Thursday, June 25, 2026

The Morning Call---Is Warsh really a hawk? M2 says no.

 

The Morning Call

 

6/25/26

I am traveling tomorrow. Back on Monday 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

            Wednesday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/big-tech-bounce-fades-bond-yields-bitcoin-black-gold-bullion-all-battered-ahead-micron

 

Summary: small rebound in Korea sparked a knee-jerk bid in US equities at the cash open, buoyed by tumbling oil prices. But the bounce died around the EU close with Nasdaq leading the charge lower into MU EPS. The dollar continues to surge, weighing on precious metals and bitcoin was triple-fisted by tech's pain, MSTR perp's collapse, and the greenback's gain. A lot of volatility today across all markets amidst a backdrop of falling rates alongside a very weak May New Home Sales report and an ongoing decline in oil prices as the Strait of Hormuz continues to reopen to shipping traffic.Rates markets were perhaps the standout mover today, starting to play catch-down to oil's recent declines, but equities remain in a world of their own (the wrong way this time)...

 

            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

 

            Is this sell off a healthy sign?

                        https://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-magnificent-seven-correction-may-actually-be-a-sign-of-a-healthy-stock-market-ab344c0a?st=vWqJQC

 

            Counterpoint.

            https://talkmarkets.com/article/the-ai-bubble-just-cracked-micron-sk-hynix-they-will-drop-75-1782325429

 

            The latest from Goldman’s flows guru.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/crowdedness-extremes-goldman-partner-warns-brace-continued-volatility-ahead

 

Summary: it is important to note that investor sentiment remains relatively balanced even as portfolios become increasingly levered to the AI trade. AAII US Investor Sentiment Bullish Readings Index currently sits at 36 (below ytd avg and well off ytd high)... Additionally, Goldman’s US Equity Sentiment Indicator stands at +0.3, the lowest level since early April... The stock market absorbed >$115b of paper in less than a 2 week period without blinking. The retail community has been a consistent buyer of stocks all year – and SpaceX appears to have accelerated the retail bid. My gut is this trend continues over the remainder of the year. Market Tailwind.On the retail point, 33b shares traded across all US equity exchanges last Thursday (6/18 - rebal + SPCX) which was good for the most shares traded on a single day in the history of the US stock market (breaking previous record of 30b shares on 4/9/25 AKA Liberation Day).Russell Rebal this Friday (6/26) will also be an explosive trading volume session. Buckle Up.There is a noteworthy technical market headwind early next week as we estimate -$30b of US equities for sale attached to quarter end pension rebalancing. $30bn to sell ranks in the 89th percentile amongst all buy and sell estimates in absolute dollar value over the past three years and in the 95th percentile going back to Jan 2000.Heading into SPCX there were concerns that the long only community would sell sleeves of their portfolios to make room for new paper.On our trading desk we did not see noteworthy funding trades from assets managers or SWFs. We saw some trading around the edges but there was no palpable scramble to raise cash ahead of the deal. MFs are currently sitting on ~$170b of cash which is inline with their historical average (from a notional perspective). There is still plenty of dry powder out there. Yes, even after record deals from GOOGL and SPCX.

 

 

Gold isn’t trading like gold anymore.

https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/gold-isnt-trading-gold-anymore

 

Thursday morning setup: Global stocks and S&P futures are higher while Nasdaq futures are on a tear after Micron’s sales forecast blew the lights out, brushing aside fears over a near-term pullback in the AI trade, while Qualcomm set aggressive targets at its investor day in New York. As of 8:00am ET, a revival of the AI demand theme is sending contracts on the Nasdaq 100 up 2.1% while S&P 500 futures are up a more modest 0.7%. MU is +18% pre-market, pushing Semis higher (SOXX +5%, DRAM +12%) while Mag7 - the companies which enable all this chip spending - are mostly lower. As Goldman's Delta 1 desks asks, how much longer will they be willing to see their stock languish while funding semiconductor outperformance? Korea's KOSPI rallied 5.5% overnight (closing well off the highs) and remains ~2.4% below pre-Flash Crash levels. While the AI theme is bid pre-market, this is not an ‘Everything Rally’ with Cyclicals seeing a mixed performance with Banks flat, Regional Banks lower, Energy down with crude, Discretionary mixed, and Materials flat. Within Defensives, Staples are weaker, HC mixed, and AI-related Utils names are higher. Brent crude dropped 1.4% to below $73 a barrel, erasing all Iran war gains, on fears of a supply glut following a ramp-up in flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Bond yields are flat to +2bp as the yield curve steepens, but the USD starts the session lower for the first time in 6 sessions. US economic data calendar includes May personal income/spending, 1Q GDP revision, May durable goods orders, weekly jobless claims and May Chicago Fed national activity index (8:30am) and June Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity (11am). Fed speaker slate includes Bowman (8:45am), Goolsbee (2pm, 6:30pm) and Williams (3:40pm).

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

                          Q1 (final) GDP growth was +2.1% versus estimates of 1.6%.

 

                          Weekly jobless claims totaled 215,000 versus predictions of 225,000.

 

May new home sales fell 7.3% versus consensus of +2.9%; May building permits declined 0.9% versus -0.7%.

                          https://bonddad.blogspot.com/2026/06/may-new-home-sales-another-poor-month.html

 

May PCE index was +0.4% versus expectations of +0.5%; the core PCE index was up 0.3%, in line.

 

May durable goods order fell 4.5%, in line; ex transportation they were up 1.3% versus forecasts of +0.6%.

 

May personal income rose 0.7% versus projections of +0.4%; personal spending was up 0.7% versus +0.1%.

 

The May Chicago national activity index was reported at -0.1 versus estimates of +0.12.

 

                        International

 

The April Japanese leading economic indicators came in at 116.1 versus predictions of 115.9.

 

The July German consumer confidence index was -29.2 versus consensus of -27.1.

 

                        Other

 

            Overnight News

 

Brent erased its wartime gains as flows through the Strait of Hormuz accelerated. But tensions remained as Donald Trump warned that tolls in the waterway are a red line issue in negotiations with Iran.

 

Iraq will consider all available options if its OPEC quota is ‌not significantly increased and has weighed leaving the producer group, sources with knowledge of Iraqi oil policy told Reuters. The prospect of OPEC's second-largest producer considering an exit would be a further blow to the group after the departure this year of the United Arab Emirates. Iraq is one of the five founding members of OPEC, which was formed in the Iraqi capital.

https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/another-opec-exit-iraq-warns-it-could-abandon-oil-cartel-if-quota-hike-rejected

 

The BOJ needs to raise interest rates every few months toward a neutral level of around 2%, board member Naoki Tamura said.

 

The EU’s trade deal with the US is set to go into effect after the bloc gave its final sign-off ahead of Trump’s deadline. BBG

 

            Iran

 

              There is no agreement on the issue of tolls.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/rubio-gulf-says-zero-support-hormuz-tolls-irgc-warns-ships-not-complying-will-be-dealt

 

              Paying Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz.

              https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2026/06/easy-mullah.php

 

              Hormuz closure strands 1200 cargo ships.

              https://www.ft.com/content/4d3dd2b7-cb6b-410b-8c15-203904f32294?syn-25a6b1a6=1

 

Summary: The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has stranded more than 1,200 cargo ships carrying goods worth an estimated $125bn, according to new data, demonstrating the vulnerability of global commerce to a handful of strategic maritime chokepoints. Please use the sharing Justus Heinrich, head of marine underwriting at Allianz, told the FT the closure of the strait had changed the perception of risk in chokepoints for insurers. “We were always talking about realistic disaster scenarios, and now we have a real disaster scenario like this one,” he said. “So I think it changes a bit the perception of actual operational risks from ‘it can theoretically happen’ to what we know now out of this situation.”

 

              Oil tanker rates soar.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/oil-tanker-earnings-soar-470000-day-hormuz-hopes-drive-tanker-frenzy

 

            Monetary Policy

 

              Is Warsh really a hawk?  M2 says no.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/liquidity-crime-scene-follow-money

 

Summary. We are currently seeing the fastest growth in US money supply in four years. The Fed’s balance sheet rose +$11 billion in the week ending June 17th, to $6.74 trillion, the highest since March 2025. Total assets have risen +$162.8 billion since the start of the year.

 

 

 

            The Financial System

 

              Hedge fund shorting private credit.

              https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-24/investor-who-scored-900-win-in-2008-crisis-has-new-big-short-bet?srnd=homepage-americas

 

 

 Summary: Hedge fund manager Lee Robinson is shorting insurers, including Lincoln National Corp. and MetLife Inc., due to their exposure to private credit. Robinson's firm, Altana, is launching a new fund to protect against a potential downturn in private credit and its impact on corporate valuations. Insurers' exposure to private credit has grown significantly over the last decade, with a fifth of the US life insurance sector's fixed-income holdings allocated to illiquid assets, mostly private credit, at the end of 2025.

 

              The stocks of private equity/debt managers are starting to crack.

              https://talkmarkets.com/article/alts-continue-to-struggle-1782324910

 

     Investing

 

            Six investment lessons from a successful fund manager.

            https://www.morningstar.com/funds/6-investment-lessons-will-danoff-fidelity-contrafund

 

            Nine lessons from Jesse Livermore.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/jesse-livermore-old-lessons-todays-markets

 

            The cost of rolling a pretax retirement fund into a Roth IRA.

            https://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-cost-of-rolling-pre-tax-retirement.html

 

            How to survive the wrong turns in life and the Market.

            https://www.safalniveshak.com/how-to-survive-the-wrong-turns-in-life-and-the-markets/

 

            Warsh hammers gold.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/precious-metals/hawkish-warsh-hammers-barbarous-relic-gold-crashes-back-below-4000-rate-hike-odds

 

    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.

 

 

 

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

The Morning Call---the end of cheap capital

 

The Morning Call

 

6/24/26

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

            Tuesday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/us-tech-trounced-bonds-bid-korean-butterfly-flaps-its-wings

 

Summary: Oil oscillations took a back seat to Korean carnage today as the flapping of levered ETF  butterflies triggered a tornado in US big-tech (led by Semis), dragging down Nasdaq (Dow green though). Heavy negative delta 0-DTE flow today. Bonds (mixed macro) and the dollar were bid as Bitcoin and bullion were dumped again. The question on everyone's lips: Are levered Korean retail traders the US Tech boom Giant killer? It was a soft-data tsunami today (and the picture was anything but clear): Philly Fed Services ugly (and contracting), Richmond Fed Manufacturing and Business Conditions ugly (and contracting), but US Composite PMI jumped to 5 month highs led by Manufacturing (at 49-month highs) amid signs of price pressures cooling. ADP's weekly employment indicator remains near its highs though as labor remains resilient. Still, it continues to be NOT about macro as stocks and bonds decouple from any head- or tail-wind from oil...

 

Finally, Apollo's Chief Economist, Torsten Slok, lays out the top three macro questions for traders at the moment:

1) Middle East: What are the implications if some tanks reach critical levels somewhere in the world, including distillate fuels in the US? 

2) AI: What happens if companies start limiting their token budgets meaningfully because they are only seeing weak ROI, and as a result, compute demand either slows down or shifts to Chinese models? 

3) Inflation outlook: With inflation trending higher, what are the implications for equity and credit markets if the Fed hikes in September and December, as currently priced in fed funds futures? 

The answer in all these cases is not straightforward but we would say that the market remains more than willing to look past all these potential pitfalls... until now. Is this week's decline a canary in the coalmine? And will Korea's flapping butterfly wings chaotically trigger a global delivering in the chase for bottlenecks?

And just to rub some salt in that wound, buybacks ain't gonna save you this time (and not just because hyperscalers FCF is negative):

 

Tuesday 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

 

 

 

            The AI trade is getting uncomfortable.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/ai-trade-getting-uncomfortable

 

Summary: The AI trade is starting to look crowded in all the right places and vulnerable in all the wrong ones. Tech volatility is exploding, systematic flow risks are building and the market continues to reward the suppliers while punishing the spenders. Nothing is broken yet, but the rubber bands are getting stretched. The market continues to reward AI suppliers while punishing AI spenders. Semis, memory and infrastructure have captured the upside, while hyperscalers face growing questions around returns and capex intensity.Meanwhile, increasingly capable models are emerging from the East at a fraction of the training cost incurred by Western AI leaders. Yet the entire AI ecosystem remains priced for ever-rising capex. Nobody is positioned for "slightly less." The figures are starting to get uncomfortable. Projected selling from options-related flows, leveraged ETFs and vol-control funds is becoming absolutely massive.

 

How far can the rubber band get stretched?

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/how-far-can-rubber-band-stretch-goldman-1-delta-desk-says-breaking-point

 

Summary: The breaking point was always likely to be when one of the major spenders concludes that shareholder returns are better served by spending slightly less. The problem is that “slightly less” is not embedded in anyone’s assumptions.The entire AI complex is priced for ever rising capex as inference demand grows. The Nasdaq appears to have failed to make a decisive new high.At the same time, there are increasingly visible issues surrounding the largest market-cap companies in the world.That feels like an unstable equilibrium.

We are through the tailwinds of last week’s expiry and now have line of sight into month-end and quarter-end rebalancing flows, which in theory should favor selling equities and buying bonds. Market structure is also becoming less supportive.Dealer gamma is lower around current spot levels and declines further on the way down.CTAs are still buyers on many measures but remain highly convex to the downside. A glance at the prime brokerage numbers largely confirms what price action is telling us: the world has become one exceptionally concentrated trade.AI is driving the equity market, the equity market is driving economic expectations, and all roads increasingly lead back to the same handful of stocks. Risk that the market has been ignoring the highly deflationary forces in token economics.

 

Wednesday morning setup; US stocks are set for a rebound with equity futures higher as Semis and Tech stage a partial recovery from yesterday’s "Chip-Wreck" as KOSPI retraced about 20% of its losses ahead of earnings from the single-biggest contributor to US outperformance this year: Micron’s third-quarter numbers are an even bigger deal than usual, following Tuesday’s shakeout of an overcrowded AI trade that’s has been priced for perfection. As of 8:00am ET, S&P 500 futures are 0.3% higher with Nasdaq 100 contracts up 0.5%. In premarket trading, equities are boosted by a bid for Semis (MU +3.6% with earnings tonight) with most of Mag7 higher. Within Cyclicals, Discretionary and Industrials are the standouts as Energy / Fins are mostly lower. Cyclicals poised to lead Defensives with Momentum factor flat. Bond yields are lower 1-2bp as the yield curve flattens, pushing 10Y yields; USD remains bid even as real yields decline. DXY set a new 52-wk high today. Cmdty remain under pressure dragged by the Energy complex and weakness in Metals. Today’s macro data focus is on Home Sales ahead of tomorrow's update on GDP, PCE, Personal Income / Spending, Cap / Durable Goods, and weekly Claims.

 

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

Weekly mortgage applications rose 1.0% while purchase applications declined 1.0%.

 

Month to date retail chain store sales were up 10.0% versus +9.4% in the prior week.

https://bonddad.blogspot.com/2026/06/consumer-spending-has-turned-red-hot.html

 

The June flash manufacturing PMI was 55.7 versus estimates of 54.5; the flash services PMI was 51.3 versus 51.0; the flash composite PMI was 52.2 versus 50.8

 

The June Richmond Fed manufacturing index was 4 versus expectations of 9.

                          https://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/2026/06/23/richmond-manufacturing-index-flat-activity-in-june

 

                        International

 

The June German business climate index came in at 85.6, in line; the June current conditions index was 87.0 versus 86.4.

 

 

                        Other

 

            Overnight News

 

The US Senate voted 50-48 to pass a resolution to halt the Iran war unless US President Trump gets approval from Congress. However, the White House said Congress resolutions on Iran are non-binding and won't be sent to President Trump, while Trump criticized the Senate passage of the Iran war powers resolution, which he claimed provides aid and comfort for the enemy.

 

The BoJ sees the risk of inflation exceeding its 2% target and will conduct additional interest-rate hikes appropriately, Governor Kazuo Ueda said in speech Wednesday that reiterated policymakers’ recent messaging

 

            Iran

 

The first tango in Lake Lucerne.       https://x.com/JoshBlockDC/status/2069047098813690054?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E2069047098813690054%7Ctwgr%5E0924bdd8e9caa093d89c2e70ad43737050772d7e%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.powerlineblog.com%2Farchives%2F2026%2F06%2Ffirst-tango-at-lake-lucerne.php

 

              Ukraine, Iran and Occam’s Razor.

              https://danieldrezner.substack.com/p/ukraine-iraq-and-occams-razor

 

            Monetary Policy

 

Real Treasury yields rise above 2%.  Is the Market doing the Fed’s job? (if it is, that is good news since the Fed has done a horrible job)

https://www.capitalspectator.com/real-yields-rise-above-2-is-the-market-doing-the-feds-job/

 

            Fiscal Policy

 

              Debt hawks ignore history.

              https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2026/06/23/national_debt_hawks_write_as_though_1981-present_didnt_happen_1189832.html

 

            The Financial System

 

              Apollo caps private credit fund withdrawals.

                          https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-22/apollo-caps-private-credit-fund-again-after-17-request-to-exit?srnd=homepage-americas&sref=loFkkPMQ

 

Summary: Apollo Debt Solutions, which has roughly $25 billion in assets, capped withdrawals at 5% of outstanding shares on Monday after investors asked to redeem 16.8%, according to a shareholder letter. Redemption requests in the quarter were higher than the 11.2% investors wanted to pull in the prior period. Cliffwater LLC faced requests to pull 17% of shares from its flagship fund, while BlackRock Inc. received about 13% earlier this month. Both funds enforced a 5% cap for such funds, known as business development companies.

 

     Investing

 

            Can tech stocks keep outperforming?

            https://alhambrapartners.com/weekly-market-pulse-markets-review/?src=news

 

            This analyst thinks they can.

            https://www.riskhedge.com/outplacement/the-biggest-ai-investing-mistake

 

            Tech companies getting money while the getting is good.

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/06/spacex-ipo-tech-companies/687659/?gift=TGgP34XZPBAppowZPOH7p09v5u9RMSdtIPhTWqBNljQ&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share

 

 

            The end of cheap capital.

            https://hbr.org/2026/06/the-end-of-cheap-capital

 

            The S&P’s latest changes in its composition.

            https://www.carsongroup.com/insights/blog/the-sp-500s-latest-changes-ai-in-consumer-out/

 

            How much of the S&P 500’s revenues come from overseas?

            https://talkmarkets.com/article/how-much-of-the-sp-500s-revenue-comes-from-overseas-1782232562

 

            Spotting bubbles and calling tops.

            https://awealthofcommonsense.com/2026/06/spotting-bubbles-and-calling-tops/

 

    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.

 

 

 


Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Morning Call---Korea crashes

 

The Morning Call

 

6/23/26

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

            Monday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/tech-wreck-trumps-iran-deal-optimism-bitcoin-bullion-bid

 

Summary: Any tailwinds from lower oil prices (US-Iran deal progress) were quickly eviscerated by Tech weakness ('cheap' China/Japan models and DeepMind departure, and SaaSpocalypse 2.0). Bond yields (higher) also ignored lower oil (heavy IG calendar), helping dollar gains. Bitcoin and bullion gained on the day. As Goldman's Chrish Hussey noted, markets adopted a defensive posture on Monday as they revisit the AI trade and contemplate the evolving geopolitical landscape following a long weekend in the US. Stocks and bonds completely ignored oil's demise to last week's lows... .it appears oil's potential (decline) as a tailwind for risk may be over.

 

                        Monday 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

 

            Warsh credibility a new volatility suppressant.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/warsh-credibility-new-vol-suppressant

 

Summary: A pivot to a more appropriate policy stance is acting as a volatility suppressor. That’s why I push back on some market particpants' take that equities and bonds will be hurt by this policy pivot. A prudent, methodical tightening cycle that lowers inflation expectations and establishes the Warsh Fed’s credibility should keep discount rates anchored and reduce volatility by limiting the risk of a sharper, more panicked hiking cycle later. In that world, a broader risk rally remains the modal outcome, with breadth expanding beyond higher-beta AI momentum names as stable economic backdrop and productivity-driven earnings gains lift all ships. Pullbacks will come, as they always do, but they should be contained as the S&P 500 builds ranges, breaks into higher ones on positive catalysts and melts upward on stronger fundamentals and greater Fed credibility.

 

            When flows meet a hawkish Fed.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/technical-backdrop-when-flows-meet-hawkish-fed

 

            This is the worst time for a flood of retail money.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/worst-time-flood-retail-money

 

Summary: Retail inflows to semis stocks are hitting records as excess liquidity is in its weakest state since the 2021 inflation shock. That’s because no matter the galactic aspirations and expectations held for these firms, their stocks’ success is governed by more prosaic considerations, namely liquidity. Excess liquidity, the difference between real money growth and economic growth, is negative and falling for the first time since the pandemic inflation shock five years ago. Inflation and economic growth are absorbing money growth from the system, leaving less for supporting risk assets. Indeed, with excess liquidity negative, we are at the point where the real economy will de facto need to extract liquidity from the market to remain supported (on a trend basis). This is the worst time for the late flood of retail money, which is much more likely to show a loss as the market drops from overbought conditions, and with no excess liquidity left to provide support. Money last in is often first out.

 

            Korea crashes.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/korea-crashed-goldman-explains-what-happened-and-why-it-matters

 

Summary: the rally had become increasingly dependent on a narrowing set of marginal buyers, and that support base was vulnerable to reversal as institutional capacity tightened and technical enthusiasm encountered fresh headwinds. Put differently, today’s selloff matters not only because of its magnitude, but also because of what it suggests about market structure. When a market rises despite heavy foreign selling, the natural question is who remains to absorb incremental supply. My conclusion last week was that institutional buying power was becoming more limited, leaving retail as the key residual source of demand. Today’s price action appears broadly consistent with that view. As pensions became a more visible source of supply and investors moved to de-risk ahead of Micron earnings, the imbalance became more apparent.

 

Tuesday morning setup: US equity futures are sharply lower as a Semis/South Korea-induced selloff has spread globally slamming tech stocks and pushing SpaceX 3% lower and below its first day of trading price of $150. Nasdaq stocks lead sentiment and early trading lower with AI cost concerns back in focus, as Bloomberg notes that traders are pointing to a South Korean media report we first highlighted at 8pm last night, saying SK Hynix is slowing expansion of AI memory chip production and shifting emphasis to commodity DRAM. As of 8:00am S&P futures were -1.3%, and Nasdaq futures tumbled 2.7%, both near session lows. In premarket trading, Intel and Micron led a broader decline among chipmakers while SpaceX fell 4.3%, below its $150 initial trade price. Chinese equities in Hong Kong entered a bear market. Mag7s are dragging the indices lower with MSFT / telecom the safety valve. In Seoul, chip giants SK Hynix Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co. slumped more than 10%. According to JPM, today's sell-off "may reflect anxiety into MU’s print on Weds as well as the levered ETF mkt structure." Bonds are operating as a safety haven as the yield curve bull steepens, and USD is bid. Commodities are seeing further declines in Energy as US / Iran discussions continue and precious metals are getting hit due to USD (gold) and AI / Tech (silver). Ags are mixed. Today’s macro data focus is on Flash PMIs, ADP’s weekly employment print, and regional Fed activity indicators. 

 

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

                        International

 

The June Japanese flash manufacturing PMI was 54.9 versus forecasts of 54.5; the flash services PMI was 51.8 versus 50.3; the flash composite PMI was 52.5 versus 50.9; the June German flash manufacturing PMI was 50.0 versus 50.5; the flash services PMI was 42.8 versus 49.0; the flash composite PMI was 48.0 versus 49.9; the June EU flash manufacturing PMI was 51.3 versus 51.6; the flash services PMI was 48.9 versus 48.5; the flash composite PMI was 49.5 versus 49.1; the June UK flash manufacturing PMI was 53.1 versus 53.8; the flash services PMI was 48.7 versus 50.5; the flash composite PMI was 49.4 versus 50.6.

 

The June UK industrial trends orders index was -48 versus projections of -35.

 

 

 

 

                        Other

 

                          The consumer sentiment disconnect from economic reality.

                          https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2026/06/22/consumer-sentiment-disconnect-economic-reality

 

                          Update on Q2 GDP nowcast.

                          https://www.capitalspectator.com/q2-gdp-nowcast-steady-at-2-5-as-us-iran-talks-progress/

 

                          The outlook for oil prices.

                          https://talkmarkets.com/article/what-now-for-crude-oil-as-peace-efforts-continue-1782145317

 

                          A ‘quick and dirty’ forecasting method.

                          https://bonddad.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-quick-and-dirty-forecasting-method.html

 

            Iran

 

              Overnight news.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/iran-says-us-unfreeze-12bn-insists-it-alone-will-decide-how-funds-be-used

 

              And.

                  https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/israel-sets-3-key-conditions-ending-occupation-south-lebanon

 

              Another perspective on the Iran deal.

              https://townhall.com/columnists/kurtschlichter/2026/06/22/some-real-talk-about-the-iran-deal-n2678042

 

Of course, it is hard to have valid perspective when no one can agree on what the memo of understanding says.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/iran-agrees-invite-nuclear-inspectors-back-vance-hails-great-progress-after-little

 

            Monetary Policy

 

              The era of ‘Powell is dovish’ is over.

              https://wolfstreet.com/2026/06/18/era-of-powell-was-dovish-is-over-warshs-five-taskforces/

 

              Ed Yardini’s take on the new Fed chair.

              A Hawk In Dove's Clothing ... June Swoon Is Back ... 'We Have A Task Force On That'

 

            Fiscal Policy

 

              Fixing social security.

              https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2026/06/22/social-insecurity-edition

 

            Inflation

 

              Fertilizer prices tumble.

              https://www.ft.com/content/e13f54a4-433c-4ab8-a70a-a38c7279de92?syn-25a6b1a6=1

 

Summary Nitrogen fertilizer prices have slumped from record highs hit during the Iran war even before ships have begun moving freely through the Strait of Hormuz, as traders increasingly bet the worst of the Middle East supply shock is over. Benchmark Middle East urea prices have fallen about 50 per cent to $475 a tonne from their April peak of $918 a tonne, according to commodities data firm Argus, dropping to prewar levels despite continued disruption to trade through one of the world’s most important export routes. Not all fertiliser prices have fallen, however, with phosphate fertilisers in short supply due to a sustained surge in the price of sulphur. About 50 per cent of global food production depends on artificial nitrogen-based fertiliser, of which urea is the most widely used.

 

            Recession

 

              Goldman cuts recession odds to 10 %.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/goldman-cuts-recession-odds-10-25-despite-expecting-big-slowdown-payroll-gains

 

Summary: In a note published earlier today (available to pro subs), Goldman chief economist Jan Hatzius writes that "the agreement between the US and Iran has reduced the downside risks to our economic outlook." As we reported last week, the bank's commodities strategists now see Brent at $80 per barrel by the end of 2026, the second price target cut in a week. That said, Goldman still sees two-sided risks for the price of oil: on the upside, Iran's announcement on Saturday that the Strait was closed again served as a reminder that oil flows might only recover slowly. On the downside, a near-term glut could develop as oil is released quickly into a market that was already oversupplied before the war. More importantly, the agreement has prompted Goldman to cut its 12-month US recession risk estimate further from 25% to the long-term norm of 15% (below the bank's 20% estimate on the eve of the war "because the labor market improvement since then indicates greater underlying resilience.")

                                                                                                                       

 

            AI

 

              All the money flooding into AI is a warning signal.

                          https://www.wsj.com/finance/stocks/all-the-money-flooding-into-ai-is-a-giant-warning-sign-6e08e3ea?st=jNsqDf&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

 

            Tariffs

 

              New Trump tariffs shakes up the winners/losers list.

  https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-22/trump-builds-a-new-us-tariff-wall-in-shakeup-of-winners-losers?srnd=homepage-americas&sref=loFkkPMQ

 

Summary: President Donald Trump's administration is rolling out new tools with the same protectionist goals after the Supreme Court ruled his sweeping global tariffs to be illegal. Many countries are subject to investigations under accusations of trade unfairness, with some countries standing to gain a competitive edge with a lower tariff rate and others potentially ending up worse off. The new tariff wall may benefit countries like the Philippines, South Africa, and smaller economies, while countries like Singapore may be left in a worse position, and the impact on countries like Canada, Mexico, the European Union, and China is still uncertain.

 

 

     Investing

 

            What is wrong with this picture?

            https://www.apollo.com/wealth/the-daily-spark/the-market-is-paying-a-premium-for-companies-that-lose-money

 

            Tech stock climax.

https://smeadcap.com/missives/tech-stock-climax/?utm_campaign=Missives&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=424308866&utm_content=424309450&utm_source=hs_email

 

 

            The bond market sell off.

              (4) Bond Market Sell Off: Welcome To The “Titanic Effect”

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

 

What I am reading today

 

           

 

 

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