Monday, June 22, 2026

Monday Morning Chartology. Plus lots to digest.

 

The Morning Call

 

6/22/26

 

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

The S&P is attempting to regain its upside momentum on the back of the hope for a US/Iran deal. That said, it failed in its first attempt and is currently in a slight very, very short term downtrend. On the plus side, the index (1) remains above all three DMAs and (2) is in uptrends across all timeframes. Further, the (1) economy continues to perform, (2) the latest Trump/Iran deal [?] is being viewed by investors as at least a short term plus [I think that open to question; but as long as the Market believes it, my opinion is worth butkus]  and (3) with one huge IPO down and two to go, I can’t believe that the Wall Street bankers are going to allow the Market to go down ahead of these offerings.

 

But with a potentially more hawkish Fed and the Market at a very generous valuation, I am somewhat skeptical of just how jiggy to get.

 

Watch the follow through for this recent rally. If the Market regains its former highs, that is great---I will stay invested, but I am now questioning whether to add to my holdings—'questioning’ being the operative word. If the Market goes on to make a new lower low, I will likely take some money off the table---some of my semiconductor holdings are well into their Sell Half Range and I have delayed making those sales because of their strong upside momentum.

 

Patience.

 

                       


 

 

I was a bit surprised by the long bonds reaction to the more hawkish tone coming out of the FOMC meeting. After all, tighter monetary policy usually produces higher rates. On the other hand, recall when the Fed started its rate cutting program (lower rates) the long bond sold off on fears of inflation. The opposite may be happening now---TLT rallying on hope of a more responsible monetary policy. However, it seems a bit early in the game to me for investors to be getting jiggy about a better inflation environment since (1) we don’t even know if Warch was serious, (2) whether the rest of the FOMC membership will go along and (3) even if they do, how hard they are willing to press on the monetary brakes and how long it will take to break the current inflation psychology.

 

What we know now technically speaking is that (1) the long bond bounced off support, (2) it reset its 50 DMA to support and is now challenging its 100 DMA [now resistance] and (3) appears to have made reverse head and shoulders [a plus].

 

 



 

The least surprising pin action of the week goes to gold. It remained in a well-defined downtrend; it is below all three DMAs; and gold historically hates a strong dollar and higher interest rates (the aforementioned TLT performance notwithstanding, short rates were up)







The dollar was strong again last week on the Fed news and appears to be developing a very short term uptrend. If Warsh is the real deal, then my previous stance on the dollar (weak and stays weak) will likely soon change.









Friday in the charts.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/hormuz-hopes-trump-warsh-worries-long-weekend-stocks-bonds-bounce-bitcoin-bullion-bruised

 

Summary:  New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh woke up to good news as a signed MOU and the resumption of Hormuz flows pushed oil prices down and took the market's mind off a hawkish Fed (stocks and bonds retraced yesterday's losses). The dollar kept rising (on the back of ugly Yen weakness), dragging down gold and bitcoin. OpEx removed some stabilizers for next week after long-weekend. Trump cheered via TruthSocial: "OIL IS FLOWING... STOCK MARKETS ARE ROARING... YOU'RE WELCOME!" Goldman Sachs Partner summed up the state of play in equities very succinctly: continue to feel that this market is narrow and concentrated with one factor (momentum) and one theme (ai power/compute/memory) driving the bus and overcoming every challenge it has faced thus far.

 

 

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

 

June option expiration will weaken Market stability.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/june-option-expiration-will-weaken-equity-market-stability

 

Summary: SpotGamma highlighted net negative delta flows came mostly from put buying, with traders adding downside hedges rather than simply closing calls.Implied volatility measures confirmed the move, with the VIX and the VVIX -- or “vol of vol” -- climbing in tandem. While the June options expiry isn’t bearish in and of itself, it’s a large call-heavy expiration rolling off after the Fed already damaged the positive-gamma backdrop. That leaves equities with less insulation as traders debate whether Warsh’s Fed means tighter financial conditions and weaker risk appetite heading into the summer months.

 

The most technically important period of the year.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/most-technically-important-period-year-markets-citadel-securities-sees-3-key-themes

 

Summary: We expect the next two weeks to be dominated by flows, not fundamentals. The market is about to absorb the largest options expiration in history, quarter-end pension rebalancing, and a significant reset in positioning across major investor cohorts. Any resulting weakness should be viewed through a technical lens.Looking beyond quarter-end, the setup remains favorable.Retail demand is at record highs, ETF inflows continue to accelerate, corporate buybacks remain robust, and the market is entering one of its strongest seasonal periods of the year. We continue to believe the path of least resistance is higher as markets transition into the second half of the year.

 

Something doesn’t add up.

https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/something-doesnt-add-0

 

Summary: Bond volatility is collapsing because the rates market sees fewer macro uncertainties. Tech volatility remains elevated because uncertainty has migrated from the economy to the AI buildout itself. Still just a short-term divergence, but it is unusual to see equities ignore such a sharp decline in bond volatility. The chart below shows the S&P 500 versus inverse MOVE. Historically, lower bond volatility and higher equity prices tend to go hand in hand. So far, stocks have not fully embraced the message from rates vol.Divergences like these rarely persist. Either bond volatility is wrong, or other markets have yet to catch up. MOVE has a habit of leading. The question is not why bond volatility is collapsing. The question is why so many other markets are refusing to believe it.

 

 

Monday morning setup: Futures are modestly lower coming off the US holiday weekend, after equities finished higher last week with both Dow and Russell clocking new ATHs and SPX finishing in the green for the 11th time in the last 12 weeks. As of 8:00am ET, S&P 500 futures edged down 0.1% while Nasdaq 100 contracts are higher by 0.1% with chips outperforming as usual while hyperscalers, aka "check payers" down as all Mag 7 are lower with TSLA (-1.4%) and GOOGL (-1.6%; Google’s DeepMind VP John Jumper is leaving the company to join Anthropic) being the biggest laggards. Overseas, Asian markets mostly higher overnight with China and Japan the big gainers, up over 1.5%. European markets higher, up ~0.3%. Big development over the weekend revolved around US-Iran talks in Switzerland, where both sides ultimately highlighted progress following some earlier headline noise. Donald Trump again threatened strikes on Iran if Hezbollah keeps attacking Israel, & US and Iran set up a communication line to avoid incidents and ensure safe passage of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. In the UK, PM Keir Starmer announced his resignation outside 10 Downing Street. The pound erased losses after briefly touching a 2026 low, while gilts rallied as an orderly leadership transition took shape. Bond yields are 2-4bp higher, while the USD is largely unchanged. WTI crude fell $-0.58 to $75.27 reversing all earlier gains while Brent traded around $79. Gold and silver are higher as is bitcoin. There is little on the corporate calendar and scant macro data, leaving traders with little direction until Micron’s earnings due Wednesday and the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge on Thursday take center stage. Fed speaker slate includes Waller at 9am; Williams, Goolsbee, Kashkari and Barkin speak later this week.

 

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

The US stats last week were balanced though the primary indicators were slightly negative (one plus, two minus) with no inflation numbers. Overseas, the data was tilted positive with two plus, one neutral and one negative price measure.

 

Subjects of the week.:

 

A.    inflation, in particular long term inflation. The reason is obvious---last week’s FOMC meeting, statement and presser in which both the FOMC statement as well as Warsh’s presser were more hawkish than most (I) expected.

 

      First, two caveats.

 

(1) one statement/presser does not a policy change make. The proof in the    pudding is in the eating. Warsh could simply be attempting to jawbone inflation expectations down. Plus, he has only one vote. So until we see a concerted effort by the Fed to truly alter the current regime of monetary accommodation, skepticism is warranted, 

 

(2) along those lines, Warsh is a Trump appointee. Trump is an avid easy money advocate. We don’t know what those two discussed that earned Warsh his appointment. But it is hard to believe that Warsh would totally deceive Trump regarding his intentions with respect to monetary policy. Which leads me to the conclusion that either [a] Warsh is sounding tough but unlikely to follow through on policy or [b] Trump doesn’t care what happens after the November election since he can’t run and conceded to Warsh the need to combat inflation. Which leaves what happens next a major uncertainty.

 

However, if we assume (the operative word) that Warsh means what he said, then history suggests a couple of likely outcomes.

 

(1) the Market hates tight money because [a] higher interest rates increase the rate of return bogey that stocks must meet in any discounted value return equation, i.e., it lowers relative equity value, and [b] it reduces liquidity which the stock market needs to support higher valuations. Which means the Market in likely in for a rough ride and

 

          The squeeze on liquidity is just getting started.

          https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/squeeze-liquidity-just-getting-started

 

Summary: In fact, wherever we look we see signs of rates getting tighter. They have started to rise around the world as war inflation seeps into the global economy. A diffusion index of central bank rate hikes (the Global Financial Tightness Indicator in the chart below) has started to fall, indicating tighter conditions. But it could just be getting going. A diffusion of global rate futures shows there is a lot more tightening in the pipeline as higher rate expectations build. And there is tightening at the longer end of the curve too. My leading indicator for 10-year real yields, based on excess liquidity, the Fed’s policy rate and the diffusion of central-bank rates as above, shows they should rise over the next 3-4 months. There are tighter conditions wherever you look. We might guess all of this will be bad for stocks, and we’d be correct. There is almost a straight line relationship with equities and excess liquidity. Progressively more negative excess liquidity is associated with progressively worse stock returns over the ensuing 3-6 months. And excess liquidity is set to keep falling. The measure is defined as money growth less inflation less economic growth across the G10. Money growth is still contributing positively, but elevated inflation and a pick-up in growth, especially in the US, is now consuming money’s contribution in its entirety. That means there is no liquidity available that is “excess” to support risk assets, and before long liquidity will need to come out of the market to maintain growth in the real economy. SpaceX euphoria or not, markets can’t keep going up if the liquidity isn’t there.

And don’t forget, there will be more competition for what there is. Net equity supply just turned positive for the first time since 2021 — and has a good likelihood of staying supported due to a surfeit of issuance and fewer buybacks than expected — posing a structural headwind for stocks. It’s thus turning into an increasingly hostile environment for the equity market. Yet none of this is deterring retail traders, with US equity ETFs showing their second highest inflow on a monthly basis this week, finally parking the hesitancy that had kept them at bay through the war. Retail is typically the last group into the rally, driving the market into a mania phase and a blow-off top. If history repeats, it’s set to be a costly, very bumpy ride.

 

(2) it sets up an inevitable clash between monetary and fiscal policy. In short, if there is less money in the system---

 

[a] there is less money to finance the deficit and that means the government will likely have to pay more to finance that deficit {i.e., higher interest rates which as I noted above, the Market hates} and

 

[b] since the government HAS TO finance its deficit, it will ultimately crowd out the rest of the economy’s need for funds, most importantly corporate investments in plant, equipment and R&D that sustains economic growth.

 

The $64,000 question is how our ruling class responds to this. If they do the right thing and curb spending growth, the economy continues to grow but with less inflation. If they don’t, then either the monetary officials cave and we are back on the same track (higher inflation, higher growth) or they don’t and we are on a slower growth, low inflation trajectory. Neither of which is what we want.

 

The bottom line is if Warsh is the second coming of Volcker, both the economy and the Market are in for the pain necessary for correcting the excesses of the past. If he is bulls**ting us, then inflation is as good as it is going to get (lower oil prices will certainly help in the very short term---see below), the economy will continue to grow but at a slower secular rate than in the past and the Market will likely continue to award excessive valuations to equities until someone recognizes that the emperor has no clothes.

                                https://www.capitalspectator.com/data-vs-debate-will-the-bond-market-embrace-warshs-new-tone/

 

B.     the end of the war (?). The problem with addressing this issue is that the circumstances change minute to minute. Even when the Donald says that we have deal, there isn’t one (his has done that 39 times). But let’s assume for the moment that there is one, the major economic impact will be on oil and its downstream by products. The problem here is that there is wide disagreement about how long it is going to take to return to normal---assuming normal is the return to the ex-ante conditions in the Strait of Hormuz---which is probably never going to happen now that Iran knows it can close Hormuz anytime it wants. Still, in the short run, if there is a deal, oil will flow and undoubtedly decline in price (although again there is widespread disagreement about just how much). So we have to count that as a positive for growth as well as inflation. But how positive?

 

Bottom line: I have no clue and neither does anybody else. So the best we can be is cautiously optimistic. That said, unless we get wildly lucky, I can’t believe this will slow a tightening in monetary policy in the short run. Again if we get lucky it could mean less tightening for a shorter period. But we won’t know that for a while. And yet, investors juice the stock prices every time there are positive headlines even though it has happened 39 times before with no result and even though the Market is higher than it was before the war started. So color me underwhelmed.

                  

                        US

 

                        International

 

                        Other

           

                          Update on big four recession indicators.

                          https://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/2026/06/17/the-big-four-recession-indicators

 

                          Both business expansion and inflation have continued in June.

                          https://bonddad.blogspot.com/2026/06/preliminary-evidence-that-both-business.html

 

            Iran

 

              Overnight news.

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

 

              And.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/oil-keeps-flowing-through-hormuz-chokepoint-normalization-efforts

 

              More analysis of ‘the deal’:

 

              The biggest issue is enforcement.

              https://townhall.com/tipsheet/dmitri-bolt/2026/06/18/victor-davis-hanson-the-biggest-test-of-the-iran-deal-comes-down-to-one-thing-enforcement-n2677936

 

              Trump’s spin is incoherent.

              https://www.ms.now/opinion/us-iran-deal-trump-vance-spin

 

              Iran’s art of the deal.

              https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2026/06/irans-art-of-the-deal.php

 

              The ‘deal’ opens the way for charges on usage of the Strait of Hormuz.

              https://giftarticle.ft.com/giftarticle/actions/redeem/6e584a6e-5069-4862-9d44-f17eecf989b3

 

              The real economic effects of the Iran war are far from over.

              https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2026/06/18/the_real_economic_damage_from_the_iran_conflict_is_far_from_over_1188906.html

 

 

                           Push back from Israel and the GOP.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/us-iran-mou-eases-energy-prices-faces-sharp-pushback-israel-and-gop-hawks

 

                           The Israeli electorate not pleased.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/israelis-are-livid-over-trump-ending-war-overwhelmingly-believe-iran-won-poll

                       

 

                        Monetary Policy

 

              Rate hikes are on for the G10.

              https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/global-markets-central-banks-graphic-2026-06-18/

 

                            Higher interest rates are coming.

              https://talkmarkets.com/article/make-no-mistake-interest-rate-hikes-are-on-their-way-up-1781799491

 

 

            Inflation

 

              A super El Nino threatens waves of commodity inflation.

              https://www.schroders.com/en-us/us/intermediary/insights/a-super-el-ni-o-threatens-rolling-waves-of-commodity-driven-inflation/

 

                        AI

 

            The usefulness of AI models.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/openclosed-or-localfrontier-ai-models-goldman-1-delta-desk-says-watch-chart-leading

 

                          Summary:  the first hyperscaler to signal that it can slow the pace of spending will likely see its share price rewarded.

  If that happens, others will take notice.That is the reflexivity that ultimately stalls the CapEx cycle…not a lack of demand,but investors    deciding that incremental returns on the next dollar of spend are no longer attractive. Watch hyperscalers share price as leading indicator.

 

 

            Tariffs

 

              The tariff math doesn’t work.

              https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/tariff-math-doesnt-work-and-the-white-house-already-admitted-it/

 

     Investing

 

            The latest from BofA.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/harnett-stock-bubbles-are-always-ended-voters-and-vigilantes

 

Summary: One week after urging Bank of America clients to keep "taking chips off the table" - despite stocks ignoring the highest CPI print in 3 years and blowing through to new record highsand then also ignoring the very hawkish FOMC, Warsh's first - until "tighter financial conditions peak once Warsh turns hawkish at the July 29th FOMC", in his latest rather brief Flow Show note (available here to pro subs), BofA's Michael Harnett summarizes the current market landscape with the letter V for Victory, Votes and Vigilantes, with markets needing the latter two for the biggest tech bubble since 2021 to burst. The second V is Votes: .. but if the GOP loses the Senate in Nov = big "dollar down, yields down, stocks down" event; Which reminds Hartnett of one of his favorite sayings: "booms & bubbles (such as this one) are ended by voters & vigilantes (and vol events, e.g. JPY & KRW crises)." Vigilantes. Since Warsh pick for Fed Jan 30th (roughly the day gold peaked, and Bitcoin tumbled just after) there has been a big US yield curve bear flattening (2s10s curve 75bps to 25bps) on “inflation = hikes” fear; recall, CPI rate > unemployment rate rare but always coincides with yield curve inversion (always a solid recession signal)... ..  But while the looming bear move from inflation boom to stagflation bust is almost certain... . it can be halted if the big oil drop offsets AI/wealth price spiral and sends CPI back <3%. In other words, the fate of the US economy and stock market is now largely in Iran's hands. 

 

 

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

What I am reading today

 

            Ways to live a longer and healthier life.

            https://hsph.harvard.edu/news/the-importance-of-connections-ways-to-live-a-longer-healthier-life/

 

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

 

 

 

Thursday, June 18, 2026

The Morning Call--Is there a new sheriff in town?

 

The Morning Call

 

6/18/26

 

The Market is closed tomorrow; so I will see you on Monday.

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

            Wednesday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/markets-manic-oil-flat-trump-warsh-dominate-liquidity-plummets

 

Summary:  Despite Trump's headline roulette (bombs away, Israel chill, reserves tight, MOU signing timing), markets were relatively calm into The Fed (with strong retail sales and home sales)... but a dramatically hawkish shift in the 'dots' and the statement sent stocks and gold lower and (short-end) bond yields and the dollar higher. A manic day for many who weren't expecting such a shift from Warsh:

 

            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

 

Note: the S&P failed to reach its old high and has now set a new lower high. Support exists at its 50 DMA (~7301) which the index bounced of off to start the latest rally and the prior low (~7267)---if it breaks that level, the index will have set a lower high and a lower low, indicating a developing downtrend.

 

            Margin debt jumps to record high.

            https://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/2026/06/16/margin-debt-finra

 

            Semis: the new systematic risk.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/semis-new-systemic-risk

 

Summary: Semiconductors keep ripping, but the story is no longer just about earnings and AI. The sector has become so large and so crowded that semiconductor volatility is increasingly becoming a market risk in itself. The trend remains powerful. The question is whether investors are prepared for the next volatility shock. Semiconductors have become so large and so crowded that they are increasingly a source of market risk. Rising semiconductor volatility combined with elevated investor exposure raises the odds of more frequent VaR shocks, similar to the selloff seen in early June, writes JPM's Nikos. The concentration is becoming extreme. Semiconductor stocks now account for a much larger share of global equity market capitalization than their share of revenues would justify. In fact, the gap between market cap share and revenue share has surpassed 6x, more than double the equivalent ratio for the Magnificent 7. The more crowded the trade becomes, the greater the risk that even a modest disappointment triggers forced selling.

 

 

Thursday morning setup: Futures rebounded from the post-FOMC selloff, and oil prices fell as Trump signed the Iran MOU two days early to end the war in the Middle East (in the symbolic Palace of Versailles of all places) and some energy shipments began to transit the Strait of Hormuz. As usual, tech led the parade higher. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures were up 0.6%, but off overnight session highs, partly unwinding a more than 1% decline after Kevin Warsh signaled the Fed may have to raise interest rates this year to contain inflation; Nasdaq gained 1.3%; pre-market all Mag 7 are higher led by AMZN (+1.2%), META (+1.1%) and NVDA (+1.1%), reversing some of yesterday’s losses. Intel shares jumped more than 8% in premarket trading after Trump said the firm struck a chipmaking deal with Apple (a rehash of previous news but to this Pavolvian market, everything seems to be brand new). Overnight, the biggest headline was that the US/Iran MOU was officially in effect (final deal within 60 days, waiver for Iran to export oil, a $300bn reconstruction fund, terminating all types of sanction, per Axios). Bond yields are lower led by the long-end of the curve as 2y is still anchored by Fed commentary yesterday; 2y and 10y are -1bp and -4bp lower, respectively, the 10Y trading at 4.46%. The USD continues to climb with the DXY adding 53bp this morning. Brent slid 1.4% to around $78.50 a barrel and touched its lowest level since the start of the war while WTI fell -2.6% to $74.78; precious metals are largely flat this morning. US economic data calendar includes weekly jobless claims, June Philadelphia Fed business outlook (8:30am), May Leading Index (10am) and April TIC flows (4pm)

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

                          Weekly jobless claims totaled 226,000 versus expectations of 225,000.

 

                          May pending home sales were up 3.8% versus consensus of +0.8%.

 

The June Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index came in at 10.3 versus predictions of 10.0.

 

                        International

 

The April UK unemployment rate was 4.9% versus estimates of 5.0%; April (3 mo./YoY) average earnings were up 4.4% versus up 4.0%.

 

April EU YoY construction output rose 0.9% versus projections of -1.6%.

 

                        Other

 

                          Consumers on a wealth-effect spending spree.

                          https://bonddad.blogspot.com/2026/06/even-adjusting-for-gas-prices-consumers.html

 

            Iran

 

              Initial analysis of the MoU---at least as we think we know it:

 

                        It may not be as good as Obama’s version.

                                    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-17/trump-s-iran-nuclear-deal-risks-falling-short-of-obama-version?srnd=homepage-americas

 

Summary: The emerging nuclear accord with Iran may secure fewer restrictions than the 2015 deal negotiated by the Obama administration. The potential agreement will build on a memorandum of understanding that states Iran's stockpile of near-bomb-grade uranium be "adequately addressed", leaving unresolved the fate of enough material to fuel multiple weapons. The US has agreed to end all sanctions against Iran, release frozen funds, and allow Iran to resume oil exports, in exchange for a promise from Iran that it will never produce nuclear weapons.

 

                                                It could transform America’s Middle East policy.

                        https://www.theamericanconservative.com/the-u-s-iran-deal-could-help-transform-americas-mideast-strategy/

 

                        In the interest of levity.

                        Oh No! Trump Negotiates Deal With England And Now They Have The Colonies Back | Babylon Bee

 

              The Strait of Hormuz will never really open again.

              https://www.semafor.com/article/06/16/2026/hormuz-will-never-really-be-open-again

 

            Monetary Policy

 

FOMC holds rates steady, remains divided but more hawkish (i.e., one to two rate hikes in 2026). Warsh cuts length of policy statement and the post meeting presser---in which he sounded more hawkish than many expected.

https://talkmarkets.com/article/fed-holds-rates-steady-as-officials-split-on-hikes-under-warsh-1781721286

 

Note: if Warsh is really serious about the Fed’s commitment to bring inflation under control: (1) the Market hates tight monetary policy and (2) it sets up a clash between monetary policy [shrinking liquidity] and fiscal policy [huge deficits = need for more liquidity]---not good [short term but good long term] for the economy or the Market. I will expand on these themes in my next post.

 

              How big a role should duration play in setting Fed policy?

              https://stayathomemacro.substack.com/p/a-good-family-fight

 

            Fiscal Policy

 

              How much has the government borrowed to pay back what it owes itself?

              https://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2026/06/how-much-has-us-government-borrowed-to.html

 

              The rise of the American state owned enterprise.

              https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2026/06/17/rise-american-state-owned-enterprise

 

            AI

 

              AI---a shortcut or the chance to do more powerful work.

              https://seths.blog/2026/06/degrees-of-freedom-3/

 

              Apple hikes prices to offset soaring memory costs.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/situation-has-become-unsustainable-apple-hike-prices-offset-soaring-memory-costs

 

     Investing

 

            Could the AI bubble burst be worst than the dot com bust?

            https://thehill.com/opinion/finance/5925202-tech-bubble-ai-driven-growth/

 

            Most stocks aren’t worth owning.

            https://www.morningstar.com/stocks/why-most-stocks-arent-worth-owning

 

            Bull market pull back---why the S&P held its 50 DMA.

            https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2026/06/17/bull-market-pullback-why-4-5-dip-held-50-dma

 

            The Iran shock reinvented tech as a safe haven.

            https://www.capitalspectator.com/the-iran-shock-reinvented-tech-as-the-new-safe-haven/

 

            Will there be a peace dividend?

            https://giftarticle.ft.com/giftarticle/actions/redeem/d318fc74-8a8a-44d7-91e5-27df4bd7f1a0

 

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