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/deal-hopes-inflation-nopes-lift-stocks-bonds-week-musk-leads-4-commas-club

 

Summary:  Supportive macro data (growth >> inflation) and mixed micro (ORCL/ADBE AI disappointing, CHWY consumer resilience) were overwhelmed by the 38th 'deal is imminent' headline, lowering oil prices, bond yields (and rate-hike odds), and the dollar; lifting stocks and crypto. In the triplet of oil-bonds-stocks, equity markets 'underperformed' on the week...

 

 

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

 

What Elliott Wave Theory says about oil.

https://talkmarkets.com/article/crude-oil-flashback-update-bearish-scenario-gains-traction-as-triangle-support-gives-way-1781271161

 

Monday morning setup: Global markets soared in a risk-on rally following the announcement of a US-Iran deal Sunday night. Stocks and bonds rallied while oil tumbled to a three-month low after the US and Iran said they have reached an interim agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and halt the war. This will provide a 60-day window for negotiation. As of 8:00am ET, Nasdaq 100 futures advanced 2.1%, while those for the S&P 500 rose 1.3%. In the pre-market, Mag 7 are all higher led by NVDA (+2.1%), META (+2.0%) and MSFT (+1.7%). European stocks climbed 0.7% to shatter a pre-war record high while Asian stocks were similarly buoyant. Bond yields are 2-5bp lower led by the belly of the curve and the 10Y trading around 4.4%. The USD is lower. Brent fell to around $83 a barrel and WTI slid below $80 for the first time since the start of the war. Gold and Bitcoin gained strongly, while the dollar lost ground against all major currencies. European bonds outperformed global peers. Metals are higher led by gold (2.8%) and silver (+3.9%). US economic data calendar includes June Empire manufacturing (8:30am), May industrial production (9:15am) and June NAHB housing market index (10am)

 

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

The US stats last week were weighed to the positive side, primary indicators were two plus, one neutral, one minus and inflation data was one plus, one neutral and one minus, Overseas, the data was balanced with two positive, one neutral and one negative price measures.

 

For the past several weeks, I have been making the observation that despite the ever louder narrative of rising inflation, that week’s numbers didn’t bear it out. Last week was no different; and it is prompting me to shift my narrative: while I don’t think that we will see a significant drop in the inflation rate perhaps we are at the point where it ceases getting any worse. So, I am shading my forecast recognizing that while inflation remains a problem, it is probably as bad as its going to get.

 

That we will get back below a two percent annual inflation rate seems unlikely to me given a spend thrift ruling class, a clueless Fed and an oil supply problem that isn’t going to be fixed anytime soon even if peace in the Middle East breaks out tomorrow. Still the good news is conditions aren’t getting worse.

 

Counterpoint.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/06/10/americans-do-not-love-these-inflation-numbers/

 

And another.

https://talkmarkets.com/article/the-data-just-killed-the-soft-landing-are-you-positioned-1781272296

 

Meanwhile, the economic growth in the US remains strong enough to support my ‘muddle through’ forecast at the very least. A new Fed chief adds some uncertainty. While it is unclear to me how dovish/hawkish Warsh will be, he was appointed by Trump, who is a loud, an aggressive proponent of an easy monetary policy. True, Warsh is a single vote and given the recent hawkish comments coming out of the several FOMC members, he would likely have a tough time persuading others to lighten up. But he would also likely keep Fed policy from being too hawkish.

 

Bottom line: the economy is performing well and will likely continue to do so at least in the short term, given (1) US energy independence, (2) the level of AI spend and (3) the enormous fiscal stimulus that presently seems endless. On the other hand, I now think that inflation has probably topped out.

 

                        US

 

  The June NY Fed manufacturing index came in at 5.7 versus forecasts   of 14.

 

                        International

 

The April EU trade balance was -E1.0 billion versus projections of +E7.8 billion; April industrial production was up 0.1% versus +0.3%.

 

May German CPI fell 0.6% versus estimates of +0.8%.

 

 

                        Other

 

                           Goldman lowers oil price forecast (clearly assumes the Iran is over).

                          https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/goldman-cuts-2027-brent-price-outlook-weak-demand-offsets-hormuz-disruption

 

Summary: Nudging down 2027 forecast. We lower our 2027 average Brent forecast by $5 to $80 on higher supply and lower demand. We lift 2027 supply in the UAE (given its OPEC exit) and the Americas (i.e., US, Brazil, Guyana, and Venezuela) on firmer realized and projected supply in our Top Projects dataset. While demand is likely to largely bounce back after reopening, we assume that just over 10% of the demand weakness persists as China's shift to alternatives (e.g., EVs) accelerates. Struyven estimates a 5 million- to 6 million-barrel-a-day deficit in the second quarter, well below the 14 million- to 15 million-barrel-a-day hit to Middle East energy flows. He said the impact has been cushioned by nearly 5 million barrels a day of demand losses and more than 4 million barrels a day of pre-war oversupply. "We now assume that oil exports from Gulf producers normalize by late August (vs. by late June prior), which may be achieved with a rise in Hormuz flows to 70% of pre-war levels given current redirections," the commodity expert said.

 

 

            Iran

 

              Overnight news.

           

Over the weekend, the US and Iran announced a 60-day peace framework, marking a significant de-escalation of the conflict. Iran will reopen the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for the US lifting its naval blockade, waiving sanctions on Iranian oil and releasing part of Iran's frozen assets. Regarding uranium, Iran would be allowed to dilute enriched uranium on site, while the 60-day window allows for further negotiations on its enriched uranium programme. The deal also covers Lebanon, with Pakistan's PM posting on X that the pact called for the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including Lebanon.

 

A source told Fars that the text of the MoU underwent changes that have definitely and explicitly emphasised the issue of exercising Iranian-Oman sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz. It is now written that the future of the administration of maritime services in the Strait of Hormuz will be "determined" by Iran and Oman. Furthermore, the change now writes that Iran will only accept ships for 60 days of free passage. That is, the US has accepted the principle of receiving fees and has only taken a 60-day discount from Iran. But after these 60 days, Iran intends to benefit from the financial revenues generated by the traffic.

 

***If this is correct, how is this a win for the good guys? The Strait was toll free before the war. Now we are recognizing Iran’s right to control a major global economic choke point? One of the key elements of post WWII political/economic world was the US Navy guaranteeing free passage on the open seas. This opens the possibility of other nations claiming control/sovereignty over waters outside the three mile limit. Let’s hope that it is not correct.

 

Israeli Defence Minister Katz said "we oppose the withdrawal of the IDF from Lebanon... have made it clear to US President Trump". If Iran attacks Israel because of events in Lebanon, "we will strike it with full force and make sure it clearly understands the gap in capabilities."

 

Israel's Finance Minister said that "the agreement is bad for the entire world. We will have to continue the campaign in creative ways."

 

Israeli National Security Minister Ben-Gvir said US President Trump's agreement does not bind us in any way. 

             

            Monetary Policy

 

              The oil shock is not a trigger for a rate hike.

              https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2026/06/11/ppi_confirms_cpi_energy_shock_not_a_trigger_for_a_rate_hike_1188146.html

 

              About trillionaires and inequality.

              (3) An Open Letter To Elizabeth Warren About Trillionaires And Inequality

 

            Tariffs

 

              After a year of tariffs, the trade deficit has barely budged.

              https://www.cato.org/blog/after-year-high-tariffs-us-goods-trade-deficit-has-barely-budged

 

            The Financial System

 

              Private credit dividends look less secure.

              https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/private-credit-dividends-look-less-secure-cash-coverage-thins-2026-06-12/

 

              Blackrock private credit fund gates investors.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/blackrocks-private-credit-fund-gates-investors-again-after-redemption-requests-surge

 

            AI

 

              The $1.8 trillion off balance sheet time bomb.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/18-trillion-balance-sheet-time-bomb-heart-ai-supercycle

 

Summary: We started this long article by highlighting the "big" $1.4 trillion 2027 capex projection by Goldman. As it turns out, that's just the tip of the iceberg as headline capex figures materially understate the economic commitment to the AI buildout. Only when you add ~$1tn of purchase commitments, ~$822bn of not-yet-commenced leases, finance-lease effects, and supplier debt collateralized by hyperscaler commitments, does one start to get a sense of the full size of AI balance sheets, and how much is truly at stake if the AI revolution fails to materlize in the form of record AI revenues to cover the massive on and off-balance sheet commitments. The good news is that, for now, the risks aren't an imminent solvency problem, but a set of timing and disclosure mismatches - a deferred depreciation wall, capex running ahead of monetization, leverage migrating into the supplier/private-credit layer, and classification judgments that make true capital intensity hard to compare across companies. For their part, hyperscalers have taken advantage of the current moment of market euphoria to raise as much capital as they can, aware that the window will eventually shut. The question is when sentiment turns, and when all these funding conduits are shut, will there be enough funding to sustain the AI revolution for the foreseeable future. Of course, this question becomes moot if demand shifts, and instead of buying the latest and greatest offering from Anthropic or OpenAI for a stratospheric number of tokens, consumers and enterprises turn to dirt-cheap alternatives from China which offer 90% of the performance of frontier models for a fraction of the cost, then all bets are off.

 

     Investing

 

            The Market is giddy.

            https://www.barrons.com/articles/panic-euphoria-index-stock-price-e00ffbbe?st=8fnW6D

 

Summary: Citi’s Levkovich Index, a sentiment gauge, reached 0.93 last Friday, its highest level since the post-Covid rally. The S&P 500 is up nearly 8% this year, but a high sentiment index often precedes a 13% median decline. Despite high market euphoria, Citi forecasts the S&P 500 to reach 8,100 by year-end, driven by strong AI-led profit growth.

 

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

What I am reading today

 

           

 

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Friday, June 12, 2026

The Morning Call--Equity supply surge---what happens next?

 

The Morning Call

 

6/12/26

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

            Thursday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/taco-thursday-trumps-hot-flation-ecb-hike-lifts-stocks-bonds-ahead-spcx-launch

 

Summary: Traders dealt with Trump's rhetoric intraday-flipping from 'blowing the shit out of Iran' to a 'no strikes, deal pretty much wrapped up' sparking a plunge in oil (ignoring denials), spike in stocks, and big drop in yields (shrugging off hot headline PPI and ECB rate-hikes). Gold and bitcoin rallied as the dollar dropped. CNN reports that this is the 38th time that President Trump has declared a peace deal is imminent...

 

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

 

S&P breaks support. Given yesterday’s pin action, the author’s probability of a support break appears a bit overstated. However, a key point he makes is that the next test is where the next high occurs, i.e., will this rally be short lived, roll over and simply set a lower high or will go on to make a new higher high. I am not making that prediction (given my abysmal record on this rally). I include it as a thought exercise.

            https://talkmarkets.com/article/sp-500-breaks-supportthe-80-top-signal-spacex-ipo-trap-1781183628

 

            Net equity goes positive.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/net-equity-supply-goes-positive-first-time-pandemic

 

Summary: Federal Reserve Flow of Funds data released yesterday showed that net supply went from a -$216 billion annualized pace in 4Q25 to +$124 billion in 1Q26. Pressure will remain on supply, not least as buybacks are likely to disappoint. That will also squeeze the near-record ROE. Make of that what you will, but my hunch is taking equity out of the market when firms are deluging the market with it is the safer path.

 

            The dollar debasement unwind.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/great-debasement-unwind

 

Summary: The dollar debasement trade was one of the defining narratives of the past two years. Gold surged, bitcoin exploded and investors rushed to position for a weaker dollar. The problem is that the dollar appears to have other plans.The dollar was supposed to be dead. Instead, DXY is trading above the key 100 level, above range highs, above the downtrend line and above a rising 200-day moving average.A decisive close above 100.5 could force a painful reassessment for the "dollar debasement" crowd. The squeeze risk is growing.

 

Friday morning setup: US stock futures and global markets are higher, extending their rally while oil hit the lowest level in months following fresh reports that the US and Iran are nearing a provisional agreement to end their war, even if top leadership has yet to sign off. Meanwhile, all eyes are on SpaceX - the world's biggest IPO- where shadow markets are pricing a spike of at least 35% for SpaceX on its debut, while online market see odds of a 30% close at roughly breakeven. As of 8:00am ET, S&P 500 futures rose 0.6% after the benchmark climbed 1.8% in the previous session. Pre-market, all Mag 7 are higher led by GOOGL and META. Treasuries held steady after Thursday's gain: 10Y yields are at 4.46%. The DXY dollar index fell 21bp to 99.639. Commodities are all lower: WTI fell $3.90 to $83.81 while Brent slid almost 4% to head for its first close below $88 a barrel since the first week of the war. Base/precious metals are unchanged; ags are all lower. Today's US economic data calendar includes June University of Michigan sentiment at 10am.

 

           

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

                        International

 

April Japanese industrial production was up 0.5% versus consensus of +0.8%; capacity utilization fell 0.8% versus +2.0%.

 

April UK GDP declined 0.1%, in line; April industrial production was flat versus +0.1%; April YoY construction output was down 1.0% versus _-1.1%; the April trade balance was -L8.4 billion versus -L4.1 billion.

 

The May German CPI declined 0.2%, in line.

 

                        Other

 

                          Economic charts of the week.

                          https://www.carsongroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/ChartsoftheWeekJune1-5.pdf

 

            Overnight News

 

The US insurance industry’s standard setter has begun to examine credit risks linked to data center projects, which are increasingly showing up in insurers’ investment portfolios.

 

Big companies and startups, chafing at rapidly escalating artificial intelligence costs, are increasingly turning to tools that tap into cheaper AI models, including some from China. That’s raising pressure on industry leaders OpenAI and Anthropic to lower their prices, a prospect that could hurt their ability to grow into profitable enterprises.

 

 

            Iran

 

              Overnight news.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/us-iran-deal-near-narrative-returns-tehran-refuses-surrender-hormuz-leverage

 

            Fiscal Policy

 

              Social Security is a political concept; there is no looming insolvency.

              https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2026/06/11/social_security_is_a_political_concept_theres_no_looming_insolvency_1187820.html

 

              Why is our ruling class abandoning economic freedom?

              https://reason.com/2026/06/10/why-are-republicans-and-democrats-abandoning-economic-freedom/

 

            Inflation

 

My favorite optimist argues for a declining inflation rate---and I think that he may be right. That doesn’t mean that it is returning to its lows. So my forecast of ‘inflation is as good as its going to get’ remains but I will likely modify it by ‘inflation is as bad as its going to get’.

              http://scottgrannis.blogspot.com/2026/06/inflation-likely-to-subside-growth.html

 

              And he has some support.

              https://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-4-2-inflation-rate-is-a-bummer-but-the-worst-might-be-over-ef27170d?st=e4hAM6

 

              Counterpoint.

  https://wolfstreet.com/2026/06/10/cpi-inflation-4-25-blows-by-2-year-treasury-yield-closes-in-on-10-year-treasury-driven-by-supercore-services-gasoline-electricity/

 

              And another.

              https://www.capitalspectator.com/us-10-year-yield-risk-premium-continues-to-rise/

 

              And a counterpoint to the counterpoint: Inflation is high but is it broad?

              https://stayathomemacro.substack.com/p/inflation-is-high-is-it-broad

 

              Finally, sort of an in between.

              https://bonddad.blogspot.com/2026/06/producer-prices-suggest-5-yoy-cpi-and.html

           

            AI

 

              An entire industry propped up by bad math.

              https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/an-entire-industry-is-being-propped

 

              Frontier dreams meet the cost curve.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/frontier-dreams-meet-cost-curves-citadel-securities-exposes-ais-expensive-reality-check

 

Summary: We have argued for some time that agentic and complex workflows delivered by frontier models would be expensive to run, constrained by physical bottlenecks, and vulnerable to unrealistic expectations of frictionless deployment cost. That judgement now looks less contrarian than it did when we first set it out in February. Amazon has now removed its token leaderboard, Microsoft has cancelled Claude Code subscriptions, and there have been multiple reports of unexpectedly large token bills. The salient point is that even the most powerful technologies must pass through the prosaic discipline of cost curves, capacity constraints, and marginal returns. Adoption is therefore becoming less about what frontier models can do in principle and more about the price and scarcity of the inputs required to make AI operational at scale. Compute, power, cooling, memory bandwidth, and inference budgets are real and binding constraints.

 

     Investing

 

            Equity supply surge---what happens next.

            https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2026/06/11/equity-supply-surge-historically-next

           

    Investor Alert

 

The share price of Cisco (CSCO) has reached its Sell Half Range. Accordingly, the High Yield Portfolio will Sell one half of its position at the Market open.

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

 

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.